Stop Complaining About Right-Wing Protests! The Left Should Be (Re)Learning How It's Done

  • dlindorff's picture
    dlindorff
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By Dave Lindorff

OMG! Those protesters showing up at Democratic “town meetings” to
promote the president’s health care “reform” program are being bused in
from out of town?

Scandal! Que horrible! (Gasp)

But wait! That’s exactly what we on the left always did when we
held demonstrations—at least if we could. Who in the trade union
movement hasn’t called on fellow workers in other unions to join them
in rallies during struggles with an employer, or asked them to join
sparse picket-lines? Who hasn’t pulled out the stops trying to get
people from other cities to attend a local protest?

Okay, if it were shown that the Republicans were hiring
fake protesters to go to those Democratic pep rallies to mess them up,
as was done during the 2000 Florida vote recount, there’d be a good
investigative story, but from the righteous if ignorant anger that is
being expressed by the tea-baggers and anti-government types that I’ve
seen in news reports, these seem like legitimate right-wing cranks, who
are willing to be rallied to the cause of opposing what they see as a
socialist plot. Never mind that you’ve got ignorant numbskulls
demanding that Democrats in Congress “Keep your government hands off my
Medicare!” or that you’ve got right-wing protesters in their 70’s who
are all on Medicare irrationally shouting “Keep government out of
health care!” The point is that confused and ignorant or not, these
people are willing to make the effort to travel fair distances to make
their voices heard, and they’re willing to stand up, shout, and even
scuffle for the chance to make their point.

It’s not as if Democrats haven’t gone to great length to fill those same halls with earnest supporters.

The real question is why is the left in the US so goddamned polite
and domesticated that these Right Wing cranks look positively rowdy.

Back in the late 1950s and the 1960s, the Civil Rights movement
wasn’t polite and domesticated. It brought activists to events in the
Deep South all the way from New York and Boston. Its members rallied in
the thousands to shut down segregated public and even private
institutions. Its activists occupied buildings on university campuses,
boldly confronting police and police dogs and armed men in white robes.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, anti-war protesters in turn shut
down recruiting and induction centers, destroyed draft board records,
tried to close down Washington, DC, got arrested in the hundreds,
incited soldiers to desert and then helped hide them from the law,
exposed the 1968 Democratic Convention as a farce, and faced down armed
police and soldiers repeatedly, at one point in 1970 closing down the
nation’s campuses in a national student strike when soldiers shot and
killed four unarmed students at Kent State University.

Years earlier, when workers were being abused, they occupied
factories, forcibly shutting them down with sit-down strikes, battled
Pinkerton detectives and armed National Guard forces, and set up tent
cities in Washington to make themselves heard.

And they won great victories.

Where is that passion today? For the most part, the left, in all its
various guises—environmentalists, labor unions, civil rights advocates,
health care reform advocates, anti-war activists—have become neutered
office-chair potatoes, sending canned emails to their elected
representatives or to the White House, occasionally marching politely
inside of pre-approved, permitted and police-prescribed routes, and
attending sponsored events like the current round of town meetings,
perhaps to raise polite objections to aspects of a proposed piece of
legislation.

The agenda of the left in today’s America is being written not by
uncompromising radicals in the street as in earlier decades of
struggle, but by the bought-and-paid Democrats in Washington. The left,
such as it is, has become simply a reactive force, trying to make
discrete little improvements in the truly horrible legislation—health
care “reform,” cap-and-trade, the Employee Not-So-Free Choice Act,
continued Iraq and Afghanistan War funding bills--that is being offered
by a wholly corrupt Washington in thrall to corporate lobbyists.

We all need to take a lesson from the Right, and from those lusty,
cantankerous folks who are raising hell at those pathetic “town
meetings.”

How can it be that 10 percent of American workers don’t have a job,
and that the government is expecting that number to keep rising for
another year or more, or that another 7 percent have either given up
even trying to find a job, or have taken part-time work in desperation,
and yet we have not had one mass protest in Washington demanding public
jobs for the jobless!

How can it be that the country has been mired in two wars now for
eight years, and we haven’t had a million people storming the Pentagon
to shut it down (or at least levitate it)!

How can it be that we have 49 million Americans who can’t even
afford to see a doctor when they’re sick, and we’re talking about a
health care “reform” plan that not only won’t fix the problem, but will
actually end up costing us all $600 billion over 10 years without
solving it! And we just write letters to Congress! Why aren’t we
liberating hospitals and opening them up to the uninsured?

How can it be that the ice cap at the North Pole is actually
disappearing, and the whole arctic tundra across Canada, Alaska and
Siberia is starting to boil with the release of prehistoric methane
trapped under now-melting permafrost, threatening the very lives of our
grandchildren, and we’re calmly watching as even the Obama
administration’s pathetic “cap-and-trade” legislation gets stalled by
coal-state Democrats! Why aren’t we on the left lying down on the
tracks to block the coal trains, or tearing up those tracks!

Where is the passion and commitment we once had?

It all seems to be on the Right these days.
__________________

DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist. His latest book is
“The Case for Impeachment” (St. Martin’s Press, 2006). His work is
available at www.thiscantbehappening.net

Comments

Why Some of Us Are Sitting at Home...

  • Wicked's picture
    Wicked
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Why am I, who marched and demonstrated and organized in the 60s and 70s, now sitting at home?  Doing what I can from my computer?  Sending those canned emails that you referenced?  Because I am over 60, disabled, caring for an Autistic grandchild.  I don't lack passion, I lack wherewithal. I don't have time for this merde from another progressive.  I barely have the time and energy for my email activism, such as it is, and the occasional sponsored event.  And I heartily resent the denigration of those actions because they are all that some of us can manage.  I take my activism where I can find it how I can find it.  If that means canned emails and sponsored events, then those are what I will use -- until something better comes along.  Do I wish that more people were making themselves monkey wrenches in the Republican-conservative-corporate machine?  Hell yes I do.  Do I wish that there were mass demonstrations and marches against the State of California balancing its budget on the backs of the poor and disabled like me?  Hell yes I do.  But that torch must pass to a new generation (thank you, JFK).  If you are directing your plaint to that generation, make it clear -- I agree that they need to get themselves motivated and moving.  Just please leave those of us who are variously hampered to do what we can how we can without your criticism.

Wicked, my story is very similar to yours.

  • kwahlf's picture
    kwahlf
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I am 58, working part time with a physical disability,
and a single parent of a young man with autism.

I hear you loud and clear.
CA is my state,too!
We are the ones getting the cuts,
no taxing Big Oil- no sirree!!

Thanks so much for sharing!
:-)

Dave, the "passion" these people display

  • kwahlf's picture
    kwahlf
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is also thinly disguised racism and ignorance.

They don't bother to read the bill(s) they are protesting.
i.e. they don't know what they are talking about=ignorance.

That is NOT something we want to emulate.

This guy has the right idea ( the one in the middle)

  • kwahlf's picture
    kwahlf
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You can't miss him!
:-)

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