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January 11, 2006
Bowing to Hillary
The Surrender of MoveOn.org
By JOSHUA FRANK
W t's a good thing for MoveOn.org that George W. Bush was reelected.   If he hadn't been, the liberal troupe would have nothing to contest.

Even if the bloody occupation had continued under a John Kerry presidency (it most certainly would have), the cowering office-chair activists would have ducked behind their computer screens awaiting the return of another brutal Republican administration.

Activism should never be partisan, but MoveOn.org isn't about to hold the Democrats' accountable for supporting Bush's war agenda.

I'm not even all that sure MoveOn opposes the Iraq war. Sure, they rallied opposition during the lead-up to the invasion a few years back, but since then they've done little if anything that should garner the respect of the antiwar movement. Despite Kerry's grotesque position on the Iraq war in 2004, MoveOn implored their members to donate cash to his campaign, but said nary a word about his pro-war posturing. You can't support a candidate without putting demands on their candidacy, and MoveOn's breakdown has made them all but irrelevant as an antiwar club.

Case in point. Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York has continued to support Bush's war in Iraq as well as his greater war on terror, yet MoveOn refuses to voice frustration. Instead, they support the war-hungry senator and admit they won't stand up to her during an election year. "The case I would make is that 2006 needs to be a year of reckoning for Republicans on Iraq," Tom Matzzie, the Washington director for MoveOn recently told the New York Times. "If the antiwar candidate is creamed by Hillary Clinton, it's a distraction."

A distraction from what? If I remember correctly, it wasn't just the Republican Party that got us into this dreadful mess. The Democrats voted for it, helped sell the damn thing, and even bombed the hell out of Iraq during the 1990s, all the while supporting deadly UN sanctions. And as Americans begin to turn on this war, including prominent elected officials from both parties, Hillary still won't retract her defense of the war, let alone meet with genuine antiwar activists here in New York. All of this, and the feckless MoveOn.org still won't call Hillary out for her warmongering.

Cover for the Democrats

MoveOn is nothing more than a cover for the Democratic Party.

Issues are no matter.

Partisan politics are.

We've got a war going on, and advocacy groups who allegedly oppose it should stand up to it, not pander to those who do.

The best way to force the New York senator to change her position on the war is to run an antiwar campaign against her during 2006 from outside of the Democratic Party.

Running a campaign against Hillary within the Democratic Party, as a couple antiwar activists are doing (one a former Green, Steve Greenfield), is hopeless — for their challenges will end after the primaries.

If the antiwar movement really wants to take on Hillary in the electoral arena, she has to be confronted from outside the Democratic Party right up to Election Day and beyond.

Hillary Clinton at the top of the list

That is exactly what MoveOn should advocate, but never will.

No, MoveOn.org is nothing more than a roadblock for an antiwar movement that is finally gaining speed after a bout of silence.

If we want to end this war, we've got to oppose all who support it — the bigger the name, the better.

That puts Hillary Clinton at the top of the list.


Joshua Frank is the author of Left Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush, published by Common Courage Press.

Josh's blog is at www.BrickBurner.org









Quotable

What is morally wrong can never be advantageous, even when it enables you to make some gain that you believe to be to your advantage.
 

Quotable

War...is harmful, not only to the conquered but to the conqueror.
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March 11, 2005
MoveOn.org Makes Peace With War
by Norman Solomon
Sadly, it has come to this.   Two years after the invasion of Iraq, the online powerhouse MoveOn.org — which built most of its member base with a strong antiwar message — is not pushing for withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq.

With a network of more than 3 million "online activists," the MoveOn leadership has decided against opposing the American occupation of Iraq.   During the recent bloody months, none of MoveOn's action alerts have addressed what Americans can do to help get the U.S. military out of that country.   Likewise, the MoveOn.org Web site has continued to bypass the issue — even after Rep. Lynn Woolsey and two dozen co-sponsors in the House of Representatives introduced a resolution in late January calling for swift removal of all U.S. troops from Iraq.

That resolution would seem to be a natural peg for the kind of kinetic activism that established MoveOn's reputation.   A movement serious about ending U.S. military activities in Iraq could use the resolution as a way to cut through political tap dances and pressure members of Congress to take a stand.   Down the road, generating grassroots support for a get-out-of-Iraq resolution has potential to clear a congressional pathway for measures cutting off funds for the war.

But, tragically, MoveOn's leadership is having none of it.   Over a period of recent weeks, the word "Iraq" appeared on the MoveOn.org home page only in a plug for a documentary released last year.   Inches away, a blurb has been telling the Web site's visitors: "Support Our Troops: Contribute your frequent-flyer miles so that American troops can get home."   (But not stay home.)   Many soldiers are returning to the killing grounds of Iraq, while a growing number are vocally opposed to this war.

