Barack Obama and The Audacity of Deception: The
Manufacture of Progressive Illusion
by Paul Street
This article previously appeared in Znet.
"From the very beginning, Barack Obama said No to the War in
Iraq. Join the movement to end the war
and change Washington." - Flyer mailed to Iowa voters, Obama for America
(Des Moines, IA)
"'Protecting' Rev. Wright."
All mainstream United States politicians purvey falsehoods
big and small, but United States Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) and his campaign
lie and deceive with distinctively nauseating chutzpah.
Last February, for example, Obama promptly revoked Rev. Jeremiah Wright's scheduled
statement of a public prayer before the senator officially declared his bid for
the White House. A preacher known for fiery sermons against American racism,
poverty, and imperialism, Wright was Obama's avowed spiritual mentor - his
personal agent of religious conversion on the South Side of Chicago in the
middle 1980s.
Last April, Obama told New York Times reporter Jodi
Kantor that he was "only shielding his pastor from the spotlight" when he
booted Wright from the stage (Kantor 2007). In July, Obama told Newsweek
reporters Darren Briscoe and Richard Wolffe that he "may have been
over-protective" toward Wright (Briscoe and Wolffe 2007).
"Obama acted to protect his campaign from charges that it
was too closely connected to the preacher."
But everybody knew Obama had acted to protect his campaign
from charges that it was too closely connected to a preacher who
occasionally questioned dominant U.S. social hierarchies. Kantor said as much when she wrote that "Mr.
Wright's assertions of widespread white racism and his scorching remarks about
American government have drawn criticism, and prompted the senator to cancel
his delivery of the invocation when he formally announced his candidacy in
February" (Kantor 2007).
"So they got together and Barack Obama, Jr. was born."
But the Rev. Wright story was just a little white lie
compared to the big black fib Obama told in Selma, Alabama last March. Trying
to sound authentically African-American during a speech memorializing the
forty-second anniversary of the 1965 Voting Rights March at the Pettis Bridge
in Selma, Obama claimed that his black (Kenyan) father and white (Kansan)
mother married and conceived the future Barockstar because of the great Civil
Rights struggles fought in Selma and Birmingham, Alabama. "There was something
stirring across the country because of what happened in Selma, Alabama," Obama
intoned, "because some folks are willing to march across a bridge. So they [his
parents] got together and Barack Obama Jr. was born."
"So don't tell me I don't have a claim on Selma, Alabama,"
Obama droned on. "Don't tell me I'm not
coming home to Selma, Alabama. I'm here because somebody marched. I'm here
because you all sacrificed for me" (Obama 2007).
Wow. Too bad Barack
Obama Jr. was born in 1961, two years before the famous campaign to desegregate
Birmingham, three years before the Civil Rights Act, and four years before the
famous Selma march!
It's true that Obama's immaculate multicultural conception
came four years after the Montgomery Bus Boycott, but his parents "getting together"
across racial didn't have much to do with the Civil Rights Movement. It was more likely a reflection of the fact
that his home island of Hawaii was relatively "tolerant" on racial questions -
a distant geographic and cultural cry from the racially segregated U.S. South
to which Obama absurdly tried to claim strong biographical connection.
"Not because of the folks writing the big checks."
But let's move on to more substantive matters. It's important not to get overly mired in
personal matters along the lines of Hillary Clinton's recent (literal)
kindergarten assault (Bosman 2007)on Obama (1).
Last August, Obama audaciously told thousands of labor union
members at Chicago's Soldier Field that he was "running for president...because
of you, not because of folks who are writing big checks" (Helman 2007). He made a big point of the fact that he
"does not take money from corporate lobbyists," unlike business-friendly
Hillary Clinton.
He uttered his worker-pleasing words even as his campaign
was bending with fierce plutocratic winds fanned by giant global investment
firms and corporations that were helping him join leading corporate Democrat
Clinton in setting new electoral fundraising records.
Ever
wonder why the "progressive" (as he repeatedly describes himself) Obama dances
for Wall Street on the (fake) Social Security "crisis" (Krugman 2007a) and
sounds like Mitt Romney and Rudy Guliani in decrying the specter of "government
mandated" universal health care (Krugman 2007b)? Curious about why the avowed
environmentalist thinks that nuclear power should be considered part of the
solution to America's energy crisis and has recently joined Hillary in voting
for the extension of the corporate-neoliberal North American Free Trade
Agreement to Peru?
"Obama's campaign was bending with fierce plutocratic
winds fanned by giant global investment firms and corporations."
Follow the money. Obama's presidential campaign has received
nearly $5 million dollars from securities and investment firms and $866,000 from
commercial banks through October of 2007.
