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The mood in America is shifting against the Iraq war, but it has found inadequate expression in Congress
by Open-Publishing - Thursday 25 August 20059 comments
Movement Wars and conflicts USA
Leaderless on the left
by Gary Younge
The myth of Rosa Parks is well known. The tired seamstress who boarded a bus in Montgomery, Alabama, in December 1955 and refused to give up her seat to a white man has become one of the most enduring legends of the civil rights era. Her subsequent arrest started the bus boycott that launched the civil rights movement. It transformed the apartheid of America’s southern states from a local idiosyncrasy to an international scandal and turned a previously unknown 26-year-old preacher, Martin Luther King, into a household name.
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"She was a victim of both the forces of history and the forces of destiny," said King. "She had been tracked down by the zeitgeist - the spirit of the times." The reality was somewhat different. Parks was no victim. The zeitgeist did not track her down; she embodied it. She had a long history of anti-racist activism and had often been thrown off buses for resisting segregation. Far from being a meek lady in need of a foot massage she was a keen supporter of Malcolm X, who never fully embraced King’s strategy of non-violence.
"To call Rosa Parks a poor, tired seamstress and not talk about her role as a community leader and civil rights activist as well, is to turn an organised struggle for freedom into a personal act of frustration," writes Herbert Kohl in his book She Would Not Be Moved.
The story of collective struggles is all too often filtered through the experience of an individual. In a bid to render the account more palatable and popular, the personal takes precedence over the political. As a result the story may reach a wider audience; but by the time they receive it, the agendas and the issues involved have often become distorted - to the detriment of both the individual and the movement.
The story of Cindy Sheehan, the 48-year-old woman whose son Casey was killed in Iraq in April 2004, is one such example. Until late last week, Sheehan was camping outside President George Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas, demanding to see the president. "I want to ask him, why did my son die?" she told the Guardian. "What was this noble cause you talk about? And if the cause is so noble, when are you going to send your daughters over there and let somebody else’s son come home?"
Sheehan, who has met the president once before and was not impressed, had planned to stay at what became known as Camp Casey for the whole of August but had to leave on Thursday because her mother became sick.
With the help of PR consultants she was packaged as a grieving Everymother who wanted answers. Capturing the public imagination, over the past two weeks she has been a regular feature on US cable and network news, the letters pages and newspaper editorials. In turn, she has re-energised the anti-war movement. On Wednesday, thousands of people across the country attended 1,627 vigils in solidarity with her cause.
Her popularity has made her a prime target for the right. One commentator on Rupert Murdoch’s Fox channel branded her a "crackpot"; Christopher Hitchens derided her for "spouting piffle" and lambasted her protest as "dreary, sentimental nonsense". Talk-radio king Rush Limbaugh said her story "is nothing more than forged documents - there’s nothing about it that’s real". The backlash continued this weekend with the launch of a "You Don’t Speak for Me Cindy" tour heading for Crawford with the support of rightwing talk radio hosts, to set up a pro-war camp.
The focus on Sheehan’s personal loss is indeed problematic. Bereavement, in and of itself, confers neither knowledge nor insight - only a particular sensibility that might lead to both and a compelling personal narrative through which to articulate them. To define her as a mournful mother, while ignoring that she is a politically conscious, media-savvy campaigner, which she has been for quite some time, does neither her nor her cause any favours.
Indeed, those who focus on Sheehan’s woes, whether they support or attack her, miss the point entirely. Had she come to Crawford at Easter, she would most likely have gone unnoticed. The reason she has struck a chord is not because of the sorrow that is personal to her but because of the frustration she shares with the rest of the country over Iraq. That is also why the right have attacked her so ferociously and so personally.
But unlike the Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry in his swift boat, Sheehan will not be blown off course quite so easily. The public mood in America is shifting consistently and decisively against the war and Bush’s handling of it. Gallup has commissioned eight polls asking whether it was worth going to war since the beginning of the year: every time at least half have said no. For the first time, most people believe the invasion of Iraq has made the US more vulnerable to further attacks. The number of those who want all the troops withdrawn remains a minority at 33% - but that is double what it was two years ago, and still growing.
The reason Sheehan has become such a lightning rod is because that mood has found only inadequate and inconsistent expression in Congress. It has been left to her to articulate an escalating political demand that is in desperate need of political representation. This marks not only a profound dislocation between the political class and political culture but a short circuit in the democratic process. The mainstream has effectively been marginalised.
This is not particular to the US. In Britain, the view that there was a link between Iraq and the London bombings was shared by two-thirds of the population, but the handful of politicians who dared to mention it were shouted down in parliament and vilified in the press. In Germany, all the main parties support the labour market reforms that will cut welfare entitlements and reduce social protection, even though most of the population do not. But what many "centre-left" politicians regard as electoral expediency is actually becoming an electoral liability. Evidence exists that support for more radical stances is there if only they had the backbone to campaign for it.
In Germany, a new leftwing party combining ex-communists and disaffected Social Democrats is attracting 12% in polls and could yet rob the right of an outright victory next month. This month, in a congressional byelection in southern Ohio, Paul Hackett, a marine reservist who recently served in Iraq, stood for the Democrats on an anti-war platform. In a constituency where the Republicans won with 72% of the vote nine months ago, Hackett branded Bush a "chicken hawk". He won 48%, turning a safe seat into a marginal.
