Thursday, September 28, 2006

DA Kaiserslautern News and Events

Check out the news from DA Kaiserslautern. They are doing an amazing job on the "front lines" so to speak as this is the area where casualties from the war in Iraq are brought for care. They have the unbelievably difficult task of giving time and comfort to our wounded men and women while not betraying their feelings aout this illegal war. Additionally, the Kaiserslautern group has within its chapter area the largest American military presence by far in Europe-- especially difficult turf for their GOTV activities.

There is much work to be done there, so contact them if you're interested in lending a hand, or if you are looking for a way to express your gratitude to the brave men and women who risk all to defend the U.S.. Remember, they didn't choose this war: regardless of whether it is justified or not, they are the ones that serve, and do so with such distinction.

Also, click the new link to DA France. While you're there, take a look at their newsletter as well. Great stuff!

As you look at the different Democrats Abroad pages (right-hand column) you will see a remarkable range of creativity and energy being brought to bear on the challenge of bringing open, honest, and responsible government back to America. This challenging (and rewarding) work is being done by Americans overseas who are just as commited to this ideal as they are to their very busy private and public lives. And here in western Europe, we are close enough to each other to participate in the events and activities of groups like DA Kaiserslautern, DA France, and DA Belgium. We are at one of the world's great commercial and governmental crossroads, with all its possibilities. Why not take advantage of it?

Bill

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

A Sunny Afternoon with DA Kaiserslautern

A group of passionate Democrats, good food and a superb venue – these were the ingredients for a happy afternoon spent at the home of Ron Schlundt and Amy Peaceman in Landstuhl. The hosts, activist Democrats for many years, made sure that the event was a success with their kind attention to the needs of everyone.

The attendees, about 50 of them, came from Kaiserslautern, Heidelberg, Frankfurt, Strasbourg and Luxembourg. All were invited as an effort to increase cross-border contact, to exchange views on the current political situation and to renew and deepen friendships. It was a splendid idea.

Speaking with the guests, most of whom were teachers at all levels of instruction, it was striking how startled they were at the large number of members in DAL. Not wanting to be impolite, I did not ask what their membership was, but they clearly felt DAL had a large membership. Discussion with local Democrats centered on the difficulty in reaching members of the armed services, having used in times past creative initiatives to reach this target. They are prohibited from having direct access to the soldiers.

The highlight of the meeting was the talk by John McQueen, editor and publisher of the “Wednesday Wire”, which is linked to on the front page of Democrats Abroad:

http://www.democratsabroad.org/stay-informed/wednesday-wire/

Mr McQueen gave a very sober, knowledgeable run-down on the current state-of-play regarding the mid-terms in November. I’ll not go into detail, but he is confident that if the election were held now (September) the Democrats would certainly take the House. He sees the Democrats winning 5-8 governorships and is very encouraged by the increased effort to win Secretary of State offices – the office that controls the voting process in that state (see Kathryn Harris).

However he and other guests foresaw dangers in an ‘October Surprise’, which might take the form of the announced capture or death of Bin Laden; suppressed voting, through methods like deliberately creating long lines of voters; and ‘scary tactics’ taking advantage of the hard- to-believe fact that 32% of Democrats still think Saddam Hussein had something to do with 9/11.

My one point of contention was his suggestion that the Democrats may not think it politically wise to impeach Bush and Cheney, as some are afraid this may be seen as revenge for the attempt to impeach Clinton. He saw a plethora of candidates vying for the nomination, including Dodd, Edwards, Warner, Biden, Kerry and Clinton. He could not forecast who would get the nomination.

A lively discussion ensued, and the eternal question for Democrats was raised: Why can’t the Democrats come up with a soundbite that better frames the issues from the Democratic standpoint? If you go to Mr McQueen’s site, you’ll see that many people are trying to come up with an answer.

The meeting broke up with promises made all around to try and keep this cross-border contact alive. DAL will play its part by informing DA Kaiserslautern of DAL events in the hope that some of their members can participate.

Attending from Luxembourg were: Bonnie Adelson, Randy Bradley, Michele Linnen, Jo Anne Moeller and Graham Cleverley.

