Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Whatever, Pelosi

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi became deservedly notorious this summer for coldly dismissing negative reactions to her complicity with Donald Trump's vicious border policies. Topping the list of atrocities are the abduction and imprisonment of thousands of migrant and refugee children. In disdaining the votes of "the Squad" of four progressive congresswomen against the appropriation of billions of dollars to pay for Trump's campaign of xenophobic sadism, Pelosi effectively tried to silence the voices of both the victims and the many people protesting these government-sanctioned crimes. She did so by very publicly calling them "the public whatever."

In Pelosi's shuttered view, the fact that only four Democrats out of 435 elected representatives in the lower House had chosen to honor the interests of immigrants, human rights activists and the liberal left in opposition to her "go along to get along" edict made them personae non gratae.


"If the left doesn't think I'm left enough, so be it," she griped to New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd in July, over an intimate San Francisco brunch.


Fast forward nearly four months, though, and Pelosi has done a complete about-face regarding the value of actual people and the wants and needs of the actual public.


Summoning a gaggle of elite columnists to her inner sanctum on Monday, Pelosi carefully positioned herself right beneath the bust of Abraham Lincoln in order to solemnly announce that "public sentiment is everything."



Corny Propaganda Or Whatever (staged photo credit, NY Times)


"With it, you can accomplish almost everything. Without it, you can accomplish almost nothing," was her echo of a truism beloved by calculating oligarchs from at least the days of the Roman emperors whenever they needed public backing and warm new recruits for their latest military incursions.

With no apparent self-reflection and without any sense of irony, Pelosi was almost plagiarizing Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who had responded to Madam Speaker's belittling July Maureen Dowd column by retorting in a tweet: "The public 'whatever' is called public sentiment. And wielding the power to shift it is how we actually achieve change in this country." 


 But Nancy Pelosi wasn't talking about the traumatized caged and abducted children to her elite press couriers on Monday. She apparently ignored a shocking new report by the American Civil Liberties Union, which now places the total number of migrant children victimized by Trump at over 5,400 and still counting. This is about five times the tally admitted to by the Trump administration, which continued its family separation policy even after a federal court ordered it stopped, and even after he flourished his own executive pen to pretend to stop it. The photo-op of a Trumpian antic was completely due to the widespread public backlash that Pelosi later derided as the "public whatever."


Nor did Pelosi react (on the record at least) at her closed press gathering on Monday to the Trump administration's own admission last week, after the release of the ACLU report, that Homeland Security and ICE cops had started caging kids - including 207 under the age of five - even before issuing his "zero tolerance" policy, in which anyone crossing the border without authorization would face prosecution.


Public sentiment about the plight of powerless kids and refugees doesn't count. But public sentiment about the plight of the National Security State does count. And it is for Trump's egregious attempt to abuse the national security apparatus for his own political gain and to damage a Democratic rival (Joe Biden) in the process that public sentiment must be aroused, by any artificial means necessary. 


It must not be aroused to achieve the meaningful structural change that AOC and Bernie Sanders call for, but aroused simply to give legitimacy to elite efforts to remove the current oligarchic placeholder known as the president of the United States.


As New York Times columnist and Pelosi invitee David Leonhardt (who just last week did the party's bidding through his column about "taking to the streets" to demand Trump's impeachment over UkraineGate) writes:  

Public sentiment is going to determine the outcome of the impeachment inquiry. If Democrats can persuade even a small share of President Trump’s supporters that he shouldn’t be president, he will almost certainly lose the 2020 election. If Democrats can persuade a modest share of those supporters, he will be at risk of losing the support of congressional Republicans and being removed from office by the Senate.
It's the same old story. It's all about the liberal political and consultant class winning power and keeping power. Trump must be brought down, not only because it is the morally right thing to do, but because it is the politically expedient thing to do.

