[blind-democracy] Re: Bernie Sanders & oppositional criticism

  • From: Carl Jarvis <carjar82@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 23 Jun 2015 08:57:12 -0700

Miriam,
You've identified three very real conditions. I'd say this is where
we find the majority of our clients. Of course the third condition,
our personality, probably makes the greatest difference. Even folks
we meet who live with family, can be feeling isolated. Often they
live in a spare bed room with their own TV and a bath room just
outside their door. So they are with family, but actually alone.
In my experience, the people who seem to be the happiest are the ones
who have a network of activities and acquaintances, along with an
interest in what is going on around them. Not always world affairs,
nor even local affairs, but certainly an interest in what is going on
with family and friends.
While you are probably physically isolated more than many of us, you
do have the active interest in what is going on around you. If I had
some magic Fairy dust that would help you not to feel depressed over
world affairs, I'd send it by overnight mail. Maybe you still feel
that you should be physically involved in world affairs? Some of us
never adjust to the limitations of our bodies. I know that I sure
struggle with that aspect of aging. I was complaining to my doctor a
few months back, telling him how I haven't the strength in my lower
back to allow me to do the brush clearing I needed to do.
"Well," he said after a long pause, "You're not a young man anymore.
Have you considered slowing down and taking it easy?" But that made
me think of my great grandmother, sitting in her rocker waiting to go
to be with Jesus. She was barely 74 years old when she died.
I was more inclined to want to compare myself to the couple I knew
when I lived in Ballard, in the north end of Seattle. They had a
neat, orderly little two bedroom house just above the ship canal. She
baked her own bread, and never let me pass by without scooting out
with a bag of fresh cookies. He mowed the lawn with a hand mower and
trimmed the hedges and weeded the flower beds, on his hands and knees.
She did all the house work and kept the windows sparkling. They
clambered into their old Chevy and drove the three blocks to the big
Tradewell super market once a week, to stock up on supplies.
They were both 100 years old. They had been married 78 years when I
knew them. That was back in 1959. I married my first wife the next
June, and moved out of the area, so I do not know if they reached
their goal of 80 years of marriage. Think of being born before Abe
Lincoln was elected president!. Between 1859 and 1959 the entire
world had transformed. The Industrial Revolution was barely underway.
And at 100, they looked up to see huge jet planes trundling overhead.
They had an old black and white TV that one of their three children
had given them. They had central heat and electric lights and a
washer and dryer and a telephone. They had a car instead of a team of
horses. When I would stop by and ask them if I could be of any help,
the old man smiled, scratched his thinning white head and said, "I
just can't think of a thing. We got all these modern gadgets doing
most of the work." I wonder what he would have thought of this
computer...and the cell phone...or the iPhone. And now that I think
of it, what a different world today, from that moment back in 1935, in
Spokane's Sacred Heart Hospital, when I came screaming into the world
on a blustery April 13th. Do you know, back when I was a boy the
iceman still drove his old horse and wagon around the streets in
Spokane.
Ah me! The changes we've seen. I'll bet even New York has undergone
some small changes in the past 70 or 80 years.
Which makes me chuckle. The last time I was in New York was in 1973.
My son learned to walk at my buddy's home out at Eaton's Neck, Long
Island, at the Coast Guard base. In fact, I still have a copy of the
tapes from the 1973 NFB convention, and in the background you can
actually hear the jingling of Jamie's shoe bells.
Anyway, a couple of years ago I was talking to a friend who had just
come back from New York. I wondered out loud if it had changed much
since I'd been there. When I told my friend that I'd not been there
since 1973, she burst out in hysterical laughter. "Could you imagine
coming back to Seattle after not being here since 1973?
My mind wandered around the city and surrounding areas. Funny, how
much really had changed, even though it seemed to still be the same.
Living among change helps the feeling of sameness, but I do remember
the lady in Port Angeles, who told us that she'd been born three doors
from where she now lived, 100 years ago, and she had grown up,
married, raised three children, worked, buried her parents and later,
her husband and one son, and today, "I don't know this town, and
everybody living here are strangers."
But she was happy. We'd first met this lady when she was a mere 95,
and was trying to figure out how she could thin her carrot seeds now
that she could not see to plant them properly. We showed her that she
could lay a strip of masking tape on the table, sticky side up,
sprinkle her seeds, shake off the excess, and lay the strip down in
the trench in her garden. She already had figured out that if she put
a stake at either end of the row and a string from one to the other,
she could draw a straight shallow trench and place her tape in it.
But I am rambling again. Time to head for Sequim and do some good in
the world.
Take care and know that I'm sending some powerful cheery thoughts out
your way.

