Tornado's on the ground in Missouri today,
wildfires in Florida -- China and Myanmar statistics worsen by the hour. The
purge is on. Light and Peace to us all.
We'll look at the candidates
again today -- some of the emerging wrinkles that are coming into view;
fascinating stuff. I approach life with the philosophy that if something appears
on your plate, it's for you to chew on. The upside of this long and winding road
to a nomination is our opportunity to achieve a real sense of not only the
character of the participants, but our own, while discovering the unmentionable
territory of our bias and prejudice. It would be snarky and add our intelligence
to the list as that's one of those black/white comments, arrogant and snotty,
and we've got enough of that -- but with Hillary projected to get 80% of West
Virginia today, not even her supporters can avoid
the implication, which she herself embraceded, that the white folk are in
rebellion. Saturday Night Live put a pin in that one.
So when she wins
big, does that mean we're a racist nation ... or that West Virginia is a racist
state ... or that some of us [those voting for the woman not because she speaks
for them, but because she isn't black] just aren't ready for the 21st century?
Indeed, an anachronistic word came out of this particular leg of the race that
startled me: half-breed. Lord help
us!
The
Obama campaign has suffered under-reported, by design, incidents of racism; the
NY Times put out an op/ed yesterday by a wing-nut that labeled him a "Muslim
apostate" because his father was a "radical Muslim" [??] and all those born into
a Muslim bloodline are forevermore ... Muslim [like those born with a drop
of negro blood are black, I guess. I'm thinking one of those historical DNA
tests to identify the racial makeup of our forebear's would do EVERYBODY in
this country a favor, even if we had to suffer a huge, inevitable wave of
identity crisis.]
I'd
think his detractors have not bothered to hear the Christian code that peppers his
speeches, part of his 'prophetic voice' that surfaces from time to time ... his use of
the term "imperfect vessel" is a bit of biblical poetry.
We've gone poll
crazy, now -- but the numbers are revealing; it's interpretation that's wonky.
Hillary is still riding high on her PA win, getting lift on her 'white' vote,
but the numbers tell another story -- as the votes came straggling in, it turns
out she won the state by less than a percent, a bit more than 11,000 votes. But
the me-me is out there, now -- Obama has problems with the blue-collar's without
college education [as do ALL Dem's, it should be noted.] That doesn't read 'stupid' to me ... that reads inexperienced
and under-educated. The people who 'wouldn't vote for one' don't know any ...
haven't connected with the hearts of their brothers due to isolation, fear and
lack of opportunity. College ain't all that -- but it DOES take us into a larger
pond, expose us to diversity and push us forward mentally and
emotionally.
Hil
has found her populist voice but it rides on a wave of fear and resentment;
while she gets the numbers for the older gen, she's also impressed about 60% of
the public as not trustworthy ... she's even gained status as one of those who
have been 'verbed' [think being Kerry'd for swift boated ... Rather'd for tarred
and feathered without having a day in court.] "Pulling a Hillary" is the new term for voicing a bogus
complaint.
Meanwhile, Obama
slapped on a flag pin to work within the Red-state crucible yesterday, and I
don't blame him -- I just wish it had one of those little chips that played the
Star Spangled Banner so he could push it, mid-speech, and see how many jumped to
their feet with their hand over their heart; those in wheel chairs, over 90 and
under 3 would get a pass, all others who didn't do the deed would be reported to
Homeland Security. OK -- that was snarky. I'm an imperfect vessel, and so is
everyone
else....
...
except the Republican candidate -- John McRib is a CRACKED vessel; he's not
holding water, that one. With "flip flop" terminology in the past, evidently,
it's still hard to view this guy as anything but the original fish out of water, flopping everywhere.
Jeff Toobin, author of The Nine, and others have speculated that Mr. Maverick
would get Roe overturned within a year or so. He's running on the George Bush
playbook, the same man he called "dumb as a stump" a few years ago. Here's a good read on John's [flippin']
dilemma.
Yesterday the Old Coot [60% say age is an issue] droned on and on about
stewardship of the planet, fussing up the corporate's and some of the base
[which is split nicely, with Ron Paul and Bob Barr ready to cut into his
numbers, Libertarian spoilers in an already shaky Pub landscape. Remember that,
already the presumptive, Mac STILL lost huge chunks of the base in Illinois and
Carolina to candidates long retired.] Just makes me want to spit that the press
gives him time and space without pointing out how many lies he tells. Yes, he's
'green' alright -- and he missed every critical environmental vote in Congress
this year. Flip
flop!
See,
here's the thing -- you know that I would prefer a new breed of president, one
not connected to the Establishment parties. Even John Edwards, bless him, played
in their ballpark so he didn't have all of my heart. But we've got to start
somewhere, and the one with the best potential to shift Left and be responsive
to the public gets my vote -- that's Obama, if he can nail it down. I watched
the PBS offering on FDR's life last night, and clearly there's a hint in that president's
evolvement; there are politicians that can rise to power and influence, and
there are rare politicians that can rise above their skill-set to become
statesmen. The FDR that produced the New Deal was not the FDR that took the
White House; the times and the need of the people convinced him to change
direction.
In the spiritual community there's a word for
this -- it's called being "teachable." That indicates a willingness to venture
out into the unknown, take risk, learn. Of the three, I think Obama is the one that is capable of that, he's got the flex and
the willingness to try something and scrap it if it doesn't work, try again --
you can read that between the lines of the Times article about him, below.
At the moment, we have three skillful,
high-flying politicians competing -- one polished in the Chicago machine, one
claiming legacy to the Clintonian political model and one deeply entrenched in the
Republican system -- only time will tell if they can be more.
GOSH,
these are interesting reads [I read that Hil said "gosh," and they called her
phony; I protest ... we're contemporaries and have a wide range of generational
expressions, even if we aren't bff.]
Some are 'think pieces' about gender
issues ... the Feminist's that are taking Hillary's decline so hard seem like
dry drunks, to me -- before you call for my head, let me explain. Feminism is a
movement, and all movements start as cartoons, drawn large and quickly
stereotyped -- they require passion that can become obsession. Those who would
take ANY woman over ANY man, seems to me, have lost their objectivity. The 12
Steps are critical to overcoming dependencies ... but the 13th, and most
critical in my mind, is to step away into a new understanding of life and
self-definition ... no longer a reformed user, but a healed human. Yes, breaking
the glass ceiling is critical to our becoming ... but if we do this by
out-butching the guys, do we not do our own energetic signal and inclination a
disservice?
There's a piece by Hil's spiritual mentor [not religious]
below, and another by a psychologist. As we strive to come to gender balance
within ourselves ... each of us ... surely we must come to recognize the authentic
versus the inauthentic along the way. For me, anyhow, Hil has done me a service
-- she's taught me how not to do it. And, win or not, she's shattered the
ceiling anyhow; who is not convinced that can and will happen now? If she wins
this time, by muscling her way through, Feminism was have sent a clear message
but females everywhere will get the wrong one, and send us into battle stance
with males for another round of karmic mis-step.
This is that rare time when we can
leap, if we will; if we won't, we can play it out in linear terms and teach
ourselves slowly and painfully.
I enjoyed collecting these today --
there's a link to a fun bit on the candidates handwriting below; a Bob Herbert
piece on the Millennial's ... the generation that's most comfortable with change;
we could also argue the one's with the least to lose. The last piece, while
written as a vehicle for Hillary commentary, applies to all the candidates --
and illustrates why we must START with one of these people, pushing them forward
relentlessly; for all the marbles, don'cha
know.
Jude
Hillary Clinton failed to master the female approach, former mentor says
Scholar and philosopher Jean Houston reflects on
where the first viable woman presidential candidate may have gone
wrong.
By Robin Abcarian, Los Angeles Times
May 12,
2008
ASHLAND, ORE. -- Recently, as New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton
campaigned in Eugene, her onetime friend and mentor Jean Houston was at home in
her double geodesic dome, a style that is not out of place here in this town of
theater lovers and spiritual seekers.
"I could have probably gone down to
see her, and she would have hugged me and it would have been nice," said
Houston, as she sat on a sofa surrounded by art from Bali and Greece in her
circular living room. "I could have been very useful to her. But there would
have been cameras, and they would have said, 'Oh, now, Hillary's so desperate,
she's gone to the spiritualist.' "
Houston was not Clinton's
spiritualist, but when Clinton was at her lowest -- after the 1994 defeat of her
healthcare initiative, the Republican takeover of Congress, seemingly
interminable investigations and intense vilification -- Houston, a pioneer of
the human potential movement, was something of a secret emotional life raft for
the first lady.
The friendship ended after Bob Woodward revealed in a
1996 book that Houston had helped guide a devastated Hillary Clinton in
imaginary conversations with her hero Eleanor Roosevelt.
