Challenging the Washington Consensus
By Robert C. KoehlerOctober 23, 2015
"Information
Clearing House" - Political wisdom always
has a sharp, cynical edge. You can’t utter it without feeling the
throb of ancient wounds.
For instance: “If voting changed anything, they’d
make it illegal.”
Emma Goldman’s observation nestled into my
subconscious decades ago, and each presidential go-around aggravates
it with new intensity. The Washington consensus never changes. The
mainstream media shills never cease their efforts to bully all
seriousness — all reality — out of the process. And money and
militarism silently, invisibly rule, no matter who wins.
The alleged result of this is an entrenched public
complacency, as Americans settle for techno-consumerism as a
substitute for participation in real, political life and a voice in
who we are as a nation. Beyond our shores . . . whatever. Empires
will be empires. What can you do?
I don’t really believe this, but election
campaigns bring out this despair in me — or, at any rate, they used
to.
“Donald Trump is throwing the GOP primary into
chaos by channeling the GOP’s id, spinning out wild fantasies of the
Mexican government deliberately sending a flood of rapists and
murderers across the border,”
Paul Rosenberg wrote back in July at Salon. “But Bernie Sanders
is disrupting Hillary Clinton’s coronation on the Democratic side by
channeling the party’s soul, with a specifically issue-based focus.”
Could it be?
At the very least, something unexpected and
against the wishes of the Washington consensus is happening in both
major parties here in 2015, as the absurdly lengthy presidential
election season begins to shake and rattle. At this early phase,
it’s difficult to assess the extent and significance of the change.
Trump is beyond the edge of weird, as he lights up the Republican
base with code-free racist diatribes and a political agenda he seems
to be making up as he goes along.
But what about Sanders? And I don’t mean, is he
“electable”? I’m willing to suspend my doubt in that regard, but I
have yet to fully embrace him politically. Does he simply look good
because the Democratic Party has fled so far to the right over the
last three decades?
There was a moment in last week’s Democratic
presidential debate that exemplified all of the above for me: the
mainstream media’s determination to continue shaping and defining
the American political consensus and the still-marginalized but
emerging counterpoint to the militarism of that consensus.
At one point, CNN’s Anderson Cooper tried to nail
Sanders with a “tough” question, bringing up the fact that the
Vermont socialist had applied for conscientious objector status
during the Vietnam War. “What would you say to a young soldier in
Afghanistan about this?” Cooper asked, his question quietly loaded
with implication.
Here’s a young soldier in Afghanistan, risking his
life to defend America’s freedom! And here’s a presidential
candidate who not only didn’t serve in his generation’s war back in
the ’60s, but actually had the temerity to apply for
I’m-against-war-in-general status, which politically speaking has
the feel of a mortal sin.
Fascinatingly, this was the only time Cooper — or
anyone else on the stage, except the seriously marginalized Lincoln
Chafee — mentioned any of America’s failed-but-ongoing wars in the
Middle East. The moment was a glaring demonstration of how the media
shape public consensus: not by overt propaganda but, far more
effectively, by silent implication. An imaginary GI is trotted out
in his battle gear to stand briefly in judgment of the CO applicant
who, 50 years ago, wanted only to avoid risking his life in service
to his country. Shame, shame.
I repeat: The wars themselves were never
discussed, because that would have been . . . well, awkward.
Sanders could have stepped directly into the
question and talked about the courage and moral clarity it takes to
declare oneself a conscientious objector. He could have discussed
the cost and pointlessness of our current wars, including the
bombing, barely a week earlier, of a hospital in Kunduz,
Afghanistan. He could have embraced the very GI Cooper had summoned
in moral judgment, addressing PTSD and the dismal inadequacy of
vets’ health care — in the process disrupting and exposing the game
Cooper was trying to play.
Instead, Sanders settled for pointing out that,
while he had been against the Vietnam War, “I’m not a pacifist.” He
added: “I supported the war in Afghanistan. War should be the last
resort, (but) I am prepared to take this country to war if
necessary.”
OK, fine. The moment passed and (almost)
disappeared. The debate went on. And while I was disappointed in
Sanders’ answer, I was fascinated that the issue had come up at all.
Conscientious objection to war has a consensus-threatening
volatility even at this marginal level of acknowledgement.
And the presidential campaign is still in its
early stages. And Sanders, to his immense credit, is refusing to run
as a candidate beholden to big money. And, as a blogger named Karim
pointed out at the website
Secular Nirvana: “An incredibly large portion of Bernie’s
supporters aren’t just voters, they have become activists.”
Being not just a voter but an activist is the
antidote for Emma Goldman’s observation. This is how to change the
world.
Robert Koehler is an
award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and nationally syndicated
writer. His book, Courage Grows Strong at
the Wound (Xenos Press), is still
available. Contact him at
koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website at commonwonders.com.
© 2015
Common Wonders