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Playing the Class Card

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted January 9, 2008.


As long as Hillary Clinton and Gloria Steinem have chosen to play the women's card against the race card, let's throw in a third one: the class card.
Robert Scheer

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As long as Hillary Clinton, and now Gloria Steinem, has chosen to play the women's card against the race card, let me throw in a third one: the class card. Clinton claimed in the New Hampshire primary debate that she is the unmistakable agent for change because she is a woman and her election as president would send a strong signal of a new day aborning to America and the rest of the world. It is hoped that it would be a more progressive message than the one sent by Margaret Thatcher's ascent in England.

Steinem put a finer point on the argument in her New York Times commentary, published Tuesday, New Hampshire's primary election day, arguing that women get wonderfully more "radical" as they age, and therefore older women are more inclined to vote for Clinton, Steinem's preferred candidate, as opposed to Barack Obama, whom younger women went for in Iowa. Maybe those younger women were more worried about how to pay off college loans or swelling mortgage obligations than gender identity.

What is radical about voting for a corporate lawyer who, in defense of her Arkansas savings and loan shenanigans, once said you can't be a lawyer without working for banks? Steinem boasts of Clinton's "unprecedented eight years of on-the-job training in the White House" without referencing the Clinton White House's giveaways to corporate America at the expense of poor and working Americans, the majority of them being women. Sen. Clinton's key election operative, Mark Penn, was the other half of the Dick Morris team that recast populist Bill Clinton as the master of triangulation.

I am not trying to play the class card here by claiming that because Obama grew up black and middle-class he will therefore inevitably be that rare politician who remembers where he or she came from. Bill Clinton, who came from a poor family, disproved the notion about remembering. To his everlasting shame as president, Clinton supported and signed welfare legislation that shredded the federal safety net for the poor from which he personally had benefited.

He faithfully served big corporate interests by signing off on Gramm-Leach-Bliley, the Financial Services Modernization Act, which, as a gift to the banks, insurance companies and stockbrokers, reversed consumer protection legislation from the New Deal era. Thanks to Bill Clinton, those pirates were allowed to merge into the largest conglomerates the world has ever witnessed and, adding insult to injury, to "data-mine," thus sharing your most intimate financial and health information. Bill Clinton's next biggest concession to the fat cats was the Telecommunications Act, which ended what was left of public control of the airwaves and permits mega-media corporations to grow even bigger. No wonder Rupert Murdock and Hillary Clinton now get on so famously.

Yes, Bill Clinton was a very good president compared to what came immediately before and after, and his wife has many strong points in her favor, not the least of which is her wonkish intelligence. What I object to is the notion that the perspective of gender or race trumps that of economic class in considering the traumas of this nation. That is because the George W. Bush administration engaged in class warfare for the rich with a vengeance that has left many Americans hurting, and we desperately need change to reverse that destructive course.

John Edwards deserves credit for putting this issue of the growing division of American society front and center, and certainly Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich has related his politics to growing up in abysmal poverty. As Kucinich has pointed out, a permanent war economy in which more than half of federal discretionary funds go to the military leaves no room for needed social programs. Question the honesty of any candidate who continues to vote for war funding while talking up all the wonderful domestic programs he or she claims to favor. At least Ron Paul is consistent in saying he would cut both.

Obviously, coming from an impoverished background does not ensure a social conscience, and there is no better example that the contrary can be true than Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the scion of a wealthy family, who, as president, was a god in my Bronx home for expanding federal poverty programs that put food on our table when both my parents were out of work.

Yes, it is important for the health of our democracy to break barriers that have held back a majority of our citizens, and for that reason it would certainly be an advance to have a black or female president. But that alone is not enough to justify a vote. What we need far more than a change in appearance is one of perspective. Otherwise, Condoleezza Rice would make the ideal candidate.

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Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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I couldn't agree more
Posted by: JackieGiles on Jan 9, 2008 1:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that "class" (read, "economic status") should emerge from "taboo" to equal status as an issue with race and gender. While poverty is often associated with race, many studies show that there are very many if not more poor whites than African-Americans and others of color.

Why is it that any attempt to discuss poverty and economic inequality is denounced as promoting "class warfare" and anyone who raises the issue is viewed as quasi-unAmerican?

If it's OK for the Wolf Blitzers and the Chris Matthewses to talk about Obama's race and Hillary's gender, it's OK to discuss the entrenched economic powers that make it so much harder, now, to rise from poverty as Edwards did in his youth. It's no accident that the corporate-owned media has tried to ignore Edwards--he is talking about their bosses, the guys who write their paychecks

John Edwards has been unfairly called a hypocrite because he rose from poverty to wealth without succumbing to the societal "amnesia" that let Bill Clinton "reform" welfare by shredding the safety net that rescued him from poverty. John Edwards remembers his roots--that's a big reason I support him.