Houston rarely
speaks about her relationship with Clinton. As Clinton's nomination seemed on
the verge of hitting the skids, Houston reflected on Clinton's style of politics
and where the country's first viable female presidential candidate may have gone
wrong.
Houston is a scholar and philosopher who travels the world giving
seminars on human potential and what she calls "social artistry," applying myth,
history and spirituality to help effect social, political or personal
change.
During President Bill Clinton's first term, Houston and cultural
anthropologist Mary Catherine Bateson, a friend of Houston, helped Hillary
Clinton arrive at a new understanding of the symbolic power of her office and
tutored her in what would become her most successful ventures as first lady -- a
trip to South Asia, her first book, and a speech in Beijing about human rights
that many would consider her finest moment.
Houston is a prolific author
whose associates have included Margaret Mead (Bateson's mother) and mythology
professor Joseph Campbell. She got to know Eleanor Roosevelt as a high school
student in New York.
Houston sees the presidential race through a mythic
lens.
"The current election is a look at archetypal structures," said
Houston, a handsome 71-year-old with a broad smile. Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.)
has "a shamanic personality, of course," she said. Clinton is "the classical
wise woman or priestess, if you will." The presumptive Republican nominee,
Arizona Sen. John McCain, she added, is "the warrior."
The
'rising feminine'
Houston believes Obama is on the verge of
winning the nomination partly because he has promoted himself as the embodiment
of a new kind of politics, and partly because Clinton has had trouble portraying
her authentic self.
"She is funny, hilarious, generous, warm, given to
acts of kindness that are extraordinary," Houston said. "She is a deep woman,
not just a very bright woman. But she is part of a dying breed, an archaic
sensibility."
The biggest change in human history over the last 5,000
years, Houston said, "is the rise of the feminine . . . slowly, but surely, to
full partnership with men over the whole domain of human affairs. This is
shifting everything." This was what Houston and Bateson tried to convey to
Clinton in 1995 when they helped her understand why, quite apart from political
strife, she was the object of so much loathing.
"It's the fear of the
'rising feminine,' " Houston said.
Ironically, Clinton's problem today,
Houston said, may be that Obama has given better voice to that new pattern of
possibility -- that he embodies a more female, inclusive approach to
problem-solving, while Clinton has become mired in proving herself capable of
emulating the male model, which requires combat and the demonization of
enemies.
Houston got to know the Clintons at the end of 1994, when they
invited a small group of bestselling self-help authors -- Marianne Williamson,
Anthony Robbins and Stephen R. Covey -- to Camp David over New Year's Eve. Both
Bill and Hillary Clinton were reeling from their defeats and searching for a way
to get back on track.
It was a time, as Woodward noted in "The Choice,"
when Hillary Clinton seemed "jerked around by the muddled role of first lady, as
she swung between New Age feminist and national housewife."
In her 2003
memoir, "Living History," Clinton seemed to agree: "As much as I loved my
husband and my country, adjusting to being a full-time surrogate was difficult
for me. Mary Catherine and Jean helped me better understand that the role of
first lady is deeply symbolic and that I had better figure out how to make the
best of it."
Woodward wrote that Houston tried to steer Clinton away from
her "warrior mode" and "the need to have enemies who could symbolically be
singled out to embody the opposition."
"It's a shame the warfare model is
still there," Houston said. "If she could have moved to the next level, she
would be the next president."
Houston and Bateson also helped Clinton
prepare for her first solo trip as first lady, a visit to Pakistan, India, Nepal
and Bangladesh in March 1995 that helped soften Clinton's image, particularly
when she was photographed riding an elephant with daughter
Chelsea.
Clinton later enlisted Houston and Bateson to help craft her
first book, "It Takes a Village," which became a bestseller.
Clinton has
invoked her trips to South Asia and Beijing -- where she stood up for the rights
of women and children -- as examples of foreign policy experience. (As for her
misrepresentation of landing under sniper fire in Bosnia, Houston said, "Well,
for goodness' sakes! The woman's been under sniper fire for 20 years, so I can
see how that would happen.")
Stung by
'Wackygate'
Clinton herself had often remarked in speeches that
she had imaginary conversations with Roosevelt, but Woodward's detailed account
of the hourlong session with Houston and Bateson, which had been taped,
insinuated something stranger at play. Clinton handled the affair with humor,
but her critics pounced, dubbing the episode "Wackygate."
Houston was
besieged by reporters. She gave a few interviews, including one to Larry King in
which she humorously guided him in a conversation with his hero, Arthur Godfrey.
The White House, she said, asked her to stop talking.
Houston found
herself tarred as a "New Age queen" who had conducted "seances" with the first
lady. She felt she suffered a tremendous blow to her professional
reputation.
Co-founder with her husband, Robert Masters, of the
Foundation for Mind Research, which studied human development and states of
consciousness (she was among the few sanctioned LSD researchers in the '60s),
she said she lost income, grants and an opportunity to serve on the board of a
Laurance Rockefeller foundation.
The Clintons did not exactly abandon
her, Houston said, but there was not much support. "They were living in a kind
of war zone all the time, so I could not feel badly for myself under the
circumstances," she said.
"The whole episode was the single biggest
trauma of my life," Houston said. "Many people know my work has affected a great
many lives around the world, but I stay quiet about it and I stay out of the
press."
On Thursday, Clinton attended a fundraiser in Ashland. Houston
could have gone but opted to stay home. ++
Hillary's Gift to
Women
Barbara Ehrenreich, HuffPo
May 12, 2008
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/barbara-ehrenreich
In Friday's New York Times, Susan Faludi rejoiced over Hillary
Clinton's destruction of the myth of female prissiness and innate moral
superiority, hailing Clinton's "no-holds-barred pugnacity" and her media
reputation as "nasty" and "ruthless." Future female presidential candidates will
owe a lot to the race of 2008, Faludi wrote, "when Hillary Clinton broke through
the glass floor and got down with the boys."
I share Faludi's glee -- up
to a point. Surely no one will ever dare argue that women lack the temperament
for political combat. But by running a racially-tinged campaign, lying about her
foreign policy experience, and repeatedly seeming to favor McCain over her
Democratic opponent, Clinton didn't just break through the "glass floor," she
set a new low for floors in general, and would, if she could have got within
arm's reach, have rubbed the broken glass into Obama's face.
A mere
decade ago Francis Fukuyama fretted in Foreign Affairs that the world was too
dangerous for the West to be entrusted to graying female leaders, whose aversion
to violence was, as he established with numerous examples from chimpanzee
society, "rooted in biology." The counter-example of Margaret Thatcher, perhaps
the first of head of state to start a war for the sole purpose of pumping up her
approval ratings, led him to concede that "biology is not destiny."
But it
was still a good reason to vote for a prehistoric-style club-wielding
male.
Not to worry though, Francis. Far from being the stereotypical
feminist-pacifist of your imagination, the woman to get closest to the Oval
Office has promised to "obliterate" the toddlers of Tehran -- along, of course,
with the bomb-builders and Hezbollah supporters. Earlier on, Clinton foreswore
even talking to presumptive bad guys, although women are supposed to be the talk
addicts of the species. Watch out -- was her distinctly unladylike message to
Hugo Chavez, Kim Jong-Il, and the rest of them -- or I'll rip you a new
one.
There's a reason why it's been so easy for men to overlook women's
capacity for aggression. As every student of Women's Studies 101 knows, what's
called aggression in men is usually trivialized as "bitchiness" in women: Men
get angry; women suffer from bouts of inexplicable, hormonally-driven,
hostility. So give Clinton credit for defying the belittling stereotype: She's
been visibly angry for months, if not decades, and it can't all have been
PMS.
But did we really need another lesson in the female capacity for
ruthless aggression? Any illusions I had about the innate moral superiority of
women ended four years ago with Abu Ghraib. Recall that three out of the five
prison guards prosecuted for the torture and sexual humiliation of prisoners
were women. The prison was directed by a woman, Gen. Janis Karpinski, and the
top U.S. intelligence officer in Iraq, who also was responsible for reviewing
the status of detainees before their release, was Major Gen. Barbara Fast. Not
to mention that the U.S. official ultimately responsible for managing the
occupation of Iraq at the time was Condoleezza Rice.
Whatever violent
and evil things men can do, women can do too, and if the capacity for cruelty is
a criterion for leadership, as Fukuyama suggested, then Lynndie England should
consider following up her stint in the brig with a run for the
Senate.
