Departments
Is our peace activists learning?
by David Swanson
May 29, 2007
Over the past two months of repeated Congressional votes to fund the occupation of Iraq, culminating in President Bush's signing the bill on Friday, what – if anything – have we learned? Have we learned anything about individuals or political parties or activist organizations to trust or despise, or have we learned better what to demand of them regardless of such emotions? Have we learned anything about policies to support, battles to lose, pyrrhic victories, or how to talk about ending the occupation?
A clear and growing majority of Americans wants to end the occupation. Yet many people are opposed to defunding it. So, not enough of us have learned that you cannot end this occupation without defunding it. And far too few of us fully understand that ultimately we'll need impeachment before the occupation actually ends.
Because we don't grasp the need for impeachment, we focus on asking Congress to oppose the war but ignore Congress' failure to investigate the lies that launched the war (and we call it a "war," giving credence to the notion that it is something that can be won or lost). http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/22933 Because we haven't faced up to a choice between continuing the occupation and defunding it, we allow Congress Members to make anti-occupation gestures and then fund the occupation, not in order to prolong the occupation and fund its profiteers, but "for the troops."
As long as we allow the pretense to continue that wars are fought on behalf of the young men and women sent to fight them, we will never see a serious effort on the part of the Democratic leadership in Congress to end the occupation of Iraq. One thing many people have gradually come to realize is that we have not seen such an effort yet, only pretenses of it. Certainly, some who now disapprove of what the Congress just passed still think they were right to support what it was doing two months ago, and it's less important to return to that debate than to get our act together from here on out. But we are more likely to make wise decisions in the future if we learn the right lessons from our mistakes. So, a quick review may be in order.
Two months ago, peace activists were pushing hard for the House to allow a vote on an amendment by Barbara Lee to end the war. Numerous activist groups sided with Speaker Pelosi and the Democratic leadership and opposed the Lee amendment in favor of a supplemental spending bill to end the war. The push back from principled peace activists against the supplemental was muted by concerns that if the Lee amendment passed, then the supplemental would be a good thing.
On March 22nd, the Democrats decided not to allow a vote on the Lee Amendment. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20355 So the debate became clearly one for funding the occupation or not funding the occupation, but there was only one day to lobby before the vote, and numerous groups were pushing the idea that the bill was the best we could get and actually took serious steps to end the occupation of Iraq.
This flew in the face of the simple fact that no bill at all would have been better than this one, not to mention that the bill promoted the theft of Iraq's oil, failed to use the power of the purse to end the war, and allowed Bush to "waive" other measures he might not like. The Democratic leaders themselves didn't pretend this was a bill to end the war, so much as a bill to move the war to Afghanistan. But the media lapped up the astroturf-roots talk about peace and standing strong against to Bush. Here's a video of Rep. Lynn Woolsey opposing the bill in a debate with Bob Borosage who promotes it as the best antiwar bill possible: http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20356
But even Woolsey, and Congresswomen Waters and Lee, played along with the game. They planned to vote No, but promised Pelosi they would not ask any other members to follow them. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20370 Only Congressman Dennis Kucinich pledged to vote No and urged his colleagues to join him. Peace activists demanded that standard from other members http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20376 and an unfortunate split developed between those taking such a strong position for peace and those activist groups following Pelosi's lead – a split that may be healing as the Democrats' position has worsened ever so slightly over the past two months.
But this history lesson could begin much earlier. Pelosi's plan for her first 100 hours as speaker didn't even mention Iraq. She pledged that defunding the occupation and impeaching the warmakers were both "off the table." Democratic Party-led activist groups take her "off the table" pledge seriously on impeachment, but pretend the one on the funding of the "war" never happened. This is an advantage because it means more people lobby her to end the war. But it's a disadvantage if we're insufficiently skeptical about what she's doing.