Amazingly enough, though, the usually compliant Leonhardt has a tiny little bone to pick with Pelosi:

 The battle for public sentiment explains why Pelosi and other House Democrats changed course yesterday and announced that they would hold a vote on Thursday to “affirm” their impeachment inquiry.The language of the resolution is a bit too clever for my tastes: The Democrats insist that this is not a vote to authorize an inquiry. And, legally, they don’t need to take any vote. The Constitution doesn’t require a vote to open an inquiry, and a federal judge recently upheld the legality of the inquiry.
But Trump and congressional Republicans were winning the public debate over the lack of a vote. It made Democrats seem sheepish about the inquiry. So I think they’re right to hold a vote of some kind, in which each House member will go on record as supporting or opposing the inquiry.
It's the same old story. Democrats find it more expedient to be perceived as doing the right thing rather than be caught doing the right thing. This "vote to affirm" is a staged gambit to fool the public into believing that Pelosi's meaningless, superfluous gesture is tantamount to doing the right thing and allowing the public to finally get a glimpse into the still-secret impeachment "inquiry" - which, for now, is restricted to a closed room.
 Pelosi was meeting with us columnists, from several publications, to explain her thinking on impeachment. I asked her how she planned to make the case that this Trump scandal was different from all of the others that have failed to move public opinion; she said she would have an answer when the inquiry was complete. She promised that it would revolve around “simple and repetitive clarity about the Constitution of the United States.”
And complicit stenographer that he is, Leonhardt left it at that. There was no follow-up, no push-back from him against Pelosi's deflective non-answer to his very simple question. There were no questions at all, apparently, about the plight of the tens of millions of "lesser people" suffering in media-imposed silence through the Trump regime. He dishonestly claims that "public opinion" has not been moved by such things as pediatric concentration camps. I guess he wasn't paying attention to all the ad hoc protests by regular citizens at the concentration camps, or to the occupation of Pelosi's office a year ago by the independent Sunrise Movement agitating for a Green New Deal to combat the climate crisis. (which Pelosi later derided as the "green dream or whatever." The woman not only can't seem to keep her disdain for people to herself, she also has a very limited vocabulary.) 

Nancy Pelosi and her crew of media stenographers are living proof of what French political philosopher Simone Weil described as the main function of any political party: to generate "collective passions" and to indoctrinate voters on just what these collective passions should be limited to. That's because the ultimate goal of any political party is not to protect the public good, but to achieve growth of itself without limit. Political parties are thus microcosms of capitalism itself.


This not only explains Pelosi's non-answer to the complicit David Leonhardt's procedural question, it explains why Trump's impeachment will likely not center around his institutional child abuse, his racist incitements to violence, his misogyny and reputed history of serial sexual predation, his cruelty to hurricane-ravaged Puerto Ricans, his planned cuts to food stamps and government health insurance, or his deadly assaults on the environment. 


As Simone Weil wrote, amidst the last outbreak of global fascism, in "On the Abolition of All Political Parties":

  "In principle, a party is an instrument to serve a certain conception of the public interest. This is true even for parties which represent the interests of one particular social group, for there is always a conception of the public interest according to which the public interest and these particular interests should coincide. Yet 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."
There's the public (non-elite) sentiment and the private (elite) sentiment. Or, as the possible 2020 Democratic presidential contender Hillary Clinton once assured Goldman Sachs bankers in a paid speech, there is a "public position and a private position."

Pelosi's task, and that of her media couriers, is to meld the public with the private just long enough to gain back the power they crave. And then it's back to The Same Old Story. 


So wouldn't it be great if people took the streets and expanded the elites' astroturfed movement for Trump's impeachment into a general strike to stop capitalism right in its tracks, even if for only a day or a week? 


They're doing it in Hong Kong, Haiti, Chile, Bolivia, France. They're doing it all over the world. So how about we give non-sanctioned political protest a chance here as well? It seems like it should only be a matter of time before most of the people here in the USA get miserable most of the time, with no longer even a moldy old couch to be a potato on, or a smart TV to absorb claptrap from. Suddenly and magically they will discover that not only do they have feet, they still have brains that function independently.

11 comments:

The Joker said...

"So wouldn't it be great if people took the streets and expanded the elites' astroturfed movement for Trump's impeachment into a general strike to stop capitalism right in its tracks, even if for only a day or a week?", you wrote.

In the spirit of "When Harry Met Sally", yes, yes, Yes, YES, YEEESSSS!!

And at the same time as I say that, I despair that it ever will occur here. I'm not sure exactly how the American people ever came to become sheeple, it was undoubtedly a multitude of factors, but that's indeed what they currently are. And I fear that to overcome that conditioning and advance a rational and moral economic future, the people will first have to become very angry, with all that entails.

Yeryoma said...