It's important -- even kind of exhilarating -- for women to
embrace their inner bitch, but the point should be to expand our sense of human
possibility, not to enshrine aggression as a virtue. Women can behave like the
warrior queen Boadicea, credited with slaughtering 70,000, many of them
civilians, or like Margaret Thatcher, who attempted to dismantle the British
welfare state. Men, for their part, are free to take as their role models the
pacifist leaders Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi. Biology conditions us in
all kinds of ways we might not even be aware of yet. But virtue is always a
choice.
Hillary Clinton smashed the myth of innate female moral
superiority in the worst possible way -- by demonstrating female moral
inferiority. We didn't really need her racial innuendos and free-floating
bellicosity to establish that women aren't wimps.
As a generation of young
feminists realizes, the values once thought to be uniquely and genetically
female -- such as compassion and an aversion to violence -- can be found in
either sex, and sometimes it's a man who best upholds them.
++
Hillary and the Unfeminine Mystique
Joan Z.
Shore, HuffPo
May 13, 2008
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joan-z-shore/hillary-and-the-unfeminin_b_101501.html
I would have loved to vote for America's first woman president. But it
wasn't meant to be.
Hillary Clinton, the woman who could have made
history, simply let me down.
She let me down five years ago when she
voted for the war in Iraq. And she let me down all these years since, by never
repudiating her vote or apologizing for her mistake.
She let me down --
and lost my respect -- by continually using the pronoun "I". "I'll be ready the
first day in office." "I'll be the one to answer the phone at 3 a.m." Like some
egomaniac, she seemed to forget that there are 300 million other people in this
country.
Barack Obama didn't forget this. His most-used pronoun is "we".
While Clinton billed herself as a one-woman act, Obama focused on the ensemble,
on plurality, unity and cooperation, That's not showmanship -- that's
statesmanship.
And Clinton's favorite verb? "Fight." Thanks, babe --
that's what they're doing over in Iraq, and in Afghanistan, and in Lebanon, and
in too many places around the globe. I don't want a fighter in the White House;
I want a peacemaker.
As an active feminist all my life, I see exactly
where Clinton went wrong. She was using the old paradigm: To beat them (the men)
you've got to be like them.
Tough, aggressive, pragmatic. But what a
difference it would have made if her campaign had employed some "feminine"
qualities: compassion, conciliation, generosity.
She must have taken
Margaret Thatcher as her role model. She should have copied Golda Meir instead,
who was known to greet foreign dignitaries in her housedress, and brew them a
cup of tea in her kitchen.
I do, of course, sympathize with Hillary's
marital predicament. As many wives discover, a husband can be both a help and a
hindrance, an embellishment or an embarrassment. I think she would have been a
lot wiser to leave hubby home, tending the lawn in Chappaqua.
Most
likely, Hillary herself will not be willing to return home next year and take up
domestic chores. Nor should she. She will make a fine elder stateswoman.
Chastened by this campaign, she may yet become a mellow voice of reason,
of tolerance, of understanding, of moral rectitude and
responsibility.
She is finished running with the wolves. Now it's time to
lick her wounds and be a woman again. ++
Revenge of the Wimp
Factor: The Ironies of Proving Manhood in the Democratic
Primary
Stephen Ducat, Ph.D., HuffPo
May 12, 2008
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stephen-ducat/revenge-of-the-wimp-facto_b_101412.html
Hi, I'm Hillary Clinton. But tonight, in honor of the WWE, you can call
me Hill-Rod. This election is starting to feel a lot like "King of the Ring."
The only difference? The last man standing may just be a woman. -- Hillary
Rodham Clinton, from her opening monologue prior to a World Wrestling
Entertainment "joke" match between Clinton and Obama look-alikes.
What
has become disturbingly evident in the last few months of the primary campaign
is that Hillary Clinton is not merely carrying the torch of the "old politics."
She is also the ironic bearer of the old masculinity, a knuckle-dragging version
of manhood that is defined in terms of domination. In this view, "the man" is
whoever can stick it to the other. It is the one who can eviscerate his or her
enemy most savagely and with the least remorse. It is the one on top in a
zero-sum world. In this curious mutation of patriarchy, anatomy is not destiny.
But being a dick is.
Much is made of the penis. We talk about how to
keep it hard, how to make it bigger, and who envies it. The public secret we
keep from ourselves -- but at a deep level understand -- is that it is not the
penis that matters most. That modest organ is, after all, vulnerable and easily
deflated. The phallus is what most men and even some women in a male dominant
culture covet, envy, think they possess, fear losing, or try to get back
(usually, each of these at different times).
In our still patriarchal
world, this symbol, in blatant or subtle forms, shows up in our dreams,
editorial cartoons, commercials, and political ads. It is often used to
represent absolute domination, insensate hardness, omnipotence, unlimited
wealth, invulnerability, untrammeled growth, or freedom from all dependency -
and sometimes all of these unattainable qualities.
The problem, of
course, is that this ancient archetypal monolith of manhood is an illusion.
Nobody has one; it only exists if someone sees it. In spite of being an
evanescent hallucination, political consultants spend much of their time trying
to paint a phallus on their candidate. A line from the Tom Waits song "Step
Right Up" could be read as a concise description of what a successful campaign
does: "It gives you an erection. It wins the election."
In most electoral
contests, the question is often "who's the man?" And the manner in which
political manhood gets displayed is tiresomely predictable: macho chest beating,
posing with the fetish objects of anxious masculinity (trucks, big machines, and
even bigger weapons), humiliating your opponent with castrating insults, calling
into question his or her ability to be tough, ruthless, and merciless with the
designated enemy of the moment -- in short, phallic strutting. These are the
bread and butter performances that keep the 24-hour cable infotainment channels
in business, and frequently eclipse the issues of the day.
There is an
astonishing irony in Senator Clinton flashing her "Hill-Rod," and striking poses
that, in the admiring words of North Carolina Governor Mike Easley, make "Rocky
Balboa look like a pansy." During her career as First Lady, Mrs. Clinton was
widely reviled by her conservative detractors as a gender outlaw. Being smart,
outspoken, a savvy investor, a policy wonk, and a woman who insisted on an
egalitarian relationship with her husband, she was seen as a profound threat, a
wife who did not know her proper (i.e., subordinate) place.
These
sentiments got represented in numerous editorial cartoons that depicted her in
male drag, using a men's urinal, and as a riding-crop-wielding dominatrix. Slick
Times, a right wing humor magazine, featured jokes about her preferred method of
birth control (vasectomy) and the reason she doesn't wear miniskirts ("so her
balls won't show"). The cover of the October 1995 issue of Spy Magazine even
retouched a photo of her to depict a discernible penile bulge under her
clothing.
This image accompanied an investigative article on her "dubious
investments" that "performed extremely well." The headline, "Hillary's Big
Secret," in equating the penis with money, revealed the phallic meaning her
powerful financial dealings had for the authors, as well as for many of her
conservative male critics.
During this same period images abounded of
Bill Clinton as castrated, cross-dressing, feminized, and physically dominated
and abused by his powerful wife. Interestingly, once the Monica Lewinsky scandal
unfolded, things reversed. He was portrayed in cartoons and late night TV comedy
monologues as studly, powerful, and potent. Hillary, now the wounded women
standing by her man, was widely depicted in sympathic and stereotypically
feminine terms. What may surprise many is that the approval ratings for both the
President and the First Lady soared following the scandal. Many citizens,
especially men, seemed relieved to see the gender order restored, and the
phallus returned to our male leader. But if, unlike the lowly but attached
penis, the phallus has a tendency to move around, this can open up opportunities
for female politicians to overcome the still lingering impediments of misogynist
bigotry. Gender, our cultural experiences tell us, is really only loosely
associated with bodies, not tethered to them.
What could not be tolerated
in Hillary the political wife turns out to be a significant advantage for
Hillary the politician, or so her campaign managers seem to believe. In fact,
Senator Clinton appears to have been positioning herself early on to wield the
political phallus. Her vote for the Iraq war resolution seems less a mistake
based on inaccurate information -- the data was readily available to her antiwar
peers in the Senate, not to mention many national security scholars, as well as
millions of ordinary Americans -- than a political calculation. She wanted to
show her "testicular fortitude," as a supportive labor leader recently gushed at
a campaign rally. It's the same reason "fight" has become her favorite verb.
Last week she autographed a pair of red boxing gloves at a rally. Perhaps the
most disturbing gesture of macho posturing has been her repeated threat to
"obliterate" Iran if that nation's leaders attack Israel. Given that the Iranian
people are unable to really make their leaders accountable, her threat is not
only a genocidal one, but, were she to act on it, would constitute collective
punishment.
Hillary Clinton seems not only willing to annihilate Iranians
for political gain. She also appears happy to depopulate the Democratic Party in
order to ensure her nomination. As I write this, news outlets are revealing her
plans for what Thomas Edsall is calling the "nuclear option." In other words,
she intends to use her influence on the members of the party's Rules and Bylaws
Committee to force the votes that were gathered in the "outlaw" primaries of
Florida and Michigan to be counted.
