No matter that she's made a far more (for me) troublesome high-speed journey from conservatism to membership in the Democratic Socialists of America in the space of just a few short years, Julia Salazar is getting raked over the coals by both liberals and right-wingers for some pretty shallow things. The democratic socialist candidate for the New York State Senate finds herself helplessly floundering in the identity politics trap. She's damned if she immigrated, and she's also damned if she's native born. She doesn't help her own case that she keeps amending her answer according to the audience she's addressing. It also doesn't help when, like many a hollow pol before her, she blames her staff for getting her biographical details wrong.
Because all serious candidates for public office are now required to present a compelling personal story (narrative), the competition of who can be the most "diverse" is heating up. And when these personal back-stories get called out on their veracity by opposition researchers looking for any fault, the candidates' supporters, for whom the overarching campaign platform trumps honesty, come to their unquestioning defense. Instead of truth-seeking, one form of dishonesty props up another form of dishonesty, or lies battle lies, all for the justifiable end of "winning."
To paraphrase Dorothy Parker, they become trapped like traps in a trap.
Before you know it, candidates will have to produce their Ancestry genetic profiles along with their tax returns. And that elicits the specter of fascism, and its all-American progenitor, eugenics.
As far as the ridiculous debate over Salazar's ethnicity is concerned, it's a red herring. Anyone of Iberian heritage is bound to have either recent or distant Jewish and African ancestors, because pre-Columbian Spain was a thriving, diverse melting pot. Before Fernando and Isabella evicted the country's entire Jewish population and went to war against the Muslim "infidels" in the south, tolerance of differences wasn't the exception but the rule. With the Inquisition, many Jewish families were forced, on pain of death or torture or financial ruin, to become Christian "conversos" and hide their religion before the diaspora. Tomas de Torquemada, royal confessor and inquisitor of Holy Mother Church, himself had Jewish ancestry.
Practically anybody with a Spanish surname has a genetic blueprint combining European, African, Arab, Jewish, and in the cases of Puerto Ricans and other colonial populations, Native American. So there is nothing even remotely "dishonest" about Salazar's journey of discovery of her Jewish ethnicity, and everything horribly wrong about critics denying her the right to her own ancestry and pettily accusing her of "cultural appropriation." The problem for Salazar comes when she makes her ethnicity a feature of her campaign plank, or at least allows her consultants and operatives to do so.
Like I said, I'm a lot more leery of how a person speeds her way from a right-wing political mindset all the way to a suddenly "cool" democratic socialist one. It usually happens the other way around, such as when former socialists, like Christopher Hitchens and Norman Podhoretz, suddenly pivoted drastically to neoconservatism and supported Bush's invasion of Iraq.
I simply don't bother much any more with any candidate running on the ticket of either right wing of the Money Party, no matter how "progressive" he or she purports to be. While the lefty supporters of Alexandria Ocasio Cortez are acting all shocked and dismayed about her sickening tweeted eulogy for John McCain, I just shrug. Whether her rock star treatment by the corporate press has swayed her into "playing the game" out of her own political self-interest, or whether she really does believe that McCain is a hero, is moot at this point.
The problem is that although Julia Salazar rightly complains that people are "exoticizing" her as a star in the identity politics game, she refuses to come right out and disown identity politics itself. To do so would probably be politically suicidal in the current neoliberal climate. Damned if she does, and damned if she doesn't, she plays it both ways.
From The Intercept:
Salazar appears to be arguing that her experience of going back and forth to Colombia as a child has allowed her to experience a version of life in the U.S. as an immigrant. “There isn’t one immigrant identity. Colombia is where my family was and where I was in the first years of my life. Most of the time when people asked about my childhood, they haven’t been interested in literally where was I born. They wanted to know how the first years of my life were spent, and where my family came from,” she told Jewish Currents.Democratic Socialist though she may be, Salazar has fully been captured by the shallow ethos of the modern, corporate-funded Democratic Party. Although not an immigrant, she is co-opting the "immigrant narrative," which, to be fair, has been co-opted by every American politician in memory, no matter how remote the immigration. Bank-subservient war hawk Joe Biden. for example, never forgets to tout his roots in Irish-American Pennsylvania coal country in a ploy to cover up his true ruling class allegiances.
