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The Democrats' Class War

By David Sirota, Creators Syndicate. Posted February 8, 2008.


The Democrats' timidity on economic justice may end up guaranteeing no real 'change' at all.

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For all the hype about generational and gender wars in the 2008 Democratic presidential primary, we have a class war on our hands. And incredibly, corporate America's preferred candidate is winning the poorer "us" versus the wealthier "them" -- a potentially decisive trend with the contest now moving to working-class bastions like Ohio and Pennsylvania.

In most states, polls show Hillary Clinton is beating Barack Obama among voters making $50,000 a year or less -- many of whom say the economy is their top concern. Yes, the New York senator who appeared on the cover of Fortune magazine as Big Business's candidate is winning economically insecure, lower-income communities over the Illinois senator who grew up as an organizer helping those communities combat unemployment. This absurd phenomenon is a product of both message and bias.

Obama has let Clinton characterize the 1990s as a nirvana, rather than a time that sowed the seeds of our current troubles. He barely criticizes the Clinton administration for championing job-killing trade agreements. He does not question that same administration's role in deregulating the financial industry and thereby intensifying today's boom-bust catastrophes. And he rarely points out what McClatchy Newspapers reported this week: that Clinton spent most of her career at a law firm "where she represented big companies and served on corporate boards," including Wal-Mart's.

Obama hasn't touched any of this for two reasons.

First, his campaign relies on corporate donations. Though Obama certainly is less industry-owned than Clinton, the Washington Post noted last spring that he was the top recipient of Wall Street contributions. That cash is hush money, contingent on candidates silencing their populist rhetoric.

But while this pressure to keep quiet affects all politicians, it is especially intense against black leaders.

"If Obama started talking like John Edwards and tapped into working-class, blue-collar proletarian rage, suddenly all of those white voters who are viewing him within the lens of transcendence would start seeing him differently," says Charles Ellison of the University of Denver's Center for African American Policy.

That's because once Obama parroted Edwards' attacks on greed and inequality, he would "be stigmatized as a candidate mobilizing race," says Manning Marable, a Columbia University history professor. That is, the media would immediately portray him as another Jesse Jackson -- a figure whose progressivism has been (unfairly) depicted as racial politics anathema to white swing voters.

Remember, this is always how power-challenging African-Americans are marginalized. The establishment cites a black leader's race- and class-unifying populism as supposed proof of his or her radical, race-centric views. An extreme example of this came from the FBI, which labeled Martin Luther King Jr. "the most dangerous man in America" for talking about poverty. More typical is the attitude exemplified by Joe Klein's 2006 Time magazine column. He called progressive Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., "an African American of a certain age and ideology, easily stereotyped" and "one of the ancient band of left-liberals who grew up in the angry hothouse of inner-city, racial-preference politics."

The Clintons are only too happy to navigate this ugly cultural topography. After a rare Obama attack on Hillary Clinton for supporting policies that eliminated jobs, Bill Clinton quickly likened Obama's campaign to Jackson's, and the Clinton campaign told the Associated Press Obama was "the black candidate." These were deliberate statements telling Obama that if he talks about class, they'll talk about race.

And so, as Marable says, Obama's pitch includes "no mention of the class struggle or class conflict." It is "hope" instead of an economic case, bromide instead of critique. The result is an oxymoronic dynamic.

Obama, the person who fought blue-collar joblessness in the shadows of shuttered factories, is winning wealthy enclaves. But Clinton, the person whose globalization policies helped shutter those factories, is winning blue-collar strongholds.

Obama, who was schooled by the same organizing networks as Cesar Chavez, is being endorsed by hedge fund managers. But Clinton, business's favorite, is being endorsed by the United Farm Workers -- the union that Chavez created.

Obama, the candidate from Chicago's impoverished South Side, is finding support on Connecticut's gilded south coast. But Hillary Clinton, the candidate representing Big Money, is finding support from those with relatively little money.

As the campaign heads to the struggling Rust Belt under banners promising "change," this bizarre class war may end up guaranteeing no real transformation at all.