Edwards became wealthy by defending people who were victims of corporate greed and negligence. From his position of success, he has chosen to expand his fight against the corporations,insurance companies, arms manufacturers like GE and their lobbyists who protect their obscene profits from the "threat" of health care for all Americans, the curtailing of their war-profiteering, and the elimination of the tax cuts that fatten their wallets.

John and Elizabeth Edwards could have stayed in the comfort of their NC home, or taken a world tour with their children , but they have decided to spend their remaining time together trying to take our nation's government back from the money moguls and return hope and opportunity to hardworking Americans. This election should not be about the possibilty of a first woman or African-American president. It should be about the real possibility of electing a person who is not in debt to corporations, insurance companies, defense contractors or lobbyists. John Edwards is that person--that's why we should elect him.

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» RE: I couldn't agree more Posted by: ordaj
» RE: I couldn't agree more Posted by: kattfish
But what are YOU doing?
Posted by: redceres on Jan 9, 2008 2:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you're worried about class as an issue--as I am--then you'll want to look into the destruction of the Appalachian mountains and the often violent actions of corporations--in cooperation with government--against the people of the mountains. Even better, visit ILoveMountains.org and type in your own zip code to see how your own local "energy sources" are connected to this destruction. And follow up!

It's time that we stop letting the forces of big money tell women and minorities and immigrants and the poor that we have to line up against each other while the moneyed class stands on the sidelines and laughs at us in our futile distraction.

We've got to unite.

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Indeed.
Posted by: jzelensk on Jan 9, 2008 3:43 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I notice that often the candidates are compared on the "issues" (by some enterprising metropolitan newspapers, e.g.), the list of issues is very selective such that many of the R-talking points (immigration, abortion, etc.) are included, thus forcing Democrats to face R litmus tests, and Republicans to gleefully engage in puffery. However, the two glaring "issues" that are missing in these media-generated lineups are (a) the corporatization of America (what Mussolini aptly called fascism), and (b) the gutting of the middle class.

Thus, John Edwards and Dennis Kucinich get defined out of the running despite the fact that their platforms on all of the issues that they consider relevent to today's America (not just selected ones) may well align best with the American people.

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The gender/race trap
Posted by: Everitt on Jan 10, 2008 4:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The worst irony of having either a minority of woman president is that because electing them is radical enough they have to be as uncontroversial and "safe" as possible on everything else.

Both Clinton and Obama have unimpressive, corporate-friendly platforms in a dire time where corporations have hollowed out the country.

As a black man I can see that the symbollic benefit of electing Obama is far outweighed by the material benefit of electing a genuinely progressive candidate with the wherewithal to take on the moneyed interests.

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FDR was ushered in by the Great Depression
Posted by: vssmith on Jan 10, 2008 5:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I fear that it will take another economic calamity to swing the pendulum back. I also fear that it is a distinct possibility.

We have the most lopsided disparity of wealth since the years before 1929.

Aux barricades!

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» --might usher in fascism this time Posted by: MobileSucks
If Scheer is truly worried about the "class card"
Posted by: naryaquid on Jan 10, 2008 6:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
his anger would be better directed at the media's treatment of John Edwards -- the only candidate running on the issue. Among the top three candidates, it is Edwards alone who has refused to take money from PACS & federal lobbyists. He is also the only candidate to has come out front and center against povery and corporate influence.

The media has responded by ignoring him -- Big Time.

This was nowhere more evident than on Iowa Caucus night when the television pundits, worked the "Obama-Clinton" meme furiously, barely mentioning Edwards even though he made second place.

The ommission was so glaring that night that someone actually tallied the number of times the name "Edwards" was mentioned compared to the names "Obama" and "Clinton". The results were something like eight to one in favor of Clinton/Obama.

I'm in total agreement with Scheer regarding the problem of "class" in this race. I only wonder why, in taking it on, he ignores its most obvious manifestation.

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Impossible to unravel the connections...
Posted by: www.suekatz.com on Jan 10, 2008 6:53 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a working class woman, I know how difficult it is to unravel the impact of class, gender and race on our lives. But why accuse someone of "using the women's card" because they point out that having a woman in the presidency would be a sign of a major change? Obviously it would be a huge change. Duh.

I'm concerned about Clinton's militaritic, belligerent foreign policy attitudes, but I can't deny that having a woman's voice coming out of the Oval Office would be a nice break.

