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Learning to Lead

by: Dahr Jamail, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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(Artwork: Charmingly Bohemian)

     "Observance of customs and laws can very easily be a cloak for a lie so subtle that our fellow human beings are unable to detect it. It may help us to escape all criticism, we may even be able to deceive ourselves in the belief of our obvious righteousness. But deep down, below the surface of the average man's conscience, he hears a voice whispering, 'There is something not right,' no matter how much his rightness is supported by public opinion or by the moral code." - Carl Gustav Jung

     What's in a system?

     We in the United States have grown acclimatized to a system that first dehumanizes us and then inevitably feeds on our dehumanization, sucking away at our resources, our rights, and our resistance while we scamper frantically around in the pursuit of life, liberty, and happiness.

     We would like to imagine that it is our agency that drives us, and that our lives are under our control. The truth, however, is that we are the ones under control. The reason we do not notice it is that this control is masked as security, which we have been told is synonymous with freedom.

     Recently, I passed through an airport checkpoint monitored by the TSA (Transportation Security Administration) and witnessed the "system" rear its ugly head yet again.

     TSA is one of several security gifts from the Bush administration, or rather, from the twisted conjunction of corporate business and state power that oversees and safeguards our "freedom" and "democracy" through an elaborate system of control mechanisms.

     Immediately in front of me, an elderly gentleman in a wheelchair was trying to reason with the security guard who was asking him to take off his sandals. "What do you want me to do? I didn't wear socks so you could see my feet since I'm unable to bend over and take off my sandals."

     "Sir, you must comply with policy," the guard said in a raised voice, as three other TSA agents moved in behind him, arms folded ominously across their chests, and surrounded the elderly man in the wheelchair who requested their assistance, doing what he could to "comply." None of the guards stepped forward to take off his sandals for him in order to check his feet.

     In exasperation he shouted, "I'm asking for help, and you won't do it, so what do you want me to do? What the Hell am I supposed to do? What are you afraid of? I'm an old man in a wheelchair! Are you afraid of my sandals?"

     The guards would not allow him through the x-ray until he eventually lowered his voice. We must never upset the status quo, because that is an important pillar of a system that holds change in dread. Do not rock the boat, and don't you dare speak up, lest it indicate that something is wrong.

     It requires no crystal ball to see that we are embedded in a system that has no qualms about harassing old men in wheelchairs or making pregnant women walk through x-ray machines. It is the same system that is killing scores of Iraqi and Afghan civilians daily, and killing the planet systemically. It is a system that requires us to be sleepwalkers, rather than alert and sensitive humans.

     A Symbol Is Born

     My partner was in Tanzania recently. I quote from an email from her which encapsulates the elation that individuals and societies across the globe have experienced at the unprecedented outcome of the recent presidential election in the United States. "My short band radio was already on, tuned to the BBC ... I bent down to photograph a small beautiful white flower that grows on the plains here, and as I clicked the shutter, the radio announced that Obama had won the election ... It was an incredible moment, to be here in East Africa as we elected our first African-American President."

     Indeed, the profundity of an African-American being elected into the office of the president of the United States of America cannot be overstated. Barack Obama will soon be living, with his family, in a White House that was constructed by black slaves. The significance is not lost on most of us, or on people across the world, especially in Africa. Indeed, the times they are a-changing.

     The entire presidential campaign was abuzz with talk of change. Barack Obama, elected, symbolizes the deep desire for change in our country. We thirst for it like one would for cool water in the desert. Our lungs are starved for a breath of positive change in a new direction. We crave a genuine diversion from the death-wish course that corporate capitalism has been pursuing for as long back as most adults in this country can remember.

     The victory of Barack Obama symbolizes our need for change. The inhabitants of this planet are beginning to sense the need for something that can replace the willful and self defeating death urge of corporate consumer culture that is bent upon destroying everything. The fate of the world, one could argue, is dependent on a shift in consciousness. The election of Barack Obama has demonstrated that this shift is, in fact, occurring.

