Monday, December 31, 2018

Background: "All Together Now"

"All Together Now" was the first of many ruthlessly factual pre-election essays I've written which have demolished the breathtakingly ignorant talking point that "the (major political) parties are the same."

I had begun following national politics in my teens, with a laser-like focus on social justice and the ways policy and process impact human beings. This focus continued through my 20's and early 30's, when W. Bush ran against Al Gore. 

I was acutely aware during the 2000 presidential election of Clinton/Gore's ideological shortcomings on issues of trade, regulation of Wall Street, the Communications Act, and Welfare Reform, but I was also acutely aware (based on Bush's record as governor of Texas) that Gore was worlds better than W on the 90-95% of other policy decisions presidents make and vastly more qualified for office. Through the fall of 2000, I argued repeatedly with supporters of Ralph Nader, most of whom said it "wouldn't really matter" if Bush beat Gore because they were "so similar."

It mattered a great deal, as it turned out. This piece explored in painful detail dozens and dozens of ways in which W reversed Clinton/Gore policy for the worse.

"All Together Now" was posted in the summer of 2003, as Democrats were beginning to think of who should run against Bush in 2004. No candidate had emerged, so I took on the first question for many of getunderground.com's very left-leaning young readers:  whether to vote for a Democratic presidential candidate or to "vote ones' conscience" for a third party candidate. The essay is less accessible than features I would write in the future--thousands of words in length, over-reliant on laundry list formatting, chock-full of long paragraphs--but it definitively proved that the only way to vote one's conscience was (and still is) to vote Democratic.   

All Together Now

[This piece was originally published 7/1/03 at getunderground.com. For background information, click here.]


During the 2000 presidential campaign a small but strident group of journalists, entertainers, and activists supported Green Party candidate Ralph Nader because they claimed that a vote for Nader would somehow launch the Greens, a third party, into the big leagues of American politics. 

The pitch was that the Greens would offer a progressive haven for voters who thought the Democrats were too compromising. Nader's supporters were unbowed by the fact that third parties have never played a constructive role in U.S. presidential elections, because our winner-take-all system rewards only parties with mass support. When asked about the possibility that Nader could siphon enough votes from Al Gore to hand the presidency to George W Bush, Nader's supporters were unanimous in their scorn for the question, claiming that it wouldn't matter who won because, as Harvard professor Randall Robinson imperiously put it: "the two major parties are virtually indistinguishable." Gore and Bush were referred to as "Tweedledee and Tweedledum," or "two heads of the same beast."  The most generous assessment of Gore pegged him as ""the lesser of two evils."

Bushies loved Nader, because his constant repetition of the theme of rough equivalence between the major party candidates helped blur the important distinctions and thereby conceal from fence-sitting voters the hard right-wing agenda W's men had in store for America. And Nader's insistence on going into big cities in tightly-contested states up until the crucial last moments of the campaign forced Gore to spend virtually all of his time and money in areas that should have been safely Democratic. This in turn forced Gore to hand many swing states (e.g. Ohio) over to Bush without a contest, as Bush used his financial advantage to close the deal with ad time that Gore couldn't compete with.

On Election Day most progressives doubted the validity of Nader's equivalence claim, and the Green candidate's vote total shrank to 2.7%. But 22,000 people in New Hampshire and 97,000 people in Florida voted for Nader, giving George W. Bush just enough votes to reinstate the Bush monarchy. Nader's oft-repeated claim that the parties were essentially the same would be put to the test.

The results: appointments

Differences between the Clinton administration and the W. Bush administration came into view as soon as Bush had declared victory. Where Clinton's cabinet appointees were center-left professionals who attached meaning to their agencies' historic missions, most of W's choices were picked because of their ability to undermine the very agencies they were appointed to run. Bush put Larry Thompson--a director of Providian, which had paid out hundreds of thousands of dollars for fraud--as watchdog over corporate crime, and Harvey Pitt (a former corporate lawyer who had specialized in ensuring that his clients would not pay the price for their negligence) as head of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

While Clinton's attorney general had been Janet Reno, a liberal, independent woman who stated in one of her first press conferences that she would focus on protecting the rights of the accused, Bush appointed John Ashcroft, a right-wing evangelical Christian who had made his name in Missouri politics by invoking the name of the Lord while opposing abortion and integrated busing, and giving an interview to Southern Partisan, a segregationist Southern publication with an undying memory.

After being confirmed on a largely party-line vote, Ashcroft set about reversing many of Reno's policies and/or implementing his own, policies that never would have seen the light of day in a Gore administration. Where the Clinton administration was the first modern administration to do major combat with the powerful gun lobby, Ashcroft reversed course, dropping a Clinton rule that allowed the FBI to hold onto gun purchase records for 90 days to check for fraud and abuse; under Ashcroft's revision, the FBI was allowed to keep the information for just one day. Turning his back on six decades of Justice Department policy, Ashcroft filed a friend of the court brief in which he reinterpreted the 2nd amendment to give individuals--as opposed to "well-regulated militias"--the right to own firearms. The new interpretation is sure to bring a flood of lawsuits aimed at eviscerating what weak gun control measures currently exist. The Bush administration also quietly ended a gun buyback program that had been initiated by the Clinton administration, and is currently working with congressional Republicans to protect the gun industry from lawsuits, another reversal of Clinton policy, which was to work actively with cities to recoup carnage money from gun companies through the courts.