Some may ask a very reasonable
feminist question that could challenge this argument: why must toughness,
Machiavellianism, combativeness, or even swaggering bellicosity be viewed as
masculine? They certainly needn't. But it is, as we have seen, Hillary Clinton
herself, along with her surrogates, who have explicitly gendered those traits in
the campaign. As the oleaginous Clinton loyalist, James Carville, has said, if
Mrs. Clinton gave Obama one of her testicles, "they'd both have
two."
What is so interesting and illuminating is that Hillary Clinton is
not just engaging in a performance of martial hypermasculinity as a way of
shoring up both her phallic and national security credentials. She is also
donning the mantel of working class hero, aping every conceivable stereotype of
white blue-collar manhood -- from beer swilling to gun toting to preening
pugilism -- and, where possible, doing so from the back of a pickup truck. It
must be said, however, unlike the many multimillionaire Republican men in power,
such as George W. Bush and John McCain, she plays the good ole boy with
convincing if increasingly unhinged gusto. Perhaps this is because men in
politics so often make the worst male impersonators.
But beyond that,
Hillary Clinton has long revealed an intuitive talent for masquerade, an ability
to lose herself in whatever role a situation required. Her instincts as a
protean politician enabled her to seamlessly shift from feminist intellectual
and powerhouse lawyer deriding stay-at-home cookie bakers, to the betrayed
housewife still loyal to her man, and beaming with pride over her cookie recipe.
She can play the verklempt victim of male critics one moment, and a macho
political predator the next. On a dime Senator Clinton can morph from a well
informed authority on the nuances of economic policy to a
we-don't-need-no-stinkin'-economists anti-intellectualism in response to the
near unanimity of expert opinion criticizing her bogus gas tax "holiday"
scheme.
Her double masquerade of gender and class has been so compelling
to some working class male voters because it taps into a deep vein in the
American collective political unconscious that dates from the founding of our
nation, and one that Republicans have understood and effectively exploited for
decades. In the 1840 presidential campaign, Martin Van Buren said his opponent,
William Henry Harrison, was "a man who wore corsets, put cologne on his
whiskers, slept on French beds, rode in a British coach, and ate with golden
spoons from silver plates." Here in this example of early negative campaigning
we have a clear illustration of the link American men have always made between
effeminacy and aristocratic manners and privilege. It was, after all, George H.
W. Bush's patrician patois and upper class mannerisms that led Newsweek in 1988
to suggest his greatest political vulnerability was "the wimp factor," and
thereby coin a term that would become a permanent part of our political lexicon.
Not only did this feminine attribution haunt the public career of Bush 41, Bush
43, as many have observed, has struggled to defend against and compensate for
this legacy.
More recently, we have the example of Barack Obama, the
black candidate raised by a poor single mother, being called an "elitist"
because of his grace, equanimity, intellect, dismal bowling performance, and
reluctance to completely inhale his Philly cheese-steak. This, along with his
willingness to negotiate with enemies, we are told, should lead us to question
whether he's man enough to be commander in chief. The Clinton crew, along with
their chief ally, John McCain, have made strenuous efforts to define Obama as a
cosseted and effeminate toff, whose pretty words only confirm his deficient
manhood, and thereby his unfitness to lead the nation. When you think about it,
Clinton's complaint against her opponent -- "you always want to talk" -- sounds
oddly like the familiar kvetch that so many emotionally constricted sexist
husbands direct at their more relational spouses.
In applying the GOP
approach to feminizing male opponents, and directing class resentment away from
the real elites, Hillary Clinton has gone beyond her more familiar adoption of
the ruthless, sociopathic say-anything, dirty tricks politics of her erstwhile
Rovian right wing enemies. She is reinforcing the conservative attempt to equate
manhood with belligerence and predation. In addition, she is trotting out the
well worn but still effective propaganda technique employed by this country's
actual ruling oligarchy of wealth -- reducing class to personal style, taste, or
the specific products people consume (brie versus Velveeta). Those who actually
own or wield control over our shared resources are rendered invisible in this
rhetorical sleight of hand.
Barack Obama stands in stark contrast to the
attitude of the Clinton campaign. His guiding political ethos has always been
one of bridging but not overlooking divisions, while privileging dialogue,
debate, and negotiation over conquest. This is not only a new politics. It is a
new masculinity, one that is inclusive of those panhuman qualities previously
disowned and projected onto women. It remains to be seen if Hillary Clinton,
with her Hobbesian hard-on, will succeed in turning the Denver convention into a
war of all against all. If so, the life span of the Democratic Party may be
nasty, brutish, and short. ++
Stephen J. Ducat, Ph.D., is a clinical
psychologist from the San Francisco Bay Area, and has published widely on the
psychology of politics. His most recent book is The Wimp Factor: Gender Gaps,
Holy Wars, and the Politics of Anxious Masculinity.
Pragmatic Politics, Forged on the South Side
JO
BECKER and CHRISTOPHER DREW, New York Times
May 11, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/11/us/politics/11chicago.html
In August 1999, Barack Obama strolled amid the floats and bands making
their way down Martin Luther King Drive on Chicago's South Side. Billed as the
largest African-American parade in the country, the summer rite was a draw over
the years to boxing heroes like Muhammad Ali and jazz greats like Duke
Ellington. It was also a must-stop for the city's top politicians.
Back
then, Mr. Obama, a state senator who was contemplating a run for Congress, was
so little-known in the community's black neighborhoods that it was hard to find
more than a few dozen people to walk with him, recalled Al Kindle, one of his
advisers at the time. Mr. Obama was trounced a year later in the Congressional
race — branded as an aloof outsider more at home in the halls of Harvard than in
the rough wards of Chicago politics.
But by 2006, Mr. Obama had remade
his political fortunes. He was a freshman United States senator on the cusp of
deciding to take on the formidable Hillary Rodham Clinton and embark on a
long-shot White House run. When the parade wound its way through the South Side
that summer, Mr. Obama was its grand marshal.
The secret of his
transformation, which has brought him to the brink of claiming the Democratic
presidential nomination, can be described as the politics of maximum unity.
He moved from his leftist Hyde Park base to more centrist circles; he
forged early alliances with the good-government reform crowd only to be embraced
later by the city's all-powerful Democratic bosses; he railed against
pork-barrel politics but engaged in it when needed; and he empathized with the
views of his Palestinian friends before adroitly courting the city's politically
potent Jewish community.
To broaden his appeal to African-Americans, Mr.
Obama had to assiduously court older black leaders entrenched in Chicago's ward
politics while selling himself as a young, multicultural bridge to the wider
political world.
"There are some people who say he's not strong enough on
this or that, that he's wishy-washy, that he's trying to have it both ways,"
said Abner J. Mikva, a former congressman and mentor to Mr. Obama. "But he's not
looking for how to exclude the people who don't agree with him. He's looking for
ways to make the tent as large as possible."
Mr. Obama's ability to
replicate the eclectic coalition he built in Chicago and expand it to the
national stage has allowed the one-term senator to match the Clintons at their
signature game: collecting influential friends and supporters.
An
untraditional politician who at times uses traditional political tactics, Mr.
Obama, 46, was portrayed in dozens of interviews with political leaders and
longtime associates in Chicago as the ultimate pragmatist, a deliberate thinker
who fashions carefully nuanced positions that manage to win him support from
people with divergent views.
"Most Americans are getting a small glimmer
into the rough and tumble world of the South Side of Chicago politics, which is
very, very difficult to navigate," said Representative Jesse L. Jackson Jr., an
Illinois Democrat and ally of Mr. Obama's. But Mr. Obama did it with skill:
"It's very unusual to have various factions agreeing with you and your
politics," Mr. Jackson added.
Others see his deft movements as a
politician's shifting of positions and alliances for strategic advantage,
leaving some disappointed and baffled about where he really stands.
"He
has a pattern of forming relationships with various communities and as he takes
his next step up, kind of distancing himself from them and then positioning
himself as the bridge," said Ali Abunimah, a Palestinian-American author and
co-founder of the online publication Electronic Intifada, who became acquainted
with Mr. Obama in Chicago.
Even moments that supporters see as his
boldest are tempered by his political caution. The forceful speech he delivered
in 2002 against the impending Iraq invasion — a speech that has helped define
him nationally — was threaded with an unusual mantra for a 1960s-style antiwar
rally: "I'm not opposed to all wars." It was a refrain Mr. Obama had tested on
his political advisers, and it was a display of his ability to speak to the
audience before him while keeping in mind the broader audience to
come.