Pelosi used every dirty trick imaginable to badger Congress Members into voting for this spending bill, including threatening to take away chairmanships and to back primary challengers and deny election support. On March 23rd, the House passed the supplemental. http://afterdowningstreet.org/heroes The corporate media and the groups following Pelosi called this a vote against a war, not a vote to continue funding an occupation. This made the position of peace activists almost incomprehensible, because we opposed the Republicans who voted no in opposition to the little bells and whistles and nonbinding deadlines, we opposed the two Republicans who voted yes to fund the occupation, we opposed the bulk of the Democrats who voted yes to fund the occupation, and we praised the eight Democrats and two Republicans who voted No for the right reasons. The media was completely incapable of telling this story, but Congress Members and the leaders of activist groups heard it quite clearly from constituents.
By March 27th, the Democratic leadership had announced its willingness to compromise with Bush and weaken further the weak bill that had just been voted on. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20532 But activists' eyes were moving to the Senate … and devising a new way to get distracted. We focused on urging Senators to pass Jim Webb's amendment to discourage an attack on Iran http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20502 We failed to focus strongly on opposition to the money that could fund an attack on Iran, money that is now in Bush's pocket. On March 29th, the Senate passed the supplemental and did not even vote on an Iran amendment. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20655 Again, the media called this a vote against the "war."
On April 25th and 26th the House and Senate passed a compromise version supplemental, which had been watered down further from what both the House and Senate had originally passed. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/21833 And on May 1st Bush vetoed the bill.
Now, here's where things get really weird. Even though the bill funded the occupation, required stealing the oil, permitted an attack on Iran, and contained nothing useful with any teeth in it, the story line had been spread so effectively that this was a good bill, that even the peace groups that had opposed its passage supported protesting its veto. And of course the veto was objectionable. Bush opposed the tiny impositions in the bill on his dictatorial power. But once you've protested the vetoing of a bill to fund an occupation of someone else's country, you pretty well have got yourself stuck promoting a new bill to do the same. And you can either back a bill with the same or greater likelihood of being vetoed, or you can back one less likely to meet that fate. And there can be no question which route the Democratic leadership will take. So, the question becomes whether you are yet ready to break with them, even if – as it turns out – they break with themselves and oppose their own bill after they support it.
But there was an important act left in this drama before we reached that deus ex machina. On May 7th the progressive Democrats in the House cut a deal with the leadership. They would be permitted to vote on a good bill to end the occupation (which the leadership would not whip for and which would fail), and in exchange they would turn around an hour later and vote to fund the occupation with an even weaker bill than last time. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/22239
The new supplemental did not contain even a hint of a deadline to end the war, and for most of the month of May almost no one noticed or remarked on this state of affairs. Media coverage by May 8th had completely dropped any mention of the absence of a deadline in the bill. The focus was all on "benchmarks" and how many months of the occupation would be funded at a time. It was as if the presence of even a nonbinding deadline in the vetoed bill had been completely eradicated from history and memory, even though that deadline had been Bush's primary professed reason for vetoing the bill. The story now was of the Democrats getting tough and standing up to Bush with "benchmarks" even though this meant sending him exactly what he wanted, a bill with no deadline, and even though he supported all of the "benchmarks." http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/22284
So, what did peace groups and other activist groups do? They promoted Yes votes on Jim McGovern's bill to end the occupation, and almost completely ignored the vote coming an hour later on funding additional months of "war". So, on May 10th, a huge number of Democrats (169) voted for McGovern, and then all but 10 of them turned around and voted to fund the war. And then we thanked them. They had played us like a fiddle. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/22334
The Senate was far less slick. It didn't hold its votes an hour apart, but separated them by two weeks. On May 16th, the Senate voted down an amendment by Russ Feingold to end the occupation. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/22540 The vote for the money was still to come, and who had voted right on Feingold would be forgotten by then.
Meanwhile, something quite unusual and dramatic happened. By May 23rd, Congress Members Pelosi and David Obey had turned against their own bill. They were going to make sure it came up for a vote and passed, but they were going to vote against it. http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/22817 Once this happened, Pelosi-following activist groups, too, turned against the bill. And the absence of a deadline in the bill reemerged in the media with a vengeance. Now everyone suddenly noticed that the bill no longer had any sort of, even nonbinding, deadline in it. This was a bill for endless war. The "benchmarks" were forgotten. The short-term funding talk was forgotten. And people were even beginning to see through the game.