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See more stories tagged with: workplace, election08, clinton, obama

David Sirota is a nationally syndicated weekly newspaper columnist for Creators Syndicate. He is the New York Times bestselling author of Hostile Takeover: How Big Money and Corruption Conquered Our Government and How We Take It Back (Crown 2006). He is also a senior fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network. His second book, The Uprising, is due in the Spring of 2008.

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RE: Wow...
Posted by: tbone on Feb 8, 2008 9:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Exactly Daves point...you are teaching your son to "follow" rather than look at the issues, you cite no substantial, rational reasons for choosing hillary...how does she "want what we all need"...that is a vague rhetorical talking point, it means nothing...and you think hillary is entitled to a 2nd term, BEFORE SHE EVEN HAS A FIRST!!! This is whats wrong with this country!!! Blind following = 4 more years of Corporate control...read about her voting record, and explain to us all how that DEMONSTRATES her "clearly defined agenda", again, vague, vague, vague.

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» Substantial Issues Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
Realism or death, pay justice or extinction, gird your loins
Posted by: nigelbest on Feb 11, 2008 9:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All happiness is real happiness. Happiness is built on realism, maturity. You can't judge opinions by whether they are odious to your opinions, your opinions are not for egotistic ornament, they are to be tested constantly against reality, and you hope they are right, because if they're not, no happiness.

You can have pay injustice and watch it blow up in your face, as it is about to do in America, with bloody revolution, and then build up again to blow up again, as it has done over and over without fail through history in all places. Or you can have pay justice, and peace, plenty, freedom, safety, order, fraternity, happiness, community, neighbourliness, democracy, dignity, truth, sanity, minimal crime and war, US$40/hr for every working person in the world, including housewives and students. Why? Because money is the joker good, good for just about everything, so the theft of it is theft of just about everything, including political power and social visibility, so is the greatest injury, and injury ricochets untiringly as atoms till your state is dust. And it's a global situation this time. 200 years of transport and communications technology have taken care of that. Borders are not real. And it is global weaponry, 60 times PDC [planet death capability], this time. Last chance. Realism or extinction. No denial, no head-in-the-sand happiness. Reality is merciless, it won't even flinch with sympathy when the lion bites down on your ostrichhide. You ignored the founding fathers' consciousness that wealth concentration is power concentration is tyranny, injustice, death of the state. The candidates are lying frontmen for overwealth [or they are assassinated]. You can't have a little pay injustice, pay injustice grows, money rakes money, people are too dangerous to injure, every empire has got into overpay-underpay and fallen, every plutocracy has crashed in blood.

Pay justice. Pay for work. No pay for no work. No pay for anything but work [wealthproduction]. Equal pay for equal work. Taking out as much as you put in by your own work. Nontheft, noninjury. Pay for no work [overpay] is work for no pay [underpay] for others. You can't pay people for natural gifts, business risk, 'responsibility', having studied, skill, experience, landownership, luck, scarcity. They aren't work by the person. [Study is work, so is housewifery, you have to pay for those for happiness.] Nature does the work for natural gifts. [People should be paid for developing gifts.] Business risk is risk, we all have it, workers more than businessmen. The businessman is risking to make or rake money for himself. 'Responsibility' is not work, it is using the aptitudes and inclinations you have, by natural gift. Skill is natural gift, or experience. Experience is gained in paid work at no cost. Paying landowners because others worked to build cities around the land is theft, injury. Giving all nature's bounty to landowners, when every living person has equal birthright share in that bounty, like the animals, is theft, misery, destruction. Pay for luck is pay for no work, and gives license to take out where they didn't put in. Pay for scarcity, rarity, is pay for absence, not work.