Political parties all have challenges. The Democratic and Republican parties in the US have the challenge of mobilizing the great masses of people when necessary (and only when necessary) to secure their grip on power so they can maintain their positions of authority to keep the money flowing to the investor class.

However, the working class and those others who are not part of the investor class need a political apparatus (or party) to advance their interests in a structured, sustained and ideologically driven organization. It needs to provide political leadership, which includes working out general perspectives for the development of society for foreign and domestic policy based on the vital interests of the working people to ensure the successful construction of a workable alternative to the capitalist model. It needs to be worthy of and capable of mobilizing the victims of capitalism to gain power and control so the government and laws represent the needs of the great masses of people.

Neither of the two most powerful parties as presently constituted are capable of or even interested in doing that, but they do pretend to be and they have been fairly effective over the years at stirring things up just enough to keep the lid on transformative rebellion.

One of the reasons they have been effective at this is that there is no organized party of the working people to effectively lead a rebellion that will dislodge them and transform society. All along the way, the great challenge for such a party is to maintain an organizational structure that is responsive to the genuine needs of the masses.

Erik Roth said...

Further fodder for gnashing of teeth ~

Why are Democratic party elites so desperate for a 2020 centrist candidate?
Is the core concern of those who consider themselves ‘moderate Democrats’ that Warren or Sanders might win?
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/oct/30/democratic-party-2020-centrist-candidate
30 Oct 2019 ~ by Hamilton Nolan

Fretting About Progressives’ ‘Electability,’ Establishment Dems Are Really Worried About Their Power in the Party —
https://fair.org/home/fretting-about-progressives-electability-establishment-dems-are-really-worried-about-their-power-in-the-party/?awt_a=spTQ&awt_l=AaA4G&awt_m=g5LNwVl0zYR._TQ
October 25, 2019 ~ by Julie Hollar

Centrist Democrats Have a New Idea to Win Reelection: Ignore Labor and Give Trump a Major Trade Deal —
https://theintercept.com/2019/10/29/usmca-deal-cheri-bustos-dccc/
October 29, 2019 ~ by Ryan Grim

Centrist Democrats, Led by Rep. Josh Gottheimer, to Fundraise With Corporate Lobby Group Seeking to Defeat Democratic Agenda —
https://theintercept.com/2019/10/28/chamber-commerce-pac-centrist-democrats/
October 28, 2019 ~ by Lee Fang

What Is Behind Mayor Pete’s Corporate Pivot on Medicare?
https://therealnews.com/stories/pete-buttigieg-corporate-pivot-medicare
October 29, 2019
Pete Buttigieg's sudden shift from supporting to opposing Medicare for All has been remarkable.
It no doubt has something to do with his fundraising, says Norman Solomon.

Like my Congressional representative, Ilhan Omar said: “It’s all about the Benjamins, baby.”

voice-in-wilderness said...

This seems like a call for a political party that has not existed in the U.S. and that if it did exist, would guarantee splitting the non-Trump vote enough to guarantee Trump and his successor wins for a long time. Another way to say this, is that Karen has more confidence in American voters than I do!

Jay–Ottawa said...


WARNING: Herewith an off-topic but important message to readers of various unnamed blogs that do not adhere to the approved narrative, which approved narrative can reliably be found elsewhere, in publications like the NY Times.

In case you're new here, please understand that the blog roll listed on this site is not a recommendation to visit those sites. Quite the opposite. Think of our blog roll as another Index Librorum Prohibitorum. In other words, DO NOT CLICK on publications listed in the blog roll!

If, despite my instructions, you regularly explore the blog roll, your clicks just might be recorded and your name put down on an anti-loyalty list. For instance, don't click on The Grayzone. Grayzone's editor, Max Blumenthal, was (quite properly) arrested and confined for a number of days in DC jails for thinking bad thoughts about the failed coup in Venezuela and reporting what his lying eyes told him about the siege of the Venezuelan embassy in DC last spring. You do not want to get near this guy.

https://thegrayzone.com/2019/10/29/periodista-max-blumenthal-arrestado-violencia-oposicion-venezolana/

As I've heard Jesuit educators say, "You are what you read." Apparently, there are lots of Jesuit school graduates in the government today who hold that truism dear: think the recently-appointed Justice (cough) Brett Kavanaugh. It is the duty of such graduates, along with their allies from other traditions, to protect you from sites like those listed on our no-no blog roll.