Jo Anne Moeller

Secretary, DAL

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Republicans and Reality

I don't know many Republicans. One, a friend, is really an up-by-the- bootstraps Democrat but remains in deep denial. The thing is, he lives in Ohio, a swing state, so off and on through several elections I have taken him on as a reclamation project. A while ago I wrote to ask whether he was among the 35-or-so percent of Americans who still shelter behind George "Mission Accomplished" Bush. The short answer was yes; the longer version sizzled on for paragraphs, mostly to do with Iraq and the pusillanimous response of Democrats to Islamic jihadists who were, he said, "the ultimate test for the existence of the Western world as we now know it,"
Wow.

Gently as I could, I reminded him that, when it came to Iraq, he was working with a clouded crystal ball. In the run-up to the 2004 presidential election, he had e-mailed me, as follows: "The Iraq war is a non-issue and will grow more favorable to the president in the coming months. Rumsfeld is holding back on the weapons of mass destruction and will lay the evidence on the line just in time to affect the election."
You will recognize here a certain Tory detachment from reality, a reverence for their own mistakes, the vision of things, not as they are, but as they would be in a world without Democrats.
I decided to try another tack. I said I didn't know if he lived in former Representative Bob Ney's congressional district in Ohio, but if he did, and if Ney hadn't been obliged to resign because of those troublesome dealings with Jack Abramoff, would he be planning to vote for him? Because Ney, in addition to being open-minded about bribery, had done some interesting things in Congress.
I particularly remembered him back in the days when the French were stepping on Rumsfeld's timetable for taking out Saddam Hussein's famous weapons of mass destruction before he turned them on us, and how Ney, then chairman of the House Administration committee, banged down on his lectern and decreed that thenceforth, by God, all French fries served in the cafeterias of the House of Representatives would be known as Freedom fries. What a shot in the arm! The members – grown men, all – promptly adjourned and went home, confident that their constituents, when they heard this exhilarating news, would start breathing easier.
But they didn't. And they aren't. Three and a half years on -- longer than American forces fought in World War II -- the gratuitous and botched war in Iraq has left that country in chaos and ferment and cost ours 2700 young lives and counting, and treasure by the hundreds of billions. It is not our defense against the radicalization of the Arab world but the cause of it; it has become a recruiting poster and training ground for al Qaeda and terrorist rabble of like mind and leaves us not safer but ever more exposed to extremist Islam's random wrath. It is the answer to bin Laden's prayers.
And buried in Iraq is the good name of the United States. In the eyes of much of the world, the nation that nurtured and sustained the great Western alliance for a half century now ranks with Iran and North Korea as a threat to the peace; crucially undermined is its competence as an honest broker in the Middle East. The American Constitution, a beacon of liberty to humankind for more than 200 years, has been subverted to accommodate torture and secret trials, and trivialized to placate the rabid right wing of the Republican Party. Did my friend cheer the Administration's proposed Constitutional amendments to forbid same-sex marriage and desecration of the American flag? Those solutions in search of a problem? That quintessentially Republican summoning to worship at smoke and mirrors?
What constitutional issue is involved in the union of two women or two men? Are there hordes out there – is there anyone out there – desecrating the flag? The flag is an abstraction, an idea. If you burn or trample or spit on the flag do you harm the nation for which it stands? If you burn the Constitution do you destroy the concepts it embodies?
But if you make war without just cause, if you spy on your countrymen without legal sanction -- if you torture prisoners and hold them indefinitely without trial, hearing, counsel or the right to appeal -- then you are desecrating the Constitution. And rejecting 300 years of Anglo-American jurisprudence, according to Ronald Sokol, an international lawyer and legal scholar. "These abuses," he wrote in the International Herald Tribune last month, "would have caused no notice in Nazi Germany or the Soviet Union but have never before been put forth in America."
Public protests against such transgressions of our laws and traditions are likely to touch off choruses of outrage from the administration camp, their adversaries labeled backbiters -- simple, confused, faint-hearted in the face of a dire threat to our way of life. And it's getting worse. Campaign 2006 is under way and for the Republican Party fear has become its sine qua non. Fear is what they have to sell. Last week, at a convention of the American Legion, in whose eyes Republicans walk on water, the president said, "If we give up the fight in the streets of Baghdad, we will face the terrorists in the streets of our own cities."
But of course the Republicans' most poignant fear is that the Democrats will take back one or both houses of Congress on November 7th, and in the struggle to ward off such a calamity, demonization is the fallback position. Recent examples abound:
The Republican National Committee, on Democrats: "Defeatocrats."
Karl Rove, on Democrats: "Obstacles to national security."
Senator Orrin Hatch, Utah, whose stump speeches regularly decry the bitter partisanship in Washington: "Middle East terrorists are waiting for the Democrats here to take control, let things cool off and then strike again."