While Pelosi was "opposing" the bill, she was also beginning to take heat from all sides for having brought the bill up for a vote and assured its passage. She voted No, but she did not whip, cajole, threaten, or bribe her colleagues to join her against the occupation as she had done to get them to join her for it. During the debate on the floor prior to the vote, Pelosi, Obey, and others made clear that they wanted the bill to pass and considered it necessary "for the troops." Obey remarked on the floor:
"I hate this agreement. I'm going to vote against the major portion of this agreement even though I negotiated it."
Then he went on to defend his record of "funding the troops" and blamed Bush's veto for preventing money from getting to the troops. There was no chance Obey would let this bill be voted down.
No one mentioned that not a single troop gets a single dollar because the occupation continues, or that the Congressional Research Service said in April that the occupation was already funded through July, or that polls of troops in Iraq last year found that a strong majority wanted to end the occupation last year, or that most of the money goes to occupation-profiteers.
Republicans attacked Obey for voting against his own bill. Nobody criticized him for introducing it in the first place. But activists and the media were waking up to the game. http://afterdowningstreet.org/whip And Bush's statement after signing the bill containing his own "benchmarks" the next day was along the lines of "I was born and raised in this here briar patch." http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/22944
From the left to the center, everyone got this one right as soon as it was too late. Pelosi had joined the Republicans to put a Republican bill on the floor, had allowed right-wing Democrats to assure its passage, and then had pretended to rejoin the Democrats in voting against it. Reactions ranged from planning for the next vote, to a demand for protests and phone calls, to a plan to recruit primary challengers against the most pro-war Democrats http://www.democrats.com/primary-2008 , to a demand that all peace-loving souls reject the entire Democratic Party and either back the Green Party or (if you don't care about poor people or think that right now keeping people alive has got to take precedence) support the Ron Paul Republicans.
There's only one Democrat in Congress with a completely clean record through this process: Dennis Kucinich. He argued against invading Iraq prior to the 2003 vote that authorized it. He published his case against it and helped persuade many of his colleagues to vote No. Kucinich challenged the legality of the war in court in an effort to prevent it. He proposed a detailed plan to end the occupation of Iraq over three years ago. His current plan is found in his bill HR 1234.
Kucinich is the only Democrat who has voted against every new funding bill for the occupation and always urged his colleagues to vote against the occupation as well. He was one of only seven who voted against the Rule to bring the latest Supplemental to a vote.
Kucinich is the only member who has repeatedly raised the topic of oil theft in the Democratic Caucus' meetings. And after Obey screamed as him for it and defamed him in the media, Kucinich obtained 60 minutes on the floor of the House to speak to the topic. (A result that seems sadly unlikely to convince Obey to stop screaming at people.)
Now, in March when Pelosi was threatening to not support or to challenge incumbent Democrats in the next election if they wouldn't back her occupation spending bill, nobody called her a traitor or drummed her out of the Democratic Party. But on Friday I had to take a leave from my part-time consulting to Kucinich's presidential campaign, because the Cleveland Plain Dealer, which has hated Kucinich for decades, began complaining that in my other job I was promoting challengers to pro-occupation Democrats. I told the reporter, Sabrina Eaton, and she refused to print, that I believed contested primaries were healthy for any party, and that participation in them was a pro-Democratic Party position at a moment when a lot of people were fed up and quitting the party in protest.
But Eaton operates under the common delusion that participation and challenges in primaries must be stifled so as not to nominate candidates too far from the middle to win general elections. That is to say, this is her rule for Democrats, not necessarily Republicans. And she compounds this with the false position, which is almost a matter of definition, that peace cannot be a centrist position.