Carl Jarvis




On 6/23/15, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Carl, You're a lucky man. I'm not feeling much excitement or wonder lately..
This could be due to my physical condition, the state of the world, my
personality, or a combination of all three.

Miriam

-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Carl Jarvis
Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 12:29 AM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: Bernie Sanders & oppositional criticism

Miriam writes: "We talk about free elections, reaching out to the public,
organizing, working toward a better future for everyone. But ultimately, we
are at the mercy of the power elite."
But Miriam, isn't that the way it's supposed to be? I mean, if we were
riding high in the drivers seat, then this big mess would be our fault, and
some upstart little bunch of whipper snappers would be trying to push us
out.
Since the world is one big mess, I prefer to be where I am. Some people see
their lives as a hopeless blink of the eye. I see my life as a cheery
twinkle in an inquisitive eye.
And while neither eye will make a difference in the scheme of things, at
least I'm hopeful and having a good time, too.
I really hope each of us can grab the excitement and wonder that is all
around us. I know that this will not make the world better. But being
depressed or feeling down will not make things better, either.

Carl Jarvis


On 6/22/15, R. E. Driscoll Sr <llocsirdsr@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Since I am one of those who do not know Jill Stein the following is
the result.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein


*Jill Ellen Stein* (born May 14, 1950) is an American physician
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physician> who was the nominee of the
Green Party
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Party_of_the_United_States> for
President of the United States
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/President_of_the_United_States> in the
2012 election
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_20
12>.^[1]

<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-wins-1> ^[2]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-Boston.com-2> ^[3]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-Questionaire-3>
Stein was a candidate for Governor of Massachusetts
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governor_of_Massachusetts> in the 2002
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts_gubernatorial_election,_2
002>
and the 2010 gubernatorial elections
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts_gubernatorial_election,_2
010>.^[4]

<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-4> ^[5]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-5> ^[6]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-6> On June 22,
Stein announced that she would seek the Green Party's presidential
nomination during an appearance on Democracy Now!
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democracy_Now%21>.

Stein is a resident of Lexington, Massachusetts
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexington,_Massachusetts>. She is a
graduate of Harvard College
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_College> (1973) and the Harvard
Medical School <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_Medical_School>
(1979).^[7] <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-7>
^[8] <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-8> ^[9]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-9>

Stein was endorsed for President in 2012 by Noam Chomsky
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noam_Chomsky>, a linguist, author and
activist,^[10]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-Stein-10> and by
Chris Hedges <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Hedges>, a Pulitzer
Prize <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulitzer_Prize>-winning
journalist <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalist> and war
correspondent <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_correspondent>,^[11]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-national_peace_lea
ders-11>

among others. In February 2015, Stein announced the formation of an
exploratory committee to seek the Green Party's presidential
nomination in the 2016 U.S. election
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_20
16>.^[12]

<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jill_Stein#cite_note-considers-12>

^I Know a little more now.


On 6/22/2015 10:59 AM, Miriam Vieni wrote:
In 2012, no one with whom I spoke, knew who Jill Stein was and in
2016, they still won't know. We live in a mass, impersonal,
fragmented society, in a complex empire operated by financial and
military forces way beyond our control. We, on this list, and the
leftist organizations that we support, are dreamers. We talk about
free elections, reaching out to the public, organizing, working
toward a better future for everyone. But ultimately, we are at the mercy
of the power elite.

