Two years later, we have nothing to show for it. The Democrats
have controlled both houses of Congress, yet have rubber stamped
virtually every Iraq war spending bill that has come down the pipeline
-- ensuring the bloodbath for years to come. All major Democrats have
echoed the Bush line on Iran, promising a military confrontation if the
country does not cease its nuclear experimentation. By and large,
Bush's backward Middle East foreign policy has not been met any real
opposition from the Hill.
Like the majority of his colleagues,
Obama has done very little to change the face of American politics. He
has voted for war spending, appeased the pro-Israel lobby, and helped
build the erroneous case against Iran, saying nothing about Israel's
plentiful arsenal of nuclear warheads. In short, Barack Obama is not an
ally to those of us who oppose the ambiguous War on Terror.
"I
want you to know that today I'll be speaking from my heart, and as a
true friend of Israel," Obama announced a day after he locked up his
party's nomination to a crowd of pro-Israel zealots. "[W]hen I visit
with AIPAC, I am among friends, Good friends. Friends who share my
strong commitment to make sure that the bond between the United States
and Israel is unbreakable today, tomorrow, and forever."
Yet
here we are again, like 2004, with "progressives" and other lefties
ogling a hope-filled candidacy. But it's not just Obama's war support
that should raise our hackles.
Obama supports the death penalty,
opposes single-payer health care, supports nuclear energy, opposes a
carbon pollution tax, supports the Cuba embargo, and will not end the
vast array of federal subsidies to corporations, including those to the
oil and gas cartel.
And as the United States economy slides into
a deep recession, Barack Obama is promising more of the same, despite
his criticism of John McCain's economic plan. But behind the curtains
of Obama's strategy team is the same set of economic troglodytes
intellectuals that led us in to our current financial disaster.
Obama's
advisory team includes Harvard economist Jeffrey Liebman, a former
Clinton adviser, who believes we ought to privatize social security.
Then we have the renowned David Cutler, another Harvardite, who
believes our economy can be boosted through an increase in privatized
health care costs. Writing for New England Journal of Medicine in 2006,
Cutler explained, "The rising cost ... of health care has been the
source of a lot of saber rattling in the media and the public square,
without anyone seriously analyzing the benefits gained."
And that's just the tip of a very large iceberg.
Perhaps
all of these issues are aiding the independent candidacy of Ralph
Nader, who is consistently polling above 5% nationwide. This, despite a
virtual media blackout and very little support among progressives.
Nader
still faces many hurdles, from ballot access to fundraising, yet his
support is higher at this point than it was at a similar stage during
his 2000 Green Party bid. I still believe that if Nader wanted to put
real pressure on Obama and the Democrats this year he would focus his
finite resources and energy on the states that matter most: Ohio and
Florida.
All in all, progressives and others working to bring
about real change in this country, ought to escape from under the dark
"Nobody but Obama" cloud that hover above. For his campaign, when it
comes to the most pressing issues of the day, does not represent
"change" and "hope" anymore than Senator McCain's.
Joshua Frank
is the author of Left Out! (Common Courage Press) and the co-editor,
with Jeffrey St. Clair, of Red State Rebels: Tales of Grassroots
Resistance in the Heartland (AK Press). Visit the new Red State Rebels
website at
www.RedStateRebels.org.