So that's that. As of today, 2016 will
officially be a race between the two most despised presidential
nominees in American history. One is a consistently neoliberal and
militaristic moderate conservative approved by Charles Koch and Dick
Cheney that claims to be the best choice for the country's
self-appointed liberal party, and the other is, well...you know
enough about him.
The circumstances that made this
possible are appropriately bizarre; one of these candidates won
through manipulation of the electoral system like has never been seen
before and outright defiance of the law, and the other one won
legitimately, but through arguably even
more unethical means.
But moving beyond the limited scope of
presidential politics in the US, things aren't looking good. The
climate continues to move towards catastrophic instability, with the
majority of people in control of the government of the country that
needs to address the problem most either adamant that it isn't an
issue at all or convinced that it isn't too important an issue.
After a period of roughly forty years
of tax reductions for the wealthy, free trade deals, nearly perpetual
military efforts, and cutting of aid for the lower classes on the
part of both parties, the legacy of the last Democratic Socialist
Americans elected in 1932 has been effectively demolished. Even with
the Affordable Care Act, 33 million Americans are living without
health care. Any limits to the amount of influence the super-wealthy
can have on the electoral system through campaign contributions are
now irrelevant. Six major corporations control 90% of the media that
Americans are exposed too. As of this month, income inequality in
America has reached a point never before seen in the history of the
country, with the top 0.1% owning as much wealth as the bottom 90%
combined. And worldwide, the top 0.1% own as much as the bottom 50%
of the population, up from 40% ten years ago.
And aside from all that, there are
things happening which uncomfortably resemble the state of the world
in 1932; starting five years ago with President Assad's overly
aggressive response to the Arab Spring uprisings, Syria's civil war,
along with the war in Iraq caused by the rise of ISIS, 65 million
people have been displaced worldwide. That's more refugees than at
any point in history.
The way societies in North America and
Europe are reacting to the influx of desperate people is equally
disturbing, with millions of white, mainly poor or working class
individuals in many countries accepting the nationalistic, xenophobic
manipulations from Trump and others as a way out of their
non-immigrant related problems. And whether such a degenerate brand
of politics will come out on top this November in spite of the
American electorate's increasingly remote resemblance of colonial
times very much remains to be seen; Hillary Clinton has forever lost
the respect and potential support of millions of voters, not just
former Bernie Sanders supporters, who were appalled by the massive
suppression of votes during the primaries and her legal
invincibility. She needs those voters, and they're not going to help
her when Trump starts to surpass her in important swing states and
maybe even in national polls.
And meanwhile in the economy, there are
strong signs that a recession is coming sometime this year. The
confirmation of imminent disaster may have come on June 23, when
Britain voted to leave the EU; the size of the eventual ramifications
aren't clear, but the decision will very soon result in many
investors around the world looking to their governments for financial
support as the economy weakens. It was predicted on June 24 by Chris
Hedges that this will lead to the Democratic Party being hurt in
November. As it was in 2008, says Hedges, Republicans in the senate
will reject any bailout of Wall Street because it's against the ideals of the
free market, while the Democrats will ignore the objections of both
the populists and the capitalists and help push for such an
entitlement.
When this happened eight years ago,
Obama's victory was all but guaranteed with his support for the
bailout in September 2008 because of the awkward and incoherent way
John McCain had objected to it during It's proposal on the senate
floor. Should history repeat itself with another financial collapse,
the exact opposite will occur this year. “The Democratic Party, by
rescuing Wall Street,” wrote Hedges in his
piece in Truthdig.com,
“will be unmasked as the handmaidens of the financial elite.”
As 1932 more or less repeats itself,
with the rise of reactionary politics and maybe even outright fascism
in many parts of the world, economic catastrophe, and an
environmental crisis to make the Dust Bowl seem minuscule, there will
not be another FDR to become president and help fix things in the
years to come. The state of our electoral and legal systems have
changed too much since then, and we're just not going to get
salvation that easily.
And so you all, of course, immediately
know the reaction appropriate: laughter.
