Changing Obama's Mindset
By Howard Zinn
May 17, 2009 "The
Progressive" -- We are citizens, and Obama is a politician. You might not like
that word. But the fact is he's a politician. He's other
things, too-he's a very sensitive and intelligent and thoughtful and promising
person. But he's a politician.
If you're a citizen, you have
to know the difference between them and you - the difference between what
they have to do and what you have to do. And there are things they don't
have to do, if you make it clear to them they don't have to do it.
From the beginning, I liked Obama. But the first time it suddenly struck me that he was a politician
was early on, when Joe Lieberman was running for the Democratic
nomination for his Senate seat in 2006.
Lieberman-who, as you know,
was and is a war lover-was running for the Democratic nomination, and his
opponent was a man named Ned Lament, who was the peace candidate. And Obama
went to Connecticut to support Lieberman against Lamont.
It took me aback. I say that
to indicate that, yes, Obama was and is a politician. So we must not be
swept away into an unthinking and
unquestioning acceptance of
what Obama does.
Our job is not to give him a
blank check or simply be cheerleaders. It was good that we were cheerleaders
while he was running for office, but it's not good to be cheerleaders
now. Because we want the country to go beyond where it has been in the
past. We want to make a clean break from what it has been in the past.
I had a teacher at Columbia
University named Richard Hofstadter, who wrote a book called The American
Political Tradition, and in it, he examined presidents from the
Founding Fathers down through Franklin Roosevelt. There were liberals and
conservatives, Republicans and Democrats. And there were
differences between them. But he found that the so-called liberals were not as
liberal as people thought and that the difference between the
liberals and the conservatives, and between Republicans and Democrats, was not
a polar difference. There was a common thread that ran through all
American history, and all of the presidents Republican, Democrat,
liberal, conservative-followed this thread.
The thread consisted of two
elements: one, nationalism; and two, capitalism. And Obama is not yet
free of that powerful double heritage.
We can see it in the policies
that have been enunciated so far, even though he's been in office only a
short time.
Some people might say, "Well,
what do you expect?" And
the answer is that we expect a lot.
People say, "What, are you a
dreamer?"
And the answer is, yes, we're
dreamers. We want it all. We want a peaceful world. We want an
egalitarian world. We don't want war. We don't want capitalism. We want a
decent society.
We better hold on to that
dream because if we don't, we'll sink closer and closer to this reality that we
have, and that we don't want.
Be wary when you hear about
the glories of the market system. The market system is what we've had. Let the
market decide, they say. The government mustn't give people
free health care; let the market decide.
Which is what the market has
been doing and that's why we have forty-eight million people without
health care. The market has decided that. Leave things to the market,
and there are two million people homeless. Leave things to the
market, and there are millions and
millions of people who can't
pay their rent. Leave things to the market, and there are thirty-five million
people who go hungry.
You can't leave it to the
market. If you're facing an economic crisis like we're facing now, you can't
do what was done in the past. You can't pour money into the upper levels
of the country-and into the banks and corporations-and hope that it
somehow trickles down.
What was one of the first
things that happened when the Bush Administration saw that the
economy was in trouble? A $700 billion
bailout, and who did we give
the $700 billion to? To the financial institutions that caused this
crisis.
This was when the
Presidential campaign was still going on, and it pained me to see Obama standing
there, endorsing this huge bailout to
the corporations.
What Obama should have been
saying was: Hey, wait a while. The banks aren't poverty stricken. The CEOs
aren't poverty stricken. But there are people who are out of work. There
are people who can't pay their mortgages. Let's take $700 billion
and give it directly to the people who need it. Let's take $1
trillion, let's take $2 trillion.
Let's take this money and
give it directly to the people who need it. Give it to the people who have to
pay their mortgages. Nobody should be evicted. Nobody should be left
with their belongings out on the street.
Obama wants to spend perhaps
a trillion more on the banks. Like Bush, he's not giving it directly to
homeowners. Unlike the Republicans, Obama also wants to spend $800 billion
for his economic stimulus plan. Which is good-the idea of a stimulus is
good. But if you look closely at the plan, too much of it goes through
the market, through corporations.
It gives tax breaks to
businesses, hoping that they'll hire people. No-if people need jobs, you don't
give money to the corporations, hoping that maybe jobs will be created.
You give people work immediately.
A lot of people don't know
the history of the New Deal of the 1930s. The New Deal didn't go far enough, but
it had some very good ideas. And the reason the New Deal came to these
good ideas was because there was huge agitation in this country, and
Roosevelt had to react. So what did he do? He took billions of dollars
and said the government was going to hire people. You're out of work?
The government has a job for you.
As a result of this, lots of
very wonderful work was done all over the country. Several million young
people were put into the Civilian
Conservation Corps. They went
around the country, building bridges and roads and playgrounds, and doing
remarkable things.
The government created a
federal arts program. It wasn't going to wait for the markets to decide that.
The government set up a program and hired thousands of unemployed
artists: playwrights, actors, musicians, painters, sculptors, writers. What
was the result? The result was the production of 200,000 pieces of
art. Today, around the country, there are thousands of murals painted by
people in the WPA program. Plays were put on all over the country at
very cheap prices, so that people who had never seen a play in their lives
were able to afford to go.
And that's just a glimmer of
what could be done. The government has to represent the people's needs. The
government can't give the job of representing the people's needs to
corporations and the banks, because they don't care about the people's
needs. They only care about profit..
In the course of his
campaign, Obama said something that struck me as very wise-and when people say
something very wise, you have to remember it, because they may not hold to
it. You may have to remind them of that wise thing they said.
Obama was talking about the
war in Iraq, and he said, "It's not just that we have to get out of Iraq."
