or the candidates were ready for this extraordinary turnout thing that's going on. Seems like lots of people are not liking it at all. That said the media may not have picked our candidates, but our candidates were certainly picked for us.
The Theater of the Absurd
<2008 presidential election>
by A K Gupta
www.zmag.org, December 8, 2007
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Political/TheaterAbsurd_2008election.html
The presidential race is about many things: money, branding, celebrity, the media and theatrics. The one thing it's not about is politics.
Going into 2008, there are six major issues confronting the United States: the Iraq War and the "war on terror," global warming, healthcare, immigration, the deteriorating economy, and the expanding police state. Not one of them will be substantively addressed during the next year of presidential campaigning.
There will be a lot of screeching about immigration and terrorism when the general election gets underway and the Republicans play the fear and terror cards, but no intelligent discussion.Don't look to the mainstream media for this. It will obsessively deconstruct the semiotics of hairdos and outfits, facial expressions and body language, but will skimp on discussing real policies that might address the numerous crises.
It's a theater of the absurd. Even as political issues increasingly become a question of life and death, the national stage-managed debate shrinks from them equally fast.
Look at the presidential campaign, which has turned into a two-year-long death march that began after the November 2006 elections. First was speculation over who would run. Then the contest was to secure high-profile consultants, pollsters, campaign managers, spokespeople, and bloggers, followed by jockeying for celebrity endorsements - Oprah for Obama, Chuck Norris for Mike Huckabee, the Osmonds for Mitt Romney, Bonnie Raitt for John Edwards and about half of Hollywood for Clinton.
The most ludicrous stage, a media creation, was the "money primary:" the race to connect with wealthy donors to generate the heftiest quarterly fundraising totals. In this second Gilded Age of America, a candidate must have the golden seal of the moneyed elite to be considered "serious."
Thus before voters cast a single ballot in any primary, the presidential field has been winnowed to those who could pass these hurdles. The serious Democratic candidates, as the mainstream media define it, are Clinton, Edwards and Obama.There is a not dime's worth of difference between them. None promise a full withdrawal from Iraq by 2013. None endorse single-payer healthcare, the only real solution. All three favor unproven and corruption-prone "cap-and-trade" mechanisms to combat global warming, rather than strictly regulating pollutants at the source. All are largely quiet on immigration, trying to quadrangulate between corporate need for cheap labor, a populist storm of jingoism and the power of the Hispanic vote.
On the Republican side, the field is more open, but all the candidates are lunatics. Almost without exception they compete to show who hates immigrants the most, who will ban abortion the fastest, who will bomb Iran the fiercest, who will waterboard the most terrorists and who will stay the course in Iraq the longest.
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Politics are only for damaging an opponent's brand identity. Clinton's adversaries seized on her wavering response over whether she supported driver's licenses for illegal immigrants to remind voters she has no beliefs other than what the latest polls or her biggest donors tell her. Not that the other Democrats, except perhaps Kucinich, have a coherent plan beyond cobbling together buzzwords like "enforcement" "secure borders," "guest workers" and "path to citizenship."
Edwards has turned the head of many progressive because he actually talks policy, but he's starring in a well-known role. Lacking the party machine backing Clinton, and the media hagiography illuminating Obama, Edwards packages himself as an issues man, which is the role Jerry Brown filled in the 1992 race and Howard Dean in 2004.
Among Democrats, talking politics means having to address how corporations and the upper class - the ones who fund presidential campaigns -plunder the government. In one television ad, Edwards says, "We don't have universal health care because of drug companies, insurance companies and their lobbyists in Washington, D.C." In another, he states, "Do you really believe if we replace a crowd of corporate Republicans with a crowd of corporate Democrats that anything meaningful is going to change?"
Those are strong words, but if Edwards somehow does manage to get the nomination - mainly because the party bosses quake at the thought of either a woman or Black man heading up the ticket - he will start singing the virtues of the free market.
A.K. Gupta is an editor of The Indypendent, a biweekly newspaper based in New York City. He is currently writing a book on the history of the Iraq War to be published by Haymarket Press. He can be reached at ak_indypendent@yahoo.c