“I would never claim nor have I ever claimed to share the experience of someone who has lived a life threatened by deportation. That’s not part of my narrative. [But] I’ve experienced people exoticizing me, or alienating me, or treating me as different. … I can acknowledge the importance of my family, and how I’ve been separated from my family, and how my family chose to live in the U.S. to be safer. All of this is part of an immigrant narrative.”
The ultimate question is what good is the Democratic Party, or any political party?
True, the Bernie Sanders faction of the so-called Big Tent did score the victory this month of disempowering the super-delegates -- but only on the first ballot in the nominating process. Failure to select a candidate will open the floodgates of the corporate will, so the first round bait and switch is a feature and not a bug of the so-called reform.
Political philosopher Simone Weil was right when she observed in On the Abolition of All Political Parties that the primary concern of these exclusive political clubs is winning power and keeping power, rather than in making people's lives better. Just because the occasional "upstart" defeats an incumbent doesn't mean that the organizational structure of the machine itself will be defeated, let alone reformed.
Weil wrote,
"Political parties are organizations that are publicly and officially designed for the purpose of killing in all souls the sense of truth and of justice. Collective pressure is exerted upon a wide public by the means of propaganda. The avowed purpose of propaganda is not to impart light, but to persuade. Hitler saw very clearly that the aim of propaganda must always be to enslave minds. All political parties make propaganda. A party that would not do so would disappear, since all its competitors practice it... Political parties do profess, it is true, to educate those who come to them: supporters, young people, new members. But this is a lie: it is not an education, it is a conditioning, a preparation for the far more rigorous ideological control imposed by the party upon its members."And that, sadly, is true just as well of the so-called Democratic Socialists of America and their slate of young, attractive, rising star candidates.
Despite some recent murmurings of protesting American foreign policy and forging an anti-war plank, the DSA's last statement on the topic was posted nearly five months ago, and merely called for the implementation of an "anti-war think tank" within the organization, to be mainly devoted to a critique of Donald Trump's national security agenda.
As Weil wrote in her own critique of partisan politics, such fuzzy, aspirational proclamations are part and parcel of the con:
"This conception is extremely vague.... No man, even if he had conducted advanced research in political studies, would ever be able to provide a clear and precise description of the doctrine of any party, including (should he himself belong to one) his own.... A doctrine cannot be a collective product."
Although not a political party per se, the DSA is in danger of becoming just another offshoot of the same Democratic machine it purports to disassociate itself from. Correction: the DSA is becoming so quietly assimilated into the machine, it's like the ancient propaganda is being greased with the same old neoliberal identity oil, as in branding and "narrative"-building. I hope I am wrong, and it's just my cynicism getting in the way again.
But when their pressing concern is not whether the United States is helping to bomb Yemeni children to death, but whether one of their own is being unfairly maligned because of her biography and identity, your skeptic radar should probably start to wobble alarmingly across your brain-screen. It sounds like their idea of change, too, is nibbling around the edges of social issues and becoming respected members of the Donald Trump #Resistance, when the mere show becomes the thing, and participatory democracy goes to die yet another of its thousands of zombie deaths.
If that strikes you as being overly pessimistic, here's Jimmy Dore to make you feel even better:
Here's something to add to the meshugas of the Democratic party these days...
ReplyDeletehttps://www.vox.com/mischiefs-of-faction/2018/8/26/17782102/race-dnc-superdelegates
You'd think 2016 would have cured at least some of this, right?
People need to organize into political parties to gain and hold on to power. The reality is that only through gaining political power can people improve their lives and make a better world.
ReplyDeleteThe Democratic and Republican parties function to fool people into thinking their interests are being served through the corrupt electoral process so they will vote for their respective wing of the ruling class.
