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(Subscribe to this RSS feed)Thoughts on politics, reporting on events, riffs and reflections on what’s in the news and what’s not--but should be.

  • To Israel, via J Street

    July 1, 2008

    For too long now, when it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and other issues of war and peace in the Middle East, the mainstream media and too many politicians in the US have deferred to the most extreme right-wing positions represented by organizations such as The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and Christian Zionist communities.

    In fact, there is a far more open and dynamic debate about the peace process in Israel than in the US. (For example, over 64 percent of Israelis favor direct talks with Hamas.) But a new lobby organization and PAC – J Street – aims to end the right-wing monopoly and give voice to the substantial number of Jewish and non-Jewish Americans with more moderate views on these issues.

    Executive Director Jeremy Ben-Ami told me last week, "The important thing is that there's a diversity of opinion in the American Jewish community. There's no monolithic view… there's an argument. And that's what J Street's about – it's about the fact that we deserve representation too in this debate. We understand that there are a substantial number of American Jews who hold very right-wing positions when it comes to Israel and they should have a voice in the public policy process. But there's also a very substantial number of American Jews who hold very moderate views on Israel and they also need a voice, and we should have that argument just like we do on any other public policy issue without resorting to name-calling, without labeling one side antisemitic or self-hating Jews and all of that. We should discuss the merits."

    (41) Comments
  • Iran, Fearmongering & Election '08

    June 30, 2008

    The essential and not surprising reality of 2008: The Republicans are desperate for a national security threat to rally their base. How else to explain McCain's uber-adviser/ lobbyist/ Charlie Black's "slip" about how a terrorist attack will help his candidate's failing fortunes.

    Now we have Sy Hersh, the reporter who has done more, singlehandedly, to expose the Administration's drive to war--with Iran--than any congressional committee.

    Last December, the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) found that Iran had abandoned its nuclear weapons program in 2003. Barack Obama claimed that the NIE's findings vindicated his calls for greater engagement with Iran. "By reporting that Iran halted its nuclear weapon development program four years ago because of international pressure, the new National Intelligence Estimate makes a compelling case for less saber-rattling and more direct diplomacy." Then Presidential candidate John Edwards used the strongest language: "The new National Intelligence Estimate shows that George Bush and Dick Cheney's rush to war with Iran is, in fact, a rush to war."

    (64) Comments
  • A New Solidarity

    June 24, 2008

    On June 22, international opposition to a US-proposed missile defense system based in the Czech Republic and Poland ratcheted up as thousands of people around the world participated in a 24-hour hunger strike.

    This action comes on the heels of a three-week hunger strike by two Czech peace activists, Jan Tamas and Jan Bednar, followed by a "chain hunger strike" that began on June 2 and continues today with Czech politicians, journalists, actors, dissidents of the former regime, athletes, intellectuals, and singers fasting for 24 to 48 hours. The people want a national referendum on the issue and an end to negotiations that subverts the will of the people.

    I've written in the past of the folly and popular opposition to the missile defense scam. The Bush Administration – as Ploughshares Fund President Joseph Cirincione described to me – is "rushing to deploy a technology that does not work against a threat that does not exist."

    (23) Comments
  • Jim Webb Tackles Our Tangled Drug Policy

    June 20, 2008

    Yesterday Senator Jim Webb--who seems to be on many people's shortlist as a possible running mate for Senator Barack Obama--chaired the Joint Economic Committee's hearing on "Illegal Drugs: Economic Impact, Societal Costs, Policy Reponses". It was the second hearing on drug policy that Senator Webb has convened, the first focused on the steep increase in the US prison population.

    In his two years in Congress, Senator Webb has established himself as a leader in fighting for economic populism, an end to the War in Iraq and a new GI Bill. Yesterday we saw that his interest in revamping our approach to drug policy is strong as well.

    In his opening statement Senator Webb noted that we have 5 percent of the world's population and 20 percent of the world's prison population--"either we have the most evil people in the world or we are doing something wrong with the way we handle our criminal justice system, and I choose the latter. The central role of drug policy in filling our nation's prisons makes clear that our approach to curbing illegal drug use is broken."

    (41) Comments
  • Progressive Book Lovers of the World, Unite!

    June 16, 2008

    Interested in joining the Progressive Book Club? Find out more here.