Obama's top contributor so far is Goldman Sachs (provider of $369,078 to
Obama), identified by Center for Responsive Politics (CRP) investigators as "a
major proponent of privatizing Social Security as well as legislation that
would essentially deregulate the investment banking/securities industry." Eight
of Obama's top twenty election investors are securities and investment firms:
Goldman Sachs, Lehman Bros. (number 2 at $229,090), J.P. Morgan Chase and Co. (#
4 at $216,759), Citadel Investment Group (#7 at 4166,608), UBS AG ($146,150),
UBS-America ($106,680), Morgan Stanley ($104,421), and Credit Suisse Group
($92,300). The last two firms are also
known to be leading privatization advocates (Center for Responsive Politics
2007a).
Meanwhile, Obama's presidential run has been "assisted" by
more than $2 million from the health care sector and nearly $400,000 from the
insurance industry through October of 2007 (Center for Responsive Politics
2007b). Obama received $708,000 from medical and insurance interests between
2001 and 2006 (Center for Responsive Politics 2007c). His wife Michelle, a
fellow Harvard Law graduate, was until a recently a Vice President for
Community and External Affairs at the University of Chicago Hospitals, a
position that paid her $273, 618 in 2006 (Sweet 2007).
And Obama's sixth largest contributor is Exelon, the proud
Chicago-based owner and operator of more nuclear power plants than any entity
on earth (Center for Responsive Politics 2007a).
Go figure.
As for his "lobbyist ban," last August the Los Angeles Times reported that
Obama "raised more than $1 million in the first three months of his
presidential campaign from law firms and companies that have major lobbying
operations in the nation's capital." Campaign finance expert Stephen
Weissman observed that this raised troubling questions about the practical
relevance of Obama's much-ballyhooed pledge to turn down donations from
"federal lobbyists."
"Obama's
rise to national prominence and presidential viability, Helman discovered,
depended significantly on PAC and lobbyist money."
As Los Angeles Times reporter Dan Morain explained,
"some of the most influential [lobbyist] players, lawyers and consultants among
them, skirt disclosure requirements by merely advising clients and associates
who do actual lobbying, and avoiding regular contact with policymakers.
Obama's ban does not cover such individuals."
Thus, to give one example, Obama received $33,000 in the
first quarter of 2007 from the Atlanta-based law firm Alston & Bird, which
maintains a large lobbying division in Washington. Obama's $33,000 came
bundled from a number of "consultants" employed by the firm.
Also deleted from Obama's "ban" are state lobbyists. Obama
took $2000 from two Springfield, Illinois lobbyists for Exelon, which spent
$500,000 to influence policy in Washington in 2006 and gave $160,000 directly
to Obama (Morain 2007).
An especially big dent in the armor of Obama's effort to
sell himself as the noble repudiator of lobbyist, PAC, and special interest
money generally was inflicted in early August of 2007. That's when the Boston Globe
published a widely circulated article titled "PACs and Lobbyists Aided Obama's
Rise: Data Contrast With His Theme." Globe reporter Scott Helman
reviewed campaign finance records to find that a "more complicated truth"
lurked "behind Obama's campaign rhetoric."
Obama's rise to national prominence and presidential viability, Helman
discovered, depended significantly on PAC and lobbyist money, including large
sums from "defense contractors, law firms and the securities and insurance
industries" to his own powerful PAC "Hopefund." Of special interest was
Helman's determination that Obama was retaining close and lucrative funding
relationships with leading Washington-based lobbyists and lobbying firms while
technically avoiding direct contributions from those key campaign finance
players (Helman 2007)[2].
"‘Join the movement to end the war'...by caucusing for Barack
Obama."
But for my money the worst example of Team Obama's taste for
truly audacious deception is their effort to appropriate the spirit and support
for the antiwar movement.
Listen to these two sentences from the cover of a shiny new
mailing that I just got from the Obama campaign in Iowa: "From the very
beginning, Barack Obama said No to the War in Iraq. Join the movement to end the war and chance Washington" (Obama
for America 2007).
Yes, you read that correctly. "Obama ‘08" is equating
caucusing for the junior senator from Illinois with joining the antiwar
movement.
Never mind some basic facts of history. In late July of 2004, for example, Obama
admitted to the New York Times that he did not know how he would have
voted on the 2002 Iraq war resolution had he been serving in the United States
Senate at the time of the vote. Here is the relevant Times passage: "In
a recent interview [Obama' declined to criticize Senators Kerry and Edwards for
voting to authorize the war, although he said he would not have done the same
based on the information he had at the time.' But, I'm not privy to Senate
intelligence reports,' Mr. Obama said. 'WHAT WOULD I HAVE DONE? I DON'T KNOW.'
What I know is that from my vantage point the case was not made'" (New
York Times, 26 July, 2004).
"Obama admitted to the New York Times that he did not
know how he would have voted on the 2002 Iraq war resolution had he been
serving in the United States Senate at the time of the vote."
Obama has never opposed the "war" (naked and one-sided U.S.
imperial aggression) on the same terms as the actual antiwar movement. His
much-ballyhooed "antiwar speech" in Chicago during the fall of 2002 followed
much conventional wisdom in the foreign policy establishment by criticizing
"dumb wars." It said absolutely nothing about the obviously criminal and
imperial, oil-motivated nature of the great international and human rights
transgression Cheney and Bush were preparing for Iraq and the world
community.