In some countries, when the government begins to adopt practices once thought way, way out of bounds by human rights zealots, first, whistle blowers and eccentric contrarians get arrested. Then it's the turn of editors who dared report on government exercises of power against freedom of speech excesses. Then, after an indeterminate spell of time without any blowback from the populace, the readers themselves of those wayward editors can expect to be sent off to re-education camps, sometimes called prisons in the West.

BOTTOM LINE: Do not read the above report about Grayzone editor Max Blumenthal's arrest. You have been warned.

Annie said...

Imagine for a moment that Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren actually becomes our next President, or better yet, they're the Pres/VP. Yippee!

Now wake up and realize that no matter who wins, Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi will still be running the show and that Pelosi doesn't even support Medicare For All let alone any other progressive measures. Ditto for Chucklehead. Absolutely nothing will change as long as they control operations. The shitshow will continue.

How do we get rid of them other than wait for them to die?

Jay–Ottawa said...


@ Annie

Welcome back.

At this stage, my dream ticket would be Sanders/Gabbard.

Warren I've come to distrust the more I become familiar with her legislative history and sources of funding and political support. Her studied plans are nothing more than campaign promises dressed up in excess detail. Like Jimmy Carter, she gets too involved with detail. Leadership and vision are what's needed at that level. Technicians can be hired.

Warren has a practice of saying she's gung ho for this or that leftish program (with fine print footnotes), then, when it's time to act or vote, she walks backwards so nimbly to center or center right. She is not the ideal candidate to pull the Dems to the left. She was a Republican until age 49. And she still circles by the Clinton camp where she regularly finds support. See any red flags yet?

Recently, The Intercept published a fluff piece promoting her latest plan of Medicare for All. The remarks that followed from respected commenters serve as a reminder of how much Warren is shaping up like another Obama. If you only have time to look at a couple of commenters, scroll for "photosymbiosis" and "mlody11." They are not the only ones eyeing Warren's fault lines in the commentary.
https://theintercept.com/2019/11/01/elizabeth-warren-medicare-for-all/?comments=1#comments

True, if Sanders, by some miracle, does win the White House, the Congress will frustrate his legislative initiatives, Pelosi and Schumer included. Instead of whining like Obama who pretended he could get no satisfaction from them, I suspect Sanders, who is pretty good at energizing crowds, will go over the heads of Congress to pump up people pressure on the House and Senate. Other presidents, some with success, have done that very thing, and it's so much easier now with a big jet at your disposal, TV appearances when you please, a fawning press on your doorstep, and the magic internet.

Obama in office held the same power to persuade and deal with recalcitrant legislators. But arm twisting was beneath him. Mr No Drama preferred to exercise power as a seldom used prop to glorify himself for eight years. So cool.

Here's an encyclopedic article on "going over the heads of Congress."

"[P]residents began to go over the heads of Congress to enlist public opinion as a force to break congressional gridlock and to increase their legislative success. Presidential speeches designed to move public opinion behind the president’s legislative agenda became a tool of presidential influence in a legislature that was not as amenable as it had been to bargaining."
https://oxfordre.com/politics/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.001.0001/acrefore-9780190228637-e-57

The White House has ways of bringing legislators around. The President can continue his or her campaign item by item with all the perks that come with the most powerful office in the land. The President can go over the heads of Congress to arouse the people and strike fear in the hearts of dull or corrupt legislators. TR did it well, Wilson tried but fell ill, FDR knew both how to deal and speak to the people directly to get much of what he wanted. Going over the heads of Congress is nothing new, and backroom wheeling and dealing like Johnson is possible at the same time. As we ought to know by now, just about every Congress critter has a price tag and can be bought.

Annie said...

@Jay

Thanks for the welcome back, but I'll be gone again for surgery tomorrow. I'm counting on you to hold down for the fort while I'm gone!

Erik Roth said...

Beware, in our real life game of thrones, Summers is coming:

Joe Biden Campaign Pointing Reporters to Larry Summers for Comment on Elizabeth Warren’s Health Care Plan —
https://theintercept.com/2019/11/03/joe-biden-larry-summers-elizabeth-warren-medicare-for-all/
November 3 2019 ~ by Ryan Grim

Patricia M. said...

Annie - Good thoughts and best wishes to you.

Jay–Ottawa said...


@ Patricia

Ditto.