Perfect for Hyde Park
When Judson H. Miner
invited a third-year Harvard Law School student named Barack Obama to lunch at
the Thai Star Cafe in Chicago before his 1991 graduation, Mr. Miner thought he
was recruiting the 29-year-old to work for his boutique civil rights law firm.
Instead, Mr. Obama recruited him.
Mr. Obama made it clear that he was
less interested in a job than in learning the political lay of the land from a
man who had served at the right hand of the city's first black mayor, Harold
Washington. Mr. Miner, who had helped with the historic 1983 election of Mr.
Washington and served as his corporation counsel, proved a willing tutor.
The confident younger man "cross-examined" Mr. Miner about how Mr.
Washington had managed to emerge from an election riven by bigotry to form a
governing coalition in which he "got along with all these different types of
folks," Mr. Miner recalled.
Mr. Obama, who had spent time in Chicago as
a community organizer in the 1980s and already knew he wanted to run for office,
openly weighed the pros and cons of working for the law firm. On the one hand it
was beloved by many of the city's liberals and black leaders for its work on
issues like voting rights and housing equality. On the other, the firm had
clashed with Chicago's powerful mayor, Richard M. Daley, who presided then and
now over the city's sprawling Democratic organization.
"During the
course of our talking, it came out that people who knew he was having lunch with
me were trying to convince him that this was the worst place for him to go. He
shared this with me — he was amused," Mr. Miner said, laughing. "This isn't
where you land if you want to curry favor with the Democratic power
structure."
It was, however, exactly where an aspiring politician might
land if he happened to want to run for office from Hyde Park, a neighborhood
with a long history of electing reform-minded politicians independent of the
city's legendary Democratic machine. Mr. Obama chose to put down roots in the
neighborhood after graduating law school and marrying Michelle Robinson, a
Chicago native and fellow lawyer.
A tight-knit community that runs
through the South Side, Hyde Park is a liberal bastion of integration in what is
otherwise one of the nation's most segregated cities. Mayor Washington had
called it home, as did whites who marched with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. and wealthy black entrepreneurs a generation removed from the civil rights
battles of the 1960s.
At its heart is the University of Chicago; at its
borders are poor, predominately black neighborhoods blighted by rundown
buildings and vacant lots. For Mr. Obama, who was born in Hawaii to a white
Kansan mother and an African father and who spent part of his childhood in
Indonesia, it was a perfect fit.
"He felt completely comfortable in Hyde
Park," said Martha Minow, his former law professor and a mentor. "It's a place
where you don't have to wear a label on your forehead. You can go to a bookstore
and there's the homeless person and there's the professor."
Mr. Obama
quickly grounded himself in the community. He led a successful drive that
registered nearly 150,000 black voters for the 1992 campaign. He became a
part-time professor at the University of Chicago Law School. And, in 1993, he
finally decided to join the law offices of Miner, Barnhill &
Galland.
The choice sent a signal that Mr. Obama was "allying himself
with the independents, which is what you have to be if you're going to be
elected from the Hyde Park area," said Don Rose, a longtime Democratic political
consultant.
Making Connections
The decision to
accept Mr. Miner's job offer quickly paid off. By the time Mr. Obama announced
his candidacy for the Illinois Senate in 1995 — at the very Hyde Park hotel
where Mr. Washington had kicked off his mayoral campaign — he had cultivated a
network of influential supporters.
Mr. Miner was "enormously helpful" in
introducing Mr. Obama to the liberal coalition of blacks and whites that had
helped elect Mr. Washington, said Valerie Jarrett, a longtime friend and close
adviser. "It brought in a whole new circle of people."
Mr. Obama
cultivated clients like Bishop Arthur M. Brazier, the influential pastor of an
18,000-member black church and founding president of the Woodlawn Organization,
which focuses on improving conditions for blacks in a neighborhood adjacent to
Hyde Park. The two men began talking politics over tennis games at Chicago's
elite East Bank Club, Mr. Brazier recalled.
Mr. Obama also worked on
housing redevelopment projects involving Antoin Rezko, who became one of Mr.
Obama's most generous donors. Mr. Rezko is currently on trial for corruption
charges unrelated to Mr. Obama.
It was through the law firm that Mr.
Obama met Marilyn Katz, who gave him entry into another activist network: the
foot soldiers of the white student and black power movements that helped define
Chicago in the 1960s.
As a leader of Students for a Democratic Society
then, Ms. Katz organized Vietnam War protests, throwing nails in the street to
thwart the police. But like many from that era, Ms. Katz had gone on to become a
politically active member of the Chicago establishment, playing in a regular
poker game with Mr. Miner while working as a consultant to his nemesis, Mayor
Daley.
"For better or worse, this is Chicago," said Ms. Katz, who has
held fund-raisers for Mr. Obama at her home. "Everyone is connected to
everyone."
Mr. Obama was comfortable attending performances of the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra with city scions like Newton N. Minow, the father of
Martha Minow. Mr. Minow, who had served in the Kennedy administration and
managed the white-shoe law firm of Sidley Austin when Mr. Obama worked there
after his first year of law school, began introducing him to Chicago's business
titans.
Mr. Obama also fit in at Hyde Park's fringes, among university
faculty members like Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dohrn, unrepentant members of the
radical Weather Underground that bombed the United States Capitol and the
Pentagon to protest the Vietnam War. Mr. Obama was introduced to the couple in
1995 at a meet-and-greet they held for him at their home, aides said.
Now, along with Mr. Obama's former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright
Jr., Mr. Ayers has become a prime exhibit in the effort by Mr. Obama's
presidential rivals to highlight what could be politically radioactive
associations. In 2001, Mr. Ayers said he did not regret the Weatherman bombings.
Even so, in Hyde Park, he and his wife were viewed favorably for their work in
addressing city problems. Mr. Ayers was just "a guy who lives in my
neighborhood," Mr. Obama said recently.
The two men were involved in
efforts to reform the city's education system. They appeared together on
academic panels, including one organized by Michelle Obama to discuss the
juvenile justice system, an area of mutual concern. Mr. Ayers's book on the
subject won a rave review in The Chicago Tribune by Mr. Obama, who called it "a
searing and timely account."
Running and Winning
Mr. Obama further expanded his list of allies by joining the
boards of two well-known charities: the Woods Fund and the Joyce Foundation.
These memberships have allowed him to help direct tens of millions of
dollars in grants over the years to groups that championed the environment,
campaign finance reform, gun control and other causes supported by the liberal
network he was cultivating. Mr. Brazier's group, the Woodlawn Organization,
received money, for instance, as did antipoverty groups with ties to organized
labor like Chicago Acorn, whose endorsement Mr. Obama sought and won in his
State Senate race.
On the campaign trail, Mr. Obama hewed closely to
liberal orthodoxy, positions that have become controversial in the presidential
race. A candidate questionnaire from one liberal group, for instance, detailed
his views on hot-button issues like the death penalty (opposed) and a ban on
handguns (in favor).
Today, Mr. Obama espouses more centrist views and
says a campaign aide had incorrectly characterized his views on those issues — a
shift that does not sit well with some in the group, the Independent Voters of
Illinois Independent Precinct Organization.
"We certainly thought those
were his positions," said David Igasaki, the group's chairman, who noted Mr.
Obama had also interviewed with the group. "We understand that people change
their views. But it sort of bothers me that he doesn't acknowledge that. He
tries to say that was never his view."
In any event, the group endorsed
Mr. Obama, and he was easily elected to the State Senate in 1996.
In the
state Capitol in Springfield, Mr. Obama was guided through the political thicket
by powerful mentors. It was not long into Mr. Obama's first term when Mr. Mikva
recalled getting a telephone call from Paul Simon, the recently retired United
States senator. Mr. Mikva had become friends with Mr. Obama after returning from
a stint as White House counsel for President Bill Clinton to teach law at the
university.
Mr. Simon suggested Mr. Mikva play matchmaker between Mr.
Obama and Emil Jones Jr., the powerful Democratic leader of the State Senate.
For the better part of a quarter century, Mr. Mikva had played in a golfing
foursome that included Mr. Jones.
" 'Say, our friend Barack Obama has a
chance to push this campaign finance bill through,' " Mr. Mikva recalled Mr.
Simon's telling him. " 'Why don't you call your friend Emil Jones and tell him
how good he is.' "
Mr. Mikva obliged, and in 1998, Mr. Obama passed one
of his signature achievements in the Illinois Senate: sweeping legislation that
banned most gifts from lobbyists and the personal use of campaign money by state
lawmakers. His Hyde Park base applauded, but Mr. Obama would soon learn the
limits of his appeal.
Learning His Lessons
The
next year, Mr. Obama called Mr. Minow, his former boss, asking to see him. Mr.
