Thursday, August 7, 2014

Listen to Maureen Dowd

Dear Friends,

President Obama should take the advice of Maureen Dowd in her recent op-ed column in The New York Times entitled "A Modest Proposal" (here).  You should read the whole column but here is the proposal:
He gives a passionate address to the nation, channeling 2004 Obama, and asks, as the son of a foreigner who came to America to go to school, how our mosaic of immigrants soured into such a cruel place toward displaced children.
He defies the Republicans and shoots the moon on an executive order, giving backdoor amnesty to millions of undocumented Hispanic immigrants as well as all those suffering kids on the border who are afraid to live in their own violent countries.
How proud I would be of President Obama!!!

Thanks for reading and please comment,
The Unabashed Liberal

President Obama's Mixed Messages

Dear Friends,

There have been a couple of items in the news that have made clear the mixed messages and double standards applied by President Obama (and I am afraid most Americans).

First, I and many others are awaiting the release of the long overdue Senate report on torture, rendition, etc. by the United States.  While President Obama has said on numerous occasions that torture is wrong and the United States was wrong when it did it and while on his second day in office he banned torture (who would have thought that we needed an executive order to ban torture), President Obama seems willing to permit the CIA to redact the Senate report so as to make a mockery of transparency.  For a great report on this issue, please read Mark Mazzetti's article in The New York Times (here).  The last paragraph of that article reads:
On Monday, Josh Earnest, the White House press secretary, said that “it is important that a declassification process be carried out that protects sources and methods and other information that is critical to our national security.”
The White House misses the point, there needs to be a balance between transparency and national security and the CIA has proven over and over again that it is not the agency that should be doing the balancing.

But the real problem is that President Obama refuses to hold the ones who ordered the torture accountable for their illegal and immoral actions.  There is a great op-ed piece in The New York Times by retired Major General Taguba, the Army general who did the report on Abu Ghraib and was eventually forced to retire because he told the truth and believed in accountability (here).  In a true understatement he writes, "accountability for the architects of torture has proved elusive".

The message being sent by President Obama is very clear to future leaders, political, military and CIA, that even if you do things that are clearly illegal and immoral you do not have to worry about being held accountable either by open disclosure of what you did or prosecution for the war and other crimes that you committed.

Second, President Obama continues to deport and try to deport unaccompanied minors and parents with children who are fleeing violence, poverty and death in Central America.  These people are refugees many of whom are entitled to asylum under our laws and certainly our values.  Yet despite his statements about due process, President Obama continues to fast track deportation without giving these refugees appropriate legal representation or due process.

Just as I was embarrassed to be an American when President George W. Bush was torturing and rendering people, I am embarrassed that today in my name, President Obama is sending child refugees back to Central America to face violence and in many cases death.  I commend to you an article in The New York Times by Julia Preston (here).  It is a heartbreaking account that saddens me to think that our country and this President could be so heartless.

The White House has said over and over again that its heartless behavior is necessary to send a message to other children and parents in Central America that they should not make the treacherous journey to the United States to save their lives because they will be sent right back.

So the two messages that President Obama is sending are contradictory and despicable.  If you are a powerful United States President or other leader, feel free to break the law with impunity, but if you are a child refugee fleeing Central America to save your life, stay home and die because there is no room for you in the United States.

What has happened to the country I love?

Thanks for reading and please comment,
The Unabashed Liberal

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Three Threats to Our Democracy

Dear Friends,

Our democracy is facing three significant threats, which I believe are interconnected.  They are control by a small economic elite, voter disenfranchisement and declining education.  These three threats create a vicious circle of declining opportunity, centralized control among a few, increasing economic disparity and voter suppression.

A recent study by Martin Gilens of Princeton and Benjamin Page of Northwestern (here) entitled "Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens" raises the spectrum that America is more like an oligarchy than a democracy.  I have to admit that I did not read the entire report and perhaps did not fully understand all that I read.  Nevertheless, I did understand this paragraph from the abstract.

The central point that emerges from our research is that economic elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy, while mass-based interest groups and average citizens have little or no independent influence. Our results provide substantial support for theories of Economic Elite Domination and for theories of Biased Pluralism, but not for theories of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy or Majoritarian Pluralism. 
I also did read completely an article in The New Yorker by John Cassidy entitled "Is America an Oligarchy?" (here).  That article ends with the following paragraph:
Me, too. There can be no doubt that economic élites have a disproportionate influence in Washington, or that their views and interests distort policy in ways that don’t necessarily benefit the majority: the politicians all know this, and we know it, too. The only debate is about how far this process has gone, and whether we should refer to it as oligarchy or as something else.
Of course our democracy has faced this threat many times in the past.  Doris Kearns Goodwin's book entitled The Bully Pulpit contains a wonderful history of the immense economic and political control of a few people in the heyday of the trusts before Teddy Roosevelt began to break them up.  After a period of time where anti-trust laws were obeyed and enforced, we are once again in an era where political and economic power are concentrated in the hands of a very few.