    "Books have always played a pivotal role in our nation's history, changing America in remarkable ways. Imagine the American Revolution without Thomas Paine's Common Sense. Where would the abolitionist movement have been without Uncle Tom's Cabin? How would the social reforms of the Progressive Era ever have been enacted without Upton Sinclair's The Jungle? What would be the condition of the natural environment today if Rachel Carson's Silent Spring had never been published?"

    This strong articulation of the power of books--and the ideas they bring to our politics and culture--comes from the mission statement for the newest organization in the progressive firmament, the Progressive Book Club (PBC). At this defining moment in our nation's history--a time which demands we examine complex issues from new perspectives, ask tough questions and press for real change--it's very good news that a venture like PBC, dedicated, like The Nation, to enriching our political and cultural conversation and debate, launches today.

    (37) Comments
  • One Simple Question

    June 13, 2008

    It started with one simple question posed by Senator Bernie Sanders to his constituents in an invitation to a town meeting: what does the decline of the middle class mean to you personally?

    Over 700 people replied.

    A second question was asked in his e-newsletter, The Bernie Buzz: do you have a story to tell about how gas prices are affecting you?

    (116) Comments
  • Taking On Inequality

    June 6, 2008

    In December, I wrote about Robert Greenwald's attempt to mobilize outrage against Gilded Age-like inequality and the hedge-funders with his War on Greed series of short films. Now, another creative effort is being led by the Service Employees International Union, with July 17 protests scheduled in 100 cities in twenty-five countries.

    Stephen Lerner, the director of the SEIU's private equity project, told the New York Times, "We think the buyout industry and the way it operates are systematic of what's wrong in this economy. We want to make them responsible corporate citizens."

    The SEIU is focused on the Carlyle Group and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, and how they game the system to take over companies with little of their own money, lay off workers, reap the profits when they resell, and pay a lower tax rate than their own secretaries do.

    (224) Comments
  • Hillary's Exit Strategy

    June 3, 2008

    A week ago I expressed my hope that Senator Hillary Clinton would exit this historic race, gracefully, with dignity, after the last primaries today. A smart op-ed by Anna Holmes in the New York Times this past Sunday suggests one way Clinton might manage to do just that – starting with a speech that offers an expansive message for all women – especially for a future generation of women who could be energized and moved by her campaign, rather than deflated by it.

    Holmes argues, "Of course there's been sexism throughout this campaign…. But at this point, keeping track of every tone-deaf criticism matters less than delivering an active, impassioned response. Senator Clinton is the one woman in America right now who has the perspective, and the responsibility, to give that response."

    Senator Clinton could deliver a rousing speech that challenges us to examine the structural sexism in our media, culture and politics. She could challenge the media to bring on more women of all ages, races, and views, as Washington Post ombudsman Deborah Howell recently called on her newspaper to do.

    (190) Comments
  • Hillary Clinton--Please Exit, with Dignity, June 4

    May 28, 2008

    Check out CNN.com for Bill Clinton's vent about how a "cover up " is hurting Hillary Clinton's chances of becoming the Democratic nominee. This is a man who has trampled on his spouse's voice every time, in this campaign, that she's found it.

    The women of The Nation are the first to deplore the sexism in media commentary this primary season, but a "cover up"?

    Hillary Clinton started this race last year as the one to beat--she had the money, the machine and the name recognition that assured her of quasi-incumbent status. And, indeed, she ran as a quasi-incumbent, an establishment candidate in a change- year election. Yes, there were the Chris Matthews and the Tucker Carlsons and the Mike Barnicles and the Rush Limbaughs and the women who were working out their Clinton hatred through Hillary's candidacy.

    (62) Comments
  • Obama's Cardinal Rule --No CNN or MSNBC.

    May 27, 2008

    It's a media rule by now that at the tail end of a campaign, we get the story about the leading candidate's "body man." That is, the personal aide who shadows the candidate and anticipates everything he or she needs. And lo and behold, there it was this Tuesday-- a New York Times cover story about Senator Barack Obama's "body man" Reggie Love.

    Love the name. Worthy of a character out of Faulkner, Dickens or Morrison.

    It seems that Love played football and basketball at Duke, graduated with a degree in political science and public policy and then had summer try-outs with the Green Bay Packers and the Dallas Cowboys before getting cut. Now he's the man who watches over Obama as he campaign 36/7.

    (47) Comments

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