He said "get out of Iraq," and we mustn't forget it. We must keep
reminding him: Out of Iraq, out of Iraq, out of Iraq-not next year, not two
years from now, but out of Iraq now.
But listen to the
second part, too. His whole sentence was: "It's not enough to get out of Iraq; we have
to get out of the mindset that led us into Iraq." What is the mindset
that got us into Iraq?
It's the mindset that says
force will do the trick. Violence, war, bombers-that they will bring
democracy and liberty to the people.
It's the mindset that says
America has some God-given right to invade other countries for their own
benefit. We will bring civilization to the Mexicans in 1846. We will bring
freedom to the Cubans in 1898. We will bring democracy to the Filipinos
in 1900. You know how successful we've been at bringing democracy all
over the world.
Obama has not gotten out of
this militaristic missionary mindset. He talks about sending tens of
thousands of more troops to Afghanistan.
Obama is a very smart guy,
and surely he must know some of the history. You don't have to know a lot to
know the history of Afghanistan has been decades and decades and decades
and decades of Western powers trying to impose their will on Afghanistan
by force: the English, the Russians, and now the Americans. What has
been the result? The result has been a ruined country.
This is the mindset
that sends 21,000 more troops to Afghanistan, and that says, as Obama has, that
we've got to have a bigger military. My heart sank when Obama said that.
Why do we need a bigger military? We have an enormous military budget.
Has Obama talked about cutting the military budget in half or some
fraction? No.
We have military bases in
more than a hundred countries. We have fourteen military bases on Okinawa
alone. Who wants us there? The governments. They get benefits.
But the people don't really want us there. There have been huge
demonstrations in Italy against the establishment of a U.S. military
base. There have been big demonstrations in South Korea and
on Okinawa.
One of the first acts of the
Obama Administration was to send Predator missiles to bomb Pakistan. People
died. The claim is, "Oh, we're very precise with our weapons. We have
the latest equipment. We can target anywhere and hit just what we
want."
This is the mindset of
technological infatuation. Yes, they can actually decide that they're going to bomb
this one house. But there's one problem: They don't know who's in
the house. They can hit one car with a rocket from a great distance. Do
they know who's in the car? No.
And later-after the bodies
have been taken out of the car, after the bodies have been taken out of the
house they tell you, "Well, there were three suspected terrorists in that
house, and yes, there's seven other people killed, including two
children, but we got the suspected terrorists." But notice that the
word is "suspected." The truth is they don't know who the terrorists are.
So, yes, we have to get out
of the mindset that got us into Iraq, but we've got to identify that
mindset. And Obama has to be pulled by the people who elected him, by the
people who are enthusiastic about him, to renounce that mindset. We're the
ones who have to tell him, "No, you're on the wrong course with this
militaristic idea of using force to accomplish things in the world. We
won't accomplish anything that way, and we'll remain a hated country
in the world."
Obama has talked about a
vision for this country. You have to have a vision, and now I want to tell
Obama what his vision should be.
The vision should be of a
nation that becomes liked all over the world. I won't even say loved it'll take
a while to build up to that. A nation that is not feared, not disliked,
not hated, as too often we are, but a nation that is looked upon as
peaceful, because we've withdrawn our military bases from all these
countries. We don't need to spend the hundreds of billions of dollars on
the military budget. Take all the money allocated to military bases
and the military budget, and this is part of the emancipation you can
use that money to give everybody free health care, to guarantee jobs to
everybody who doesn't have a job, guaranteed payment of rent to
everybody who can't pay their rent, build child care centers.
Let's use the money to help
other people around the world, not to send bombers over there. When disasters
take place, they need helicopters to
transport people out of the
floods and out of devastated areas. They need helicopters to save people's
lives, and the helicopters are over in the Middle East, bombing and
strafing people.
What's required is a
total turn around. We want a country that uses its resources, its wealth, and its
power to help people, not to hurt them. That's what we need. This is a
vision we have to keep alive. We shouldn't be easily satisfied and
say, "Oh well, give him a break. Obama deserves respect."
But you don't respect
somebody when you give them a blank check. You respect somebody when you treat
them as an equal to you, and as somebody you can talk to and somebody who
will listen to you.
Not only is Obama a
politician. Worse, he's surrounded by politicians. And some of them he picked
himself. He picked Hillary Clifton, he picked Lawrence Summers, he picked people
who show no sign of breaking from the past.
We are citizens. We must not
put ourselves in the position of looking at the world from their eyes and say,
"Well, we have to compromise, we have to do this for political reasons."
No, we have to speak our minds.
This is the position that the
abolitionists were in before the Civil War, and people said, "Well, you
have to look at it from Lincoln's point of view." Lincoln didn't believe
that his first priority was abolishing slavery. But the anti-slavery
movement did, and the abolitionists said, "We're not going to put ourselves
in Lincoln's position. We are going to express our own position, and we
are going to express it so powerfully that Lincoln will have to listen
to us."
And the anti-slavery movement
grew large enough and powerful enough that Lincoln had to listen. That's how
we got the Emancipation Proclamation and the Thirteenth and Fourteenth
and Fifteenth Amendments.
That's been the story of this
country. Where progress has been made, wherever any kind of injustice has
been overturned, it's been because people acted as citizens, and not
as politicians. They didn't just moan. They worked, they acted, they
organized, they rioted if necessary to bring their situation to the
attention of people in power. And that's what we have to do today.
(Thanks to Alex Read and Matte Corn for transcribing Zinn’s talk on February 2 at the Busboys and
Poets restaurant in Washington, D.C., from which this is adapted.)
© 2009 The Progressive