Obama was eyeing the Hyde Park Congressional seat held by Bobby L. Rush, a
former Black Panther leader. "Are you nuts?" Mr. Minow recalled telling the
younger man. "Barack, I think this is a mistake."
Mr. Minow flipped
through his Rolodex, calling black businesspeople and asking them if they would
help finance Mr. Obama's bid. He said he received a uniform answer: "No — let
him wait his turn." Nevertheless, the impatient Mr. Obama jumped into the race.
Brimming with confidence, he equated Mr. Rush with "a politics that is
rooted in the past" and cast himself as someone who could reach beyond the
racial divide to get things done. But it quickly became clear that while he had
solidified his support among Hyde Park's denizens, he had not built enough
bridges to the surrounding black communities.
That failure was apparent
on the summer day in 1999 when he walked through the South Side during the Bud
Billiken Parade and Picnic. Other politicians rode on colorful floats, trailed
by throngs. But Mr. Obama was on foot as he made his way through the cheering
paradegoers who had shown up to celebrate black pride.
"People were
asking, who is he?" said Mr. Kindle, who served as one of his emissaries to the
black community. "You could see how humbling it was in his face."
The
campaign, as Mr. Mikva put it, was "a disaster from beginning to end." Yet in
ultimately losing, Mr. Obama learned that he needed to expand his base to be
able to bounce back onto a larger stage, according to Mr. Mikva and others. "The
beauty of Obama," Mr. Kindle said, "is that he was willing to be taken to the
woodshed" and "allow himself to grow."
Mr. Obama, who had a reputation in
Springfield as standoffish ("He socialized, but he did not hang out," Mr. Kindle
said), began making courtesy calls to black politicians and members of the
clergy. He assured them that he had nothing against Mr. Rush and that "it was
all cool," said Ron Lester, who was Mr. Obama's pollster during the race.
Mr. Jones, the State Senate president who by then had become Mr. Obama's
political benefactor, stepped up to help as well. The two were an unlikely pair:
the Harvard-educated lawyer and the former sewer inspector who had risen through
the ranks of Chicago ward politics. Mr. Jones let Mr. Obama take center stage on
legislation important to the black community, like forcing the police to tape
interrogations.
His willingness to negotiate — the interrogation law
ended up with a host of exceptions — gained him a reputation as a pragmatist who
could sell compromise as a victory to all sides, said Peter Baroni, then the
legal counsel to the Republican caucus.
"He took what came into the fray
as a very leftist bill, a very leftist proposal, a very non-law-enforcement
bill," Mr. Baroni said, "and he appeased law enforcement and brought everyone
around to support it."
Before his loss to Mr. Rush, Mr. Obama's typical
response for requests for state money would be a lecture, recalled Dan Shomon, a
former Obama aide. "He would say something like: 'You know what, you're not
going to get your money, and you know why? Let me explain the state budget,' "
Mr. Shomon said. "Then he'd give a 20-minute treatise on how the Republicans
wouldn't raise taxes, so there wasn't any money to do what they wanted to do."
Now, Mr. Obama more eagerly met the demands for spending earmarks for
churches and community groups in his district, said State Senator Donne E.
Trotter, then the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee. "I
know this firsthand, because the community groups in his district stopped coming
to me," Mr. Trotter said.
Typical of Mr. Obama's earmarks was a $100,000
grant for a youth center at a Catholic church run by the Rev. Michael Pfleger, a
controversial priest who was one of the few South Side clergymen to back Mr.
Obama against Mr. Rush.
Father Pfleger has long worked with South Side
political leaders to reduce crime and improve the community. But he has drawn
fire from some quarters for defending the Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan
and inviting him to speak at his church. Father Pfleger, who did not return
calls for comment, is one of the religious leaders whose "faith testimonials"
Mr. Obama has posted on his presidential campaign Web site.
David
Axelrod, the chief strategist for the Obama presidential campaign, said that
Father Pfleger was "remaking the face" of Chicago's South Side and that all of
Mr. Obama's earmarks went to worthy programs like his.
With his black
base more secure, Mr. Obama began in 2002 to contemplate a run for the United
States Senate.
"I had lunch with him at the Quadrangle Club, and we were
discussing the different bases he had to touch. I said, 'You have to talk to the
Jackson boys first,' " Mr. Mikva recalled, referring to Representative Jackson
and his father, the Rev. Jesse Jackson. "Because Jesse Jackson Jr. had his eye
on that seat. He said, 'I know. I'm working on that.' "
Mr. Obama soon
sat down with the younger Mr. Jackson at the 312 Chicago restaurant. Michelle
Obama had attended high school with Mr. Jackson's sister and been close to the
family for years, and the congressman had attended the Obamas' wedding. "He
said, 'Jesse, if you're running for the U.S. Senate I'm not going to run,' " Mr.
Jackson recalled.
But Mr. Jackson had already decided against it, and he
gave Mr. Obama his blessing.
A Pivotal
Moment
Betty Lu Saltzman, a Democratic doyenne from Chicago's
lakefront liberal crowd, convened a small group of activists, including Ms.
Katz, in her living room to organize a rally to protest the United States'
impending invasion of Iraq. It was late September 2002, and Mr. Obama was on the
top of Ms. Saltzman's list of desired speakers.
She first met him when
he ran the black voter registration drive in the 1992 election, and was so
impressed that she immediately took him under her wing, introducing him to
wealthy donors and talking him up to friends like Mr. Axelrod. But with just a
few days to go before the rally, Ms. Saltzman was having trouble reaching Mr.
Obama. Finally, she said she left word with his wife.
But before Mr.
Obama called her back, he dialed up some advice.
With his possible run
for the United States Senate, he wanted to speak with Mr. Axelrod and others
about the ramifications of broadcasting his reservations about a war the public
was fast getting behind. An antiwar speech would play to his Chicago liberal
base, and could help him in what was expected to be a hotly contested primary,
they told him, but it also could hurt him in the general election.
"This
was a call to assess just how risky was this," said Pete Giangreco, who along
with Mr. Axelrod described the conversation. When Mr. Obama tossed out the idea
of calling it a "dumb war," Mr. Giangreco said he cringed. "I remember thinking,
'this puts us in the weak defense category, doesn't it?' "
The rally was
held on Oct. 2, 2002, in Federal Plaza before nearly 2,000 people. On the podium
before speaking, Mr. Obama joked about the dated nature of crowd-pleasing
protest songs like "Give Peace a Chance." " 'Can't they play something else?' "
Ms. Saltzman recalled his saying.
The speech, friends say, was vintage
Obama, a bold but nuanced message that has become the touchstone of his
presidential campaign: While he said the Iraq war would lead to "an occupation
of undetermined length with undetermined costs and undetermined consequences,"
he was also careful to emphasize that there were times when military
intervention was necessary.
"What's fascinating about Barack is what he's
trying to do is reframe and change the discourse so you build support for
liberal alternatives within the electorate," said Will Burns, a former aide whom
Mr. Obama also consulted on the speech. "He has an ability to frame stuff so
it's not an all or nothing proposition."
Still, Mr. Obama's refrain about
supporting some wars perplexed some in the crowd.
An event organizer, Carl
Davidson, recalled that a friend "nudged me and said, 'Who does he think this
speech is for? It's not for this crowd.' I thought, 'This guy's got bigger fish
to fry.' At the time, though, I was only thinking about the U.S.
Senate."
Straddling Two Worlds
As Mr. Obama moved
closer to running, he paid a visit to James S. Crown and his father, Lester,
billionaire investors who presided over a sprawling Chicago business dynasty and
prominent leaders in the Jewish community.
As the meeting ended, the
younger Mr. Crown said, his father — who is "fairly hawkish" about Israel's
security — was noncommittal about Mr. Obama. But, James Crown said, "I pulled
him down to my office, and I said, 'Hey, look, I think you should run, and I
want you to win.' "
In courting families like the Crowns, Mr. Obama was
gaining entree into the upper echelon of the city's corporate boardrooms, a ripe
source of campaign money. But he was also seeking to broaden his appeal to
Jewish voters, and he was wading more deeply into one of the touchiest issues in
American politics: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
For years, the
Obamas had been regular dinner guests at the Hyde Park home of Rashid Khalidi, a
Middle East scholar at the University of Chicago and an adviser to the
Palestinian delegation to the 1990s peace talks. Mr. Khalidi said the talk would
often turn to the Middle East, and he talked with Mr. Obama about issues like
living conditions in the occupied territories. In 2000, the Khalidis held a
fund-raiser for Mr. Obama during his Congressional campaign. Both Mr. Khalidi
and Mr. Abunimah, of the Electronic Intifada, said Mr. Obama had spoken at the
fund-raiser and had called for the United States to adopt a more "evenhanded
approach" to the Palestinian-Israel conflict.