Cheney, commenting on Ned Lamont's primary election victory over Joseph Leiberman, the Republicans' most empathetic Democrat: "It gives comfort to al Qaeda types."
Rumsfeld, raising goose bumps at the Legion convention with his invocation of fascism's 1938 "appeasers" (oh, freighted word!), then linking them with today's critics of the Iraq war. "Now we face a new type of fascism," he said, and neatly spliced the word "fascism" to "terrorists," so that, next day, the two together sprouted like grass seed in April all over the Washington Times and Fox News.

He did not say that there were also American appeasers in the late 1930s, and that nearly all of them were members of the Grand Old Party, and that they voted overwhelmingly against every single measure to support our European allies against Hitler, or that would help the U.S. prepare for the coming struggle.

Today's disconnect from reality seems to emanate straight from the White House. Americans are coming to see that the main occupation in all those bustling west wing offices is spinning the Iraqi crisis, not dealing with it. We keep hearing that Nuri al-Maliki and his government and army are moving steadily toward assuming full responsibility for the defense of their country. But after the weapons of mass destruction that weren't there and the helping hand Saddam Hussein gave Osama bin Laden on 9/11 that never happened, there is a certain skepticism abroad in the land. (It seems especially to have affected Republican congressional candidates in tight races; they're falling away from the party line in clusters). Maliki governs -- if one can use the word -- only with the support of a Shiite militia which last week was in open warfare with the national army -- yes, the very one trained and funded by the U.S., and which, in some units, has desertion rates of 40 percent.

Okay, if that daydream won't fly, what about Iraq as "the decisive ideological struggle of the 21st century," as Bush put it to the legionnaires? It is, he went on, war against "a worldwide network of radicals that use terror to kill those who stand in the way of their totalitarian ideology." Into the same pot went the battles in Lebanon between Hezbollah and the Israelis and the nuclear threat from Iran.

But that doesn't seem to have gained much traction either. Where is there even a shred of evidence that there is a worldwide network of Islamic radicals out there on the scale of Hitler's Germany or Stalin's Soviet Union? As the Boston Globe put it, "Al Qaeda….may be capable of mass killings….but inflating the danger from jihadi terrorists into an existential threat and invoking a grandiose third world war….only plays into the hands of bin Laden and the other deluded megalomaniacs hiding out with him." And if Armageddon is upon us, where is our leader's call on the people to join the struggle, to sacrifice for the common cause -- say a dollar a gallon hike in the price of gasoline, repeal of the fat tax cuts to all those people who don't need them, a summons to the sons and daughters of privilege to share the burden of military service with those who aren't sheltered by status and money?

Some things do change in Washington. Without fanfare, Congressional cafeterias have gone back to calling French fries French fries. It may be that the French embassy's graceful reaction to Chairman Ney's dictum about Freedom fries has belatedly registered. "These are serious moments and we are dealing with serious issues," said an embassy spokeswoman. "We are not focusing on the name you give to potatoes."
Some might say that that sent a whiff of reality into the Capitol's hallowed halls, that with Ney gone the Administration committee is more sensible about intergovernmental affairs and cafeteria management. But don't count on it.

So I am left, finally, with three questions for my Republican friend in Ohio, only one of which I can answer with any assurance. Why, in the face of many real and some desperate needs facing our country, did we go to war against a gasbag of a tyrant and a ragtag army that presented no real threat to our people or our vital interests? I don't know.What is the administration's strategy for withdrawing our forces from Iraq? I don't know. The last question is really my friend's. "Like the war or not," he now says, "Iraq is the key issue." Then he elegiacally notes the approaching end of Bush's term and lists all the likely -- and some unlikely -- Democratic possibilities to succeed him. Who, he disparagingly asks, could do better? And that's the question I can answer. Anyone.
-- Larry Elliott

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Psst... Hey Pogo, They Git You Yet?

“We have met the enemy and he is us”

After listening to Keith Olbermann’s Countdown (MSNBC) piece of August 30th, I am reminded of this quote from Walt Kelly’s popular, and more than a little political, comic strip Pogo, and uttered by Pogo hizself. Popular in the 50’s and 60’s, this strip about the simple life of Pogo Opossum and his his friends in Okefenokee Swamp gnawed at the ankles of the likes of Joseph McCarthy, J. Edgar Hoover, Spiro Agnew, Pat McCarran, and the John Birch Society. But more on that later.