Why won't MoveOn "support our troops" by supporting a pullout of our troops from Iraq? "We believe that there are no good options in Iraq," MoveOn.org's executive director, Eli Pariser, told me.   "We're seeing a broad difference of opinion among our members on how quickly the U.S. should get out of Iraq.   As a grassroots-directed organization, we won't be taking any position which a large portion of our members disagree with."

In sharp contrast, early in the 2004 primary campaign, MoveOn committed itself to endorsing any Democratic presidential candidate receiving more than 50 percent of the Internet ballots cast by its activists.   (Howard Dean fell shy of a majority, so there was no MoveOn endorsement.)   But now, evidently, a majority of MoveOn members in favor of swift withdrawal from Iraq would be insufficient if a "large portion" disagreed.

When I asked Eli for clarification, he replied: "We've been talking with our members continuously on this issue.   We've surveyed slices of our membership in January and in December, and surveyed our whole membership last spring.   That's how we know there's a breadth of opinion out there."

But last spring was a year ago.   And any surveying of "slices of our membership in January and in December" came before the Woolsey resolution offered an opportunity to find out how the MoveOn base views the measure.   In any event, there will always be "a breadth of opinion" about this war — a fact that does not trump the crucial need for clarity of purpose.

If MoveOn leaders were willing to submit the House get-out-of-Iraq resolution to MoveOn's rank-and-file in an up-or-down vote, the chances of a substantial majority would be excellent.   Too bad the leadership of MoveOn.org is currently unwilling to find out.

The 29 members of the House now sponsoring the resolution are hardly radicals.   They recognize the kind of grisly consequences of equivocation that occurred during the Vietnam War: refusal to speak forthrightly about the urgent need to end military involvement only fuels the war's deadly momentum.

It's all well and good for MoveOn.org to excoriate President Bush for his many big lies in the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq.   But such activities don't make up for going along with the basics of the present-day Iraq war.

When a large progressive organization takes the easy way and makes peace with war, the abdication of responsibility creates a vacuum.   Ironically, a group that became an Internet phenom by recognizing and filling a void is now creating one.   And other groups are bound to emerge to fill it.

Among the emerging organizations is Progressive Democrats of America, a fledgling national group with an activist focus on the Iraq war that is laudably straightforward.   "We're organizing a new campaign in every congressional district we can to call for the end of funding for war and occupation, and for the transfer of reconstruction assistance to Iraqis themselves," says Tim Carpenter of PDA.   He contends that "public pressure can awaken Congress to an opposition role."

War in Iraq requires continual funding, of course, so President Bush's new supplemental boost of $80 billion in war appropriations has been moving through Congress in recent days.   Tacitly accepting the war's continuation, MoveOn declined to take a stand against the essence of congressional backing for the war — the money that keeps paying for it.   Meanwhile, PDA launched an effort against the $80 billion; the organizing included a National Call-In Day aimed at members of Congress on March 10.

MoveOn.org pioneered the use of e-mail and Web technologies as creative tools to further its political agenda.   Now that the MoveOn agenda on the Iraq war has tumbled into the shallow depths of the Potomac, some similar online activism will be needed if MoveOn's dive is going to be merely temporary.   So, to help get the cyber-ball rolling, please forward this article around the Internet and post it where appropriate.

Friends don't let friends drive drunk, and peace advocates do a lot more than shrug when a previously great antiwar organization starts to get lost.

If MoveOn continues to abandon its antiwar base, that base will get the picture — and move on.



Copyright 2005








March 18, 2005
Misdirecting the Anti-War Movement
The Perfidy of the Democratic Party's Puppets
By JOHN WALSH
S carcely a day goes by that I do not receive an email from a self-proclaimed "progressive" organization soliciting contributions and asking for support and participation.

Unfortunately most of these groups are tightly allied with, if not completely controlled by, the Democratic Party leadership and they toe the party line with a fidelity that would make an old Stalinist blush.

The groups are legion: MoveOn, ACT, American Family Values, True Majority, etc.

They raise many issues, the favorites being Social Security and (surprise!) electing Democrats in 2006.

But one issue that is rarely mentioned is the war on Iraq.

And although these groups will tell you that the war was a mistake, they are careful to state that now the U.S. cannot withdraw ­ at least not anytime soon.

They are for "staying the course," although they do not like to use those words.

Hawkish masters like Howard Dean, H. Clinton and John Kerry

The giant fissure now separating these groups and their hawkish masters like Howard Dean, H. Clinton and John Kerry from genuine progressives and from a near majority of the American people is the issue of total withdrawal from Iraq, commencing at once.

Perhaps no organization is more illustrative of this kind of sell-out, and none more powerful, than MoveOn.org.

Take a look at their web-site today (03/16/2005).

You will find nothing about the upcoming actions on the weekend of March 19th, the second anniversary of the War, calling for withdrawal now.