Humans have a steep learning curve to conquer, a mountain of head-in-the-sand and greedfaith to undo, if they are to survive. And reality doesn't care either way.
happinessfinneganswake.blogspot.com [free and easy survival plan, do in your home, learn, teach two, justice capitalism, no social struggle]

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Thank you David. We do need to put race and gender behind us and move on.
Posted by: maxpayne on Feb 8, 2008 10:08 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The truth is Big Business and Religious "Right" love it when we're all pitted against one another be it race, gender, nationality, etc ... all the while keeping it silent on the economic front because they know that the more voters confront the economic issues, the less divided they'll be placed.

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Btw, as for the bizarre voting pattern,
Posted by: maxpayne on Feb 8, 2008 10:10 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I guess the real blue collared workers choose Hillary over Obama is the same reason they choose GOP over Democrat 7 out of 10 times. They would much rather have a known devil than an unknown one. Sad when choices have to be broken down to this level.

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» Because . . . Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
Hillary's support
Posted by: green mom on Feb 9, 2008 5:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wonder what percentage of Hillary's supporters in the lower income bracket are voting aginst Obama beacuse of the successful smear campaign painting him as a radical Muslim with terrorist sympathies who reuses to recite the pledge of allegiance, will be sworn in on the Koran, and plans to destroy the US.

http://www.snopes.com/politics/obama/muslim.asp

People also believe that he hates white people and plans to have African Americans take over the government

http://www.snopes.com/politics/obama/church.asp

As a volunteer with the phone bank or the Obama campaign, I have heard numerous people repeat the claims verbatim. I would like to know how much of a factor ugly bigotry is playing in this primary.

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» RE: Hillary's support Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: Hillary's support Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
» RE: Hillary's support Posted by: Quannah
"...may end up guaranteeing no real 'change'"???
Posted by: browsercat on Feb 10, 2008 6:17 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Democrats' timidity on economic justice WILL up guaranteeing no real 'change' at all.

They have been dancing backwards with Republicans so long they no longer know how to lead.

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Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Feb 10, 2008 11:46 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The point is, ladies and gentleman, that class warfare -- for lack of a better word -- is good.

Class warfare is right.

Class warfare works.

Class warfare clarifies, cuts through, and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit.

Class warfare, in all of its forms…has marked the upward surge of mankind.

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The deeper issue
Posted by: citizenjoe on Feb 11, 2008 7:07 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Other than in the Great Depression, the American working class has supported the corporate system- and rationally so. The support was not based on tricks and manipulation which is the subject of David Sirota's article.Why is support of the corporate society and state rational for working people here? Why are mom, apple pie, the flag, patriotism, and imperialism all rational working class values? The answer is so obvious we are idiots for not seeing it. The USA is the richest and most powerful nation on earth. This benefits all Americans, not equally of course, but still compare the American way of life with that of poverty in most of the world. Our people are relatively far better off.That is why the world wants to immigrate to the USA.That is why corporatism can say:"There is no alternative. (TINA)"
Hillary tells this story and does well with it as have nearly all successful American politicians, as did Thatcher and Tony Blair. She points at Obama and implies "Uppity n--ger, don't rock the boat." And American white workers, say "Yea, praise the lord." Why, maybe in eight years Barack will have learned enough lessons to have a shot at power, but not yet. " Hey isn't that what the white South said about blacks after slavery? "They ain't ready for the vote,yet."
So that is the problem, not mere manipulation by the press. What do we do about it? That is a very big question-- how do we make it clear that another world is possible? It can be done. I suggest that we support Obama, and make show that racism won't work any more. That is a step, even if Obama is an imperialist, he may serve the interest of working and a middle class Americans by pulling back from the racial horrors of the Iraq war.

Enough for now, Citizen Joe

What do you think , David Sirota?

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» RE: The deeper issue Posted by: mclemens
» That is the best you got? Posted by: citizenjoe
» RE: That is the best you got? Posted by: mclemens
» Testy? Come-on, Posted by: citizenjoe
Not the "impoverished South Side" again
Posted by: reikimama on Feb 11, 2008 8:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's disingenuous to refer to Obama as from "Chicago's impoverished South Side". He's not "from" Chicago at all, by which I mean being a product of a particular neighborhood and growing up there. Obama settled in Hyde Park, a very privileged and educated enclave surrounding the University of Chicago, the institution that gave us "urban renewal," a wholesale evicition of poor blacks and tearing down of working class housing in the late 50s and early 60s.