     My partner wrote that her entire journey "... has been wonderfully saturated by the immense excitement for Obama. Being so close to Kenya, the local news shows images of his family's joy and the villagers dancing, and also Kenya's own mock election of our candidates. I haven't met a single person, who upon learning of my US citizenship didn't initiate a conversation about Obama and the future of the US. They are thrilled, and seemingly proud, of America poised for change ... and as I traverse one corner of this massive continent, I hear it over and over again: 'We love Obama - he has a hard road ahead of him, but the world is ready to stand by him.' One woman chose to clarify to me '... and it's not because he's black-skinned that we believe in him ...'"

     She continued, "After eight years of feeling angry at and ashamed by the actions of the Bush administration, and in the very moments of worldwide celebration for our country's clear voice for a new path, I find myself feeling a certain excitement for the challenging road that lies ahead for our country. Here, amidst nearby turmoil and tribal conflicts, Africa is, as is the whole world, looking to us again with a sense of renewed possibility in their eyes."

     Undeniably, there is possibility in this moment.

     But is there change?

     Since it is the United States that is primarily responsible for dragging the world economy into a recession, much of the world is now relying on it to provide the solution. Needless to say, the same applies to our vainglorious attempts at empire building, our excessive contribution to heedless pollution, our invasion of sovereign states, our transgressions and violations of international law....

     We have an African-American president, but let us also bear in mind that he is but a symbol, and our need and faith may not suffice for the symbol of change to deliver real change.

     There is a tremendous schism between what Barack Obama is saying, and what he is doing. Already, he is gathering around him a group of people that are not only likely to maintain status quo, but worse, cause our current catastrophic situation to worsen.

     On November 17, Obama promised on CBS News 60 Minutes to shut down the Guantanamo Bay concentration camp, while his advisers are simultaneously crafting a plan to create a brand new system of "Preventive Detention" and "National Security Courts." Preventive detention facilities do not give people the right to challenge their own detention, which is essentially what the Guantanamo Bay gulag has been all about - detaining people without charging them with a crime, and without trial. All we have at the moment is a suggestion of brand change, but nothing about policy change.

     Obama promises to restore the moral stature of the United States. He has John Brennan and Jami Miscik, former intelligence officials under George Tenet, leading his review of intelligence agencies and making recommendations to the new administration. Brennan supported warrantless wiretapping and kidnapping (extraordinary rendition) and Miscik was involved with the politicized intelligence alleging WMDs in Iraq. They were both part of the team that provided the phony intelligence when Tenet informed Bush during the lead up to the Iraq invasion that the intelligence to support it was a "slam dunk." The incoming administration has also revealed that there will be no attempt to bring criminal charges against government officials who authorized or engaged in torture during the Bush presidency.

     The new Defense team is being led by former Deputy Defense Secretary John P. White, who is the chair of the Kennedy School of Middle East Initiative at Harvard, and Michele Flournoy, president of the Center for a New American Security famed for the Iraq bombing and sanctions under President Bill Clinton.

     Obama's transition team leaders are six of his top fundraisers, four of whom raised $500,000 or more for his campaign. One of them, Tom Donilan, was a lobbyist for mortgage giant Fannie Mae during 1999-2005. The President-elect himself voted in favor of the recent $750 billion bailout.

     We were also treated to an echo of hollow rhetoric from the Bush chambers when the new president said on CBS that, "It is a top priority for us to stamp out al Qaeda once and for all," and that killing or capturing the groups mastermind Osama bin Laden was "critical" to US security.

     On that note, let us note that Obama has already made it clear he refuses to "rule out" using mercenary companies in war zones, he has labeled Iran's Revolutionary Guard as a "terrorist organization," he plans to escalate the war in Afghanistan, and he has pledged to use unilateral force in Pakistan to defend US interests.

     Obama's running mate, Joe Biden, despite having stated that his vote to authorize the use of force in Iraq was "mistaken," was an important facilitator of the war. He has also shamelessly championed the absurd idea of partitioning Iraq into three areas based primarily on ethnicity and religion (Balkanization).

     Nor let us forgive the apparent selection of Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State. She was an ardent supporter of her husband's sanctions and bombing campaign against the people of Iraq throughout the 1990s, and she supported the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, which helped lay the groundwork for George W. Bush's invasion in 2003. As a US Senator, Hillary Clinton said, "Saddam Hussein has worked to rebuild his chemical and biological weapons stock, his missile-delivery capability and his nuclear program. He has also given aid, comfort and sanctuary to terrorists, including al Qaida members ... I want to insure that Saddam Hussein makes no mistake about our national unity and our support for the president's efforts to wage America's war against terrorists and weapons of mass destruction."