Sadly, such examples are all too rare. Sheehan has revealed both the strength and the weakness of the left. We have a political agenda that can command considerable mainstream support; yet we do not have a political leadership willing or able to articulate those agendas. We wield political influence; we lack legislative power.
g.younge@guardian.co.uk
Forum posts
25 August 2005, 16:42
You call what Paul Hackett stood for an "anti-war platform"? This quote is from Hackett’s web site:
"No matter what your position on the war, if we pull out now the entire region will spiral into chaos and present our nation and military with a far more difficult challenge than we currently face."
This sounds like typical democrat double talk to me, not an anti-war position. And, that is what is wrong with the institution of the Democratic Party. It is nothing more than Republican-lite. He is peddling the same message as the President, the Republican Party and the hawkish leadership of the Democrats. When the Iraqis are ready to defend themselves, in who knows how many years, we will leave. This is bunk because those permanent bases we have built are not for the Iraqis. They are for U.S. troops.
Democrats should be challenging the very act of having gone there in the first place, not rationalizing why we have to stay, even though the reasons for having gone were based on misrepresentations and outright lies.
26 August 2005, 04:28
"Inedequate expression.?’ I was under the inpression that elected people to congress were servants of the people. Which applies to the president also. Please forgive my ignorance. You see, I have’nt read George Orwell’s ’1984.’ I’ll have to see if it applies to 2005. Good day to all!!
25 August 2005, 18:58
Yes the mood is becoming against the war, because President Bush is letting us down. We have seen him waver in the fighting of this war against these savages that cut people’s heads off. I know you think that is nothing wrong with it, so what, right? Nick Berg deserved it, he was a Jew who took land from Palestine, right, you left wing morons?
We should have bombed that entire Sunni Triangle into the next ice age, the day after they strung up 3 workers from that bridge. Only women and children should have been allowed out. Then after it, we stand there and ask "ANY QUESTIONS??" Don’t you remember what it took to get Japan to surrender? Not even the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima did it. It took the second bomb on Nagasaki, and the firebombing of Tokyo before they gave up. We must be prepared to do no less with these Islamic radical cocksuckers.
The enemy doesn’t even rise to the level of a pit bull. We have to de-louse the fleas from the body politic, reinstitute the Sedition Act, and jail anyone who undermines the war effort. OR GET OUT OF BLOODY IRAQ!! Bush has been reading too many New York Slimes editorials. If he wants to win friends, he should get a DOG!! The insurgents must be taught a lesson, if they so much as touch a hair on our heads in the USA, we will destroy MEcca. Period.
As General Patton said, "nobody won a war because he died for his country. He won a war because he made some other poor bastard die for HIS country.""
God bless him.
25 August 2005, 22:18
That was truly inspiring. Now go and write a 200 word essay entitled "Why We Were In Viet Nam.
26 August 2005, 06:48
Bush has made a fucking mess out of Iraq. The women there are now going to be relegated to non-status their rights have been taken away and their countries independence has vanished never to return as an occupied country. The U.S. even after losing the war will not leave, they are building 14, yes that is 14 permanent bases in that tiny country. There is hardly any electricity, hardly any clean water to drink, hardly any gasoline in an oil rich country, hardly any hospitals, hardly any schools, and lots and lots of destruction, violence, killing, misery.
Bush = misery.
25 August 2005, 22:48
Oh, you mean the Vietnam War that was started by a Democrat President (Kennedy), was escalated by a Democrat (Lyndon Baines Johnson, God rest his soul), the pivotal event (Gulf of Tonkin) happened on the watch of a Democratic President (and was a contrived event)??? Is THAT the Vietnam War you’re referring to?? And then it took a Republican President (Nixon) to end the war you Democrats started? Your bastard President Clinton, who liked cigars, broads and interns, in that order — turned his cheek for 8 years to the radical Islamic cocksuckers who attacked us over and over, and now Bush has to deal with his mess, and you are blaming him?? It’s no wonder you have lost every election since 1994, and no chance of winning another anytime soon, either pal. You better stick with your signature issues: abortion for 14 year olds without parental knowledge, and more welfare for the "pillars of the Democratic Party" to keep them happy and quiet, and voting Democrat.
You know what, I can hardly wait for Hanoi Jane to show up in Fallujah, sitting on a truck, wearing a bomber’s vest!!
26 August 2005, 03:58
What a sick mind. Like the ’Man’ said a long time ago, ’forgive them for they know not what they do.’ And I’ll add, think!!
26 August 2005, 06:39
Get it right you Nazi....the Vietnam war was started by Eisenhower, a Republipuke, Kennedy tried to end it, the military ended his life instead, and Tricky Dick escalated it into Cambodia, and Laos and he lied (like Bush) about the fact that we were losing it, and he continued to escalate it and used agent orange on the all the while lying about it and saying he would end it right up until he was impeached.
26 August 2005, 05:46
The Bush and Clinton families have been friends and business companions for most of their adults lives. The Republican and Democratic parties are controled by the Banking familes of the world. Every 4 years we are presented with the two parties (Rep & Dem) who the bankers have complete control over.
When one looks at the laws that have been passed the last 20 years, all in favor of big business, one should be able to deduce that something is drastically wrong. NBC is owned by GE and the other television stations are also owned by big business. Government has been working silently to take all, WE THE PEOPLE, rights away, just as they are taking the rights of those in the Middle East. It is time for WE THE PEOPLE to take them back.