[lbo-talk] tea party numbers

c b cb31450 at gmail.com
Wed Sep 1 12:03:19 PDT 2010


Here's more discussion of this ( from a source that will remain anonymous so as not to get Shane's blood pressure up ; smile)

"Gibbs may be guilty of overstatement, but smart people will cull the grain of truth from his remarks. Too often the lpls, (liberals-progressives-lefts) as he correctly suggests, are inclined to judge President Obama abstracted from the context in which he governs.

Insufficiently factored in is the considerable power of right-wing extremism, the influence of the corporate class and the class character of the capitalist state, the anachronistic practices of Congress that allow a minority to frustrate majority rule and popular democracy, the conservative pressures from within the Democratic Party and Obama's Cabinet, and, importantly, the inadequate scope and intensity of the popular upsurge, compared to the 1930s and 1960s.

The president doesn't govern in a vacuum. Every word he says and everything he does will be filtered, spun, and turned inside out by his opponents, and at times his friends. The lpls don't carry that burden.

His political calculus has to anticipate how the American people of every political persuasion will react to his words and to what degree they will make him vulnerable to the inevitable attacks from the extreme right. His constituency includes the citizens of Lubbock and Sioux City as much as the citizens of New York and San Francisco.

It is almost an article of faith in left and progressive circles that the American people in their majority are ready to embrace left positions if only the president articulated them, if only he campaigned for them. If he says it, "they will come."

Implied is that the left has a much better read on the public mood than the administration does. But do we? Are the American people, if given the green light by the president, ready, if not to storm the barricades, then at least to fight for radical reforms?

I don't believe it is that easy. It strikes me as not so much naïve as simply wrong to make such a claim. It misreads where people are at, what they are ready to fight for, what they are up against, and what it takes to move them to higher ground.

Three decades of right-wing ideology - a nasty variant of capitalist ideology that individualizes social problems and blames the victim, fractures any sense of human solidarity, extols the free market, disdains the notion of economic, social, and political rights, and is steeped in racism, sexism, homophobia, and xenophobia - has had a profoundly corrosive effect on popular thinking.

Today's much talked about "enthusiasm gap" reflects, it is said, people's frustration with Congress and the administration, but it also expresses a shift in mass consciousness in a democratic/progressive direction that is uneven, lacks sufficient depth of understanding on issues of class and race, and has yet to fully shed important elements of right-wing ideology.

My suspicion is that the country is neither center-left nor center-right. Both categories are too static, not dialectical enough. Popular opinion is more capricious, mercurial, and unpredictable than too many of us allow for. At any given moment progressive and even radical ideas can give way to backward thinking, and vice versa.

What people are thinking depends on the issue(s) and event(s) - sometimes unforeseen (9/11 and the financial meltdown, for example), on which side is able to frame the discussion and grab the political momentum, on the overall political atmosphere, and, not least, on their own experience. All this constantly shapes and reshapes mass thinking in unexpected ways.

Taking Gibbs to the woodshed for a verbal thrashing is easy. Much more - a thousand times more - difficult is the task of expanding, deepening and sustaining the movement that elected this president two years ago. I'm not against parsing the words and actions of the administration, although it should be done in a constructive and unifying way. But it can't substitute for uniting a broad people's movement into collective action.

We need such a coalition now and going forward."



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