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Ask
Auntie Pinko
September
26, 2002
Dear
Auntie Pinko,
I can't understand what's going on with the Democrats
in Congress who are blindly trotting along behind the War
on Iraq bandwagon. I'm old enough to remember the last time
we let a President tell us there were vital American interests
at stake and we should just trust him to know best. Don't
they remember? Why are they being such spineless wimps?
Tom R.
Moffat, CO
Dear Tom,
Auntie Pinko is also old enough to remember. Ear-collecting,
and body counts on the nightly news. "Gooks," and "destroying
the village to save it," and napalm, and young American men
coming home with empty eyes and hollowed-out souls.
To justify such horrors, the cause cannot be less than totally
compelling, totally validated, and totally supported - not
just by an overwhelming majority of Americans, but by our
friends and neighbors who share this planet.
The problem with your question, Tom, is in the phrase "the
Democrats in Congress." To start with, there are fifty Democrats
in the Senate and two hundred and nine in the House of Representatives,
and it would not be at all surprising if there were approximately
two hundred and sixty different exact viewpoints on America's
policy towards Iraq. One thing the Democratic Party has never
been good at is getting all of its elected representatives
to march in some kind of Party-dictated lockstep. I guess
that's why we're not Republicans.
So it's entirely likely that quite a lot of those Democratic
Representatives and Senators are firmly opposed to the notion
of a unilateral American attack on Iraq. (In fact, Auntie
Pinko would bet a free t-shirt on it!) Many Democrats do oppose
what you so aptly characterize as the "bandwagon." The problem
is threefold:
1. Many who oppose the helter-skelter rush to war are saying
so but not being heard or reported in the media;
2. Many who are being reported in the media are having
their messages distorted: They are saying that they oppose
the war unless the need for it is incontrovertibly proven,
which it has not been. But the press either doesn't report
that last part or dismisses it; and
3. Many key Democratic leaders are justifiably worried that
opposition, distorted by the GOP and corporate-controlled
media, will harm midterm election results - and they are keeping
their eye on the real prize: Getting back control of
the Legislative Branch.
All of these factors combine to frustrate ordinary Democrats
like you and I, Tom, who would like to see more gutsy, unequivocal
statements from our leaders. Statements like Mr. Gore's, bless
him.
It is a frightening commentary on the GOP's dominance of
the public dialogue and the corporate controlled media message
that almost no one is willing to come out and say they oppose
war on Iraq, period. Have you noticed, Tom? Every one
has to qualify it by saying they're against it "unless it's
really necessary." They have managed to frame the whole debate,
not in terms of whether war is good or bad, whether it is
a legitimate tool of geopolitical interaction or not, but
whether it's "necessary."
And who defines "necessary?"
That is, whether we like it or not, the real boundary of
the public discourse on this issue. We cannot say "Well, here's
a set of criteria that justify war," because if we do, the
debate will then move to the precise definition of each criterion,
and each word of each criterion, in a reductio ad absurdum
exercise that will end in giving the unelected media and the
unelected President control of this decision.
No, the definition of "necessary" must remain squarely where
the Constitution places it: in the laps of the more than four
hundred men and women elected by their fellow-citizens precisely
to make such decisions. Because no matter how hard the media
tries to spin the issue, no matter how passionately Mr. Bush
shouts from his bully pulpit, no matter how much money is
put up to buy them, each of those men and women are ultimately
responsible to a comparatively small number of voters.
That's the joker in the deck of American politics. It's harder
to buy and bully and spin two hundred and nine elected Democrats
than one appointed Republican. And here's the beauty part,
Tom: There's something you and I can do to make it even
harder! The more we speak out to our Democratic
representatives and our Democratic leaders, and the more we
get our friends and neighbors to speak out, the harder it
will be for them to believe that big money in their campaign
funds will buy them their re-election.
It's an uphill fight against the corporate money that pollutes
our government. But in the end, numbers - if properly mobilized,
organized, and vocalized - will win. Every time. So the
ball is in our court.
Thanks for asking Auntie Pinko, Tom!
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