Ashcroft's most flagrant abuse of office has been in the area of civil liberties. One of the first things Ashcroft did after 9/11 (though it had been in the works previous to 9/11) was reverse Clinton policy on the Freedom of Information Act. Where Reno's policy had been to declassify anything that was not considered tangibly harmful to national security, Ashcroft went in the opposite direction, sending Justice department employees (and employees in the Agriculture and other pertinent departments) a message to classify anything for which there was a "sound basis for doing so", in effect shifting the burden of proof to those who sought to obtain documents. Armed with this secrecy, Ashcroft made and proposed a startling array of changes to civil liberties, including giving law enforcement agencies expanded wiretapping authority, allowing law enforcement agencies to enter people's homes, or seize personal and billing information from the Internet, without court orders, and instituting secret military tribunals. Ashcroft also proposed a repeal of the decades-old ban on domestic spying by the CIA, allowing the CIA to spy on individuals or groups, including dissidents, without cause. Ashcroft was stopped by a Democratic Senate from instituting TIPS, wherein bus drivers, mailmen, and meter readers would act as informants, in a system not unlike East Germany during the Cold War. And in the true spirit of Cold War East Germany, when confronted in a congressional hearing for his flagrant disregard for fundamental constitutional rights, Ashcroft accused his interrogators of giving aid and comfort to the enemy.

Ashcroft's Justice Department has been particularly bad for people of color. Not much concerned about getting their votes, Ashcroft blocked rules that would have required federal agencies to offer bilingual assistance to non-English speaking persons. Ashcroft also replaced Clinton's liberal immigration policies with a strict policy that leaves immigrants' fates in the hands of a single administrative judge--as opposed to the previous norm of three--and offers little chance for appeal. Only extraordinary cases can be appealed to a Board of Immigration Appeals panel, which Ashcroft halved from 23 to 11 members, after getting rid of the most pro-immigrant judges. In line with this policy, Bush limited foreign nationals from pressing cases against despots and multinational corporations for human rights violations under the Alien Tort Claims Act, and the U.S. Justice Department exhumed a 50-year-old law that threatens jail or deportation for any legal non-citizens who fail to report changes of address within 10 days of moving. And on the voting rights front, Ashcroft continued the Republican tradition of disenfranchising minorities--which worked like a charm in Florida, 2000--by intervening in congressional districting battles in Mississippi and Florida.

One of the benefits of being a zealot is being freed from having to question one's own motives. While Republicans claim to be the party of state's rights, Ashcroft has shown a passion for meddling with state laws, by trying to convince state prosecutors in non-death penalty states--such as Michigan, Minnesota, and Massachusetts--to seek the death penalty, and by fighting the right of elderly Oregon residents to die with dignity, a right that has twice been confirmed at the ballot box. The Bush administration has also meddled with many states' medical marijuana policies, diverting precious law enforcement dollars and personnel to break up medical marijuana co-ops in California, running ads and making public statements in opposition to a ballot measure in Nevada that would have decriminalized small amounts of marijuana, and trying to force hard time on Ed Rosenthal, a city-certified distributor of medical marijuana in Oakland, California. As the rest of the world updates their drug laws to meet the realities of the new millennium, the Bush administration tries to drag us back to the 1950's.

Like all dutiful Bush appointees, Ashcroft has reduced the Justice department to an organ of Bush's re-election strategy, politicizing every move. In September 2002, criminal justice experts accused the Justice Department of tainting the integrity of crime statistics by exerting top-down control over previously independent agencies within the Justice Department. Not long after, Ashcroft appointed two members of the right-wing Independent Women's Forum (Margot Hill and Nancy Pfonhauer) to its domestic violence advisory committee, though they had both vehemently opposed the Violence Against Women Act, a bill Clinton signed into law in 1994. Ashcroft also politicized the Attorney General Honors Program, which had been a non-partisan internship program for new law graduates, by implementing ideological litmus tests in the applications process. Recently the Justice Department turned its back on another department tradition when it tried to kill an annual Gay Pride celebration for gay employees, another vestige of Clinton era tolerance.


Government as theology

While Ashcroft is the most visible face of reactionary Republicanism, his policies represent just a fraction of the Bush administration's sops to the religious right. Nowhere has control of our government by a rabid, unrepresentative religious minority been more apparent than in Bush's court choices. Where Clinton appointed centrist and center-left judges who supported a woman's right to choose, Bush's picks have been uniformly hostile to abortion rights and virtually every other tenet of progressive politics. Among Bush's choices have been Charles Pickering (a Mississippi judge who tried to convince a jury to be more lenient in its treatment of bigots who had burned a cross on a black family's lawn), Jay Bybee (who defended employment discrimination against gays in the Department of Defense), Dennis Shedd (a protege of Strom Thurmond), Peter Keisler (a former clerk for the notorious Robert Bork), Terry Boyle (a former staff member of Jesse Helms), Priscilla Owen (the most extreme member of Texas's far right Supreme Court), John Roberts (a former clerk to William Rehnquist), Jeffrey Sutton (who earned his credentials fighting protections for the disabled), Brett Kavanaugh (an author of the salacious Starr Report) and Bill Pryor (an Alabama attorney general who filed a brief in defense of an anti-sodomy law which was later overturned by the Supreme Court). While the number of 5-4 conservative votes on the Supreme Court highlights the importance of Supreme Court picks, these nominations to the appellate courts may prove to have an even bigger impact on American law, as the Supreme Court docket has shrunk to less than a 100 cases per year. If Bush serves through 2008, his eight years of judicial appointments will have a profoundly destructive effect on American justice for decades to come.

