Virginia Senate candidate Tim Kaine spoke prior to Obama’s speech on Wednesday in Charlottesville, Va. He had praise for anyone signing up to go to war in Afghanistan. “We can still put our positive thumbprint on that nation,” he said, to wild cheers. Imagine the competition among the world’s nations to get our thumbprint next! Imagine what it costs to get our assprint.
“So, who are you voting for?” an Obama follower asked me prior to the event. I was holding posters with 12 friends and handing out hundreds of flyers that looked like Obama material until you read them. (PDF).
The posters objected to the tripling of weapons sales to foreign dictators last year, Obama’s willingness to cut Social Security and Medicare, the kill list, imprisonment without trial, warrantless spying, corporate trade agreements, the continued so-called “Bush” tax cuts, the war on Afghanistan, the drone wars, the increased military budget, the murder of Tariq Aziz and of Abdulrahman al Awlaki, the weak auto efficiency standards in the news that day, the refusal to prosecute torturers, Obama’s sabotaging of agreements to counter global warming, etc.
“So, who are you going to vote for?”
“Well,” I said, “you know, you can vote for someone good like Jill Stein or Rocky Anderson, or you can vote for Obama, but today is not election day. If you vote for the lesser evil candidate on election day, that’s great. Knock yourself out. But that does not begin to produce an argument for being his apologist and cheerleader throughout the year. If you push the culture and the government in a better direction, both evil candidates will get a little less evil. One guy wants to trash Social Security, and the other guy brags about his willingness to make huge compromises with that agenda — that is, to partially trash Social Security. So, is your job to demand that not a dime be cut (regardless of how you vote), or is your job to cheer for the partially trash it guy, thereby guaranteeing that he and the other guy both get even worse?”
“Yeah, I see, but I’m trying to understand who you think we should vote for.”
“Let me try again. Take Obama’s kill list for . . . “
“His what?”
“President Obama keeps a list of the people he wants to kill. It was a frontpage New York Times story three months ago that made a lot of news but was carefully avoided by Democrats even more assiduously than you would have sought it out and trumpeted your outrage were the president a Republican. Anyway, take the kill list, which includes Americans and non-Americans, adults and children. Is it your job to ignore it, to celebrate it, or to protest it? I don’t mean your job as a voter, but your job as a citizen. What are you supposed to do in such a case?”
“Well what’s the alternative?”
“The alternative to murdering people? Well, I don’t know how to put this. The alternative is essentially not murdering people.”
“No, what’s the alternative to Obama? Isn’t the other guy worse?”
“Let me try again. You’ll grant me that women didn’t vote themselves the right to vote. Will you go along with that? They didn’t get the right to vote by voting for it?”
“Yes.”
“And the civil rights movement didn’t end the sit ins and marches and endorse Democrats and pack events like this one to cheer loudly? That wouldn’t have worked as well and wouldn’t have been required in order for those activists to be serious activists, right? We don’t accuse Martin Luther King of not being a serious activist because he didn’t endorse candidates, right? And if you’d asked him what the alternative was to your candidate, would you be shocked if he had replied that the alternative was educating, organizing, mobilizing, and engaging in nonviolent resistance to evil?”
“So, you’re not going to vote for anybody?”
“I’m not sure I’m being very clear here. 70% of the country wants the war in Afghanistan ended. Neither candidate is willing to end it. Obama pretends he’s ending it. Romney doesn’t mention it. Should 70% of the country keep quiet while large numbers of people are killed? Or should we approach both branches of our government, the two parties, with our just and moral demand until we’re satisfied — regardless of who we’re going to vote for?”
“Well, you can have your opinion about Afghanistan, but that’s no reason to character assassinate the President.”
“Seventy percent of the country is character assassinating the president by wanting to get out of Afghanistan? Or only if you mention it out loud? How do you character assassinate someone? Did you catch the part where I pointed out that Obama actually assassinates people?”
Three of us went into the event. I had tickets, which were free and which the campaign could barely give away, while back in 2007 Obama had sold out the same venue. We didn’t go in so as to spend hours in the hot sun just to hear an Obama speech like the one he’d given the day before in another town which we could have watched on Youtube. Thousands of people did that. We went in to disturb the war.
We wanted to shout. But what could we shout? We were only three. We were not near the front. (I recommend taking 10 to the front of one of these events if you can. You’ll own the place.) We would have to be loud and clear. We couldn’t mention the kill list which would be like mentioning UFOs to these people. We couldn’t mention Social Security because they pretend Obama’s not threatening it. We couldn’t mention peace because people would think it was a pro-Obama chant. We decided to say this: Get out of Afghanistan! End the sanctions on Iran!
Here’s how the Washington Post’s blog reported on that:
“Protesters drown out Obama
“Posted by Amy Gardner on August 29, 2012 at 3:58 pm
“CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — An outdoor political rally erupted into a moment of chaos as protesters drowned out President Obama’s speech at a downtown amphitheater here — and then the rest of the crowd drowned out the protesters. It was unclear what the protesters were saying, but several members of the crowd said a few minutes later that they heard ‘Get out of Afghanistan!’ The shouts prompted a flurry of Secret Service activity, and they also prompted an enthusiastic crowd of more than 7,000 to shut down the protesters with two cacophonous chants: ‘Four more years!’ and ‘O-ba-ma!’ Obama couldn’t continue for a long moment, but when the noise finally died down, he said: ‘I couldn’t hear what those young people had to say, but that’s good that they got involved.’ To the rest of the crowd, he said: ‘Don’t just chant! Vote!'”
Obama was pretending the crowd was all young people. He’d tried to speak at the University of Virginia which had turned him down, but he gave his speech as if he were there. The crowd didn’t shout us down till we’d run out of breath. They were not nearly as fast as Republicans are with their “U-S-A! U-S-A!” In fact, they seemed tremendously proud of themselves when they managed to discover that they could yell “O-BA-MA! O-BA-MA!” Voting, in the pretense of those in power, constitutes more activism than chanting or any other activity. Don’t just hold teach-ins, vote! Don’t just occupy the square, vote! Don’t just risk your life to expose injustice, vote! If Bradley Manning had just voted, that would have been the last full measure of devotion.
As to the flurry of Secret Service activity, an Obama campaign guy started standing next to us, and a mean possibly drunk guy started shoving and threatening us. After various additional disruptions of the war (not the peace) by us, the Obama guy called the local police over who asked us to leave, and asked for our names, etc., to tell them to the Secret Service. The police had earlier refused numerous requests by the Obama staff and volunteers to evict our poster demonstration. The police had mentioned freedom of speech. The local media, as well as the police, were surprisingly decent. The Obama campaigners, on the other hand, would have exiled us all to Gitmo if they’d been able, and if they weren’t suffering under the misconception that it’s been closed.