Miriam

-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Carl
Jarvis
Sent: Monday, June 22, 2015 11:28 AM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: my blog carl jarvis
Subject: [blind-democracy] Bernie Sanders & oppositional criticism

Good article, Roger. And by the way, Jill Stein declared her intent
to run for the presidency this morning on Democracy Now, with Amy
Goodman.


So let me ramble a bit on the upcoming fiasco called the Presidential
Race. In boxing we call it, "The fix is in". There is no race.
Unless you consider Tweedle Dee Dee and Tweedle Dee Dum sitting on
the fence, a race. Clinton verses Clone does not constitute a Race.
It is the left hand shaking the right hand. But both hands belong to
the same body. Both hands are controlled by the same brain. Both
hands appear to do different things, but both hands will always do
what the brain orders them to do.
That, in my humble opinion, is the American Political Monster.
So, if I am even close to being correct, we can't make this monster
do our bidding. We are under the spell of different brains than the
two hands of the Ruling Monster.
Then why even dabble in this fiasco? Why even campaign for Jill Stein?
Would we really want to place her in the pot of boiling water called
the White House? Ideally, we would better spend our time planning
how to remove the current Monster, with nonviolent means.
Remember, I strongly maintain that violent overthrow merely sets a
nation up for another violent encounter. Usually the takeover by a
Strongman.
We might better spend our time discussing what sort of world we want
for our children/grandchildren.
But the Progressive/Radical Parties are at each others throats, eager
to show the limitations of all others, and the "Rightness" of their own.
Sort of like the vast array of Christian Denominations.
Maybe the day will come when all these organizations can talk
together without taking everything personally, but we have been so
conditioned to behave in that manner that it is going to be a long time
in coming.
Meanwhile, I am planning to support Bernie Sanders. Why? Because he
does have a fairly broad platform and audience. He will bring up
many domestic issues that the Right Hand would rather not consider,
and the Left
Hand(Clinton) will be forced to pay lip service to. At least this
will force the Monster Brain to work overtime in devising ways to
squelch Bernie Sanders. There is some value, or perhaps simply some
fun, in helping the Monster squirm.
As long as we keep firmly in mind that no matter what happens, the
Monster Brain is going to win.
And after the Primary, I plan to turn my measly support to Jill
Stein, and the Green Party. Still remembering that even if she were
to win, she would be swallowed up by the Monster Brain.
But again, her campaign will bring out issues that would never surface.
Perhaps of all the candidates, Jill Stein would have the greatest
impact on our nightmare called, Foreign Policy. None of the Left
Hand or Right Hand candidates will touch that sacred cow. None of
them, including Bernie Sanders, will dare to take on the mighty
military, the true power center today.
The Corporate Masters are behaving like the Greedy Fools down through
history. They will grab and grab and wake up one day to discover
that the very forces they set in motion to help them maintain power,
are turning on them and taking over. The Corporate Rulers will
become the servants of the New Ruling Class. The Mighty Military.
But I digress. Bernie Sanders, and then Jill Stein. But it will
only be an exercise to fill in my idle moments.

Carl Jarvis




On 6/22/15, Roger Loran Bailey <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In the past when I have been asked what I think of Bernard Sanders I
have said that at best he is a social democrat and a right-wing
social democrat at that. I think that Sanders is causing me to
revise that opinion himself. He does not seem to be a social
democrat at all and his claims of socialism have about as much
meaning as others' claims that Obama is a socialist. Sanders is
showing every sign of being nothing more than a bourgeois liberal
and not even a left-wing liberal either.

http://socialistaction.org/bernie-sanders-and-oppositional-criticism
/


Bernie Sanders & oppositional criticism

Published June 21, 2015. | By Socialist Action.
July 2015 Sanders

By JOE AUCIELLO

“… the oppositional criticism is nothing more than a safety valve
for mass dissatisfaction, a condition of the stability of the social
structure.” — Leon Trotsky in his preface to “The History of the
Russian Revolution.”