The Bush Administration has also proven its unqualified obeisance to the true believers by doing everything it can to destroy the wall between church and state. The Clinton Administration took the Constitution at its word, that the use of taxpayer funds for any one religion was discriminatory against not only all other religions, but against the irreligious as well. Bush, by contrast, hired Kay Cole James, the former dean of the Pat Robertson School of Government, to help vet many administration employees. Where Clinton/Gore had vehemently opposed school vouchers, Bush has been a tireless proponent of vouchers. Where Clinton did everything in his power to unleash science on serious medical problems, Bush has thumbed his nose at people suffering from diabetes, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, spinal cord injuries, and heart disease by handcuffing stem cell research and trying to impose a ban on therapeutic cloning (as opposed to human cloning), a position so radical that Bush is even opposed by Orrin Hatch and Nancy Reagan.

Bush has overturned or tried to overturn longstanding church-state precedents in a startling number of ways: by proposing that religious groups receive federal housing aid even if they discriminate against employees on the basis of religion or sexual orientation; by funding the construction and restoration of religious buildings; by threatening to strip federal funding from any school that fails to accommodate prayer; by signing an executive order that eased the way for religious groups to receive federal funds to run social service programs; by altering regulations to allow federally-funded job training programs to use "sacred literature" (such as the Bible); by bringing huge increases in federal funding for abstinence-only education (which had been undercut by Clinton); by replacing his first top adviser on AIDS, Scott Evertz, because conservatives complained about Evertz's support for condoms in AIDS prevention workshops; by initiating a Health and Human Services review of all grants for AIDS prevention/treatment to ensure they are not sexually explicit; by appointing Jerry Thacker, who called AIDS the "gay plague," to serve on the Presidential Advisory Commission on HIV and AIDS; by appointing David Hager, an anti-contraception Christian reactionary, to head the Reproductive Health Drugs Advisory Committee of the FDA; by removing information about contraception and sex education from the Health and Human Services website; and by removing information on the National Institute of Health website that pointed to the fact that recent studies had shown that there was no link between abortion and breast cancer.

Reproductive freedom is another area where the differences between Clinton/Gore and Bush II could not be starker. Clinton was the most pro-choice president in U.S. history, a leader who received 100% marks from the National Abortion Rights Action League. Bush, on the other hand, is likely to score a 0, as he has done everything he can to return the States to a time of back alley abortions. In his short time in office, Bush has revoked funding for family planning agencies that performed abortions with their own money, put the morning after contraceptive RU486 back on ice (under the guise of protecting women's health, no less), intervened in a federal appeals court case in Ohio to reverse a lower court ruling that struck down a ban on "partial birth abortion," directed the Secretary's Advisory Committee on Human Research Protections to study protections available to embryos in medical experiments (a backdoor move to establish embryos as human beings), extended eligibility under the Child Health Insurance Program to fetuses (though prenatal care is already available to pregnant women through existing government services), initiated big increases in "crisis pregnancy centers," where anti-abortion activists try to talk women out of having abortions; and he is about to sign into law a ban on "partial birth abortion" (vetoed by Clinton multiple times), considered by people on both sides of the issue to be the first step toward repeal of Roe v. Wade.


Leaving children behind

Despite his unwavering insistence that every child be born, Bush has gone out of his way to ensure that life is nasty, brutish, and short for the growing ranks of children who, quite unlike our blue blood president, are unfortunate enough to grow up poor. After selling his No Child Left Behind Act as his (one) major domestic policy achievement, Bush cut funding for schools that was necessary to help them meet the tough new academic standards. 

Alongside his dubious proposals to block grant or privatize Medicaid, Head Start, and public housing (measures by and large opposed by the people in the trenches who run these programs), Bush has cut Medicaid, Headstart, public housing, school lunches, the Women and Infants Nutrition program, the Community Access Program (a program Clinton created to coordinate care among health providers for those with no insurance), youth opportunity grants for at-risk youth, HUD community development block grants, the Low Income Energy Assistance Program, childcare for women who are forced to work as part of welfare reform, money used to investigate cases of child abuse and neglect, and training schools for teachers at children's hospitals.

To be on the safe side, Bush's minions have conducted head-totoe investigations of every anti-poverty program to ensure that the crumbs we do authorize go only to the deserving indigent.


Leaving no millionaire behind

Poverty-fighting programs haven't been alone on Bush's chopping block. Bush has also starved domestic security, libraries, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Americorps, Medicare, community policing programs, and government payouts for student loans. Fortunately Bush found enough money in the budget to give a hefty increase to White House operations, and extended $8,000 to John Ashcroft so a blue robe could be thrown over the nude statue of lady justice during Ashcroft's press conferences.

While the budget cuts to anti-poverty programs were made in the name of deficit reduction, Bush has put all his political capital into shifting America's tax burden to the middle class. Instead of increasing the Earned Income Tax Credit for the working class, as Clinton did, Bush has increased IRS investigations of the working poor, while at the same time calling the IRS off the big money prevaricators who hustle money offshore. Reversing the 1993 Clinton tax hike on the super-rich, Bush gave 40% of a $2 trillion windfall to the upper 1% in 2001 and served them up the recent dividend tax cut for good measure.