But I favor peace candidates in primaries in every party, including Democratic, Republican, Green, and any other. And I favor a strong Green challenge to the Democrats for the same reason I favor strong primary challengers to Democrats, to influence the Congress now. To the amazement and frustration of some Green partisans I have not learned from the past two months or the past few decades that the entire Democratic Party is an evil plot that must be purely opposed. While Kucinich may be the best Democrat, others are relatively great, good, and mediocre. I'm not trying to identify roll models. I'm trying to end a war and reestablish the rule of law.
And to the amazement of many Democratic real politikers I do not accept that promoting Greens is a dangerous temptation that will only give us more Republicans. I've seen virtually nothing over the past five months of Democratic rule that was superior to what we had under the Republicans. A few embarrassing hearings, but no enforcement of subpoenas, no impeachment. A partial correction to the minimum wage, but no end to the steady march of corporate trade deals. A hell of a lot of rhetoric, but no end to the occupation of Iraq, in fact no end in sight, and no resistance to attacking Iran. Ron Paul has done more for peace than Pelosi. And if we don't make clear to pro-occupation, pro-Cheney-immunity Democrats that we will vote Green or Republican or stay home, then we should never bother leaving our homes.
I do hope that some people have learned not to be loyal to the leadership of any party when it requires setting aside their own views or those of the people they represent. I was never loyal to Pelosi and Reid, but I have learned more in recent weeks about the depths they will sink to. Politics for politicians is all about friendships and loyalties. For activists it is not, and if Kucinich supports a pro-war candidate for president I will not support him in that. But I will urge everyone now to do the one thing most likely to influence Congress toward peace: fund Kucinich's presidential campaign.
The optimistic view of this story is, I think, as follows. We have finally had a vote for money in which a Yes vote was understood to be a Yes vote, and a No vote was understood to be a No vote, and 140 Congress Members and 14 Senators voted No, rejecting the absurd Orwellian dictum on "funding the troops." More and more activists and other Americans understand that story. More and more people are willing to demand of Congress what we know is possible rather than what they tell us is possible. And we know that Congress can, if it chooses, bring up a bill right after Memorial Day break to ban any future spending on the occupation of Iraq beyond September, require the withdrawal of all troops, mercenaries, and contractors by that date, turn Iraq's territory, oil, bases, and our world's largest "embassy" over to the Iraqi people, and make it a felony for Bush to violate these terms.
We have a duty to learn not to compromise until we need to, to ask up front for what we really want, to treat every member of Congress as if they work for us rather than the reverse, to stop calling an occupation a war, and to insist that the only harm done to US troops is done by those who fail to bring them home.
|
 |
Recent National Issues Articles
Medicare for all via H.R. 676 December 28, 2007 Stephen Crockett
Unions passing resolutions to honor, assist folksinger/storyteller Bruce "Utah" Phillips December 28, 2007 George Mann
Hate us for our WHAT? December 27, 2007 David Swanson
Lies, injustice and the capitalist way: we're on the highway to hell -- don’t stop us! December 24, 2007 Jason Miller
Who I give to December 23, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Rep. Weiner joins call for Cheney impeachment hearings December 21, 2007 David Swanson
Hillary as hawk December 19, 2007 Paul W. Lovinger
Dick Cheney's fondest pipe dream, revisited December 19, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Crooked timber December 17, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Exclusive interview with syndicated columnist Bob Koehler December 10, 2007 Joan Brunwasser, Voting Integrity Editor, OpEdNews
Piano wire puppeteers: the Constitution, media and Dennis Kucinich December 9, 2007 Sean Penn
Enough heroes to fill a book December 9, 2007 David Swanson
The Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act: A tutorial in Orwellian newspeak December 2, 2007 Robert Weitzel, AfterDowningStreet.org
Institutionalized glorification of our greed and gluttony: Thanksgiving reflections of an anti-capitalist November 23, 2007 Jason Miller
Twenty thousand protest at Ft. Benning: eleven face federal criminal trials November 21, 2007 Bill Quigley
Pelosi, Cheney, and the fertilized eggs November 21, 2007 David Swanson
God bless the Senate Republicans November 19, 2007 Mike Ferner
Mentes Peligrosas: confession of an American thought criminal November 15, 2007 Jason Miller
Veterans Day: A day for peace or a day for war? November 14, 2007 Ann Wright, Colonel, US Army Reserves (Retired), AfterDowningStreet.org
The reverse shock doctrine November 13, 2007 David Swanson
