https://www.rt.com/op-ed/452853-sanders-warren-trump-clinton/
What a surprise! After Bernie
Sanders announced his bid for the US presidency, attacks on him instantly arose
from all sides.
They came not only from
President Trump, who referred to him as a "wacko," nor the
usual bunch of conservative commentators who proposed dozens of variations on
the motif "You want Sanders as president? Look at Venezuela
today!"
The smears also came from his
more centrist Democratic Party opponents. And reading these barbs, one is
immediately overwhelmed by a feeling of deja vu.
Because we have lived through
this situation before, in the time of the Democratic primaries contested
between Sanders and Hillary Clinton.
Arguably, the Clinton campaign
against Sanders reached its lowest point when, campaigning for Hillary,
Madeline Albright said: "There's a special place in hell for women
who don't help each other!" (Meaning: females voting for Sanders
instead of Clinton.)
Now maybe we should amend this
statement: there is a special place in hell for women (and men) who think half
a million dead children is an acceptable price for a military intervention that
ruins a country (as Albright said in support of the massive bombing of Iraq
back in 1996), while wholeheartedly supporting women's rights and gay rights at
home.
Is Albright's worldview not
infinitely more obscene and lewd than all Trump's sexist banalities? We are not
yet there, but we are slowly approaching it.
Strong principles
Liberal attacks on Sanders for
his alleged rejection of identity politics returned from the dead again,
ignoring that Sanders is doing the exact opposite, insisting on a link between
class, race and gender.
One has to support him
unconditionally when he rejects identity in itself as a reason to vote for
someone: "It is not good enough for somebody to say, I'm a woman,
vote for me. What we need is a woman who has the guts to stand up to Wall
Street, to the insurance companies, to the drug companies, to the fossil fuel
industry."
As expected, for this very
statement, Sanders was attacked as a white male chauvinist advocating "class
reductionism." Indeed, don't be surprised if it will be soon
denounced as an expression of toxic masculinity.
If we disregard straight lies
(like the claim, proven false, that the young Sanders did not work with Martin
Luther King in the civil rights struggle), the strategy of those who privilege
Warren over Sanders is a rather simple one.
First, they claim that the
difference between their respective economic programs is minimal and
negligible. (One is tempted to add here: yes, minimal, like the fact that
Sanders proclaims himself a democratic socialist, while Warren insists she is a
capitalist to her bones... It is sad to hear Elisabeth Warren declaring herself
a "capitalist to the bones" when even top corporate
managers like Bill Gates, Elon Musk or Mark Zuckerberg talk about how
capitalism, at least the way it functions now, cannot survive.)
Muddying waters
Then, critics claim that in
contrast to Sanders' exclusive focus on economic injustice, Warren also brings
in gender and race injustices, so her advantage over Sanders is clear: only
Warren can unite a broad progressive front against Trump.
Ultimately, critics of Sanders
end up with a kind of electoral affirmative action: Sanders is a man and Warren
a woman. Thus, two key facts get obfuscated here: the democratic socialist of
Sanders is much more radical than Warren, who remains firmly within the
Democratic establishment.
Plus it is simply not true
that Sanders ignores racial and gender struggles – he just brings out the link
with economic struggle.
Warren is not, as her
defenders claim, a third way between centrist Democrats and Democratic
Socialists, the synthesis of what is best in race/gender identity politics and
in the struggle for economic justice.
No, she is just Hillary
Clinton with a slightly more human face. Even defenders of Warren admit that
her claim to Native American roots was a mistake – but was it really just an
innocent mistake?
The Cherokee Nation's
secretary of state, Chuck Hoskin Jr, responded to the test showing Warren was
between 1/64th and 1/1,024th Native American: "A DNA test is useless
to determine tribal citizenship. Current DNA tests do not even distinguish
whether a person's ancestors were indigenous to North or South America."
Hoskin was right, and what one
should add is that to prove that you have a little bit of exotic ancestry is to
legitimize your popular roots – it has nothing whatsoever to do with the actual
fight against racism.
However, the main point is
that Warren applied for a "progressive" cause, using the
same procedure that the Nazis applied to identify those with suspected Jewish
blood.
On today's market, we find a
whole series of products deprived of their malignant property: coffee without
caffeine, cream without fat, beer without alcohol, and the list goes on.
What about virtual sex as sex
without sex and what about the contemporary politics – the art of expert
administration – as politics without politics? Do "Leftist" Democrats
attacking Sanders not offer something similar – socialism without socialism,
deprived of the features that make it a threat to the establishment?
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