Waiting For A President to Do the Right Thing

We live in a nation where the media writes more about professional athletes taking drugs than they write about the country’s Vice-President admitting that he authorized and supports torture. We also live in a nation where the latest escapades of a pop star get more media coverage than the dismantling of our founding documents by the ever-growing police state. It’s not that the media care about the pop star or the athletes, either. Their reportage is done with a spite that approaches joy in seeing these people they have turned into heroes fall. We live in a nation where candidates for the nation’s leadership position lie to their base to get elected and then do the bidding of their billionaire corporate and banking backers once they have won. We also live in a nation where the majority of the population wants an end to the occupation of Iraq, universal health care, and a decent living for all. Yet, most of the organizations that organize for these demands hitch their wagon to the two-party corporate system that makes the fulfillment of these demands impossible, thereby insuring that business as usual will continue. As long as these groups continue to speak for us without listening to what we have to say, the occupations will not end, there will not be universal health care, and a decent living will not be had by all.

Recently, the national antiwar network UFPJ held a convention in Chicago and decided not to co-sponsor a unified antiwar protest in Washington, DC in Spring 2009. Instead, they decided to have a march on Wall Street to protest the recession. While this is certainly an issue that needs to be addressed, one wonders why UFPJ chose this spring to make this statement. To top it off, UFPJ is calling for this protest on April 4th. The choice of dates is little more than an emotional ploy to take advantage of that date’s symbolism. After all, it is the date Martin Luther King, Jr. made his antiwar speech against the Vietnam War in 1967 and also the date he was murdered a year later. According to sources who attended the Chicago meeting, it is the impression of a sizable minority of the delegates to to the UFPJ convention where this decision was made that UFPJ does not want to protest the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan while Barack Obama is president. In addition, they do not want to make the link between the wars/occupations and the recession as clear as they ought to be. If this is the case, then the Pentagon generals’ jobs are secure, and the business of hegemony, death and torture will suffer not.

There are those who opposed George Bush wars who are calling for patience. They tell us that Obama deserves a chance. This is true. However, if the antiwar movement is not going to oppose the occupations undertaken by Washington, it seems quite likely that those who support the occupations and the so-called war on terror will succeed in their desire to continue those endeavors. After all, they are not waiting to see what Obama does. They are moving forward with their plans. It’s important to remember that the natural inclination of the imperial regime in Washington is not towards world harmony, but towards world hegemony. That is what the system of capital needs to survive. A new president not only can’t change this essential fact, it is rare that one can even make the drive for hegemony a bit more humane. Furthermore, it doesn’t matter if this drive for hegemony is challenged by outside states and other actors. The fact is, the system pushes for expansion and control until it collapses. Given the adaptability of the system and its constant movement the most likely cause of such a collapse would be inertia. Inertia is something the caretakers of capitalism can not allow. That’s why there are imperial wars and that’s why there are government bailouts of banks and industries. The economy must move, even if it doesn’t move smoothly and even if it destroys the livelihoods and lives of millions of people living under that system.

Waiting for Obama to be the good guy all those who voted for him want him to be is pointless. Organizing ourselves to end the occupations and the accompanying murders, torture, and destruction makes a hell of lot more sense. Obama, Bush, Clinton, Cheney or any other individuals are not the problem; they are merely the face of a system that requires war and poverty to survive. To be an antiwar movement a movement must oppose the wars and occupations of that system. It’s not enough for a candidate to say they will bring the troops home while he is running for office and then turn the decision over to the Pentagon and the industries it is in cahoots with after he is inaugurated. If a group that considers itself antiwar believes this, then they do not deserve to be called antiwar. Like I said before, as long as these groups continue to speak for us without listening to what we have to say, nothing will change. As long as self-avowed leadership organizations like UFPJ refuse to unite with other segments of the antiwar movement and work all-out to end the occupations now and not in 2012, the antiwar movement will never be effective. Even if you voted for him, if the man in the White House is not ending the wars and occupations you are against, then that policy must be opposed. Given the recent decision by the 100 or so UFPJ delegates to reject a spring 2009 unified protest against Washington’s war and to move away from protest politics that might be seen as against Obama (the future face of Washington’s policies), it might be time for the antiwar rank and file that have appeared by the tens of thousands at protests in DC and elsewhere to create a new movement that does want to end the occupations and wars before the end of 2009.

Ron Jacobs is the author of The Way The Wind Blew: A History of the Weather Underground and Tripping Through the American Night, and the novels Short Order Frame Up and The Co-Conspirator's Tale. His third novel All the Sinners, Saints is a companion to the previous two and was published early in 2013. Read other articles by Ron.

15 comments on this article so far ...