Tasered Florida student on Palast Report Today on Air America Radio: It’s not the volts, it’s the votes November 13, 2007 Zach Roberts
Giuliani and Clinton taste occupation in Iowa November 12, 2007 Mike Ferner, AfterDowningStreet.org
Used razor blades November 9, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Peace and impeachment in Los Angeles November 7, 2007 David Swanson
It's time to impeach Cheney November 5, 2007 Congressman Dennis Kucinich, special to www.ImpeachCheney.org
Why Kucinich should concede nothing November 5, 2007 David Swanson
Burn, baby, burn -- the California celebrity fires October 31, 2007 Greg Palast
Shouting at the devil: “Fuck you, capitalism!” October 30, 2007 Jason Miller
Address by Mayor Ross C. “Rocky” Anderson on October 27, 2007 October 29, 2007 Mayor Ross C. “Rocky” Anderson
Depleted uranium and depleted democracy October 27, 2007 David Swanson
The National Lawyers Guild opposes the confirmation of Michael Mukasey as Attorney General of the United States October 24, 2007 Marjorie Cohn and Heidi Boghosian
Pre-existing conditions October 19, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Reflections on the passing of our people of AIM October 15, 2007 Ben Carnes
Making our restrooms safe for democracy October 12, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
A special need October 7, 2007 Lucinda
Do we know who attacked America on 9/11? October 7, 2007 Pete Johnson
Edwards-Obama, go Edwama October 6, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Preempting the next war October 2, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Acquitted! October 2, 2007 Mike Ferner and Tom Brejcha
Louisiana, Iraq, impeachment, & protest music! September 30, 2007 Cynthia McKinney
Presidential candidates diverge September 29, 2007 David Swanson
This hallowed landmark September 27, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Free speech takes a capitol beating September 24, 2007 Mike Ferner
Kerry's sense of timing September 20, 2007 David Swanson
Student tasered for Armed Madhouse question to Kerry September 19, 2007 Greg Palast
September 11: relevant questions September 18, 2007 Ramzy Baroud
September 11: the epitome of American arrogance September 14, 2007 Lucinda Marshall
The military draft: a moral abomination September 11, 2007 Michael Boldin
Wild weather creates chances for political progress September 10, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
The prerequisite for salvation September 6, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
If not now, when? General Strike on 9/11/2007 September 6, 2007 Michael Collins
US Arabs and Muslims: the search for common identity September 5, 2007 Ramzy Baroud
"I will salute no more forever" September 5, 2007 Mike Ferner
Presence of mind September 1, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
America needs a guarantor September 1, 2007 Pablo Ouziel
New Orleans: Not lost to a hurricane, but by government betrayal September 1, 2007 Mitchel Cohen
American nightmare: Gonzales "wrong and illegal and unethical" August 30, 2007 Greg Palast
Secret to forcing compliance with subpoenas August 30, 2007 David Swanson
"They wanted them poor niggers out of there." -- New Orleans two years after August 30, 2007 Greg Palast
The 18 percent Congress August 28, 2007 David Swanson
Responsible investment: Gates Foundation and the California Model August 27, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Ella Baker, Presente! August 27, 2007 Ted Glick
The nanny state August 24, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Hurricane George: how the White House drowned New Orleans August 24, 2007 Greg Palast
National Lawyers Guild calls on Congress to repeal warrantless domestic surveillance August 16, 2007 Marjorie Cohn and Heidi Boghosian
Where Congressman Jerrold Nadler stands on impeachment August 16, 2007 Jacob Park
An appeal for the hurricanes Katrina and Rita International Tribunal August 15, 2007 Cynthia McKinney
It really is a Democratic Congress August 13, 2007 David Swanson
DaFazio, Homeland Secuirty Committee leaders again refused access to continuity of government information August 13, 2007 Peter DeFazio
Disciples of Yossarian August 9, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Commenting on the black commentator August 9, 2007 David Swanson
Failure to stop Bush is not a victimless crime August 8, 2007 David Swanson
Un-American intimidation tactics shall not silence Muslims August 7, 2007 Ahmad Al-Akhras
Senator Dodd thinks you're stupid August 7, 2007 David Swanson
Some thoughts on progressives organizing August 5, 2007 Robert A. Letcher, PhD
Tax withholding for an end to tyranny August 2, 2007 James R. Campbell
34 Congress members for impeachment August 2, 2007 David Swanson
The other lost war July 29, 2007 Reverend Jesse L. Jackson
Bush fulfills his grandfather's dream July 28, 2007 David Swanson
Of Marx, Christ, and the persecution of radicals: how will humanity survive the capitalist threat? July 27, 2007 Jason Miller
Race is the tripwire for the progressive movement: John Conyers and impeachment July 27, 2007 Rev. Lennox Yearwood, Jr.