But if we reject political parties in general out of disgust over the hypocrisy and foolishness of the two dominant electoral parties we cut ourselves off from promoting a strong, organized and principled movement that can fight for and attain political power and make real, positive change in peoples lives. It's not a perfect process but the alternative is to revert to individualism and essentially abandon the fight.
And once we do achieve political power the fight to preserve a principled party continues.
This is exactly what bothers me about the DSA, and why I haven't joined up. The correct answer for any candidate asked about their background is, "I'm an American citizen first and foremost. Like all Americans, I also have a background which includes being (ethnic or family national identity or other identities)." What is so hard about THAT?"
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteI agree with Ms. Garcia:
"The ultimate question is what good is the Democratic Party, or any political party?”
In reply, please consider these:
"There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.”
~ John Adams
“They have the same point of view. The two parties are two factions of the business party. Most of the population doesn't even bother voting because it looks meaningless. They're marginalized and properly distracted. At least that's the goal.”
~ Noam Chomsky, "Media Control: The Spectacular Achievements of Propaganda"
Regarding third parties, note these —
https://www.cnn.com/videos/tv/2018/08/11/jill-stein-on-third-party-candidates.cnn
http://www.cagreens.org/alameda/city/0803myth/myth.html
https://www.truthdig.com/articles/dont-fall-for-it-the-nader-myth-and-your-2016-vote/
As for Jimmy Dore making me feel better, I trust that was sarcastic, notwithstanding the correctness of his perspective.
But for real encouragement, watch this, paying particular attention to what Charlene Carruthers says:
https://www.democracynow.org/2018/8/30/from_the_grassroots_to_the_ballot
Finally, I'd like to hear a political candidate respond to these comments:
"I really believe that if the political leaders of the world could see their planet from a distance of 100,000 miles their outlook could be fundamentally changed. That all-important border would be invisible, that noisy argument silenced. The tiny globe would continue to turn, serenely ignoring its subdivisions, presenting a unified facade that would cry out for unified understanding, for homogeneous treatment. The earth must become as it appears: blue and white, not capitalist or Communist; blue and white, not rich or poor; blue and white, not envious or envied.” ~ Michael Collins, Gemini 10 & Apollo 11 astronaut, "Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut's Journeys," 1974.
"This planet is not terra firma. It is a delicate flower and it must be cared for. It's lonely. It's small. It's isolated, and there is no resupply. And we are mistreating it. Clearly, the highest loyalty we should have is not to our own country or our own religion or our hometown or even to ourselves. It should be to, number two, the family of man, and number one, the planet at large. This is our home, and this is all we've got.” ~ Scott Carpenter, Mercury 7 astronaut, speech at Millersville University, PA, October 15, 1992.
"We went to the Moon as technicians; we returned as humanitarians.
You develop an instant global consciousness, a people orientation, an intense dissatisfaction with the state of the world, and a compulsion to do something about it. From out there on the moon, international politics look so petty. You want to grab a politician by the scruff of the neck and drag him a quarter of a million miles out and say, 'Look at that, you son of a bitch.'" ~ Edgar Mitchell, Apollo 14 astronaut, People Magazine, April 8,1974.
Astronauts with the wrong stuff, for sure. As soon as the House Un-American Activities Committee reconvenes, which could be any moment now considering the plethora of American flags being run up on Washington lapels, they should haul those astronauts before them for questioning. Think of all the tax money we spent on sending them up there with American patches on their uniforms, and then they come back home spouting vague internationalist Kumbaya claptrap. Have they lost their grip on the right stuff?
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, maybe Tom Hanks (ex-flattop ace and hero of Apollo 13), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (giant killer) and other high flyers could reverse present trends by sporting pins of world globes instead of Old Glory. Or we can wear them ourselves, being sure to memorize the lines of Edgar Mitchell (Apollo 14) in case we're shoved against a wall for an explanation.
Are Rima Regas and Karen Garcia the same person?
ReplyDeletenot that I am aware.
ReplyDelete