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  1. John Hatch said on December 18th, 2008 at 5:00pm #

    I think that nothing short of a revolution (and likely a bloody one) will bring change, and that’s not going to happen in obese, indifferent America. Dream on!

  2. RG the LG said on December 18th, 2008 at 5:01pm #

    Long wait … impossibly long wait.
    I am not sure the right thing is doable in the US.
    I am not sure that the right thing was ever done in the US.
    Sure, we’ve done some things better than we started out … slavery for example … but the cost was rampant corporatism. Dare I suggest that Lincoln traded the slaves for the support of northern business interests? That he, Lincoln, is at or near the root of rampant capitalism? Freeing the slaves broke the economic back of the south … and of agrarianism. The loss of a strong agrarian voice is one of the reasons Monsanto and ADM feed us schlock …
    Sure the slave system was morally corrupt. But we only traded one form of corruption for another.
    That, it seems, is the USan way … we defeated Germany so that we could be THE major fascist power in the world. The soviets pretended to be our enemies … I suspect because to be THE enemy of the most powerful nation in the world was worth something. Same thing can be said for ObL and the allegedly invincible al-Queda that we can not seem to find much less defeat.
    Of course, we didn’t really want to defeat al-Queda in the first place … we need that straw man to keep the militarist economy working.
    Regarding the Obummer administration? Same old same old with a different face … and just what we really want!

    RG the LG

  3. joed said on December 18th, 2008 at 6:32pm #

    seems amerika is doomed. i heard that only about 20% of the people in 1775 considered themselves revolutionists and even less would actually physically fight the redcoats. seems the only winnable position for a modern revolutionist would be to stop buying stuff. of course, medical care, safety, food must be gotten somehow. but, sacrifice and hardship are the only way to effect real change. amerika is doomed. it is all over and has been for several years. jonathan schell has a book called “the unconquerable world” it it he describes how the people of hungary, poland etc. managed to survive the russian occupation of their countries. it is the same now there in amerika; you guys are occupied by an enemy of the people and obama is one of the worst enemys you can have. anyway, what will you do when you see armed u s marines on the street corners of your town. will you see them as foreign troops, as occupiers or guardians of your lifestyle… . one thing for sure, it is too late now to do what should have been done years ago; go to dc and arrest the bush/cheney gang, 7 of the scotus and 99% of the congress. too late too late. sacrifice and hardship are your answer.

  4. Petronius said on December 18th, 2008 at 6:49pm #

    the inauguration by warren is a deliberate slap in the face of gays after
    proposition 8 in california (not to speak of warren’s pro-life attitude which has not been sufficiently commented upon). obama if nothing else lacks character and it wont make him popular in the years to come.

  5. joed said on December 18th, 2008 at 7:11pm #

    “Given the recent decision by the 100 or so UFPJ delegates to reject a spring 2009 unified protest against Washington’s war and to move away from protest politics that might be seen as against Obama (the future face of Washington’s policies),” …
    the author of this article is correct about the need for real leadership of an antiwar movment. why ufpj and other major aw groups backed away from a mass demonstration is most odd. but then too, any demo in dc would probably have been mostly unatended. amerikan people are just too frightened to say or do anything. just too frightened. and, i guess all the revolutionaries and physical fighters are on the side of the govt and can hardly wait to set you straight on your street corner. seems the aw movement is left with the dregs.

  6. Petronius said on December 18th, 2008 at 9:17pm #

    but then Obama the Great Accomodator is probably well aware of the persistent remnants of discrimination within the gay community…

  7. Brian Koontz said on December 19th, 2008 at 10:31am #

    Obama himself is a tool and does nothing, just like every other American president. The actions that the executive office takes depends on the forces that create them – the lobbyists, the public pressure, the special interest pressure, the economic pressure.

    “Wait and see what Obama does” is another phrase for not being one of the forces that creates Obama’s actions. It’s a phrase of utter impotence.

    The only point of positive relation anyone should have to the American president is to force him to do what one wants him to do. Use the tool wisely. The only alternative is not using him at all.