Caged priest July 26, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Another Congress member backs impeachment July 26, 2007 David Swanson
Getting impeachment wrong July 25, 2007 David Swanson
Some thoughts on progressives organizing July 24, 2007 Robert A. Letcher, PhD
Observations of a political editor at large in Puerto Rico July 24, 2007 David S. Lewis
Conyers: Three more Congress members and I'll impeach July 22, 2007 David Swanson
Impeach now or face the end of Constitutional democracy July 21, 2007 Paul Craig Roberts
Slaves to Christ and compassion unite: free markets must prevail July 16, 2007 Jason Miller
Bush has photos of Pelosi July 16, 2007 David Swanson
John Edwards' fortress July 16, 2007 David Swanson
Governor of Massachusetts favors impeachment July 14, 2007 Robert Feuer
The secular God July 12, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Want to impeach Cheney? Think July 23rd July 10, 2007 David Swanson
Life, liberty, and the pursuit of personal gratification: “Here there be monsters” July 6, 2007 Jason Miller
CNN and 4 Dems opt to skew debate July 5, 2007 David Swanson
John Perkins: jerk, con-man, shill July 5, 2007 Greg Palast
Strike the root! July 5, 2007 Sheila Samples
Fourteen congress members for impeachment July 3, 2007 David Swanson
Commuting Scooter July 3, 2007 David Swanson
Rev. Jackson calls on democrats to put impeachment back on the table July 2, 2007 Reverend Jesse L. Jackson
New NSA whistleblower speaks July 1, 2007 David Swanson
Impeachment in Kennebunkport July 1, 2007 David Swanson
Where is our conscience? June 29, 2007 Reverend Jesse L. Jackson
The violence interrupters June 27, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Peak suburbia June 27, 2007 James Kunstler
Kucinich comes to take back America June 26, 2007 David Swanson
Curbing the imperial presidency June 25, 2007 David Swanson
Randi Rhodes and Greg Palast hunt Giuliani's favorite vulture June 25, 2007 Greg Palast
Overgrown kids, unshackled ids, and the death of the superego June 25, 2007 Jason Miller
Hip hop comes to take back America June 20, 2007 David Swanson
Barack Obama takes over the take back America conference June 19, 2007 David Swanson
Is this heaven? June 18, 2007 Mike Palecek
The tears of a clone: Conyers closes in on Karl and his Rove-bots June 18, 2007 Greg Palast
Obama says he'll use force unilaterally to protect "vital interests" June 15, 2007 David Swanson
Sahl’s last punchline June 13, 2007 Paul Krassner
Father's Day, peace, and masculinity June 11, 2007 David Swanson
Begging your pardon, Guvnor June 8, 2007 Steve Fournier
Rep. Jerrold Nadler: President and Attorney General are engaged in a criminal conspiracy June 8, 2007 David Swanson
The conscience of Los Alamos June 7, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Ritter's repudiation ritual June 5, 2007 David Swanson
Iraq, cowboys, and the enormity of 18 months June 4, 2007 David Swanson
Rep. John Conyers backs impeachment May 30, 2007 David Swanson
Is our peace activists learning? May 29, 2007 David Swanson
The goods on Goodling and the keys to the kingdom May 29, 2007 Greg Palast
Dancing with fear May 24, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
What do these crimes have in common? May 24, 2007 David Swanson
The haircut that won't die May 20, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Detroit City Council votes to impeach Bush, Cheney May 18, 2007 DAWSON BELL and MARISOL BELLO, Detroit Free Press
War-pimping with a smile: of American exceptionalism, apple pie, and moral rot May 18, 2007 Jason Miller
U.S. space first strike program well underway May 16, 2007 Bruce K. Gagnon
Exclusive: Rep. Maxine Waters speaks out for impeachment May 15, 2007 David Swanson
Naked neo-cons: Perjury and the big, bad Wolfowitz May 11, 2007 Greg Palast
