Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.
No Matter Who Wins, The President Will Be a Bastard
Also in Top Stories
Memo to Obama: Moving to the Middle Is for Losers
Arianna Huffington, Huffington Post
U.S. Journalist Photographs Grisly Aftermath of Attack in Iraq, Gets Booted by Military
Dahr Jamail, IPS News
Big Pharma Is in a Frenzy to Bring Cannabis-Based Medicines to Market
Paul Armentano, AlterNet
Bush Economy Sheds 62K Jobs in June; Sixth Straight Monthly Decline
Dean Baker, TruthOut.org
Our Government: Powerless to Outlaw Guns, Able to Outlaw Sexual Expression
Dr. Marty Klein, Sexual Intelligence
WALL-E: A World Without Us
Michael Dudley, City States
Even as Celebrities, Women Face a Double Standard
Vanessa Richmond, The Tyee
Now Let's Talk About Populism for Real
Ruth Rosen, Truthdig
The campaign was a minuet performed by robots; the post-election period is a bacchanal. What a relief. It's just too bad one of these mediocre men has to win. But the good news is that the victor will be perceived by much of the population as illegitimate. And that is not only as it should be, but how it would have been, even without the post-election crisis.
Bush and Gore's campaigns were full of sound and lack of fury, signifying nothing but focus group pandering and the power of cash; the process by which they were chosen had little to do with the "will of the people"; and the platforms on which they ran were as calculated and artificial as plastic topiary.
The system has long been in thrall to the big money that sponsors and choreographs the electoral show. This time however, the process spun out of control at a crucial moment. Suddenly millions at home, and abroad where America has flogged its system as a flawless model, see that the way "the world's greatest democracy" chooses leaders is slightly more democratic than a dog fight.
With all the rubbernecking magnetism of a 10-car pile up, "The Battle for the White House," as MSNBC packages its coverage, is not only good dirty fun, it is, actually, good for the country, especially compared with the inevitable denouement: installing either of these corrupted ciphers in the oval office.
In fact, the longer the crisis continues, the better it is. That the US electoral system is flawed and unfair should hardly be news, but suddenly it is. Sounding sillier than a Dan Rather simile, the candidates and their defense dogs have couched each self-serving maneuver as a commitment to serve the "will of the public" and as a pledge to do what is "best for the country." Is there anyone within retching distance of a TV who has failed to notice that the good of the country meshes precisely with the strategic needs of each candidate?
To call them hypocrites does disservice to true hypocrites everywhere. At least hypocrites have principles to betray. Bush and Gore are simply self-serving opportunists. Bush instantly abandoned his keystone "trust in the people" and switched his faith to machines and K-Street lawyers. His argument about the accuracy of hand counting has more holes than a West Palm Beach ballot. It also directly contradicts policies he implemented as governor. Grabbing presidential trappings, even before the votes were counted, he began compiling a transition team, meeting with advisers, calling his wife "First Lady Bush."
Gore, authentic as the Valium-calm he projects, veils his raw ambition with the desire -- discovered midway through the campaign -- to "fight for the people." Donning a Kennedyesque mantle, he frolicked gawkily at touch football while his surrogates intoned against a "rush to judgement" -- a phrase laden with the seductive scent of JFK-done-wrong, spiced with the provocative undertone of conspiracy.
Meanwhile, dueling gurus of gravitas, including two second-rate ex-secretaries of state, fertilize bouquets of network microphones with talking points.
Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from AlterNet! Sign up now »
| More News and Analysis: | ||
|
Economy: Small Comfort in Manufacturing Uptick Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: An unexpected spurt in manufacturing activity is doing little to dispel the gloom that envelopes the U.S. economy midway through the year. By Abid Aslam, IPS News. July 5, 2008. |
Obama Fails to Put Out the FISA Fire in His Own House Rights and Liberties: Obama campaign tries to control the impact of his stance on FISA. By Bob Ostertag, Huffington Post. July 5, 2008. |
The Iraq War Was About Oil, All Along War on Iraq: Oh, no, they told us, Iraq isn't a war about oil. That's cynical and simplistic, they said. It's about terror and al-Qaeda and toppling a dictator. By Bill Moyers, Michael Winship, Bill Moyers Journal. July 5, 2008. |