In early June, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton
told a conference organized by Service Employees International Union
members that she backed the $15-an-hour national minimum wage
campaign. She praised the union activists and supporters “for
marching in the streets to get a living wage” and added, “I want to
be your champion. I want to fight with you every day.”

She didn’t really mean it, of course. Within 24 hours her campaign
issued a clarification explaining that in general Clinton favors
higher wages for low-income workers, but she does not specifically
endorse the demand for a $15 hourly minimum. So, union members and
activists heard their hoped-for message; big business and Democratic
Party officials heard the more honest message.

Clinton’s cautious centrism permits her only a flirtation with
leftist causes, thereby yielding the left-of-center space to another
candidate.
Thus, the stage is set for the entrance of Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders, whose campaign website boldly asks: “Ready to Start a
Political Revolution?”

Sanders certainly intends to become the voice of “oppositional
criticism” in the 2016 election. Thus far, the efforts of this
sometime “socialist,” the independent in the Senate who typically
votes with the Democrats, have been more successful than those of
former Democratic governors Martin O’Malley of Maryland and Lincoln
Chafee of Rhode Island.

Sanders has been drawing increasingly large crowds in the primary
states for his campaign events, and in those states his poll levels
are sharply rising. Clearly, Sanders is saying something
different—which energizes Democratic and independent voters. The
promise of radical change resonates with many whose lives have seen
little benefit during the tepid years of the Obama administration.

At this stage in the primaries, the Sanders platform gives a public
hearing to many progressive ideas. Most notably, the Sanders
campaign directs a spotlight on the obscene levels of income
inequality in America. Sanders speaks out for a national,
single-payer health care system and pledges to pursue efforts to
create sustainable energy to reduce global warming.

He would remove tuition fees from state colleges and universities.
He supports the $15 minimum wage, argues for breaking up the
mega-banks, and promotes a jobs package that would put people to
work by rebuilding the highways and bridges that are deteriorating
throughout America.
These are reforms that, if enacted, would benefit the lives of
millions.
No wonder Sanders’ poll numbers have risen dramatically.

Still, Bernie Sanders is hardly an unknown. Given his “socialist-light”
political history and voting record, which is virtually
indistinguishable from that of a typical liberal Democrat and
includes support to funding Israel and the war in Afghanistan, it is
fair to ask:
Is Sanders really the voice of dissent? Is he really the figure who
can galvanize the poor, the working class, women, racial minorities,
and youth to lead the political fightback that is so sorely needed?

Though audiences at rallies may be stirred by soaring speeches,
high-flown words accomplish little. What’s more, a geyser of popular
rhetoric tends to erupt every four years around election time.

A socialist writer has noted that while the Democrats proclaim
themselves “as champions of the poor, their ‘soak the rich’ rhetoric
is largely a misrepresentation. They and their Republican
counterparts use such rhetoric only to appeal to voters. Both
parties, over the last decade in particular, have rushed to find tax
breaks for the rich and lower the real income of working people.
Today even two-income families are having a difficult time paying for
basic necessities.”

This observation was made 25 years ago. The article, written by
Hayden Perry, was entitled: “Congress approves new budget: Higher
taxes and fewer services,” which certainly has a present-day ring to
it. Though it was published in the November 1990 issue of Socialist
Action, it could be reprinted today with little change.

Bernie Sanders is this year’s model of the token “leftist” who will
make oppositional criticism as a safety valve for mass
dissatisfaction. His commitment to his causes appears real enough,
but it goes no further than the margins of the Democratic Party.
Those margins cannot and have never sustained a popular movement
that would give real meaning to democracy.