  8. bozh said on December 19th, 2008 at 11:47am #

    brian, right on,
    the one party system had oulawed communist party. the reason for it is obvious: only a party can best oppose another party.
    we’v talked a lot ab US having a oneparty system. it can be concluded, firmly tho, that the ruling class wld never allow another party, if it cld help it.
    especially, a party that wld represent lower tiers and wld just ask for minimum so as to attract left and right.
    the minimum wld be heath care, higher education for all and no more warfare. forget the rest for now.
    many dems r to the right of many reps; and vice versa. nearly all r smack in the middle of hitler-mussolini but touted as centrist by obnubilators.
    as long plutos have a party or even seemingly two they will rule; their will be done.
    andthat’s been like that everywhere for at least 10K. yrs.
    i think u oft make this point. thnx

  9. ron said on December 19th, 2008 at 12:06pm #

    http://natassembly.org/Home_Page.html

  10. Petronius said on December 19th, 2008 at 8:38pm #

    I couldnt give a toss what obama the great accomodator does or doesnt do. bozh ‘n brian are right, the elite scum will always float to the top and trying to influence its flunkies is a pipe dream cooked up in 1776. but I also think that when the people truly get fed up, they will act. we arent there yet, but approaching it. thats how obama got in because people thought, lets try it with a totally different guy than numbskull bush. it may take them a while to discover that obama is a flunkie too because otherwise the elite scum would not have allowed his election. and that goes for all of congress too, regardless if they are democruds or republicrats (my terms). power to the people !

  11. Hue Longer said on December 20th, 2008 at 2:55am #

    A read of A People’s History of the United States will show that there HAVE been succesful revolutions by the people…short lived, placated to or otherwise ultimately broken through slow and patient siege, but successful. I think the co-opting and then the memory erasing is what should be fought against should there be another successful run.

  12. Layla said on January 2nd, 2009 at 6:15pm #

    The international community must put Somalia at the top of its agenda and press for change before it is too late, Unless real action to end insecurity is taken very soon, the world is in danger of seeing a whole generation of Somali children growing up having only known war

  13. Layla Sheikh said on January 2nd, 2009 at 6:17pm #

    As I’m sure you can understand, as an exiled refugee of this once great nation so filled with lush valleys, pristine coastline, and some of the most fertile soil on earth – I cannot sit on the sidelines as this heinous, savage, and ignorant warfare is allowed to continue. Although the solution is complicated and perplexing for even the greatest of peacemaking minds, a solution does exist, and one thing I can guarantee to you with absolute certainty, having grown up there with my family and seeing thousands of the great smiles of the big-hearted Somalian people and their children, is that whatever time, money, and effort it takes to overcome this difficult situation – it is worth it.

  14. Layla Sheikh said on January 14th, 2009 at 12:35am #

    Wisdom is defined as the ability to discern or judge what is true, right, or lasting. This ability does not depend only on the knowledge of the observer, but mainly on his sensitivity, otherwise he would not be any different from someone who has only a vast knowledge about many subjects

  15. Layla Sheikh said on January 16th, 2009 at 2:41pm #

    Mr. President,

    YOU ARE THE HOPE FOR MY HOME COUNTRY OF SOMALIA.

    You are much more than the leader of the United States of America. Your victory more special than you can imagine. People around the world have been waiting for this kind of inspiration for decades. Your mixed ethnic background helps remind individuals the world over of the futility of their racial and religious battles. In place of this despair and aggression, you are a living, breathing, pulsating symbol of Hope.

    Nowhere is this inspiration and insight more urgently needed than in the bloody, racism-torn, suffering country of Somalia – the country that the whole world has left to self-destruct without a trace of help.

    As I’m sure you can understand, as an exiled refugee of this once great nation so filled with lush valleys, pristine coastline, and some of the most fertile soil on earth – I cannot sit on the sidelines as this heinous, savage, and ignorant warfare is allowed to continue. Although the solution is complicated and perplexing for even the greatest of peacemaking minds, a solution does exist, and one thing I can guarantee to you with absolute certainty, having grown up there with my family and seeing the thousands of great smiles of the big-hearted Somali people and their children, is that whatever time, money, and effort it takes to overcome this difficult situation – it is worth it.

    Somalia is a perfect place for you to establish yourself as not only a legendary leader of America, but as an international authority ready to unite nations and races in a way that no person in the history of the world ever has. You can use your symbolic victory, as the first racial minority to be elected president, to reach out and help those who are still stuck in ancient notions of racial supremacy and inferiority. Nowhere do these stubborn notions have a stronger foothold, nowhere have more lives of innocent children been taken away, and nowhere is there greater potential for life-changing liberation, than in Somalia.

    Just as you had a vision, a vision that moved you forward to reach goals that no one around you could have ever imagined – I too have a great vision for the future of Somalia. I know, just as you knew in your heart that becoming a U.S. president was your destiny, that my brothers and sisters, my mother and father, and all the great people that I had to leave behind will one day awaken to a world they, like every human being, deserve.

    I beseech you to lead the international community in helping end this 18-year nightmare. I urge you to look at Somalia through a new lens and to hear the voices of the people. Somalia is not a haven for terror; it is a victim of it. The innocent women and children of the country can not be ignored any longer, their hope lives in me and you, and those who believe justice, and willing to stand up on behalf innocent children.

    Mr. President, you are a man of im