     Other so-called liberal hawks either in or advising Obama's team include the likes of Madeleine Albright, a war criminal who, as Bill Clinton's Secretary of State, was asked on 60 Minutes if she thought the price of 500,000 Iraqi children killed by the sanctions was worth the price to contain Saddam Hussein and said she thought that the price was "worth it."

     The list is long, but I will just mention two more of note. Martin Indyk, the founder of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, spent years working for AIPAC and served as Clinton's ambassador to Israel and Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs, while also playing a major role in developing US policy toward Iraq and Iran. In addition to his work for the US government, he has worked for the Israeli government, and with the neo-conservative think-tank the Project for the New American Century - which devised the US blueprint for global domination.

     The idea of Obama keeping Robert Gates as Secretary of Defense is equally disturbing. Let us remember, it is Gates who supports a new generation of nuclear weapons at a time when even George Shultz and Henry Kissinger are calling for nuclear abolition. Gates wants to apply his surge approach to Afghanistan, and while he has criticized the massive budget and influence of the Pentagon, when he had the chance to rectify both problems, he has refused to do so. For example, in his FY 2009 budget request - the last he will be officially responsible for - he added $36 billion, an increase former CENTCOM commander Anthony Zinni noted, "is roughly equivalent to the entire budget for International Affairs."

     Schism Galore

     On November 16 it was reported that Obama is pursuing an ambitious peace plan in the Middle East that involves the recognition of Israel by the Arab world in exchange for its withdrawal to pre-1967 borders.

     Yet, the first appointment he made was of Rahm Israel Emanuel as his White House Chief of Staff, easily the most powerful office in the executive branch. In the 1940s Rahm's father, Benjamin, helped smuggle weapons to the Irgun, the Zionist militia of former Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. The Irgun carried out numerous terrorist attacks on Palestinian civilians, including the bombing of Jerusalem's King David Hotel in 1946.

     Rahm's father, commenting on how his son would influence US policies toward Israel, is reported to have told an Israeli paper, "Obviously he will influence the president to be pro-Israel. Why wouldn't he? What is he, an Arab? He's not going to clean the floors of the White House."

     To his credit, Emanuel apologized for his father's incendiary remarks. But that does not alter the fact that he has been a consistent and vocal pro-Israel hardliner. In July 2006, Emanuel was one of several members who called for the cancellation of a speech by visiting Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to the Congress because al-Maliki had criticized Israel's bombing of Lebanon. Around the same time, Emanuel referred to the Lebanese and Palestinian governments as ‘totalitarian entities with militias and terrorists acting as democracies" in a speech supporting a House resolution backing Israel's bombing of both countries that had caused thousands of civilian casualties. He accompanied Obama to an AIPAC executive board meeting last June, immediately after the Illinois senator had addressed the pro-Israel lobby's conference.

     Emanuel is one of the most influential politicians and fundraisers in the party, and has played not an insignificant role in the costliest campaign for presidency that the country has known.

     Sheldon Wolin writes in "Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism":

"When a minimum of a million dollars is required of House candidates and elected judges, and when patriotism is for the draft free to extol and for the ordinary citizen to serve, in such times it is a simple act of bad faith to claim that politics-as-we-know-it can miraculously cure the evils which are essential to its very existence."

     Security Lies in Securing Bases

"The truth is replaced by silence, and the silence is a lie." - Yevgeny Yevteshenko

     Barack Obama announced on CBS that immediately upon taking office on January 20, he and his security advisers will "start executing a plan that draws down our troops" from Iraq.

     What we never hear him mention is the massive US military infrastructure being developed in Iraq. The US "embassy" in Iraq is the largest embassy in the world and the most secure diplomatic compound in the world.

     At a construction budget that now exceeds $1 billion, the "embassy" is a self-sustaining cluster of 21 buildings reinforced 2.5 times the usual standards, with some walls as thick as 15 feet.