That's right, laugh at it all. Laugh at
the media manipulation. Laugh at the DNC's deliberate limitations of
the number of debates. Laugh at the voter fraud, voter exclusion, and
refusal to count exit polls. Laugh at the contempt so many Democratic
leaders have expressed for Bernie Sanders and his ideas. Laugh at the
disregard for the law FBI director James Comey displayed in his
dismissal of Hillary Clinton's obvious criminal activity. Laugh at
every defender of the unjust system of the two pro-war, neoliberal
parties, because what you've seen for the past year or so (or maybe
decades farther back,) has been a big joke.
It was a joke whose punchline goes as
follows: the fate of a country is not determined by what any kind of
conventional wisdom imposed by the political and economic
establishment says about how a certain person has “lost that
election,” or how an idea “isn't realistic,” or how millions of
people who are seeing the ruling class destroy their democracy and
their planet should simply “fall in line” and allow the old
paradigm of inequality, lack of accountability, and endless excuses
to continue.
What happened in these past
five-and-a-half months can most simply be described as a group of
people, after being given a lot of money and power and other toys for
adults, were confronted by the population that gave them these toys
about their abuse of them. We tried to take their toys away, but they
of course refused, and now it's time for them to face the
consequences.
Inadvertently, through the last several
decades, as the banks, the corporations and the politicians have
carried on with their little game, the device that they use to
control the world has grown weak. And it's about to get a lot weaker.
To bring up an almost obligatory
subject when talking about American political revolutions, let us
think back to the election of 2000. After eight years of a Democratic
president that was called by Michael Moore “the best Republican
president we've ever had,” politics had grown disturbingly tribal;
despite all the evidence that Ralph Nader was vastly superior to Al
Gore on progressive issues, most liberals saw him as an enemy, a
benefit to Bush, a disturber of the peace, and even an extremist. Not
everybody thought this, but the party's corporate masters very
explicitly did, falsely accusing Nader of costing them the election
and shutting him out of the audience of one of the presidential
debates despite him having a ticket to it.
And they could do so from a comfortable
perch, too; their pseudo-progressive party was currently enjoying the
membership of 33% of the electorate, with 29% of the rest political
Independents and 28% Republicans. With support like that, it was easy
to marginalize those who genuinely wanted to fix the system with a smug “we're Democrats,
and we don't care what some radicals think, because we're the only
alternative to the very worst option.”
There's no telling where this could
have lead if Gore had been allowed to succeed Clinton as the
“liberal” representing a neoliberal party, but we know where Bush
took us; aside from the historic debt, massive violence, and
undermining of the constitution, the following years brought
some new hope. By 2007, Democratic membership was still at 33%, but many
Republicans had left their party, and Independents were at 34%. The
incredibly destructive conservative administration had also driven
the Democratic Party to the left, with the centrists among it no
longer able to criticize liberalism from the right (at least not
explicitly.)
But then something interesting
happened; after all the Obama fervor died down (the electorate was
35% Democratic in 2008, with only 31% of it Independent), and the
reality of he and the rest of the Democratic leadership's resistance
to change was made apparent, Independents again edged them out in
2009, with 35% to their 34%.
And here's where it gets scary, Hillary
and friends; since then, the gap has only been growing larger. When
the Democrats failed to pass universal health care in 2010 despite
having the majority in congress, their membership compared to
Independents became 33% to 36%. When the Obama administration
proposed cutting social security in 2011, that gap was at 32% to 37%.
When Obama was was re-elected in 2012 still without having ended the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, that gap had not changed from the year
before. When Obama wanted to prosecute the defender of the
constitution Edward Snowden and listened to his militaristic
Secretary of State's advice to start a disastrous series of attacks
on Libya in 2013, that gap was at 32% to 38%. When Republicans took
firm control of the senate in 2014 because the alternative option had
discouraged so many liberals who would have otherwise participated,
that gap was at 32% to 39%. In 2015, when the president embraced a
free trade agreement that, should it pass, will be more destructive
than NAFTA, that gap was at 30.4% to 40.1%. And this year, when
Democrats have created a platform that's halfway as conservative as
that of the Republican's, oversaw a primary election arguably more
offensive to Democracy than Bush v. Gore, and nominated a proven
criminal for president, that gap is at 29% to 43%.