Although MSNBC is usually a poster-child for ratings-driven “opinion” cable news, it actually allowed a cogent, blistering rebuttal to Donald Rumsfeld’s VFW speech of Tuesday, in which “Mr. Secretary” again reminded us that those not “with us” are, well, “agin us” and continued the official roll-out of the Bush Administration’s new and improved, easy-to-remember, all-purpose evil-in-a-can…Islamo-Fascism.

Keith Olbermann’s well-worded opinion is so honestly delivered (and obviously felt), that I can’t believe I heard it on a major television network. And he even channels Edward R. Murrow in framing Rumsfeld himself as a new-style fascist in the mold of Joseph McCarthy. Olbermann seems a man who has had his fill, and he sends Rumsfeld back to school (elementary school) for lessons in both civics and history while "re-gifting" the administration's well-worn package of vague fears, insinuations of disloyalty, and misdirected blame, right back to them. Even co-opts their own label--fascism. Rumsfeld was using the VFW speech to throw down the government's glove, but Olbermann picks it up and slaps him with it. A sample:

Mr. Rumsfeld is also personally confused, morally or intellectually, about his own standing in this matter. From Iraq to Katrina, to the entire “Fog of Fear” which continues to envelop this nation, he, Mr. Bush, Mr. Cheney, and their cronies have — inadvertently or intentionally — profited and benefited, both personally, and politically.

And yet he can stand up, in public, and question the morality and the intellect of those of us who dare ask just for the receipt for the Emporer’s New Clothes?

In what country was Mr. Rumsfeld raised? As a child, of whose heroism did he read? On what side of the battle for freedom did he dream one day to fight? With what country has he confused the United States of America?

And about Mr. Rumsfeld’s other main assertion, that this country faces a “new type of fascism.”

This country faces a new type of fascism - indeed.

(So Don, who's your new daddy?)

You can hear (and really should see) Olbermann’s complete commentary at http://tinyurl.com/q4cdk .

Finally, some fightin’ words from a source other than bloggers.

Now back to Walt Kelly. As you might imagine, Kelly, who peppered the simple humor and everyman characters of Okefenokee Swamp with occassional characters from the outside the swamp, characters with a too-close-for-comfort resemblance to guys like McCarthy, McCarran, and Agnew, withstood constant attack and derision by supporters of those men, as well as predictable setbacks to his career. He of course paid, like Murrow and so many others, a high price for his intellectual honesty. And his was just a comic strip. (It's said that Hoover thought Kelly’s comic strips contained secret coded messages and had Government cryptographers trying to decipher them.) I believe were Pogo around today, he would remind us (in swamp-speak of course) that Democracy requires the light of truth for flowering, and that those were very dark days indeed. But, considering the secrecy of our current government, with it's minions of misinformation, and their open antagonism to (and revenge upon) anyone who would question them, were those days so different from today? Come to think of it, has anyone heard from Pogo lately?

Rumsfeld’s surprisingly audacious speech is a frightening flashback to those “dark days”. What makes it audacious is that it's such a blatant throwback to those very same tactics used by McCarthy and Nixon. What makes it frightening is that Bush/Rove/Cheney/Rumsfeld are getting away with it. And, to be clear, both the American people and the American media have let them get away with it. Why then blame only the Bush administration, or only the Republicans, when they are, in fact, still the minority party? Maybe the real culprit is our own collective complacency. Maybe the real enemy IS us. At least Keith Olbermann (with help from the spirit of Murrow) has stood up and called the beast by it's rightful name. How long will the rest of America wait? Whose lead is it that we are waiting to follow?

Thanks to Beverly Bander of DA Mexico for spotting this and posting it on the DemsAbroad@yahoogroups.com listserv. Thanks to Ron Andrews of DA Japan for providing the url. Thanks to Keith Olbermann for standing up, and to MSNBC for letting him. And very belated thanks to Walt Kelly. I’ll leave you with his words:

Resolve then, that on this very ground, with small flags waving and tinny blast on tiny trumpets, we shall meet the enemy, and not only may he be ours, he may be us.

"Forward!"


Bill McQueen
DA Luxembourg