Rescuing the Democrats May 11, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Mother's Day Proclamation of 1870 May 8, 2007 Julie Ward Howe
Hillary's mother-f'ing tour business May 6, 2007 Greg Palast
The lethal media silence on Kent State's smoking guns May 6, 2007 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
The Crusaders May 3, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
18 missing inches in New Orleans May 2, 2007 Greg Palast
A whoring she will go May 2, 2007 Jason Miller
Pelosi, Conyers, the people, and impeachment May 1, 2007 David Swanson
Don’t fire Gonzales April 28, 2007 Greg Palast
Reflections on the VA Tech massacre April 24, 2007 Lee Thompson
Star Wars test set for Monday April 24, 2007 Bruce K. Gagnon
Rethinking American culture April 22, 2007 Herndon L. Davis
USA: cornering the market on morality April 21, 2007 William Blum interviewed by Jason Miller, including satirical commentary by Miller
Season of grief April 19, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
The accomplices: Sundance George and Butch Reid and the Virginia Tech massacre April 19, 2007 Greg Palast
"I hope it's your family members that die" - US Representative Dana Rohrabacker April 19, 2007 Ann Wright
Kucinich says Clinton and Obama continue to vote for war funding April 18, 2007 Dennis J. Kucinich
Please God, deliver us from the banality of evil April 18, 2007 Jason Miller
Vonnegut dies without a country or religion April 12, 2007 David Swanson
The anti-empire report: Some things you need to know before the world ends April 7, 2007 William Blum
Heroes, sung and unsung April 7, 2007 David Swanson
Ten states Introduce Impeachment April 7, 2007 David Swanson
Devil weed April 5, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Veto this March 30, 2007 David Swanson
Symbolism and duct tape March 30, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
How's the Progressive Caucus progressing? March 28, 2007 David Swanson
Surviving at the pleasure of the president March 27, 2007 Sheila Samples
John and Elizabeth March 27, 2007 Susan Estrich
U.S. Attorney firings exposes rough justice “voter fraud” prevention equals voter suppression March 27, 2007 Michael Collins
Boycott the Democratic Party wing of the War Party March 26, 2007 Chuck Zlatkin
Let Rove lie March 26, 2007 David Swanson
A measure of morality in Congress March 26, 2007 David Swanson
Why the progressive caucus should vote no on war money March 23, 2007 David Swanson
It all started with an American Taliban March 20, 2007 David Swanson
The barking of the dog is trumping the wagging of the same March 20, 2007 Tom Luffman
Forgiveness, my final soul-ution to what ails America: the search for the heart of New Orleans, part IV March 19, 2007 Dave Lewis
Fraudulent firings March 19, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
How about a little democracy for a change? March 17, 2007 Joel Hirschhorn interviewed by Jason Miller
Impeachment may well be the only remedy March 16, 2007 Rep. Dennis Kucinich
From Lawn-Boys to B-2’s: America’s penchant for mowing ‘em down March 15, 2007 Mike Palecek interviewed by Jason Miller
Obstruction of justice March 15, 2007 Susan Estrich
Subpoena Dick March 10, 2007 David Swanson
What's wrong with David Obey March 10, 2007 David Swanson
It's time for detention, Ms. Coulter March 10, 2007 John Ireland
Bush's new U.S. Attorney a criminal? March 9, 2007 Greg Palast
BBC Television had exposed 2004 voter attack scheme by appointee Griffin, a Rove aide. March 7, 2007 Greg Palast
Count the quagmires March 7, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
New York Times spins health coverage opinion March 3, 2007 David Swanson
The Employee Free Fire Zone Act March 3, 2007 David Swanson
Leaders don't kill people... March 3, 2007 Michael Boldin
Testimony for impeachment hearing March 2, 2007 David Swanson