Assiduously avoiding the new spirit of austerity has been the Department of Defense, which--with the federal government under complete Republican control--has received increases in the neighborhood of 10% to its already bloated budget. Strangely enough, this defense spending has not gone to veterans. Opposite huge increases in purchases of the latest and greatest pyrotechnic killing machines were: cuts to payments to people suffering from cancer and other illnesses as a result of Cold War atomic weapons projects; the implementation of a new Veterans Administration policy to stop informing veterans of their eligibility for health benefits; and cuts to veteran's hospitals that have left ever bigger waiting lists of veterans. Currently 300,000 vets are on waiting lists, many of them homeless, waiting up to a year for an entry medical exam. In a further slap at veterans, Bush threatened to veto a defense authorization bill if Congress insisted on including expanded retirement benefits for disabled veterans; Bush complained that we just couldn't afford the $18.5 billion to 58 billion it would cost over the next 10 years. The top official of the American Legion said that Bush let down all men and women who had served the armed forces. Bush also cut school aid for the children of the armed forces, many of whom were in Iraq at the time, and failed to extend a child tax credit to nearly 200,000 low-income military personnel.

The results of Bush's drunken sailor budgets have been laid plain. Opposite Clinton's surplus-producing fiscal discipline, Bush's combination of profligate defense spending and the taxpayer-funded giveaways to Bush's filthy rich core constituents have produced the biggest deficit in American history this year. Next year Bush promises to really go for the gusto by shattering his own record, which is certain to shrink the small discretionary budget (which pays for everything but entitlements) more and more as interest on the debt increases.

In his endless quest to abandon all things Clintonian, Bush has also shown fierce opposition to Clinton's economic prosperity. During W. Bush's two and one half years the United States has lost two million jobs, giving the Bush family a net total of 500,000 jobs created, next to Clinton's 23,000,000 jobs in eight years. Its as if W stripped the keys to the Rolls Royce from Clinton's firm hands and drove it over a cliff, into an ocean of endless debt.


Government secrecy

Though Bush has demanded full disclosure of penny-ante music downloaders and traders in court, and full exposure of our health records (without our signature), and has foisted a host of sacrifices of personal privacy on the public in the name of the war against terrorism (think of the officially abandoned Total Information Awareness project run by Iran-Contra criminal John Poindexter), the Bush administration has felt disclosure of its own inner workings improper during the same never ending war on terrorism. 

It's fair to say that the Bush administration is the most secretive, least democratic administration since Republican Richard Nixon's iron-fisted reign ended in self-destruction. In addition to John Ashcroft's rollback of the Freedom of Information Act, we have witnessed: Office of Management and Budget head Mitch Daniels' attempt to transfer control over government information from neutral librarians (a system that has been in place since Thomas Jefferson) to the heads of the departments themselves; Bush's request for a Freedom of Information exemption for the Department of Homeland Security; a court order forcing the Bush administration to release sampled data from the 2000 census; the administration's repeated refusals to hand over documents to Senate Environmental Works head Jim Jeffords about the polluter-friendly rewrite of New Source Review; the administration's killing off of a Labor Department program that tracked mass layoffs by U.S. companies; Vice President Cheney's ongoing refusal to release records of the secret meetings behind the administration's extraction-based Energy Bill; Bush's multiple delays of the release of 68,000 pages of presidential records from the Reagan Administration; Bush's reversal of Presidential Records Act signed by Democrat Jimmy Carter (which required presidential papers to be released no more than 12 years after they were drawn up); Bush's executive order requiring members of the public to show a "demonstrated, specific need" for what should be public information; the secret no-bid contract for Iraq reconstruction awarded to Cheney's former employer, Halliburton; to say nothing of the general disdain voiced by Administration officials when the rare member of the normally docile major media calls their bluff.

Nowhere has this modus vivendi of secrecy been more pronounced than in the administration's handling of the 9/11 investigation. Where Democrat Franklin Roosevelt immediately authorized an independent commission to study Pearl Harbor, the Bush Administration has done everything in its power to keep the circumstances of 9/11--the most important historical event in the United States since the end of the Cold War--secret from the public. Compounding the lie that the Bush administration had absolutely no hint of knowledge of the terrorist danger level at the time of 9/11 (uncovered many months later, along with the revelation that Ashcroft had stopped flying commercial airliners in the months leading up to the attack), the Bush administration first tried to limit the investigation to secret congressional investigations. When this became politically untenable, Bush agreed to an independent investigation, and soon after appointed war criminal-cum-cover-up artist Henry Kissinger to head up the committee. After the public outcry that followed this absurd and insulting appointment, Kissinger stepped down, and the Bush administration reverted to its regular tactics: undercutting funding for the investigation (Bush has allocated five times as much money for the comparatively trivial Columbia tragedy) and stonewalling on giving up documents. Currently the Bush administration is trying to keep the committee's 800-page report from becoming public information.


Green death

Nowhere has the practice of cutting the public out of the loop been abused more frequently than in the administration's environmental policies. Since picking an EPA head (Christie Whitman) who slashed enforcement budgets, pushed voluntary regulation, and gutted public right to know laws in her first years as a New Jersey governor, and an Interior Secretary (Gail Norton) who had impressed her new employer in her years of suing the government for enforcing environmental laws, the administration has performed the masterful political feat of committing an unprecedented assault on the environment while most of the public remains completely oblivious. This has been done both by limiting (or eliminating) public feedback on public land decisions (the direct opposite of Clinton administration policy, where public comment sometimes stretched for years, and was accompanied by the best science available), and releasing many odious anti-environmental policies to the press on Friday evenings or holidays so as to minimize public exposure.