Voter suppression is also on the rise in the United States.  We have of course faced voter suppression in the past and been able to overcome it.  But clearly it is on the rise again today.  Norm Ornstein wrote an article in The Atlantic entitled "The U.S. Needs a Constitutional Right to Vote" (here).

In his article, Mr. Ornstein points out that the Constitution does not explicitly guarantee the right to vote.  I will simply quote a couple of paragraphs from his article.
It is becoming increasingly obvious that the Supreme Court decision in Shelby County v. Holder, which eviscerated the Voting Rights Act, is leading to a new era of voter suppression that parallels the pre-1960s era—this time affecting not just African-Americans but also Hispanic-Americans, women, and students, among others.
 Voter suppression is nothing new in America, as the pre-civil-rights era underscores. But it is profoundly un-American. The Texas law, promoted aggressively by state Attorney General Greg Abbott, the GOP choice for governor in next year's election, establishes the kinds of obstacles and impediments to voting that are more akin to Vladimir Putin's Russia than to the United States.
The effort should be accelerated. We need a modernized voter-registration system, weekend elections, and a host of other practices to make voting easier. But we also need to focus on an even more audacious and broader effort—a constitutional amendment protecting the right to vote.
Many, if not most, Americans are unaware that the Constitution contains no explicit right to vote. To be sure, such a right is implicit in the Fifteenth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-Sixth amendments that deal with voting discrimination based on race, gender, and age. But the lack of an explicit right opens the door to the courts' ratifying the sweeping kinds of voter-restrictions and voter-suppression tactics that are becoming depressingly common. 
I could not have said it better.  I am proud to point out that my Representative in Congress, Keith Ellison, and another Representative have introduced a Constitutional amendment.  Of course, it will go nowhere with the Republicans in charge of the House.

The third threat is the decline of education in the United States.  Thomas Jefferson was very clear that we needed an educated electorate for our democracy to thrive.  Here are just a couple of his quotations on the subject.
If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.

Educate and inform the whole mass of the people... They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty.
If you do not believe that education is rapidly declining in the United States just Google "decline of education in the United States".  You will find no shortage of studies and articles documenting the decline.  Clearly, Jefferson was right that you need an educated populace.  If we are to provide anything that approaches equality of opportunity, we need to provide a great education to people.

The problem is that even if we can take back the power from the economic elite (or oligarchs if you want to be more direct) and even if we can assure the right to vote, without an involved and educated electorate our democracy will fail.  Just as we have overcome threats from the concentration of economic and political power in the hands of a few and voter suppression.  We can overcome the threat of the decline in education too.

We need to elect politicians that have the courage and the conviction to fight for all the people, and that will require getting people to vote.  So do whatever you can to get out the vote.  You will be helping to save our democracy.

Thanks for reading and please comment,
The Unabashed Liberal

Monday, August 4, 2014

Why the CIA needs a complete overhaul

Dear Friends,

The CIA has been caught lying over and over again about its spying, torture and other activities.  Most recently, it has been confirmed (and acknowledged by the CIA) that it hacked into Senate staff computers.  These actions by the CIA and the lies that attempt to cover them up are completely unacceptable and demonstrate a complete lack of respect for the American people, the Constitution and our rights as citizens.

The culture within the CIA that permits this kind of disrespect is condoned by one CIA director after another.  Each in his own way saying trust us, we follow the Constitution and the law.  Of course, they do not.  The most recent example of this culture was obvious when John Brennan, Director of the CIA said that it was absurd that the CIA would hack into the Senate staff computers, but later had to acknowledge that they did.

There is a great interview of John Brennan by Andrea Mitchell on March 11, 2014 on the website of the Council on Foreign Relations (here).  I have quoted the appropriate part of the interview below because the interview is quite long.

