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[Marxism] ABB'ers underwhelmed by Kerry "turn"
- To: Activists and scholars in Marxist tradition <marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, PEN-L list <PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [Marxism] ABB'ers underwhelmed by Kerry "turn"
- From: Louis Proyect <lnp3@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2004 16:39:52 -0400
- Cc:
- User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.0; en-US; rv:1.0.1) Gecko/20020823 Netscape/7.0
Two of the highest profile Nader-bashers have weighed in on Kerry's
speech at NYU, which has been heralded as the second coming of Howard
Dean. Btw, don't mistake what they write as a signal that they will vote
for anybody but Kerry. These are what you might call the extreme
clothes-pin faction of the ABB brigade, as in putting a clothes-pin on
your nose when you go into pull the lever for Kerry.
From Marc Cooper's blog:
Six weeks out from the election, finally, John Kerry moved aggressively
toward defining his position on Iraq in a major address he gave today at
NYU. He blasted the Bush administration for what he called its “colossal
failures of judgement." That's obvious, isn't it?
Now, if only Kerry could delay the election until the beginning of the
year, Kerry might actually get to where he should have been the whole
time. Meanwhile, his indictment of the Bush policy was on target:
"The administration told us we’d be greeted as liberators. They were wrong.
"They told us not to worry about looting or the sorry state of Iraq's
infrastructure. They were wrong.
(clip)
"In fact, the only officials who lost their jobs over Iraq were the ones
who told the truth."
The problem is that Kerry’s recipe for how to move forward – by
involving international support—is not going to happen. Not unless a
President Kerry takes the one step he so far isn’t willing to go i.e.
make it clear that the way forward is the way out.
full: http://marccooper.com/
===
From Doug Ireland's blog:
September 21, 2004
THE FATAL NEW DECISIONS OF KERRY'S CAMPAIGN
One after the other, John Kerry's misdirected campaign is making
decisions incomprehensible to most political operatives close to the
ground and to the voters. First came the news that, as far as I'm
concerned, Vernon Jordan had his pants taken down in the negotiations
over the presidential debates by that sly old fox Jim Baker.
In this battle of the master-fixers from the back rooms of power, Baker
somehow sweet-talked Jordan into accepting a change of topics for the
first Kerry-Bush debate. It was to have been on domestic policy--the
area in which, the polls all show, Bush's leadership is seen as the
weaker of the two.
Instead, Jordan agreed that the first debate should be on foreign
policy--but, in every category under this rubrique, whether it be
terrorism, managing Iraq, national security, or leading the country in a
crisis, this is the arena in which all the polls say Bush has a distinct
(in some of them, overwhelming) advantage. The first debate is usually
the one most watched by the electorate, and the one leaving the
strongest impression of the candidates that it is subsequently difficult
to shake or change. Kerry, of course, is seriously hobbled in these
debates by his vote for war in Iraq--which is why all his pirouettes on
the issue this year have been so ineffective and content-weak. Score
Jordan's mistake for Bush.
Then, on Tuesday morning came Kerry's much-heralded speech on Iraq. The
telepromptered text was crisper than Kerry's usual meanderings, but just
as devoid of new and convincing substance. It would, we were told by his
campaign's pre-spinners, lay out a detailed plan for how to get the U.S.
out of Iraq. Well, Kerry's NYU speech did nothing of the sort. It was
the same-old-same-old, airbrushed with a bit more vigorous rhetoric and
given numerals so that Kerry supporters could talk about his "4-point
plan."
One of the cleverer GOP consultants, Mike Murphy, devastatingly skewered
these pretentions when he characterized the "Kerry plan" on Tuesday's
Nightline as "Bush is a liar and I can be nice to the French." Kerry's
assertion in the speech that he can somehow persuade foreign leaders to
send their troops and personnel into the chaos that is Iraq to pay for
America's imperial mistakes with their blood, and relieve the burden on
the treasury of the World's Only Superpower--the poor, impoverished
thing-- is a fantasy unlikely to convince anyone outside Kerry's circle
of sycophants. And Kerry himself acknowledged that it would be four long
years before the U.S. could withdraw from Iraq under his so-called "plan."
I found it incredible that, only 43 days before Election Day, Kerry was
still engaging in pompous, first person claims about his better skills
than Bush on the Iraq issue--which up to now, let's be frank, have left
the voters confused--instead of talking about the economy. Kerry, who
won't admit a mistake, kept insisting, too, that he'd been right all
along and had had a better plan than Bush all along. But, we learned
from this week's Newsweek report, the latest batch of
lobbyist-consultants imported to the Kerry campaign to save it from its
blunders are responsible for pushing Kerry into refocussing his campaign
on Iraq, making it the central theme on which he hopes to win the
election. It is even, Newsweek reports, the theme of the final week of
campaigning.
These millionaire media goniffs and Clintonista off-year whores for
Corporate America, to whom Kerry is now listening, are themselves deaf
to the wails of distress coming from those Democrats in the battleground
states who have been begging for a bold Kerry economic attack on Bush,
which they see as the only way of having a prayer of defeating this war
president by mobilizing the victims of the Bush economy and energizing
the desultory Democratic base. It's as if the Clintonista imports have
forgotten their own mantra that brought them the White House: It's the
economy, stupid--especially when Kerry has shown ever since he became
the virtual nominee of his party that he cannot win on the Iraq issue.
full: http://direland.typepad.com/direland/
--
The Marxism list: www.marxmail.org
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- Thread context:
- Re: [Marxism] Re: marxist difficulty in theorizing the nation?, (continued)
- [Marxism] A Call to Arms for the Working Class,
Doug Smiley Tue 21 Sep 2004, 23:43 GMT
- [Marxism] call for protest in Los Angeles,
Josh Saxe Tue 21 Sep 2004, 23:18 GMT
- [Marxism] ABB'ers underwhelmed by Kerry "turn",
Louis Proyect Tue 21 Sep 2004, 20:42 GMT
- [Marxism] A web book from the ISO on lesser-evilism,
Louis Proyect Tue 21 Sep 2004, 20:27 GMT
- [Marxism] How to fight (and lose) colonial wars,
Marvin Gandall Tue 21 Sep 2004, 19:54 GMT
- [Marxism] Re What to make of Marx's antisemitism,
Ilyenkova Tue 21 Sep 2004, 19:52 GMT
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