Bush environmental policy is another one of those vital areas of government that offers a stark contrast to the policies of the Clinton Administration. The day Bush was sworn in, his chief of staff Andrew Card immediately suspended all of Clinton's consumer-, nature-, and labor-friendly federal rules with the object of weakening some, killing others, and getting the spin straight on all of them. 

Once in office, while butchering the EPA budget to weaken the EPA--a tactic guaranteed to make the government look bad--and trying to hand enforcement off to the ill-equipped states, Bush took the scalpel or the pickaxe to a startling number of Clinton policies: Bush supported a technique by West Virginia coal companies called mountaintop removal, whereby mountaintops are sheared open to get to the seams, dumping pollutants and debris into surrounding forests and streams (Gore's opposition to this practice cost him West Virginia's electoral votes in 2000); Bush abandoned the Kyoto treaty on global warming, which had been negotiated by Gore (Bush adviser Harlan Watson said it wouldn't even be considered for another ten years); Bush replaced Clinton's strict New Source Review policy, which forced aging coal-fired plants to upgrade to cleaner burning technologies, with the Clear Skies plan, which relied on the facade of voluntary compliance, and actually increased the net amount of allowable pollutants.

Where the Clinton EPA continued the traditional practice of defending environmental laws in court, the Bush EPA has settled out of court, giving polluters a slap on the wrist; Bush immediately suspended the hallmark of Clinton's environmental legacy, his rule against development in big portions of publicly-owned forests, instead handing forests back to "local management," and, in effect, industry, for commercial exploitation at taxpayer expense; Bush also nullified a Clinton rule on protecting wetlands, and another rule that regulated run off from big industrial farms; Bush weakened energy-saving standards set by Clinton for air conditioners and heat pumps, declared a moratorium on expansions to the National Park system, pushed proposals to eliminate environmental impact statements and public participation when drilling, logging, mining or development was desired on publicly owned lands, abandoned a plan to propose changes to Missouri River flow to avoid the extinction of endangered fish and birds, reversed a Clinton rule banning mining for copper, gold, zinc and lead on public lands, and issued a legal opinion allowing Glamis Gold Ltd, a Nevada company, to dig an open-pit gold mine near El Centro, California, a desert considered sacred by local Quechan Indian tribe (Clinton had opposed the mine). 

Bush also withdrew the veto power of the interior secretary on mining permits on sensitive federal lands, instructed the Forest Service to remove protections for undeveloped portions of national forests, offered amnesty to livestock producers from the Clean Water Act, shifted the cost of Superfund cleanups from chemical companies to the taxpayers, and slashed the funds to clean up Superfund sites. 

In further reversals of Clinton/Gore policy, Bush allowed snowmobiles back into the Yellowstone and Grand Teton parks in Wyoming, gutted a regulation forcing public notification of sewer spills, overturned regulations against personal watercraft in eight national parks, deleted information from successive EPA Pollution reports about global warming, backed away from a Clinton plan to create a national seashore just north of Santa Barbara, lifted wildlife protections on federal lands, reversed a Clinton policy of not approving construction of a geothermal plant in the Modoc National Forest, a sacred Indian ground, published a rule in the federal register delaying a measure to force oil and gas industries to follow water pollution standards at drilling sites, put off Hudson river dredging until 2006, forced conservation groups to sue in court to protect Clinton's long-negotiated Northwest Forest Plan, ignored Clinton's plan to restore salmon and steelhead habitat in Snake River, gutted Clinton's Sierra Nevada plan and Clinton's sand dune protections in southeastern Cal against dune buggies, weakened Clinton's new arsenic standard (until it became politically unpalatable to do so), ended the environmental fellowship program for students pursuing environmental sciences, and tried to pry the Alaska National Wildlife Reserve--and innumerable other publicly-owned natural treasures - to commercial exploitation.

This onslaught has taken its toll on career employees at the EPA, producing a number of departures, voluntary and otherwise: Forest Service head Michael Dombeck; Eric Schaeffer, head of EPAs Office of Regulatory Enforcement; EPA ombudsman Robert Martin, along with his partner Hugh Kaufman; James Furnish, a self-described evangelical Christian disappointed with what he termed the Bush administrations "strident pro-development policy"; Martha Hahn, state director of Bureau of Land Management in Idaho; Sylvia Lowrance, former acting head of the office of enforcement and compliance; and David Mihalic, superintendent of Yosemite National Park.

For his tireless efforts on behalf of extraction industries and polluters, Bush has just received an "F" on his League of Conservation report card, an undeniably strong contrast to what we would have seen under Al Gore, whom the Sierra Club said would be the most pro-environment president in American history.


Public safety

Ever wedded to corporate theology, the Bush administration has extended its crass negligence of the environment to many areas of public health and safety. Never much for minimizing public risk, Bush proposed cuts to the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention in the middle of the SARS epidemic. With serious concerns in the air about security at chemical plants and nuclear facilities, Bush and congressional Republicans caved to the chemical lobby and passed over a Democratic plan for strict safety guidelines in favor of voluntary compliance. On Cheney's suggestion, Bush has suggested bringing nuclear energy back from the dead; a Bush official shook off public concern by explaining that "apart from Chernobyl and Three Mile Island" nuclear energy had had a bright track record. 