     Plans are for over 1,000 US government officials to work and reside there. They will have access to gyms, swimming pools, barber and beauty shops, food courts and the commissary. There will also be large-scale barracks for troops, a school, locker rooms, a warehouse, a vehicle maintenance garage, and six apartment buildings with a total of 619 one-bedroom units. The total site will be two-thirds the area of the National Mall in Washington, DC. And, luckily for these "government officials," their water and electricity supplies and sewage treatment plants will be independent of Baghdad's city utilities. Meanwhile, one of four residents of Baghdad, a capital city of over six million, are now displaced from their homes thanks to the so-called surge. Of those lucky enough to still have a roof over their head, they receive an average of 3-4 hours of electricity on good days, and recent reports show that at least 45 percent of Iraqis lack access to safe drinking water.

     Then there are the permanent military bases in Iraq.

     To give you an idea of what these look like, let's start with Camp Anaconda, near Balad. Spread over a modest 15 square miles, the base boasts two swimming pools, a gym, a mini-golf course and first-run movie theater.

     There are 30,000 soldiers who live at the Balad Air Base, where they can inspect new iPod accessories in one of the two base exchanges, which additionally offer piles of the latest electronics and racks of CDs to choose from. Thousands of civilian contractors live at the base in a section called "KBR-land." Doctors at the base hospital carry out as many as 400 surgeries every month on wounded troops.

     Air Force officials on the base claim their runway is one of the busiest in the world. A steady stream of unmanned Predator drones carrying Hellfire missiles take off from there along with F-16s, C-130s, helicopters and other aircraft from a total of 250 that the base houses.

     If our troops aren't up for the rather lavish dinners served by Third Country nationals from India, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh working for slave wages, they can dine at Burger King, Pizza Hut, Popeye's or Subway, then wash it down with a mocha from Starbucks.

     There are other gigantic bases in Iraq, such as Camp Victory near Baghdad Airport, which when complete will be twice the size of Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo, currently the largest overseas US base since Vietnam.

     At Camp Liberty, adjacent to Camp Victory, soldiers even compete in triathlons. According to a news article on a DOD web site, "The course, longer than 140 total miles, spanned several bases in the greater Camp Victory area in west Baghdad."

     There is never any talk of full withdrawal of all forces from Iraq because US policy dictates a continuance of its military presence there. Less than two weeks after the fall of Baghdad on April 9, 2003, military officials announced the US intention to maintain at least four large bases in Iraq for future use, to be located respectively near Baghdad International Airport (where the triathlon was), at Tallil near Nasiriyah in the south, at either Irbil or Qayyarah (80 kilometers apart) in the Kurdish north, and one in western al-Anbar province at al-Asad. These do not include Camp Anaconda in Balad.

     Billions of dollars have been spent in their construction, and if today they are in the mentioned locations, it only indicates that the military planners had blueprints ready long before Mr. Bush declared that major combat operations were over in Iraq.

     Note that while US officials never use the word "permanent" when referring to military bases in Iraq, they do talk of "permanent access." I quote from a front page story in The New York Times on April 19, 2003, entitled "Pentagon Expects Long Term Access to Four Key Bases in Iraq": "There will probably never be an announcement of permanent stationing of troops. Not permanent basing, but permanent access is all that is required, officials say."

     None of the 700-plus US military bases and installations located abroad are considered "permanent," which is why ambivalent instruments like SOFA, the Status of Forces Agreement exist.

     A quick glance at US government military strategy documents is even more revealing.

     The 2002 National Security Strategy claims: "Our forces will be strong enough to dissuade potential adversaries from pursuing a military build-up in hopes of surpassing, or equaling, the power of the United States." To accomplish this, it adds, we will "require bases and stations within and beyond Western Europe and Northeast Asia."

     Another interesting document is "Joint Vision 2020," within which the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff's "vision" is, "Dedicated individuals and innovative organizations transforming the joint force of the 21st Century to achieve full spectrum dominance: persuasive in peace, decisive in war, preeminent in any form of conflict."

     The Quadrennial Defense Review offers another priceless key to US foreign policy. In this document, a stated ambition for the US military is to have the capacity to fight "multiple, overlapping wars" (Afghanistan, Iraq, etc. ...) and to use the US military to "ensure that all major and emerging powers are integrated as constructive actors and stakeholders into the international system."

     What can be a more obvious proclamation from US policymakers about having replaced the Cold War with a Long War for Global Empire and Unchallenged Military Hegemony? Viewed through this lens, it is not difficult to comprehend the need for permanent US bases in Iraq and elsewhere.