Some fifteen years ago, Ralph Nader launched his bid as the Green
Party candidate for the president of the United States. Although
Socialist Action gave no support to the Green Party’s electoral
campaigns, which only proposed reforms to capitalism, Nader at least
argued with a boldness and insight thoroughly lacking in Bernie
Sanders today. In his 2000 announcement speech, Nader said that the
foundation of his efforts would be “to focus on active citizenship,
to create fresh political movements that will displace the control
of the Democratic and Republican parties, two apparently distinct
political entities that feed at the same corporate trough. They are
in fact simply the two heads of one political duopoly, the DemRep
Party.”

How did Bernie Sanders, the socialist who asks if we are ready for
revolution, respond to the Nader campaign? In his political memoir,
Nader explains: “Bernie had told me that while he sympathized and
agreed with our pro-democracy agenda, he could not come out
officially for us.
The reason was that his modus vivendi with the House Democrats would
be ruptured and he would lose much of his influence, including a
possible subcommittee chair” (“Crashing the Party,” pp. 125-126).
Nader was discreet enough not to inquire about the actual results of
Sanders’
supposed influence.

Little has changed. The fix is still in. The Democratic National
Committee has essentially offered Sanders a simple deal in words
approximately like these: “We’ll let you speak out and give you a
place in the six Democratic primary debates if you affirm your place
as a Democrat. You get to say whatever you want in the state
primaries as long as you support whoever we want in the national
election.”

It is not a very good deal, but it is the only one on offer, and
though Sanders will haggle, pushing for more debates, he will accept
what he is given. It’s what Bernie does. In fact, Sanders has built
a career as the fighting socialist who takes a dive for the Democrats.

Sanders does not lead and does not intend to. He follows. His vision
of the future is restricted to what has been made popular in the
recent past. The ideas Sanders offers, the program of his campaign,
go no further than the demands raised by the significant social
struggles of the last several years: the Occupy movement and the
environmental movement, especially.

The lesson for activists working for Sanders is quite clear: Do
better work and be more effective by building social protest
movements at the grassroots and national levels. The opportunities are
many and varied.
The Ferguson National Response Network is a good source of
information for protest actions taking place in cities all across the
United States.
The approximately 100 organizations that attended the United
National Antiwar Coalition conference would eagerly welcome new
supporters.

Whether it is 15 Now, Black Lives Matter, local campaigns against
nuclear power plants, struggles for environmental issues, women’s
rights, and more, important causes need the time, energy, and money
that is being poured into the Sanders for President Campaign.

The biggest flaw with Bernie Sanders is not his failure to condemn
capitalism as a system and call for its overturn. It may even be
asking too much to expect Sanders to fight for the structural reform
of capitalism, to demand the nationalization of basic industries, as
the British Labor Party did after World War II, in a platform that
won a national election. The Sanders team will say the times are not
right for such bold measures, that it is enough if Bernie only wants
to soften some of the system’s worst excesses.

But the time has come—in fact, the time is long overdue—to show a
new generation of activists just what the Democratic Party is and
why it is necessary to move past it. Bernie Sanders fails to take
that decisive step. His campaign by its very nature misleads
activists by asserting that the Democratic Party is a fit instrument
for the kind of social change that is needed to transform America.

A socialist who truly merits the term “independent” once said,
“Capitalism rules and exploits the working people through its
control of the government. … And capitalism controls the government
through the medium of its class political parties. … The
unconditional break away from capitalist politics and capitalist
parties is the first act of socialist consciousness, and the first
test of socialist seriousness and sincerity” (James P. Cannon, “Speeches
for Socialism,”
pp. 339-340, emphasis added).

Sanders has been compared to a “sheep-dog” who herds people into the
Democratic Party. A better analogy might be drawn from the world of
sports. In the preparation for a championship bout, boxers hire
sparring partners to help them train and get into shape for the real
match. That opponent is there to fight but not fight too much.
Though putting on a lively show before losing, the sparring partner
should not cause the real boxer any serious injury, much less draw
blood.

This type of dynamic is underway now in the Democratic Party primaries.
Bernie Sanders is primarily a sparring partner for Hillary Clinton.







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