Why I will vote for Bernie
Sanders
A vote for Hillary Clinton is
not a vote against Republicans.
In a recent interview with Al Jazeera, the eminent US dissident and
world-renowned linguist Noam Chomsky comes out in support of the presidential
candidate Bernie Sanders, whom he considers to have the "best policies of
the Democratic presidential contenders in this election year".
But since he does not believe
Sanders has much of a chance of winning, he concludes by resorting to a
conventional position that "he would absolutely vote for Clinton over any
Republican", for the Republicans are, as he puts it, a danger to the
world.
In a remarkably similar move,
the liberal Zionist outlet The Nation has also announced wholeheartedly that it
endorses Bernie Sanders, and yet tJoan Walsh, he magazine's national affairs
correspondent, has come out of the closet and declared - Glory Hallelujah
"bourgeois feminists of the world unite!" choir in her background -
"Why I'm Supporting Hillary Clinton, With Joy and Without Apologies".
Liberal Zionists have a nicely
located corner store in the political shopping mall of the United States - one
corner from which they dish out what passes for "progressive
politics" in domestic affairs, while from the other, they sell monstrous,
warmonger corporate lackey Wall Street errand boys and girls, Israel-firsters
with a Janus double-face like no one is watching.
Enemy of my enemy is not my
friend
A vote for Hillary Clinton,
however, is first and foremost a vote for Hillary Clinton before it is a vote
against Republicans.
A vote for Clinton may indeed
be soothed by the lullaby of a vote against climate change-denying Republicans
who want to destroy the world and evidently fly to another planet, but a vote
for Clinton is a vote for an unrepentant warmonger carpetbagger corporate
lackey who will flood the Israelis and the Egyptians with even more massive
shipments of arms to destroy the poorest and most vulnerable parts and peoples
of the world, while letting Afghanistan, Iraq, and, unavoidably, Syria rot to
pieces with no sense of moral responsibility for having wreaked havoc on
sovereign nations.
I would happily vote for
Sanders in the primaries and hope he will beat Hillary Clinton and all her
Republican cohorts and become the next US president. But even if he does not,
there is no snowball chance in hell I would vote for Hillary "Margaret
Thatcher" Clinton, who I, in fact, consider an infinitely more dangerous
warmonger than all those hot-air crackpot Republicans put together.
The lunatic Republicans are
political non-entities and have no clue how to navigate legislations through
Congress. Hillary Clinton and her husband are master practitioners of that
statecraft. They will sail through any legislation that will facilitate
dropping more bombs on brown and black people around the world and could not
care less if their liberal domestic agenda is stonewalled in the Congress.
It is a point of astonishing
liberal hypocrisy to ignore that fact and vote for Clinton - because she is
against the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement and an ardent
Zionist - on the pretence that a vote for her is a vote against Republicans.
The US is first and foremost
an empire built on the fragile illusion of a republic. Billions of human beings
around the globe have every reason to be scared witless of a vicious
imperialist presidency of Hillary Clinton.
If liberal Zionists who, with
identical logic, oppose the BDS and vote for Hillary Clinton, want to sustain
the illusions of that republic over the deadly fact of that empire, it is, of
course, their choice. But the tired old cliche of voting for Clinton by way of
voting against the Republicans, fortunately, does not wash any more.
Democratic limits of an empire
Sanders, to be sure, is not
going to be the Salvador Allende, Hugo Chavez, or even Jeremy Corbyn or Alexis
Tsipras of the US. This fact has nothing to do with him, but with the empire in
which he wants to become president.
There are structural
limitations that would make such a possibility entirely improbable. This fact
extends not just to his chance of winning this presidential election, but even
more seriously to what he can do as the president of a belligerent,
warmongering empire.
Be that as it may, a vote for
Sanders is a vote for the historic unfolding of a noble struggle within the US
as a fragile republic that has appeared in the civil rights and anti-war
movement in the 1960s; in the anti-Iraq war rallies in 2000s; in the Occupy
movement in the 2010s; and now, in rallying behind Sanders in the 2016
presidential election - as it has historically been around Ralph Nader in many
other such elections.
This movement is weak, and has
never achieved a critical mass, and the presidential campaign and eight-year
presidency of Obama have done everything to destroy it.
But it is a streak of hope
that has a modest catalytic effect on the rest of US politics.
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