     At the height of the Roman Empire, Rome had 39 foreign military outposts. The British had 38 at their peak. The US, in the twilight of her lust for empire, currently has just over 730 according to the Department of Defense.

     We have not heard from our new President-elect any articulation of the intent of total withdrawal of all US military personnel and bases from Iraq. Nor has he made any suggestion about the imperative to alter the country's policy of global domination.

     Making Real the Symbol

     But this is not the time to despair, or merely hope.

"The cure for despair is not hope. It's discovering what we want to do about something we care about." - Margaret Wheatley

     To underscore the essence of this moment in history, I refer once again to my partner's email from Africa, "We must not forget the tremendous responsibility we have now, to see that Obama maintains his promise of change ... we must not relinquish this moment nor this victory into his hands entirely. As he learns to lead us, so must we learn to lead him."

  

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Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan," (Haymarket Books, 2009), and "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last five years.

Comments

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Well said Dahr, very well

Well said Dahr, very well said. That brilliantly phrased "yes, we can" has taken on an ugly 'things remain the same' sort of ominous shading. Meet the new boss and, well, the Bama ain't off to such a good start. It is mostly sad that in soon to be 'post-Bush' Amerika, cynicism passes for hope. The joy that was the Obama victory is turning acrid and metallic to the taste. Obama is in now and the commentary seems to be "the more things change, the more they stay the same." Those of us in dissidence to Amerikan insanity might not get much time out of the trenches.

As a member of the Green

As a member of the Green Party most of this is old news to me, and exactly what is to be expected. Obama will gladly join the killers and try to keep the empire. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.

Well, I guess I see this

Well, I guess I see this differently. The writer is despairing - and the new administration has not even been sworn in! What I see is that Obama is assembling a team to work for him - not to do what they want to do as he stands idly by, watching. To my eye, standing idly by and watching is not who Obama is. If he assembles a team of people who know about the subject matter, it will be for him to tell them what he wants them to do - not that they will either (1) do as they please or (2) tell him what to do. Frankly, I am so sick and tired of all the emotion of a 2-year campaign that I'd like a bit of respite from the carping and backbiting. We must absolutely not abdicate our responsibility to let the President know exactly what we elected him to do and then, for goodness sake, let's give the man a chance to do it!!!!

I agree that one could

I agree that one could perceive the unfolding events regarding Obama's moves from this sort of pessimistic point of view; I still choose to hope that Obama is in fact what he symbolizes for many people - let's re-examine this issue in a year after we see what he does, and in the meantime voice our views to him and our other leaders in hope that this democracy can hear the voices of the people. If we don't do that, then we can't complain about the decisions that are made by the people with the keys.

Bama ain't off to such a

Bama ain't off to such a good start? Excuse me? He is NOT president yet. Give it a rest and see what happens after the 20th instead of falling on the knife now. This attitude depresses everyone and accomplishes nothing.

Too soon to condemn. Time

Too soon to condemn. Time to write lots of letters.

To continue the TSA

To continue the TSA analogy--realize that if you are wealthy enough to own or lease your own plane or helicopter you can: (1) fly many places in the US without being tracked (by radar) or filing a flight plan; (2) you never ever have to go through security at small airports--apparently the US considers you to be no security risk whatsoever, definitely safe--solely because you are sufficiently wealthy to own or lease a plane, jet or helicopter; (3) you can bring in anything, transport anyone or anything--no one will ever know. Remember that a jet full of Saudis left the US after 09/11--the only civilian jet allowed to fly in the days immediately following 09/11. The wealthy have rights the rest of us do not. I have heard of no suggestions to change that, not from Homeland Security, not from Obama's incoming "team." Sure, people are upset because Obama's appointments strongly indicate that he will be taking advice, letting situations & issues be framed by people who are hawkish & who see things not much differently than those in office. Only by degree. If he's interested in taking advice from people w/different perspectives, why isn't he hiring them? It's not like there aren't plenty of intelligent experienced people out there (maybe they just haven't been in power in the Swamp of DC)--but Obama isn't hiring them. I'd say he's signaling that he isn't even interested in dissent or lively discussions from people with different points of views & perspectives. I agree, that's a bad sign.