Hold the mushrooms March 1, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Texans will PROTEST the appearance of Karl Rove on Tuesday Feb. 27 in San Marcos, Texas February 27, 2007 Susan Cook
Apologies from Clinton, we don't need February 27, 2007 Tim Copeland
Defining and refining the Democratic message February 26, 2007 Stephen Crockett
Impeach07 campaign launched February 24, 2007 David Swanson
Stale glory February 22, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Remarks at Emergency Impeachment Conference in New York City, February 17, 2007 February 22, 2007 David Swanson
Conyers and the impeachment table February 18, 2007 David Swanson
The tyranny of the minority: Jim Crow and the counter-majoritarian difficulty February 14, 2007 Gabriel J. Chin and Randy Wagner
Feith based intelligence February 11, 2007 David Swanson
Sex and torture in America February 11, 2007 David Swanson
Preventing an Iran war -- A preemptive petition February 11, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
The science of evil and its use for political purposes February 9, 2007 Carolyn Baker
Rightwingers attacking war supporters February 7, 2007 David Swanson
How a bill becomes a signing statement February 7, 2007 David Swanson
Human Rights Campaign salutes Black History Month February 5, 2007 Human Rights Campaign
Alan Haber's perspective on developments in MDS February 1, 2007 Multiple authors
Live blogging from Congressional Progressive Caucus Committee Chairs Conference February 1, 2007 David Swanson
Live blogging from House Judiciary Committee Hearings on Bush's Signing Statements February 1, 2007 David Swanson
Lobbying for impeachment: remarks at United for Peace and Justice Pre-Lobby Day Event on Jan. 28, 2007 February 1, 2007 David Swanson
Chairman Conyers puts Bush abuse of power `On the table' January 30, 2007 Dave Lindorff
An interview with Jason Miller January 30, 2007 Carolyn Baker
US military kept hostage to political abuse of power January 30, 2007 Charles Mercieca, Ph.D.
Don't fear a filibuster January 29, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Backbone Brigade captured on C-Span delivering giant spine to Congress for peace & accountability January 29, 2007 Backbone Brigade
Peace is Possible – Peace is Imperative January 27, 2007 Reverend Jesse L. Jackson
Don't let Dick Cheney get me! January 27, 2007 David Swanson
Heaven waited January 26, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Follow Pelosi or follower Pelosi? January 23, 2007 David Swanson
Paying for protection January 23, 2007 Gene C. Gerard
Huddle up! January 23, 2007 David Swanson
'Un-inventing nukes' January 22, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Truth is speaking….Is power listening? January 20, 2007 Carolyn Baker interviewed by Jason Miller
A storm of denial January 17, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Man fuel: Is it in you? Of savage imperialism, pigskin monopolists, and intellectual emasculation January 15, 2007 Jason Miller
Martin Luther King, Jr: Visionary, Revolutionary January 15, 2007 Ted Glick
If Beal Street Could Talk – Part 2 January 15, 2007 David Swanson
A message from Leonard Peltier January 11, 2007 Leonard Peltier
A different story January 10, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney makes the case for impeachment January 7, 2007 David Swanson, Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney
Democrats' open-mic press conferences January 5, 2007 David Swanson
Celebrity carnage January 5, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Gerald Ford's failure of nerve January 5, 2007 Paul Rogat Loeb
Crocs, Costco and the Mindful Shopper January 2, 2007 Joan Brunwasser, Voting Integrity Editor, OpEdNews
Live spring January 2, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
Read National Issues Articles by Year: 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 |