In the part of his famous 2004 Democratic Convention Keynote
Address (generally credited with producing his national celebrity) that came
closest to directly criticizing the Iraq invasion, Obama suggested that the
Bush administration had "fudged the numbers" and "shad[ed] the truth"
about why "our young men and women" were "sent into harm's way." He
added that the U.S. must "care for [soldiers'] families while they're gone,
tend to the soldiers upon their return, and never go to war without enough
troops to win the war, secure the peace, and earn the respect of the
world."
Morally cognizant and reasonably informed listeners were
left to wonder about the considerably larger quantity (well into the tens of
thousands) of Iraqis who had been killed and maimed and who lost income as a
result of the criminal U.S. invasion of their country by the summer of 2004.
What about the massive harm U.S. forces were ordered to inflict on Iraqis,
considerably greater than the damage they experienced?
"Securing the peace" was a morally impoverished and
nationally arrogant, self-serving way for Obama to describe the real White
House objective in Iraq by the summer of 2004: to pacify, by force when (quite)
necessary, the outraged populace of a nation that understandably resented a
brazenly imperial invasion it saw (with good reason) as driven (as even Alan
Greenspan admits) by the United States' desire to deepen its control of Iraqi
and Middle Eastern oil.
And "shade the truth" didn't come close to doing
justice to the high-state deception - the savage, sinister, and sophisticated
lying - that the Bush administration used and is still using to cover their
real agenda, understood with no small accuracy by the people of Iraq. It is hardly a "war," moreover,
when the most powerful military state in history attacks and colonially
occupies a weak nation it has already devastated over decades of military
assault and even deadlier "economic sanctions."
It gets worse. Obama has repeatedly voted to spend billions
on the illegal invasion since his arrival in the U.S. Senate. He inveighs
against the "Tom Hayden wing of the Democratic Party" and has told
congressional Democrats they would be "playing chicken with the troops" if they
dared to actually (imagine) de-fund the Cheney-Bush "war."
He voted to confirm as Secretary of State (of all things)
the mendacious war criminal Condoleezza Rice, who played a critical role
in advancing the preposterous Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
claims Bush used to invade Iraq.
"Obama has repeatedly voted to spend billions on the
illegal invasion since his arrival in the U.S. Senate."
He distanced himself from fellow Illinois U.S. Senator Dick
Durbin when Durbin faced vicious right-wing attacks after daring to tell some
basic truths about U.S. torture practices in Iraq.
Obama used his considerable political and campaign finance
muscle to back centrist Democrats against antiwar progressives
in numerous Congressional primaries in 2006 (he even supported the
neoconservative Joe Lieberman - his self-chosen Senate mentor - against the
antiwar insurgent Ned Lamont in Connecticut). After their attainment of a
majority in the Congress in November of 2006, Obama warned Democrats against
being seen as working against the remarkably unpopular and arch-criminal
Cheney-Bush administration.
Obama has repeatedly and absurdly claimed that the illegal
invasion was launched with the "best of [democratic] intentions."
He praises U.S. military personnel for their "unquestioning"
"service" in Iraq and (despite numerous U.S. atrocities there) for "doing everything
we could ever ask of them."
His belated calls for withdrawal are hedged by
numerous statements indicating that an Obama White House would maintain a
significant military presence in and around Iraq for an indefinite period of
time. And Obama has refused to support taking a reckless (possibly even
nuclear) U.S. military assault on Iran off the table of acceptable U.S. foreign
policy options. Obama couldn't bother to be present on the Senate floor to vote
against the Bush's administration's provocative, saber-rattling move to define
Iran's Revolutionary Guard as "an international terrorist organization" (3).
So, yes, by all means let's "join the antiwar movement"
by...voting/caucusing for... no, not for the actually Left-progressive antiwar
candidate Dennis Kucinich, but for...Barack Obama.
Please lie less (brazenly)
If you've read this commentary in Iowa, New Hampshire, South
Carolina, or Nevada, please print it off and take it down to your closest Obama
'08 "HOPE" headquarters. Ask the
staffers there to tell Barack Obama to cut the crap - or at least just to lie a
little less often and a little less brazenly.
Tell them this isn't about the juvenile mudslinging that
Hillary Clinton has embraced. It's
about empire and inequality, corporate power/business rule, the meaning of
progressivism, the business-sponsored authoritarian peril that haunts our
fading democracy, and the invisible lives and fates of billions around the
world.
Veteran Left historian Paul Street ([email protected])
is a writer, speaker and activist based in Iowa City, IA and Chicago, IL. He is the author of Empire and
Inequality: America and the World Since 9/11 (Boulder, CO: Paradigm); Racial
Oppression in the Global Metropolis (New York: Rowman & Littlefield,
2007);and Segregated Schools:
Educational Apartheid in Post-Civil Rights America (New York: Routledge,
2005).