And that almost doesn't compare to
what's happened to the Republicans. The last time they even had the
majority in electoral membership was in 1995, with 31% to the
Democrat's 30%. And the year in which they've more or less since been
in decline is an interesting one: 2003. Republican popularity had
been rising, though never exceeding that of the Democrats or
Independents, since 2000. The number of Democrats had also
drastically fell since 2001, with the implementation of a vast
pro-Bush Administration propaganda campaign post-9/11 undoubtedly
playing a role. With the help of a compliant corporate media and
largely pro-war Democratic leadership, the GOP had started the
invasion of Iraq with more than seventy percent of public support,
and their other policies went nearly unchallenged by the left.
But most of the country was not really
behind them. As of that year, 57% of Americans supported a woman's
right to choose. 73% wanted mandatory background checks on those
seeking to purchase guns. Half believed that gay and lesbian couples
should receive the same benefits as heterosexual couples. Eight in
ten of them wanted universal health care. 62% wanted nonviolent drug
offenders to be rehabilitated, instead of sent to prison. 72% thought
that the problems in corporate America were due to greed, instead of
“the consequences of a free market.” And perhaps most
importantly, 83% of them agreed with the goals of the environmental
movement.
The consequences of these ideological
inconsistencies began to materialize the year after, when Democratic
membership rose to 33% and Republican membership fell to 29%. How
Bush was then re-elected is anybody's guess. Then in 2005, when
the Republican-run government took two days longer than necessary to
start rescuing the victims of Katrina, those numbers remained the
same. When the Bush Administration considered the use of nuclear
weapons on Iran in 2006, the gap went to Republicans 28% and
Democrats 33%. When a worldwide financial meltdown started in 2007
because of the failure of Republicans to regulate Wall Street, that
gap was 25% to 33% (though thanks in part to Wall Street having
originally been deregulated by Bill Clinton, independents were at
34%).
And their slight rise since then to 26%
is of little comfort to them.
As of this year, 54% of Americans support
taxing the wealthy to aid the poor. 63% are in favor of a $15 minimum wage.
86% want mandatory police body cameras. 76% are against sending
conventional ground troops to fight ISIS.
Well over half want to
replace Obamacare with a single-payer system. The overwhelming
majority of Americans, including Republicans, are against Citizens
United. And
majority support for the goals of the environmental movement is
clear, even among Republicans themselves.
Stepping back from the media's portrayals
of a thriving electoral system, it's not looking good at all for both
parties. 55% of Americans have an unfavorable view of Hillary
Clinton, while 7 in 10 dislike Donald Trump. Only 68% of Republicans
have a favorable view of their party, and going by the most recent
estimates, 50% of Americans disapprove of the Democratic Party.
Twenty-one percent of voters from both parties are backing neither of
their nominees, and that number is sure to grow. (13% would prefer a
giant meteor hitting the earth to both of them-at least it would be
honest in its intentions.) When comparing the combined votes the two
nominees (officially) received in the primaries to the 219 million
eligible voters in America, they were only picked by 15.7% of those
capable of voicing an opinion.
And finally, on a somewhat related
note, only 29% of Americans think the country is headed in the right
direction.
These are the numbers and facts you
should be paying attention to. Not biased polls about Hillary's
support reported in a way that makes it seem as if the left is
submissive as ever to the will of the corporate DNC. Not claims that
progressives who oppose the Democratic party are mainly just
privileged young people (which is a group that's becoming
increasingly rare). Not smug assertions from representatives of the
established party system that our objections are irrelevant because
Bernie Sanders supposedly lost. The buildup has been long, but the
two parties have reached a point where their support, their common
agenda, and their reasons for self-justification are doomed.
Devin Reynolds, someone who very much
recognizes this fact, summed up the reason for this in a June 20
Medium.com
article:
“The divide between the top 1% and
the top 10% makes our political system look competitive, and there
are legitimate diverging interests between those two classes. That
said, in practice, our two political parties split the vote for the
working class, then both ignore it in favor of their primary
constituencies. The simple reality of this dynamic is that the
majority of the population’s interests go unrepresented. While
Republican members of the working class are exploited by their
low-information status into voting for policies that benefit the top
1%, the Democratic members of this group allow themselves to be
browbeaten into supporting policies that largely benefit the top 10%
based on the dubious supposition that those policies are “better
than Republican policies.” With one half of the working class
deceived into voting Republican and the other half treated like it
has no choice but to vote Democrat, 90% of the population
has its interests treated like an afterthought. Bernie’s entire
campaign was an attempt to change that.”