(There is an advertisment for an old documentary on Iraq done in 2003, but that is it. That is a long period of silence.)

But the site is awash with items on the approved Democratic Party agenda.

It is pretty pathetic when the only possible victory these "progressives" can hope to claim is preservation of a program from the 1930's. Hardly progress.)

But MoveOn is apparently feeling some heat.

After an incisive piece by Norman Solomon exposing the pro-war stance of MoveOn, I received an unexpected email today.

In it MoveOn calls on its contributors to participate in peace "vigils" sponsored by Sojournors.

Does not call for total and prompt withdrawal from Iraq

But Sojournors on its web-site does not call for total and prompt withdrawal from Iraq, only for "lasting peace and security in the region," whatever that means.

Sojournors is apparently intent on proving that you don't have to be anti-war to be pro-peace.

But that is not the worst of it.

MoveOn wants to make sure its stance is not misinterpreted, saying: "The fundamental error of the invasion has left us, as a nation, with no opportunity for a quick fix."

"Quick fix" is MoveOn speak for prompt withdrawal.

Even more pathetic were the house parties organized by MoveOn nationwide last March 10.

There were many younger people at the one I attended who were brought there by anger over the war in Iraq.

And what did they confront ­ an organizing meeting where the word Iraq was mentioned only once over the webcast and that as something MoveOn would eventually address.

To kick the meeting off, the webcast was addressed by Senate minority leader, Harry Reid, who is pro-war, anti-choice, anti-environment (siding with the mining interests in his state of Nevada) and the author of a constitutional amendment prohibiting flag burning.

Some progressive!

And then we were "organized" to call Senators to urge them to oppose Bush's judicial nominations a bit of political tone deafness in light of the fact that the second anniversary of the war comes in the same week when this action is being urged.

MoveOn's fundamental problem is that it is not democratic.

MoveOn's fundamental problem is that it is not democratic.

There is no effective way for members to communicate with the leadership.

The leadership polls its members but only within certain guidelines.

When they did their on-line primary which launched the candidacy of pro-war Howard Dean, they did not include Nader or any non-Democrats.

In the on-line discussions one's comments get lost in a fog of blog.

And I have personally had my comments critical of the Democratic Party pulled from such a Discussion. MoveOn will either democratize or die as progressives understand that it is strictly a partisan organization.

But I fear that other "progressive" organizations are sliding into the same pro-war pit inhabited by MoveOn.

For example, The Nation's call for immediate withdrawal, at least in the last half year, has been minimal.

It is noteworthy that both the Nation and the paleo-conservative magazine, The American Conservative, have opposed the war.

But whereas The Nation endorsed the pro-war John Kerry, the American Conservative refused to endorse the pro-war George Bush.

So which magazine is principled and which merely partisan?

The Nation banished John Nader from its pages

(The American Conservative even did an extensive interview with the anti-war Ralph Nader leading up to the election whereas The Nation excoriated him and banished him from its pages.)

And now leading up to the March 20th anniversary of the war, there is no clear call in The Nation this week to join the Out Now demonstrations.

Hopefully, The Nation will change course, invite Nader's contributions on the war and vigorously promote actions calling for U.S. withdrawal.

And sadly this slide to the Right includes the Greens (my party).

At least The Greens are calling for immediate withdrawal and sponsoring the Out Now demonstrations this coming weekend.

But they are hardly leveling a blistering critique at the Democratic Party for its pro-war stance which is precisely what a political party like the Greens exists to do.

Instead the Greens seem to be stalled in some kind of time warp where all that matters is the vote count in Ohio.

Air America Radio?

Or take Air America Radio.

Its anchor program, the Al Franken show, has not called for withdrawal or pointed even once to the complicity of the Democrats in the war.

Franken, author of "Lies and the Lying Liars That Tell Them," should know that a very powerful way of lying is by omission.

Fortunately some other voices on Air America are not following the party line, calling instead for immediate withdrawal and promoting the Out Now demonstrations. And it is evident from the calls that many are fed up with the Democrats.

Beneath all this an anti-war movement is stirring.

One can see it in organizations and coalitions like the one organizing the March in Fayettteville, NC, calling for the troops to be brought home now, in the town meetings in Vermont where 49 of 52 towns voted for withdrawal, in the anti-war movement in Washington, DC, which has been sparked into a fury of progressive activity following its work together with A.N.S.W.E.R on the anti-war demonstration at the Inaugural, and in the demonstrations at military recruitment centers.

(To its credit, MichaelMoore.com tirelessly tracks these genuine anti-war efforts.)


(See www.unitedforpeace.org/) Soon the misleadership must either change or lose its following.









 
 


























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































 
 





 
For archive purposes, this article is being stored on TheWE.cc website.
The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political,
human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.