Sitting This One Out.

AuthorReed, Adolph L., Jr.
PositionEssay

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Ok, here we are again, a year out from a Presidential election, and we're all supposed to be figuring out which of the Democrats has the best chance to win--determined mainly by the standard of raising the most money--and subordinating all our substantive political concerns to the objective of getting him or her elected. This time, I'm not going to acquiesce in the fiction that the Presidential charade has any credibility whatsoever. I'm not paying any attention to the horse race coverage--that mass-mediated positioning in the battle for superficial product differentiation.

The Democratic candidates who are anointed "serious" are like a car with a faulty front-end alignment: Their default setting pulls to the right. They are unshakably locked into a strategy that impels them to give priority to placating those who aren't inclined to vote for them and then palliate those who are with bromides and doublespeak. When we complain, they smugly say, "Well, you have no choice but to vote for me because the other guy's worse." The party has essentially been nominating the same ticket with the same approach since Dukakis.

The last straw for me was the spectacle of all the "serious candidates" falling over one another to link Castro and Chßvez with Ahmadinejad, bin Laden, and Kim, thus endorsing the Bush Administration's view that any government that does anything that ours doesn't like--including giving its own people's needs higher priority than those of our corporations--qualifies it as a supporter of terrorism, a rogue state, part of the Axis of Evil, or whatever comic book slogan is operative this week. Then came the supposedly anti-war Obama buttressing his commitment to increase overall American troop strength with a pledge to invade Pakistan. Then came his and HRC's tiff over the etiquette of publicly declaring a willingness to use nuclear weapons on a case-by-case basis, with both parties treating the issue as purely a matter of foreign policy gamesmanship. And this was during Hiroshima and Nagasaki week, no less!

Each serious candidate has boosters who will tell us that we should be more sophisticated than to take what their candidates say at face value, that their empty, inadequate, or objectionable proposals are the best, most realistic versions of whatever we think we want--from ending the war, to universal national health care and access to quality education, to public investment in rebuilding the Gulf Coast and the rest of the country's physical and social infrastructure, to worker protection and fighting environmental degradation.

A friend of mine characterizes this as the "we'll come back for you" politics, the claim that they can't champion anything you want because they have to conciliate your enemies right now to get elected, but that, once they win, they'll be able to attend to the...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT