Why I
Support Dr. Jill Stein for President
By Chris Hedges
February 22,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Truth
Dig" -
The political
crisis in America is severe. The old ideas that
buttressed the ruling class and promised democracy,
growth and prosperity—neoliberalism, austerity,
globalization, endless war, a dependence on fossil
fuel and unregulated capitalism—have been exposed as
fictions used by the corporate elite to impoverish
and enslave the country and enrich and empower
themselves. Sixty-two billionaires have as much
wealth as half the world’s population, 3.5 billion
people. This fact alone is revolutionary tinder.
We are
entering a dangerous moment when few people, no
matter what their political orientation, trust the
power elite or the ruling neoliberal ideology. The
rise of right-wing populism, with dark undertones of
fascism, looks set in the next presidential
election—as it does in parts of Europe—to pit itself
against the dying gasps of the corporate
establishment.
We are
caught between the jaws of the monsters Charybdis
and Scylla, and our escape route is narrow and
diminishing. Playing the old political game,
attempting reform using the old rules, won’t work.
We must focus exclusively on revolt, on overthrowing
corporate power to reclaim our liberty and save the
planet from a coup de grâce delivered by the fossil
fuel industry.
If we fail
to revolt we will see the numerous mechanisms for
control enshrined in our system of
inverted totalitarianism—wholesale surveillance,
militarized police empowered to use lethal force
against unarmed citizens, the loss of nearly all
civil liberties, the impoverishment of the majority
of the citizenry in the name of austerity, the use
of the military as a domestic police force,
indefinite detention without trial,
government-ordered assassination of American
citizens—spread like a wildfire across the
landscape.
The battle
before us is global. It is a battle being fought on
myriad fronts, including in Greece, Egypt, Spain and
Venezuela. The ravages of climate change, the
ruthless exploitation of international finance and
the evil of American imperialism and militarism are
as present outside our borders as they are at home.
The greatest enemy before us is not radical
jihadists, but the forces lurking within our society
that threaten to extinguish human liberty and
eventually the human species itself.
Our real
compatriots do not look like us. They speak in
foreign tongues. They come from different cultures
and faiths. They fight on the streets of Athens and
Madrid and in Tahrir Square. It is only when we link
arms, when we make common cause against the
hydra-headed monster of global corporatism and
American imperialism, that we will have any hope of
victory.
Revolutions
come in waves. They ripple around the globe feeding
off each other’s ideas, passion and energy. The
French Revolution in 1789 and the Haitian Revolution
in 1804—the only successful slave revolt in human
history—were direct products of the ideas and
experience of the American Revolution. The
revolutions of 1848 reshaped Europe. The 1917
Russian Revolution inspired numerous revolts
including the
1919 Spartacist uprising in Germany. Eastern
Europe was remade in the revolutions of 1989. We
will create a new worldwide wave, we will rise up en
masse, or we will be crushed.
The
imperative of revolt dramatically reduces the
importance of elections. Elections, managed by the
elites, mean nothing if radical movements are not
powerful enough to disrupt and dismantle corporate
power. To deserve our support, a political candidate
or party must hold fast to the goals of a fiercely
anti-capitalist, anti-militarist movement. Those
running for office must serve as the political
expression of such a movement, for without movements
committed to radical politics and buttressed by
sustained acts of civil disobedience—strikes,
lockdowns, mass rallies, marches, oil and gas
pipeline blockages and coordinated disruptions of
the systems of corporate power and the war
industry—we will lose.
The focus
of our energy must be on building nonviolent, mass
movements keyed to issues such as immigrant rights;
Black Lives Matter; fighting male violence against
women, including pornography and prostitution; the
anti-fracking and environmental justice movement,
which has spawned groups such as the
Delta 5; the cancellation of all student debt;
the demand for a living wage; the destruction of the
animal agriculture industry through the practice of
veganism; health care as a human right; the struggle
to dismantle the security and surveillance state and
expose the crimes of empire; the abolition of trade
agreements such as NAFTA and the Trans-Pacific
Partnership; and the rebuilding of militant unions.
These movements must build alliances with the
oppressed around the earth, including the
Palestinians. We do not have the luxury, or the
right, to pick and choose whom among oppressed
people it is politically convenient to support. We
will rise or fall together.