He lives in a weathy island of the South Side. Surrounded on three sides by poverty and one side by the lake front, but not in a poor neighborhood nor part of one.

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Rebecca
Posted by: Bec59 on Feb 11, 2008 11:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As an addendum to the above posting,Obama is from Hawaii and was raised by his white mother and his white grandparents. His African father from Kenya left them when Obama was two. Obama's mother went to Indonesia (taking Obama, too) when he was a small child as she met someone from Jakarta who she married. Obama returned to live with his white grandparents in Hawaii because the schools were better than in Jakarta.

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Who cares about the "poor" ...
Posted by: Quannah on Feb 11, 2008 3:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
or "low-to-middle-income" Americans? Why don't they have any political clout?

The only candidate that put poverty on the agenda is out of the race now. John Edwards was the only one to talk about the problems of the "working class" and no MSM was there to listen (or broadcast).

They have no political clout because they have no $$$. Who lobbys for the poor, for the working poor, and for the working class? No one does. They simply don't care. Their coffers are filled by corporations and wealthy donors, not poor or working class people. At least not in the sizeable donations.

So, this is a play to get what votes are left to be gotten, and in the meantime, we're served platitudes and told to be thankful for them.

Amazing.

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The Peril--and Necessity---of Populism for Obama
Posted by: Roger Bybee on Feb 12, 2008 8:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
David Sirota brilliantly spotlighted a paradox for African-American candidates: to the extent that they discuss class issues in clear, lucid terms, they somehow get labeled by the media as race-oriented candidates.

I recall a Feb., 1988 incident in Kenosha, Wis. where Jesse Jackson was about to speak to some (overwhelmingly white) 10,000 Chrysler workers and supporters about a looming plant shutdown. The Kenosha mayor, obviously unaccustomed to speaking before such a huge crowd and live on all the area TV stations, got flustered and introduced Rev. Jackson as a "spearchucker for justice!" Jackson ignored the racial slur, embraced the mayor, and gave a spellbinding speech to thecrowd shivering in near-zero temperatures.

When reporters tried to get Jackson to comment on the racial slur, he laughed it off. Similarly, I heard him speak with pride about marching with striking workers through poor-white Milwaukee neighborhoods with Confederate flags in the windows but "Jesse Jackson for President" posters stapled to the front porch.

Jackson deeply tapped the sentiments of white workers, farmers, and miners, and remarkably seemed to view some expressions of white racism as basically reflecting a lack of contact with African-American humanity rather than deeply-rooted hatred.

Yet the mainstream media portrayed him at the times as "the black candidate," and depicted him as always touchy on any matter of race. The media's recent recollections of Jackson's candidacies in 1984 and 1988 have been even worse, neglecting to mention the electrifying impact that he had on whites who were victims of "economic violence"--plant closings, outsourcing, and the growth of agri-business at the expense of small farmers.

So Barack Obama must walk a tight-rope. The adoption of Jesse Jackson/John Edwards-style populism will likely bring on accusations that he is stirring up "racial" resentment.

Yet unless Obama directly speaks to the issues of economic polarization, outsourcing, a blatantly pro-corporate and pro-rich tax system, he can be marginalized as "too Ivy League" like John Kerry.

A couple final responses to pro-Clinton comments above: 1) She has been virtually silent on campaign finance reform and the ending the system of legal "payoffs" and policy "paybacks," unlike Edwards, who called for full public financing. 2)Clinton's sincerity about re-thinking corporate globalization must be challenged in light of statements like one she made in India: "There is no way to legislate against reality. Outsourcing will continue."

Roger Bybee, Milwaukee.

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Hey David Sirota,
Posted by: MobileSucks on Feb 14, 2008 4:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
why not give up on the Democrats and support third parties? I know you've been asked this.