The Bush administration also downgraded the safety standards for radioactive leaks so that they could push for a nuclear waste repository in the earthquake zone of Yucca Mountain, not far from one of the fastest growing parts of the country. The Bush administration's lax food safety standards played a starring role in the largest U.S. meat recall ever when Pilgrim's Pride Corp, the number two poultry producer in the States, had to recall over 27 million pounds of poultry. Bush also had his FDA reverse a Clinton requirement that drugmakers test their products to determine whether they are safe and effective for children and stacked the Center for Disease Control's Advisory Committee on Childhood Lead Poisoning with people sympathetic to the lead industry, including two people with direct lead industry ties. 

To help his good friends at the Pentagon, Bush put a gag order on a risk health assessment of perchlorate (a rocket fuel component that has been known to cause neurological damage which has seeped into the groundwater in many states). 

And, in one of the crassest political acts on record, Bush made steep cuts to mining enforcement not long before nine miners provided Bush with a dynamite photo op by dying down a mineshaft.

Attacks on labor

Union support for Al Gore from the Teamsters, the AFL-CIO, and the UAW helped produce a turnout for Gore that defied expectations, giving him the second-highest number of votes ever, after Reagan in 1984. Endorsing Gore was a no-brainer for the unions, who, apart from NAFTA/GATT, strongly supported the Clinton Administration because of their many efforts on behalf of working people, as well as their opposition to dozens of insidious anti-labor measures belched out by Republican congresses.

Naturally Bush, with Rove standing behind the curtain, immediately set about emasculating his biggest opponents with four executive orders that were later overturned by a federal judge. When dockworkers had a strike on the West Coast, President Bush asked a federal court to reopen the ports and impose a cooling-off period that would end a labor lockout and force workers to consider accepting management's terms. At the same time, Labor Department officials proposed tougher reporting and disclosure requirements for the nation's labor unions, forcing unions to itemize all expenditures above a $2,000 to $5,000 threshold spent on organizing and strike services, lobbying or political activities. Bush also initiated cuts to Family and Medical leave mandates, child labor laws (a century-plus-old bogeyman for the corporate right), and money used to investigate corporate violations of minimum wage laws.

Government employee unions were not far behind. After Democrats lost control of the Senate in 2002, Bush announced a plan to outsource half of the federal workforce. Alongside this controversial move Bush decided that the 56,000 valuable new federal employees in airports did not deserve job security or the right to collective bargaining; similarly, after Bush embraced the creation of the Homeland Security department (which, not surprisingly, Ashcroft endorsed on the very day Colleen Rowley was unmasking the incompetence of the FBI in the run up to 9/11), he fought congressional Democrats on the issue of unionization, explaining the need for "flexibility," even running smear ads accusing Georgia Democrat Max Cleland (who has been wheelchair bound since getting a Purple Heart in Vietnam) of being unpatriotic. The ads showed Cleland in the middle of the screen, flanked by Saddam Hussein on one side and Osama bin Laden on the other. The administration also tried--unsuccessfully, so far--to privatize air traffic control, an idea so insane in the wake of 9/11 that it has yet to take wing in a Republican congress.

Union employees were hardly the only working people to feel the brunt of Bush. Immediately upon taking office, Bush signed a repeal of Clinton's ergonomic regulations sent to him by a Republican Congress and set about relaxing workplace safety enforcement. Key in the effort to strip 100 million workers of protection from repetitive stress injuries was John Graham, who headed the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. As a Harvard professor, Graham had birthed "comparative risk analysis," a regulatory model that attempted to scientifically justify lax public safety measures or other harmful corporate practices by placing low valuations on human life. Ergonomic regulations were part of the large task Graham had of deciding which of the raft of Clinton regulations to un-suspend, amend, or kill, as quietly as possible. 
One of Graham's right-hand women was Mary Sheila Gall, who headed the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Gall had the distinction of having been the lone commission vote against safety standards for baby walkers, bunk beds, and crib slats. She was quite a contrast with Clinton's head at the CPSC, Ann Brown, who had used investigations and threats to try to force industry to do the right thing. 

Other big shifts in labor policies stemmed from Bush's nomination of Eugene Scalia, Antonin's son, to be the top lawyer at the Labor Department. The Democratic Senate refused to confirm Scalia, so Bush appointed him to a lower post without a vote during the congressional recess, where one of Scalia's specialties has included filing friend of the court briefs against agency whistleblowers.

The administration has also meddled with worker retirement systems, proposing measures that would allow employers to switch from seniority-based to cash-based pension plans, a boon to business and a bust to workers who are middle-aged and older. In yet another reversal of Clinton policy, the Bush administration has proposed a dangerous re-working of overtime laws that allows employers to base overtime on an 80-hour cycle, instead of the current 40, and allow employers to replace overtime with comp time for any employees loosely classified as "management."  This one even has some congressional Republicans scared. The administration also repealed a Clinton rule that allowed states to use unemployment money to help people use family leave to have babies or adopt children. 