This is why
I support
Dr. Jill Stein, who is running to be the Green
Party candidate for president after having won her
party’s nomination in 2012. I support Stein because
she understands that this is primarily about
building a global movement, not about participating
in an election. She, unlike Bernie Sanders, knows
that this movement will never be realized within the
Democratic Party or by paying deference to the power
elites, the Israel lobby or the arms industry and
the military establishment. She grasps that until we
name and destroy the evil of militarism and
imperialism, genuine social and political reform,
indeed democracy, is impossible. She does not want
to work within the corporate establishment. She
wants to dismantle it. And all the pundits who tell
us not to waste our vote miss the point. It is time
to stop playing the game.
“We’re in
this kind of magical moment, it’s an existential
moment which is very personal and very real,” Stein
said when I interviewed her in Baltimore
for my podcast, “Days of Revolt.” “It has
enormous potential for transformation. The question
is which way is it going to go. How are we going to
make that happen? How do we optimize what history is
going to do? Because history will mobilize people as
the treachery of the system continues to be
inflicted on us. And the question is whether we will
mobilize in time to change it.
“The powers
that be would love our movements to remain divided
and conquered,” she said. “The challenge of our era
is to bring our movements together so we’re working
with a common agenda and to some extent a common
strategy. That’s what political parties can do. A
political party can help provide that conversation
so that the movements can [articulate] and develop
our agenda, our priorities.
“It is
extremely corrupt,” Stein said of the American
political system. “It serves the interests of
oligarchy. It puts people, planet and peace—it
subjugates those critical things—to profit. We have
a political system that is funded and therefore
accountable to predatory banks and fossil fuel
giants and war profiteers. Those are the interests
it serves. Those are the policies it creates. It’s
sort of like an amoeba that oozes its way into all
aspects of the system.
“It’s
reached a level where no one except the 1 percent,
or perhaps the 5 percent, is out of danger,” she
said. “We’re imperiled in a very clear and direct
way—whether you’re talking about an entire
generation of young people who are locked into debt
for the foreseeable future, the decline of wages,
the true joblessness that actually exists, the
foreign policy of total economic and military
domination that’s blowing back at us now
catastrophically or the immigrant human rights
disaster, as 60 million people were forced to
migrate over the past year alone. And the climate is
in meltdown.”
She called
the presidential debates and political carnival
around them “elaborate, staged events to create the
sense that resistance is futile.”
“We’re fed
this corporate brainwashing, many times a day, that
we are powerless,” she said. “And therefore we have
to choose between two oppressors. It’s really
important to reject that lesser-evilism and stand up
and fight for the greater good. The greater good
here has been lost in the battle between the evils.
“The
politics of fear has delivered everything we were
afraid of,” she went on.
She, as has
Ralph Nader, pointed out that all the reasons
liberals and progressives are told they should vote
for a Democratic candidate—Bill Clinton, Al Gore,
John Kerry, Barack Obama and now Hillary Clinton—are
wrong. These Democratic politicians have never
worked to halt the expanding wars, end the assault
on civil liberties, curb the looming ecocide, halt
the offshoring of jobs or stop the bailouts to Wall
Street—$800 billion under President George W. Bush
and $16 trillion under Obama. The corporate state,
with the complicity of the Republican and Democratic
party leaderships, continues to ravage the planet
and disembowel the country.
“You have
differences around the margins, but the core stuff
is essentially the same,” Stein said. “The
differences are not enough to save your life, to
save your job, or to save the planet.
“We have to
understand how absolutely deadly the threat is that
we are facing now,” Stein said, “whether it’s the
next economic collapse, which we are teetering on
the brink of right now, or whether it is the
meltdown of our climate. We are looking at the
collapse of our major ice sheets within the next
couple of decades. Within a handful of decades we
could basically ruin all coastal cities. When Pearl
Harbor was bombed we called out a national
emergency, and within six months we had converted 25
percent of GDP to a wartime footing and stayed
there. We are facing an all-out climate emergency.
It got much worse under the Democrats. Obama [and
the Democratic Party] had two houses of Congress.
People should not make excuses for Obama—‘it was the
bad Republicans.’ This is the second point about the
politics of fear. The lesser evil paves the way to
the greater evil. It’s not in opposition to it. It
makes way for it.
“Democracy
needs values,” she said. “Democracy does not exist
in a vacuum. There’s nothing more powerful than a
moral compass. We have to bring that moral compass
to our democracy, because it is a ship lost in a
storm right now.”
Chris
Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle East,
Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from more
than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian
Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas
Morning News and The New York Times, for which he
was a foreign correspondent for 15 years. |