Dissecting her husband's sell-outs doesn't really contribute much to the general understanding of the present candidates. I am not a Hillary Clinton supporter but the profoundly sexist coverage of the campaign is getting me down.

www.suekatz.com

linked text

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8:51 am, January 10th, John Kerry to back OBAMA?
Posted by: Prairie Waif on Jan 10, 2008 7:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is Kerry backing Obama instead of his former Vice-Presidential Running Mate in the 2004 election out of spite because KERRY couldn't bring it home for the Democratic party in a BIG way?

I feel betrayed by the Presidential Candidate I voted for and I voted for His TEAM, and that included his choice of John Edwards as his VP.

Perhaps Kerry's endorsement of Obama will be the kiss of death, as it was to the Democratic Party in the 2004 election, and Edwards will be the beneficiary.

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Paul Cardwell
Posted by: Paul Cardwell on Jan 10, 2008 8:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are better candidates than Rice to get a black female. It is more than likely that the Green Party will nominate Cynthia McKinney as their candidate. She is black, female, and has six terms of experience in the US House of Representatives, in addition to having been the victim of crooked electronic voting machines. Remember, the purpose of an election is to support the one who best represents your political views; it is not a game to guess who will win.

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Great Article! Two points
Posted by: Andie927 on Jan 10, 2008 8:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. I too, am disappointed in Kerry today! I guess I should have expected it, he's DLC just like Barak and both Clintons!
2. I disagree with one point in this article, Barak is not Middle-Class! Both his Kenyan father and his mother are Harvard graduates, and his Grandparents 'retire' to Hawii! Please, you don't do that on Social Security, maybe that's why Barak is talking about Privatizing Social Security (the one thing Bush wanted he didn't get, Barak wants to give him)

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The real race card
Posted by: mnascimento on Jan 10, 2008 9:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is ordinary WHITE people identifying with the white elite, that elected Reagan and the Bushes. For some reason, piss poor white people vote against their own interests time after time.
The brainwashing has been thorough. Mention single payer health insurance and a chorus of "we don't want socialized medicine" arises.
Suggest bailing out homeowner's exploited by predators and the talk becomes "personal responsibility" The greedy bankers are bailed out by the Federal Reserve, when they can pull it off, without public outrage.
Bush and Paulson convulse about how to save investors, and ordinary white people, react as if they had investments.
The wealthy white elite use every action to divide and conquer, and poor whites continue to believe they are one the winning side.

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Aaahhh!
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jan 10, 2008 10:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oh, pleeze, oh gawd, don't even WHISPER in jest that Condosleeeeeza would make the ideal candidate! Someone might just get the idea she should run...

Aaaahhh!!

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» RE: Aaahhh! Posted by: mnascimento
Whew, spot on piece
Posted by: DaBear on Jan 10, 2008 1:59 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I only wish it was written by a woman so the genderists could be told to STFU.

When a body loses her/his piece of shite over priced condo in a system created and maintained by the corporate elite and their politcal activists (ClintonandObama), the ONLY card is the class card. Neither genitalia nor melanin level mean anything when most of the country is so damned broke they're 1-2 months away from homelessness. Ironically, the Green Party has the only batch of candidates where all three cards are meaningful in a substantive way... but oh no, we can't vote beyond superficiality in 'Merkuh can we? We're too realistic for that...

It's time for some rich pricks to have the furnishings tossed onto their lawns, people. Under Hillary or Obama, the military... well, Blackwater at least, will be outside the gated communities of "affordable homes from the mid $900,000's" to ensure any genuine class revolt doesn't occur without bloodshed. And under both it'll be worse, because the "Left" will no longer allow the poor to talk about their plight without turning every person who is fiscally challenged into a sexist or racist. Talk about using good tools to frack everything up... how Clintonesque.

Thanks Rob, for speaking at least some of the truth on our behalf. For me personally, none of this will matter for me since I'll most likely be homeless and inelligible to vote come November. I'll make the CA primary I think, just under the gun... hell, I'll cast the only vote using all three cards: Elaine Brown. Take that in yer Dim-realo pipe and smoke it. Consider it my grenade as I exit the damned Kapitalist system.

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» RE: Whew, spot on piece Posted by: redceres
Zero credibility.
Posted by: Livemike on Jan 10, 2008 9:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"which ended what was left of public control of the airwaves"

Yeah right, that's why Howard Stern is on regular radio again. In fact the FCC is just as powerful now as ever, hell more so since they can now approve as well as disapprove the big mergers. You just cost yourself any credibility with me, which is a shame since some of what you say was true.

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» RE: Zero credibility. Posted by: JSquercia
Great Article!
Posted by: MobileSucks on Jan 11, 2008 12:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yea Clinton is "radical". Jesus Christ. 'Women get more radical as they age'. What? No, Some people get even more full of Bull when they age.

Identity Politics has ruined the left and confused and politically disabled liberals.

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