In other administrative actions, a request by the Bush administration to suspend federal rules aimed at making it easier for coal miners with black lung disease to apply for disability benefits was rejected by a federal judge. Along the same lines, the Energy Department kicked the job illness claims of government nuclear employees back to state comp programs, which have stricter burdens of proof and statutes of limitation. As AFL-CIO head John Sweeney said "This is the most anti-labor administration since Hoover"

Unilateral dogma

Not content to make a mess of things at home, the Bush administration has also gone out of its way to destroy amity abroad. According to Al Gore, the Clinton Doctrine was "together when we can, alone if we must."  The Bush Administration has turned this multilateralist vision on its head, going it alone as a rule and retaliating against anyone who raises a peep. 

Bush has set a new record in international arrogance by dropping out of, sabotaging, or forcing his heavy hand on a whole host of international agreements: the 1972 ABM Treaty, the world tobacco treaty (which caused the top U.S. official, Thomas Novotney, to step down), an agreement on going after offshore tax havens (probably with a wink to the owners of Bush's favorite media outlets), the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (held up by congressional Republicans since 1997), the 1972 treaty on germ warfare, the Biological Weapons treaty, the UN meeting on racism (the U.S. boycotted), a treaty that banned export of diamonds mined and sold illegally, a UN vote on an international torture convention, the Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, a War Crimes Court, the World Summit on Sustainable Development. 

Needless to say, the bully on the block has hit new lows of international popularity, a stunning reversal after the high opinions held of the United States during the Clinton administration. It's gotten so bad that many international citizens in a recent survey said they feared Bush more than Osama bin Laden.

What else?

Space and time considerations prohibit a discussion of many other important areas of government for which the Bush administration has devious plans, such as privatizing and in essence destroying Social Security, Medicare, and all other remaining elements of our weakening social contract, a TORT deform bill that would release Bush's contributors from accountability for the harm they cause, a bankruptcy bill (vetoed by Clinton) that hurts the working poor for the benefit of credit card companies, monumentally harmful FCC deregulation, the death of HMO reform, 40,000,000+ people with no health insurance, Bush's opposition to Affirmative Action (other than for rich straight white born again Christian males), ad nauseum.

Where do we go from here?

If things go smoothly for Bush over the next year and some, it may be too late; the tiny window of opportunity created when the Greens splintered the left in 2000 may have given Bush all the space he needed to sell his aw-shucks persona to gullible voters. We could be facing years of Republican dominance, in which the United States spirals back to a time of extreme social Darwinism, the Gilded Age with DSL.

For those who maintain hope that this juggernaut can be stopped, there is only one sober, adult option left: join hands with environmental groups, labor, gun control advocates, NARAL, and civil rights supporters by offering your money, your time, or at least your vote, for whichever Democrat emerges from the primaries. 

History is made by coalitions, not noble gestures.


Other features exploring the notion that 
"the parties are the same"

Aliens, unicorns, and the narcissism of voting Green

178 reasons Hillary Clinton is infinitely better than Donald Trump 
(even on her worst day)

Romney-Ryan's road to perdition

Sunday, December 30, 2018

Background: "Operation Enduring Democracy"

In early 2003, I responded to an ad to do political writing for getunderground.com. 

Up to that moment, I had been an active writer, but I had not done features before; my writing had consisted of extensive journaling, letters to the editor, prose-poems, hundreds of ideas and phrases jotted down on Post-its, early attempts at short story writing, and a budding novel.

My first assignment was to cover an Iraq War protest. Rain kept the audience small, and made note-taking challenging (I had to hold an umbrella up and steady the mini notebook in one hand while I wrote with the other), but the people who showed up were die-hard believers in what they were doing, their moral outrage driven by a stolen presidential election and an invasion built on lies

The editor I was working with wanted the piece turned around quickly, so I made an outline from my notes when I got home, did a first draft, and fastened down my final submission within a few days. 

Looking back, it isn't a feature that stands out, but it was a good experience, a chance to do event reportage and get my foot in the door.

Operation Enduring Democracy

[This piece was originally published 4/14/03 at getunderground.com. For background information, click here.]


April 12, the day of the most recent peace rally in San Francisco, began on an ominous note.
For the first time in months, it rained all morning and early afternoon and mid-afternoon. The sky cried thunder and lightning, very rare in these parts. I wondered if the demonstration was still on, and, more peripherally, does the Bush administration control the weather now too?

I stopped at a cafe on the way. Right after I sat down a clutch of protesters walked by in ponchos, signs encased in plastic, held high. Looking on, one of the cafe employees saluted the protesters and related a story of a recent trip to Paris. Parisians, he said, were not anti-American, but anti-Bush, a distinction the right has done their damndest to obscure to middle America. This is a common dialogue in a city where Bush got 15% of the vote.

The rally was at the Civic Center Plaza, across the street from City Hall. It was put on by ANSWER (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism), an international collective of activist groups, in league with the Bay area chapter of NION (Not in our Name), an organization that stresses international peace and cooperation and social justice. I called the Bay area NION on Thursday, to see if the rally would continue as planned, despite the fall of Baghdad. The spokesperson answered with an unqualified yes, explaining that NION's mission stretched beyond opposition to cowboy unilateralism to include opposition to civil liberties infringements and Bush's war on the environment and communities of color. The demonstration in San Francisco was part of an international day of action, with coordinated demonstrations taking place in over thirty countries on five continents.