These words precisely blow

These words precisely blow the thick smoke that has very quickly blanketed the "hope" and euphoria of Obama's election. It has been in shaking disbelief watching my own hope be tested by Obama's first moves . Were we all fools to believe in real change? His story so cool, kids so nice and those speeches!.. Damn though, the road signs we are seeing so far look familiar thus, very disheartening. If continuation of the machine is all it is, Obama's soaring rhetorical skills will be hard to overcome and this is what's scary to those of us looking into what this "change" supposedly looks like. Personally, I still hold onto the vision collectively experienced election night, but it is being tested much quicker than I thought. It may be that the real (and peaceful) revolution has yet to germinate and that Obama'selection as President might simply be used in the future as a reminder of what a "taste" of revolution was like. For the sake of us all, we must collectively keep the fire at his feet. With this article, the intelligent dissent of US policy under President Obama's watch has officially begun.

the beauty about democracy

the beauty about democracy is that we get to vote in four years if O delivers on real change. He deserves a chance to deliver results before we can judge him as more of the same. Just as he led a nation to vote for change, we must give him the opportunity to lead his government to change. Speculate all you want, what is truth is where we are in two years.

Dahr Jamail's jitters

Dahr Jamail's jitters notwithstanding the unasked question is: how do we get real change? Progressives look at the building "team of rivals" and are reminded that what we have is a representative democracy, not a direct one. Who will we ask, moveon.org or the AARP, to be the central co-ordinating organization to bring pressure on our representatives? We need to be able to immediately threaten recall on all the Senators and Representatives who don't represent us. E.g. [and this is just a hypothetical] what if the Senate refused to confirm Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State?

Critics of Obama need to hit

Critics of Obama need to hit the ground running; just as Obama pledges to do the same. If Dahr Jamail calls me at 3:AM and tells me Guantanamo is still torturing, the Green Zone runs Iraq and Hillary Clinton is planning to bomb Iran, I gotta be ready!

Give the guy a break! It's

Give the guy a break! It's true that he might not be able to change that much, particularly with regard to the military budget. The military-industrial complex has clearly staked out its territory and cutting its financial stranglehold on the American taxpayers is probably beyond even the president's reach. But look what we have had for the last 8 years! At least Obama will inject some badly needed intelligence and compassion into the execution of his office, and we cannot overlook what his presidency means symbolically.

As I've said in many other

As I've said in many other places, we can't expect the wannabe "rulers" of our "Democracy" to practice self-reform. That's not in their vernacular. The people heading the corporations who are calling the shots are the ones we have to shut down, and the only way to do this is to remove our tiny aphid selves from their fiscal control. This is not just a matter of protest or political vision, it's also a matter of necessity. As the collapse that these imbeciles have brought upon us progresses, the corporations that have taken over systems of delivery of food and other essentials will be failing. As they fail, they will remove themselves- and large chunks of the grid- from operation. Those of us still reliant upon these systems will find that we're S.O.L.. On the other hand, if we set ourselves up to be self-sufficient now, then we not only will spare ourselves the worst of the deprivations, but will also be removing our energy- the only true "bottom line"- from their control. Win-win, game over.

Never forget that the govt.

Never forget that the govt. works for WE THE PEOPLE! and if they forget that, then WE will take our country back from the thieves and pirates even if it takes a thousand year war against them, so be it.

Can anyone comment on the

Can anyone comment on the rumor that both Hilary & Barrack attended a meeting of the wealthy, & secret society called the Bilderberg group this past summer when that group met in Virginia in June? Why was the participation in that group not reported anywhere? If indeed this is not conspiracy!!!

Patience everyone. Change

Patience everyone. Change takes not only time but Obama needs to be sworn into the office that he was elected to hold first. Think, it took 8 years for GW to flush this nation down the drain, its going to take almost as much time and energy to run the "snake" down the drain to find what is left of this country.