I know that pisses off something like, I don't know, 80% of people that read and post on Alternet, and I can and do appreciate why. But when is enough, enough? When damn it? I admire you and good and brilliant folks like Thomas Frank, for example, but if all we get from the Dems are people like Clinton, and yea, Obama too, then we are just selling ourselves out. Period. And things will continue to worsen as we support anyone that isn't a Republican.

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M. Clemens
Posted by: mclemens on Feb 14, 2008 7:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a tragic state when people are teaching their kids to listen to what politicians say rather than look at what they do. Hillary, a corporate lawyer for such bastions of American dignity and decency as Wal-Mart, single-handedly demolished the chances of a truly universal single-payer health system for a generation in 1993 by pandering to the parasitic insurance companies, which themselves are largely to blame for our current health care mess. She has contined to support and work to further the interests of Monsanto, which has caused the deaths of over 100,000 Indian farmers in its pursuit of profits over people in the form of "terminator seeds" and oil-based pesticides and fertilizers. She is hawkish in the extreme regarding the colossol failure of military-imperialist hubris in both Iraq and Afghanistan, as her votes on the floor indicate, and shows no interest in restoring some of the civil rights lost to the Constitution-shredding extremists that have been running the show. If we can't differentiate fact from fiction, action from rhetoric, in the dissembling and showboating by these residents of this political bagnio that passes for an election, we don't deserve any better. But it's truly tragic our ignorance and laziness will be paid for with the blood and souls of our children

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» Amen Posted by: citizenjoe
Allow Me To Freedom Of Speech!
Posted by: sharon_jenson on Feb 29, 2008 10:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is the government going to do about the rising gas prices?

Many articles available online support facts that the oil companies do not need to raise gas prices as much as they do; yet the Bush Administration has done nothing to stop them from continuing to enjoy fat profits. Can't the government stop them from "gouging prices"?

One fact is that Exxon-Mobil is one of the world's most profitable companies of 2007, earning almost 40 billion in 2007. This is the largest profit ever in U.S. History. The source of this information is Fortune 500s Top 20 Most Profitable for 2007 and the list is available online. Do they need such a huge profit? Its fine to make money, but how much and at what cost to others? Gas is necessary right now. Americans have no other alternatives but to fill up at the pump. I happen to live in a city in California that is nationally known for owning the most Hybrids. I am pretty proud of that, although I drive a Beetle. Hybrids weren't available widely as of yet when I purchased my car. I do try to drive as little as possible. As of today, gas is $3.45 per gallon here in California.


The next direct threat is the legislature yet to be passed for drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. In 1960 our then president Eisenhower protected this land. It is home to over 80 species of wildlife and would have disastrous impacts on them, the environment, and the Native Americans who live there. In 2005, a Washington Senator was rejected when she tried to protect a small portion of this land.

This "reconciliation" legislature, as it has been named, also includes many other unrelated legislature having nothing to do with this protected land. Its all part of a budget resolution. It includes spending in Iraq, among other things. How on earth did a major wildlife refuge get lumped in with wiretapping and Iraq spending?

You can write to the senate and ask them if they plan to protect the ANWF from oil drillers, who would benefit greatly if they found oil there. There is no guarantee the protected land would produce enough oil to bother going in, so why should they? Write to 433 Russell Senate Office Building, United States Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510. You can learn about this beautiful land and its inhabitants from their defenders website at savearcticrefuge.org.

Now, how did I learn of all these details? I watched C-SPAN today, and I paid attention. Just thought I should pass it along.

Again, I ask how the government intends to solve this problem. Non OPEC oil supply is expected to grow by 900,000 barrels per day in 2008, providing their legislature sees no delays. The earth is in deep trouble if more drilling in every possible pristine, protected place is the answer! The oil industry is not hurting for money. They could certainly take their profits from last year alone and invest in alternative energy. Washington, D.C. is in some way enjoying the oil profits and they really don't seem to see that we are in financial trouble. The consumer is the victim.

Thank you C-SPAN.

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