When I arrived at Civic Center Plaza, I saw at least a thousand protesters toughing the hard rain. Right away I was drawn to the many interesting signs. In the category of Biggest Stories The Liberal Media Quickly Forgot About was a sign reading "Remember Florida?!!' (www.gregpalast.org)." A sign that has caught on for months now appeared several times: "Regime change begins at home: Impeach Bush! (www.votetoimpeach.org)." Signs were by turns moral ("Victory at what cost?"), biblical ("An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind"), darkly humorous (a man in a blood-spattered suit and tie holding a sign that said "Everything Is Fine"), and simple, direct ("How many lives per gallon?"). And there were flags. The NION flag is a globe in an ocean blue background expressing that we're all in this together. One woman held a US flag in which the stars were replaced with corporate logos: Nike, Coke, McDonald's, Shell, IBM, ad nauseum.

In the center of Civic Center Plaza, a location for many rallies--
including the recent mega-protest of over 50,000--a speaker cracked a joke about the demonstration being "a rally announcing the death of the peace movement," then shortly after gave a reminder of an upcoming non-violent, direct action demo at Chevron to "resist the corporate invasion." Within moments of this statement whistles blew, and the march was off. 

Any idea that the march would be a dirge dissolved immediately. As soon as the crowd left Civic Center Plaza and gave onto Grove Street, the protesters were buoyed by the Brass Liberation Orchestra's marching band rendition of Herbie Hancock's classic "Watermelon Man." Looking around one could see people smiling, happy to participate in democracy among others who were not afraid to share their dismay over the state of the union. At the second intersection a man held a sign up to the marchers that asked "Is Syria Next?," reminding us that we might soon be out in the streets again, if the Bush cabal continues its drive to make the Middle East a U.S. protectorate.

The march continued unimpeded through every intersection except Market Street, which did not thrill all the drivers along the route. At one intersection a peace activist had a lively if civil discussion with a stalled and frustrated single-occupancy driver. At another intersection the motorist at the front of the waiting line kept his horn depressed in futility. A few people flashed him the peace sign, feeling few qualms at reminding the driver, however briefly, of the human costs of his lifestyle choice to drive in a transit-first city.

After a short stop at Market, the march went two blocks south on Church Street and turned left onto 16th. 16th had not yet been cordoned off, causing a driver to be caught going against foot traffic. One protester taunted the driver, who looked miffed, surprised. Quickly two other protesters yelled at nearby marchers to get out of the way and let the driver through.

The march route led to Dolores Park, a park on the side of a city block-sized hill on the edge of the Mission District. Not halfway up the block the march fed into the rally and was met by a group of booths recruiting members and copping leftist merchandise: Bushoncrack.com; the San Francisco Green Party; Bay Area United Against War; the World Workers Party; the International Socialist Movement; and Food Not Bombs, which feeds homeless San Franciscans. There looked to be about two thousand people.

It was obvious from the moment we arrived that we weren't in Kansas anymore, as the first speaker made repeated, angry references to "President Moron" and the "imperialist aggression" of his administration. More specifically, the speaker questioned the United States setting up a war crimes court against Iraqis (when the United States itself had ducked out of the International Criminal Court), and the ability--o
r will--of a country that had supported and installed dozens of dictators to conceive and grow a fledgling democracy. 

The ten or so speakers covered a host of leftist causes that have gone virtually unreported in the U.S. major media. Early on, a message was read from the parents of Rachel Corrie, the unarmed 23-year-old American activist from the International Solidarity Movement who was recently run over by an Israeli bulldozer as it destroyed the house of a Palestinian doctor. There was a pair of speeches by veterans from Veterans for Peace.

A Gulf War I veteran and self-described recovering "right-wing hawk" said "blind faith in your leaders will bring your children home in body bags." The other veteran, w
ho was among the survivors when 241 marines were killed in the Lebanon occupation fiasco in 1983, said "I love my country; I fear this government."

William Mendoza, a former Coke plant employee in Columbia, spoke of the Coke corporation's payments to right-wing paramilitaries to intimidate or kill union leaders.

Next was Stephen Funk, a former Marine Corps corporal and the first conscientious objector in Iraq War II, who read a statement of opposition to the US habit of "exploiting other countries for their resources."

There was a speech from one among the many activists who were shot at with rubber bullets at the Oakland Port last week when they "got in the way" of the business being conducted by a defense contractor that was shipping military hardware to Iraq, and there was a performance by the the rap band Red Guard, whose lyrics spoke for many:

Not your flag

Not your government

Not your war

Not your president

Now is not the time to be silent


As the rally wound down and the crowd thinned to a few hundred, the tenor of the demonstration turned from universal to sectarian. One speaker lamented the fact that the people of Yugoslovia, now living in peace after years of horrific bloodshed and forced dislocations, were "still suffering the effects of the NATO bombing."

Despite the flagrant discrediting done over the past two years to the theory that there was "no difference" between the major party candidates in the 2000 presidential election, Mumia Abu Jamal's lawyer brought the remaining crowd to its feet when he lumped the Democrats with the Republicans as co-equal "parties of the ruling classes."

At the extreme end of the ideologically freeze-dried, an ANSWER representative warmed over about the "free peoples" of Cuba and finished with the fist-raising statement "Long live the Cuban revolution."

At the close of the demonstration we were reminded of the Northern California War Tax Resistance booth and the rally 15 minutes later to protest the purported pro-war leanings of San Francisco representative and House Minority leader Nancy Pelosi. Most people went home relieved to know that they weren't alone in their anger and apprehension at the Bush administration's assault on democracy under cover of security. And many felt a degree of contentment at having engaged in that most truly American of activities, public dissent.