Substantial portions of this

Substantial portions of this article are based on bad logic and (McCain would be proud) guilt by association arguments. Let's review. Obama plans to draw down our troops, and yet Bush built a big embassy in Baghdad. So? How are those two things related? (Hint: they're not.) Obama chose Rahm Emanuel as his chief of staff, and Rahm's dad is virulently pro-Israel. So Obama's lying about bringing peace to the Middle East! That totally makes sense. Obama is calling upon Martin Indyk, who once worked for the Israeli government and "with" PNAC (whatever that means). So am I to assume that Obama intends to engage in preventitive wars based on false intelligence because he has appointed Mr. Indyk? Do I need to keep going? In conclusion, Dahr Jamail, to answer your question ("But is there change"): no. Believe it or not, Obama has not managed to change everything that happened over the last eight years during the three weeks since he won the election, before even taking office. Take some Xanax. Relax a little. Give Obama a week or two in the White House. If he does turn out to be a spineless creature of the DLC variety, there will be plenty of time to dump on him over the next 4 years.

The inability to distinguish

The inability to distinguish symbol from reality has fractured the human psyche since we separated fire from the sun (thanks O). Barack Obama can be both symbol and actual Commander-in-Chief in the same way that Haile Selassie can be both fallible human leader and His Imperial Majesty, Lion of Judah. Symbols exist to focus our intangible principles and can come from wherever we chose. Ancestors, gods, constitutions, Presidents... But actual people are always constrained by the realities of their times. Reality is always an eclipse of black and white. Freedom is as good as it is bad. The freedom to harm is inherent in the right to defend oneself from it. But what of the freedom to define what constitutes a threat? Who would you allow to define for you what constitutes a real and present threat to your person? Who would you trust to make such a judgement, that traffic lights are unnecessary because people can be better drivers? Reality behaves with time. Uranium decays at a given rate into lead. Human beings value their own existence over others. It is rarer to love a thing than to feel nothing for it at all. Control is not the opposite of freedom, it defines it. The path of a drop of rain down a car window is not random nor predictable. The one who says it will bend left is as wrong as the one who says it will bend right, but they can agree on its destination. We have inconsistency of appearance but consistency of behavior. Paradise is not lost, only imcomplete, imperfect. A photograph is referenced in order to steady the painter's imagination and his hand. Such is the power of symbols to focus the body and the will when the truth as we know it is always a snapshot of a reality too fluid to grasp.

Thanks, Dahr, for your

Thanks, Dahr, for your excellent update on Pentagon shenanigans in Iraq and elsewhere. I share your skepticism about the future. Evil forces have been in control of our nation for so long. Why would they fold their tents and go gracefully away now? It is naive for us to believe that Mr. O rose uncompromised from the grassroots to lead us to an enlightened society dedicated to justice and equality, rather than greed and imperialism. No way, Jose. I fear that the only change we are going to see is a set of new and less repuslive features on the face of the puppet.

We keep talking to

We keep talking to ourselves... and each other. Go to www.change.gov and tell Mr. Obama what you want! You, the people who elected him. He's not our savior. He is a smarter than average human being, but he is not the whole ball game. We are the ball game. Now play it hard.

D.C. has always been

D.C. has always been corrupt. Will Rogers and Mark Twain got off some good lines on the subject. We pretended to be cleaner than other places, but we weren't. We were just good at whitewashing before greenwashing came into fashion. While 700 bases with long supply routes are unsustainable, maybe some of these installations can be sold to the governments where they are. That way we could get back some of the bucks that are parked over there because they can't be dumped on the market all at once. And we can bring our lonesome young people home, to build solar cells or whatever. D.C. is an expensive burden to bear, but most of America is going to figure out that paper money is pretty much ruined, so we have to make arrangements with the neighbors to exchange what we have too much of for what we don't have enough of. It's tough for bureaucrats to get their pounds of flesh out of garage sales and thrift shops. Poisonous toys from China are not necessities. We will live better lives if we don't buy them. I don't know all the mechanics of it, but cities paid teachers in local scrip during the Great Depression. One of the elders in my church says her parents were both paid that way. They got by. If deflating and inflating cause Americans to trade locally more, it will cut the legs off big meanies eventually, or maybe they will drown in corn syrup and hydrogenated fat. Some of the people who promote that lifestyle don't look very good. At least the proponent of pesticides withdrew himself from the agriculture race. We'll see.