Still, Mr. Khalidi said
ascertaining Mr. Obama's precise position was often difficult. "You may come
away thinking, 'Wow, he agrees with me,' " he said. "But later, when you get
home and think about it, you are not sure."
A.J. Wolf, a Hyde Park rabbi
who is a friend of Mr. Obama's and has often invited Mr. Khalidi to speak at his
synagogue, said Mr. Obama had disappointed him by not being more assertive about
the need for both Israel and the Palestinians to move toward peace. "He's played
all those notes right for the Israel lobby," said Mr. Wolf, who is sometimes
critical of Israel.
During the Senate campaign, Mr. Obama joined in a
"Walk for Israel" rally along Lake Michigan on Israel Solidarity Day. The Crowns
and other Jewish leaders raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for him.
Several days before the primary in 2004, some of his Jewish supporters took
offense that Mr. Obama had not taken the opportunity on a campaign questionnaire
to denounce Yasir Arafat, the leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization,
or to strongly support Israel's building of a security fence.
But in a
sign of how far Mr. Obama had come in his coalition-building, friends from the
American Israel Political Action Committee, the national pro-Israel lobbying
group, helped him rush out a response to smooth over the flap.
In an
e-mail message, Mr. Obama blamed a staff member for the oversight, and expressed
the hope that "none of this has raised any questions on your part regarding my
fundamental commitment to Israel's security." Mr. Abunimah has written of
running into the candidate around that time and has said that Mr. Obama told
him: "I'm sorry I haven't said more about Palestine right now, but we are in a
tough primary race. I'm hoping that when things calm down I can be more
upfront."
The Obama camp has denied Mr. Abunimah's account. Mr. Khalidi,
who is now the director of the Middle East Institute at Columbia University,
said, "I'm unhappy about the positions he's taken, but I can't say I'm terribly
disappointed." He added: "People think he's a saint. He's not. He's a
politician."
Mr. Crown, for his part, could not be more pleased. Since
Mr. Obama was elected to the Senate Mr. Crown said that even his father had been
won over, helping to arrange meetings for Mr. Obama in a visit to Israel. James
Crown said he had "never had even the slightest glimmer of concern that Barack
wasn't terrific" on Israel — a view that Mr. Obama jokingly reinforced at a
meeting last year in Mr. Crown's office.
As Mr. Mikva recounted it,
after discussing a lukewarm response by more conservative Jews to some of Mr.
Obama's comments, "I turned to Barack and said, 'Your name could be Chaim
Weizmann, the founder of the Jewish state, and some of these Jewish Republicans
wouldn't vote for you.' " And, Mr. Mikva said, "He joked, 'Well, you know my
name is "Baruch" Obama.' "
But for all of Mr. Obama's attentiveness to
Jewish concerns about Israel, Republican Party officials have made it clear that
they think this is an area of vulnerability. Though Mr. Obama has condemned
Hamas, a militant Palestinian group, as a terrorist organization, just last week
Senator John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee for president, suggested
that the group wanted to see Mr. Obama in the White House. Mr. Obama denounced
that suggestion as a "smear."
Embracing the
Machine
When Mr. Obama delivered a now-famous speech at the 2004
Democratic National Convention that catapulted him onto the national stage,
sitting in the audience was Mayor Daley of Chicago.
As Mr. Obama spoke,
Mr. Daley and other Illinois officials "were just as wide-eyed as the thousands
of conventiongoers," said James A. DeLeo, a Democratic leader in the Illinois
Senate.
The mayor and the senator had some ties, but they had never had
a close relationship. Mr. Obama's friend Ms. Jarrett had worked for Mr. Daley,
and had hired Michelle Obama into the administration in the early 1990s. Yet Mr.
Obama had run multiple times as a candidate without the mayor's
help.
Now, as Mr. Obama ascended to the larger stage, he also took the
final step in his evolution from Hyde Park independent to mainstream Chicago
politician, establishing an overt alliance with Mr. Daley. "Over the years,
Senator Obama and I have been like-minded in most of the issues facing Chicago,"
the mayor said in a statement.
His former chief of staff, Gary Chico,
said the mayor's alliance with the senator was "based on mutual interest and
what the mayor saw in the man. They're both pragmatic."
But Mr. Obama's
closer relationship with the mayor, coupled with some of his endorsements of
Democrats who championed the kind of patronage politics Mr. Obama had once
denounced, left some supporters feeling as though he was straying from his roots
in the reform movement.
Last year, Mr. Mikva said he took Mr. Obama
aside to complain about his endorsement of an alderwoman who had supported Mr.
Obama in his United States Senate run and was the focus of newspaper reports
about questionable spending on a $19.5 million cultural center. Mr. Mikva said
Mr. Obama's response was simple: "Sometimes you pay your debts." Early last
year, Mr. Obama endorsed Mr. Daley in his re-election bid, asserting that
Chicago had blossomed during his tenure.
Mr. Miner, the mentor who had
brought Mr. Obama into his law firm in the early 1990s, said he remained an
enthusiastic Obama supporter. But, when it comes to some of Mr. Obama's
endorsements, "I don't know who he's listening to," Mr. Miner said.
"I've thought sometimes that I should have picked up the phone and
called him," Mr. Miner said. "Why did he think he needed to do
this?"
Just before Mr. Obama complimented Mr. Daley, the mayor did
something unusual, as well. He broke with his tradition of remaining neutral in
Democratic primaries and threw his support behind Mr. Obama's presidential bid.
++
Handwriting of Hillary Clinton, John McCain and Barack Obama May Speak Volumes
Experts see telltale markings of personality in
penmanship samples from the presidential candidates.
Faye Fiore, Los
Angeles Times Staff Writer
May 13, 2008
An important aspect of the presidential race so far has been the
generational divide, with Barack Obama doing very well with younger voters and
Hillary Clinton drawing strong support from those who are older. A similar split
can be expected in a general election race between Senator Obama and John
McCain.
However the election ultimately turns out, the Obama campaign has
tapped into a constituency that holds powerful implications for the future of
American politics. The youngest of these voters, those ranging in age from
roughly the late teens to the early 30s, are part of the so-called millennial
generation.
This is a generation that is in danger of being left out of
the American dream — the first American generation to do less well economically
than their parents. And that economic uncertainty appears to have played a big
role in shaping their views of government and politics.
A number of
studies, including new ones by the Center for American Progress in Washington
and by Demos, a progressive think tank in New York, have shown that Americans in
this age group are faced with a variety of challenges that are tougher than
those faced by young adults over the past few decades. Among the challenges are
worsening job prospects, lower rates of health insurance coverage and higher
levels of debt.
We know that the generation immediately preceding the
Millennials is struggling. Men who are now in their 30s, the prime age for
raising a family, earn less money than members of their fathers' generation did
at the same age. In 1974, the median income for men in their 30s (using today's
inflation-adjusted dollars) was about $40,000. The figure for men in their 30s
now is $35,000.
It's not hard to understand why surveys show that
overwhelming percentages of Americans believe the country is on the wrong track.
The American dream is on life support. Polls show that dwindling numbers of
Americans (in some cases as few as a third of all respondents) believe their
children will end up better off than they are.
The upshot of all this is
ominous for conservatives. The number of young people in the millennial
generation (loosely defined as those born in the 1980s and 90s) is somewhere
between 80 million and 95 million. That represents a ton of potential votes — in
this election and years to come. And the American Progress study shows that
those young people do not feel that they have been treated kindly by
conservative policies or principles.
According to the study: "Millennials
mostly reject the conservative viewpoint that government is the problem, and
that free markets always produce the best results for society. Indeed,
Millennials' views are more progressive than those of other age groups today,
and are more progressive than previous generations when they were
younger."
The Demos study pointed to the very difficult employment
environment confronting young adults. Fewer jobs offer the benefits of paid
vacations, health coverage or pensions. And moving up the employment ladder is
much harder.
As the study noted, "The well-paying middle-management jobs
that characterized the work force up to the late-1970s have been
eviscerated."
The longer-term outlook is depressing.
Except for
the expected continuing demand for registered nurses, the occupations projected
to add the most jobs over the next several years do not offer much in the way of
pay, benefits or career advancement. Demos listed the top five occupations in
terms of anticipated job growth: registered nurses, retail sales, customer
service reps, food preparers and office clerks.
Often saddled with debt,
and with their job prospects gloomy, young Americans feel their government ought
to be doing more to enhance their prospects. They want increased investments in
education, health care and initiatives aimed at expanding the economy and
fostering the growth of good jobs.
The American Progress study found that
Millennials are more likely to support universal health coverage than any other
age group over the past 30 years. By huge percentages, they want improvements in
health coverage and support for education, even if it means increases in
taxes.