MITCHELL: Thank you all very much. And...
(APPLAUSE)
Thank you, Director. We're going to have a conversation here and then, obviously, bring the audience in. First of all, the topic of the morning, which you have addressed here. You said that you want to get the interrogation, the detention past practices behind you, but Senator Feinstein today went to the floor. She said she did this reluctantly, that she has been dealing with you privately, trying to resolve this since January, and only went public today because of events, because of the referral from the inspector general of the CIA to Justice, because a lawyer in CIA had referred a crimes report separately accusing the Senate of going in improperly into CIA computers.
Her claim in this scathing speech, frankly, was that the CIA had hacked into the Senate Intelligence Committee staff computers to thwart an investigation by the committee into those past practices. She also alleges that the Panetta-era report was very similar to the Senate's conclusions about those past practices, but that you, who were involved in that era in the program itself, and the CIA currently was trying to thwart the full review of the harshness of the detention and interrogation practices.
Can you respond to that?
BRENNAN: Yes. Well, first of all, we are not in any way, shape or form trying to thwart this report's progression, release. As I said in my remarks, we want this behind us. We know that the committee has invested a lot of time, money and effort into this report, and I know that they're determined to put it forward.
We have engaged with them extensively over the last year. We have had officers sit down with them and go over their report and point out where we believe there are factual errors or errors in judgment or assessments. So we are not trying at all to prevent its release.
As far as the allegations of, you know, CIA hacking into, you know, Senate computers, nothing could be further from the truth. I mean, we wouldn't do that. I mean, that's -- that's just beyond the -- you know, the scope of reason in terms of what we would do. [emphasis added]
MITCHELL: She says that there are potentially illegal and unconstitutional breaches by the CIA.
BRENNAN: Well, there are appropriate authorities right now both inside of CIA, as well as outside of CIA...
MITCHELL: The Justice Department.
BRENNAN: ... are looking at what CIA officers, as well as SSCI staff members did. And I defer to them to determine whether or not there was any violation of law or principle, and I referred the matter myself to the CIA inspector general to make sure that he was able to look honestly and objectively at what CIA did there.
And, you know, when the facts come out on this, I think a lot of people who are claiming that there has been this tremendous sort of spying and monitoring and hacking will be proved wrong.
MITCHELL: You said at your confirmation hearing you wanted to restore the trust between CIA and the overseers in the Senate. This is a pretty major gulf. If it is proved that the CIA did do this, would you feel that you had to step down?
BRENNAN: I -- I am confident that the authorities will review this appropriately, and I will deal with the -- the facts as uncovered in the appropriate manner. I would just encourage some members of the -- of the Senate to take their time to make sure that they don't overstate what they've claimed, and what they probably believe to be the truth.
These are some complicated matters. We have worked with the committee over the course of many years. This review that was done by the committee was done at a facility where CIA had a responsibility to make sure that they had the computer wherewithal in order to carry out their responsibilities, and so if there was any inappropriate actions that were taken related to that review, either by CIA or by the SSCI staff, I'll be the first one to say we need to get to the bottom of it.
And if I did something wrong, I will go to the president, and I will explain to him exactly what I did, and what the findings were. And he is the one who can ask me to stay or to go.
Of course, as we all know now that it is in fact "with the scope of reason" that the CIA would hack into the Senate staff computers.  Director Brennan has finally issued an apology acknowledging spying by the CIA on the Senate.  There is a great article in The Guardian (here) that also provides some context.

As long as the CIA is led by people whose first reaction is to defend the CIA and to attempt to intimidate its critics, the culture within the CIA that led to all these illegal activities and the lies that tried to cover them up will remain.  President Obama should demand the resignation of Director Brennan and replace him with someone who truly believes in the Constitution and the rule of law.  You can contact the President here.

Thanks for reading and please comment,
The Unabashed Liberal

More on the Middle East

Dear Friends,

I do not know how I missed his column entitled "Who's Right and Wrong in the Middle East?"when Nicholas Kristof wrote it a couple weeks ago in The New York Times (here).  He is exactly right, and I am tempted to cut and paste the whole column but will trust you to click through to it.

Thanks for reading and please comment,
The Unabashed Liberal

Gaza

Dear Friends,

I believe that Israel has the right to exist in peace and security, free from terrorist attacks.  I believe just as strongly that the Palestinians have the right to exist in peace and security, free from terrorist attacks.  I also believe that the only path to peace in the Middle East is the two state solution with Israel and Palestine existing side by side with security, freedom and opportunity for all people.  There will never be peace if the Palestinians are imprisoned in poverty and without hope in Gaza, and Hamas continues to fire rockets and attack Israel.

The biggest obstacle to achieving such a two state solution is the vicious circle of hatred, fear, violence, attacks, retaliation and retribution.  It seems that the extremists on both sides refuse to permit a break in this awful cycle.  I was struck by Roger Cohen's oped piece in the International New York Times this morning (here), "Why Americans See Israel the Way We Do".  Yes, I am writing from France today.  His piece ends with the following paragraph.
I find myself dreaming of some island in the middle of the Atlantic where the blinding excesses on either side of the water are overcome and a fundamental truth is absorbed: that neither side is going away, that both have made grievous mistakes, and that the fate of Jewish and Palestinian children — united in their innocence — depends on placing the future above the past. That island will no doubt remain as illusory as peace. Meanwhile, on balance, I am pleased to have become a naturalized American.
There will be no peace unless and until, the world and its politicians are able to have an honest discussion of the issues and as Mr. Cohen points out we focus on the future for the children both Jewish and Palestinian.

Thanks for reading and please comment,
The Unabashed Liberal