When you're talking in terms of nine
out of ten Americans being left out of the interests of the political
system, and of that minority acting like the system should be
accepted as normal, it's only a matter of time before the majority
takes it's power back.
As Democratic elites dismissed us as
young white “Bernie bros,” and booed our candidate for saying
that his goal is not to win elections but to transform the country,
and claimed that our ideas for making this as sane and just a society
as the rest of the developed world were based on fantasy, these same
old obnoxious attacks were quietly but surely losing their validity,
assuming they had any to begin with.
The national sentiment has changed.
It's changed in the direction of rationalism, it's changed in the
direction of self-interest, and it's changed in the direction of
common sense. No longer do most Americans believe that poverty is
caused by laziness, or that endless war is the consequence of
perpetual security threats, or that environmental problems should
simply be ignored. And perhaps even more importantly, no longer do we
believe that any politician should be excused for working against the
interests of the people because of the title of the party they're
affiliated with, or that dishonesty and corruption should be accepted
because that's “the only way to survive in politics,” or that any
given person, no matter how powerful, should not face the
consequences if they commit a crime.
Come to think of it, we never even
really believed these things at all.
All the real statistics support one
fact, which is that we are headed for a profound transformation as a
nation and even as a civilization. And I'm not just talking about
protests, petitions and other types of activism, which have always
been occurring, if not on the scale that we're seeing today, but
real, lasting change within our government.
Sometime very soon, maybe even at the
next opportunity, Americans are going to go to the polling places and
make a statement to the same people that worked to suppress their
votes in the Democratic primaries this year: no, we do not think that
the current economic system is acceptable. Yes, we do believe health
care, food and housing are the right of all people, not just a group
of the wealthiest citizens. No, we are not satisfied with what the
two parties have had to offer in terms of real change. To put it
succinctly, enough is enough.
If you heard a loud voice with a
Brooklyn accent at some point during that last paragraph, it proves
that Bernie did not go away at all when he conceded, and that he
never will.
So we have the support, we have the
historical advantage, and we have the moral high ground to pull off
the rise of a genuinely populist third party that actually wins
elections, but will the system allow for us to do so? That is
unfortunately worth considering, seeing what the oligarchy has done
to the first real threat to them in a long time during these past few
months.
The answer to that is both no and yes.
The powers that run the the way our democracy functions-therefore not
making it a democracy at all-will try to stop us at every turn. But
the future of American politics will be a whole new game, one where
we'll be free to run candidates and promote our agenda within parties
that are not controlled by the billionaires. As soon as we unite the
millions of voters not enamored with the dying establishment behind a
third party with a serious chance to win elections, most of the
battle will be won, and undemocratic obstacles like the Electoral College will have quite a lot to worry about should they decide
to deny us a victory outright. As long as democracy is even more or
less intact, we will be able to win.
And in fact, we've already started to.
Several genuinely progressive politicians across the country have
won
their primaries because of Bernie Sanders' efforts, and while we may
not see much change from this election cycle, it will without a doubt
be very different the next time around; there's no telling how far
these new types of leaders will get in the elections of 2018, or 2020
for that matter. And I'm certainly not the only one who will be
helping them along the way.
As for the present situation, I
personally see the Green Party's candidate Jill Stein as the best
option, but whatever you choose to do is no concern of mine and
ultimately won't matter too much. The media wants you to ignore it,
but a change has occurred in this country that Bernie's concession in
New Hampshire only made even more sure to have influence on the
future.
But above all, keep in mind that I am
not talking about some kind of fun little club that disappointed
former Bernie Sanders supporters will put together so that we can
meet with like-minded people. Yes, I am ideologically very
progressive and supported Bernie for as long as there was any hope
for him to win, but if this movement were only for people like me, we
would slowly fade into irrelevance. This will be a movement for every
American to be apart of who is concerned about the massive
inequalities, injustices, and threats to our planet that absolutely
must be addressed. This movement's base will be made up of every
person who cares about the needs of the many, and not the wants of
the few. A new party for the people does exist; it's just waiting to
find an organization to help advance it's great power. To repeat a
line from a different revolution, both ironically speaking and not,
yes we can.
No, the revolution was never meant to
be easy. But as of now, it will only get easier.