The landscape is changing before our eyes. Younger voters
struggling with the enormous costs of a college education, or trying to raise
families in a bleak employment environment, or using their credit cards to cover
everyday expenses like food or energy costs are not much interested in hearing
that the government to which they pay taxes can do little or nothing to help
them.
Whether young Americans can shift the balance of the presidential
election is an open question. But there is very little doubt that over the next
several years they are capable of loosening the tremendous grip that
conservatives have had on the levers of American power.
++
Humbly Submitted: A New Stump Speech for Hillary
Clinton
Peggy Drexler, HuffPo
May 9, 2008
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peggy-drexler/humbly-submitted-a-new-st_b_100987.html
Dear Senator Clinton:
When I heard that you have now spent about
$12 million of your own money on what is looking increasingly like a
mathematical impossibility, I had a thought.
Since you're paying for this
anyway, and the odds of winning are about the same as W and Michael Moore going
out for a beer after an afternoon of brush cutting, why not say exactly what you
feel?
Think about it: simple truth as a campaign strategy. What do you
have to lose?
I've taken the liberty of putting together a new stump
speech.
It's great to be here in (place).
I can't believe I'm
standing in the back of a pick up truck. Never owned one - probably never
will.
But what am I going to do here in the heartland -- stand on the
hood of a Volvo?
As you may have noticed, even with a world-class IQ, and
an Ivy League law degree, I'm all of a sudden dropping my g's: workin' hard,
talkin' to folks, doin' all I can for America.
I'm not sure how I get
away with that. You know I don't talk like this on the Senate floor,
right?
I need to set some things straight today.
First is our
security.
There are still people out there who would like to kill
us.
There aren't a lot of them. But they want to get us so badly that
they're OK with killing themselves in the process.
We've had a pretty
good run since 9-11.
I really don't know if we have Al Qaeda's home
office stuck in caves, or if they are just lying low and enjoying our agony in
Iraq.
I don't know how many genuine close calls we've had, or how many
were morons who thought they could bring down the Golden Gate Bridge with bolt
cutters.
Sooner or later, somebody is going to try to hurt us
again.
I hope I can stop them. It doesn't matter what time the call comes
in. I'll do the best I can.
What kills me is that I know I contributed to
the threat.
I voted to invade Iraq. And I still feel terrible about
that.
As it turns out, this is either the dumbest administration in
American history, or the most cynically dishonest. Maybe both.
Who
knew?
The Secretary of State went to the UN and said he had evidence that
a certified lunatic was trying to build a nuclear bomb.
I thought I
should vote not to let that happen.
Now: if you elect me, I have a
terrible choice.
We can leave.
But the Iraqi Army is a joke. They
are never going to shoot at guys from the neighborhood. And they won't attack
anything unless we bomb the b'jesus out of it first.
If I pull the
troops, the Sunnis and Shiites are going to fight like two mean dogs that have
hated each other for years - and just found a hole in the fence.
We'll
watch it start from the windows of the last plane out.
Or:
I can
keep troops there, and more Americans will die.
This isn't going to be
like Korea, where we call a 50-year time out and leave behind thousands of
soldiers to play cards.
This time, it's not ideology. It's oil.
As
long as the oil is up for grabs, this fight will never stop. For the next 50
years, we'll just be referees with guns.
As for the price of oil, I know
I talked about taking on OPEC and the oil companies. But that isn't really going
to happen.
First, OPEC no longer cares what a U.S. president says.
Of the 13 members, nine countries tolerate us and four hate us. The
president of one of them told the UN that our current leader is the devil and
smells like sulfur.
OPEC used to have to deal with us because we were the
only super-economy in town. If we went south, so did crude prices.
Now
that China and India are talking about putting billions of people in cars, OPEC
can sell to us, without listening to us.
It's an all-time seller's
market.
Blaming the oil companies makes great sound bites.
I love
using my tough-girl voice to say things like: "I'm going to take on the oil
companies that are getting rich on the backs of honest, hardworking
Americans."
That's great stuff.
But if they were doing anything
wrong, we would have caught them by now. They're just in the right place at the
right time.
We'll call them into Senate hearings and slap them around
some for the cameras. They'll stick to their talking points. And then we'll all
go back to work.
It's one of the longest-running shows in
politics.
I knew I was going to take a lot of abuse for suggesting they
pay for a gas-tax holiday.
The economists say it's useless. The
opposition says it's pandering.
I prefer to think of it as a nice
gesture.
If you don't want the $35.00 - fine.
I also said I would
take on the oil traders.
I really can't do that either.
Oil is now
a volatile, global, tradable asset.
And when you have big-money
volatility, you have speculators.
These are very smart people who figure
out how to beat the market and crush innocent bystanders.
Like the dot
coms, Enron and drive-through mortgages, we're probably going to find out
something shady was going on.
But by the time we figure it out and pass
our next rounds of too-late legislation, other very smart people will be working
on something new.
That, my friends, is never going to
change.
There is a reason why these people make hundreds of millions or
even billions of dollars, and the people we depend on to watch them are working
for government pay.
Windmills and solar panels aren't going to get us out
of this. It's all about the consumption.
The only thing that will do
enough, fast enough to change our oil dependence is to make huge changes in how
we live.
And you hate that.
I'm talking about outlawing the
manufacture of any car that doesn't get more than 50 miles a gallon.
I'm
talking about slower cars and smaller houses.
I'm talking about a
national crash program to build nuclear plants - in spite of those who are
afraid of them and in places you don't want them.
I'm talking about
sacrificing things that we've been telling you all your lives are yours just
because you're American.
Other countries want those same things. And now
they can afford them.
We're going to have to learn to share.
And
you're not crazy about that either.
A few other things.
I feel
terrible about those of you who have lost jobs.
I know I told you I can
save them. But I can't.
The global economy isn't going to go away, and
the jobs aren't coming back. In fact, we're going lose more.
We don't run
the world like we used to. It's not that we're getting weaker. Others are
getting stronger.
And that's good. People who do business with each other
tend not to shoot at each other.
Unless we have trade agreements with
Brazil, Russia, India, China and comers like Indonesia and Ireland, we're going
to be on the outside looking in.
Besides, trade agreements are just one
factor in lost jobs.
Technology is a much bigger one. For decades now,
it's been helping us to do more things with fewer people.
What do you
want me to do about that? Sanction Microsoft?
The only thing you can do
is figure out a way to be where the demand is.
I'll try to help you with
that.
But I'm not going to dismantle NAFTA. And you know it.
For
the record, I don't like guns.
I see no reason why we should allow anyone
to make and sell weapons that have no other purpose than to kill
people.
I see even less reason why anybody should be allowed to sell
assault weapons that have no other purpose than to kill a lot of people at the
same time.
And I really don't think you hunters in Pennsylvania and Ohio
believe that if we take assault rifles off the street, we'll be coming after
your deer rifles next.
But I'm scared to death of the NRA. These are
tough people. They're organized. And they have money.
They beat Al Gore
in the state where he grew up.
As long as they have a say in whether or
not I win this state, I'll keep telling you how my father taught me to
shoot.
But seriously: when do you think was the last time I touched a
gun?
I don't hunt. And I have Secret Service protection. Those guys do
have the guns.
Actually, there were times in my marriage when having a
gun handy would not have been such a good thing.
(Pause for
laughter)
On that score ...
I really appreciate that neither the
media nor my opponent has dwelled on the fact that my co-campaigner had repeated
sex with an unpaid 22 year old Intern in the house where we used to
live.
So far, you let me get away with putting my daughter out front to
say it's a private matter. That actually worked better than we thought it
would.
But I'm worried about the Republicans.
The 527 groups live
for this kind of thing.
If they can turn a war hero into someone soft on
terrorism, while their own guy can't prove he showed up for National Guard
service, think what they can do to us.
So:
I just thought I'd take
a shot here, and tell you the truth.
What the hell - it's my
money.
There is not much I can promise that I'm sure I can actually
deliver.
This job is not nearly as powerful as we like to say it
is.
So how about this?
If you elect me, I'll have good intentions,
be as honest as the job allows, try to keep you safe, and maybe make things a
little better.
Until then, I'll just keep workin', fightin' and doin' the
best I can.
God bless you. And God bless America.
Now get me off
this truck. ++
http://www.politicalwaves.net
"So keep fightin' for freedom and justice, beloveds, but don't
you forget to have fun doin' it. Lord, let your laughter ring forth. Be
outrageous, ridicule the fraidy-cats, rejoice in all the oddities that freedom
can produce. And when you get through kickin' ass and celebratin' the sheer joy
of a good fight, be sure to tell those who come after how much fun it
was."
~ Molly Ivins, 1944 - 2007
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