Wish I could have the same

Wish I could have the same confidence in our ability to influence Obama and his team that SlidingHomeInOregon expressed. While I rejoiced on November 4th, it was more due to the fact that the Bush-Cheney era was going to end, not because of Obama's victory. Obama had amply demonstrated that he was not going to rock the boat, that he was going to be part of the establishment. Still, we hoped for change. The signs, however, are disappointing. Changes will be cosmetic, especially about foreign policy issues. Hillary Clinton, as secretary of state, will not be much different than Condoleezza Rice when it comes to negotiating a Middle-East Peace Agreement. The policies of Bush Administration will largely remain unchanged where Iraq and Afghanistan are concerned. The corporate bosses that looted Wall Street and brought about the collapse of our economy will be allowed to rebuild their empires and do it all over again. There will be no change in the laissez faire policy. He has even backed off from rescinding the Bush tax cuts for the "have mores". The fact that Obama can be voted out in 2012 is no consolation to those for whom it meant so much to make his victory possible.

Perhaps it would be a good

Perhaps it would be a good idea for all of us to focus on methods to keep our "elected" fear mongers from doing what it is they do best – keeping us too afraid to do anything that would stand in the way of achieving their monstrous goals. Do we, should we, stop paying taxes? Taxes are not constitutional. Should we stop paying against our debts? The "financiers" have at their disposal the taxes we have supplied to the US Treasury Department. Should we stop supporting retailers who use cheap labor from overseas then turn around and sell us poor quality merchandise? Or we could ALL surrender, turn ourselves in, become fully dependent on the only part of our broken down system that provides the security of food, shelter, warmth, and clothing– jail.

I've been a lifelong

I've been a lifelong Democrat and had such high hopes that Obama would return us to the days of FDR policy where companies made money, people made money, kids were off the streets and in school, and one salary took care of the bills. For just a moment, I allowed myself to believe in the Obama presidency but there is such a glaring discrepancy between what he says and what he does that I have little doubt that we are just being served another helping of neo-fascism warmed over and repackaged in time for holiday gift giving. I didn't like Obama's FISA vote (as a former Constitutional professor he knows better), I cringed when he backed the bailout of Wall Street while turning his back on Main Street, and my heart sank to the ground when he announced his government staffing. President Obama is what I feared he would be, fresh off the Harvard neo-con/neo-fascist assembly line with a head full of mesmerized dreams of global corporate domination all financed by We the People both in dollars and labor. What fools we have been to believe.

Did we really think that the

Did we really think that the sachrine chorus of "yes we can" and hope revealed anything other than a very smart and well-oiled political publicity machine? Let's be hard headed about this. Obama did what he had to do to get elected. Now he will do what he has to do to hold and use the greatly enhanced (under Bush) powers of the presidency. Whoever is president of the US, this is a country at the end of empire and in financial ruin. This collapse is bigger than Obama, and historically as inevitable as is the fall of all empires. All Obama can do is try to hold this nation together and oversee whatever national salvage operation comes out of it. It ain't gonna be pretty. We'd better get used to it.

DespiteObama we have now

DespiteObama we have now entered a real enviroment for CHANGE! New union leadership will be forced out of the rank and file. Struggle nurtures radical change, I wanna hear the Auto workers talk about workers control. The Global working class are now united technologically as NEVER before. Come on people there's a CLASS war to be won!

if this article and comments

if this article and comments are any indication, it looks like Obama will have a real tough time explaining why his change looks exactly like more of the same. Bush was so out of touch with reality that nobody expected him to be able to defend his fascist behavior, but being a well-spoken Constitutional Professor; Mr. Obama has got a lot of explaining to do already, and thanks to his campaign slogans he will have plenty of people to hound him for REAL answers. Change means ending manufactured and unjust wars (all three!!) And change also means investing in clean, sustainable energy--this does not mean E85, 'clean coal' or nuclear plants owned by the elite; this does mean hemp, wind, solar and flywheel technologies owned by the public. Change means using the technologies developed by Nikola Tesla for something other than building weapons like HAARP. If Obama doesn't want to end up with approval ratings lower than our current President, he should make Ron Paul his top advisor and tell his handlers to piss off. We need a real leader this time, not just another puppet.

"Obama promises to restore

"Obama promises to restore the moral stature of the United States." I don't think a promise to "restore" something that never really existed should be taken seriously at all, since it reflects so badly upon the opaqueness of the vision of the person making the promise, does it not? It might have had some credibility if he had instead promised to "build" the moral stature of the United States.