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  • Reply to: Iraq: Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?   17 years 5 months ago
    Though biased, I support the Progressive Democrats of America. You don’t get a email from the man behind the curtain about the issue du jour. They have a platform on the issues built upon the input of its chapters, and they stand behind it. They have stood firm and backed Lee’s H.R. 508 (The Safe and Orderly Withdrawal resolution). They are grassroots in that the movement is built from the bottom up, and they take stand on issues and are not shy about saying what that stand is. They work to add support to the Congressional Progressive Caucus members and to expand their numbers. PDA's plan, a long term one, is to reshape the Democratic Party to be a party that speaks with the progressive voice, one that chooses citizens over the corporations. I suggest of you do not have a chapter in your CD, then you start one and start organizing. We have to build the movmement for change from the bottom up, not the top down. And though Move-on can elicit a large response and gets many donations, I believe the PDA approach is the practical, roll-up-your-sleaves-and-get-to-work strategy that will bring about change. You money is better spent funding PDA. We have to build and sustain a movement, and we have to support those who stand tall in Congress and work to elect others who will stand tall. Though I identify with many of the ideas of the Nadarites and the Greens, starting a third party is pracitcally impossible at this time in America. Let’s take the Democratic Party and refashion it around principles of a sane and shared responsibility in addressing problems, both foreign and domestic. In truth, the American people are much more progressive than even they think when asked about how they stand on issues (such as single payer health care, international cooperation, fair work rules, etc). If we can reshape the Party and election rules (such as instituting Instand Run Off Voting, and publically financed elections--see this link for the issues: http://pdamerica.org/policy/priorities.php) the space will be made for other parties to join the game and we can get at a consensus politics where the input of all parties at least gets some hearing. We then will get to listen to the voices of the true minority rather than the minority that now rules–the corporate and monied elite, the oligarchs. See www.pdamerica.org Forgive the commercial but we need to begin buiding the beast that can change the way things are now done and the PDA plan is a solid one: working inside and outside the Democratic Party for change. Addressing how the powers that be try to co-opt progressives, I should say, that even in my home state, I have seen the state party operate in much the same way. They use pseudo-progressive groups (and I am not calling Move-on pseudo-progressive or am I saying that they are used by the national party–I don’t know enough about them to make qualified statements) to try to gather the progressives under their tent so that they can use and rein in their energy for their own purposes. These psuedo-progressive groups bandy about the word “progressive” as if any grass roots group is by definition progressive. None make an across the board stand on the issues, or say exactly who they are and what they stand for. They don’t have much respect for progressives, and they see them more as a hemorrhaging cut that needs to be stopped. They tend to see them as naive and treat them as such.
  • Reply to: Iraq: Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?   17 years 5 months ago
    MoveOn's polls are frequently "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Push_poll">push polls</a>" whose purpose is not to elicit opinion but to shape it. Push polling has been called a "thoroughly unethical political campaign technique" by the National Council on Public Polls. MoveOn is doing great harm to the progressive and antiwar movements by wasting resources in support of policies and politicians that are not in fact supported by those movements. I wrote about the organization a number of times in 2005: <a href="http://simplyappalling.blogspot.com/2005/03/what-in-hell-is-content-neutral.html">What in the hell is a content-neutral movement?</a> <a href="http://simplyappalling.blogspot.com/2005/06/moveon-conducts-push-poll-on-iraq-and.html">MoveOn conducts a push poll on Iraq and cons its supporters</a> <a href="http://simplyappalling.blogspot.com/2005/07/what-is-it-with-moveon.html">What is it with MoveOn?</a> <a href="http://simplyappalling.blogspot.com/2005/08/moveon-tiptoes-around-war.html">MoveOn tiptoes around the war</a> Please do not give money to this organization if you support ending the war at the earliest possible date--or even if you support ending the war in the next decade!
  • Reply to: Iraq: Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?   17 years 5 months ago
    In 2003 MoveOn issued a poll in the presidential race. Saying they wanted a true majority, they claimed that they would continue to run the poll until one candidate received at least +50% of the vote. In the first run, no one came very close, but I believe Dean was leading at around 30% or so. The second time, Dean slipped and Kucinich started to gain rapidly. The poll was not repeated after that. MoveOn, like too many Americans, has no real faith in democracy or in our ability to make positive change through political risk. It's a cynical organization, well suited to our cynical times.
  • Reply to: Iraq: Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?   17 years 5 months ago
    when they sent me a begging letter ("give till it hurts") signed by then Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle. Here's what I wrote back: "Um, excuse me, I hate to be rude--and I strongly support the work you are doing--but who the hell is Tom Daschle, of all people, to be soliciting help from MoveOn members? He has given Bush absolutely everything he has asked for, and more, on a silver platter. He's one of the most spineless and servile politicians I've ever encountered. With Democrats like these, who needs Republicans? I wouldn't go near the man with a ten-foot pole--he's one of people we need to get OUT of the Senate, so we can put some real leaders in their place. Count me IN for real change and progress--but OUT for supporting the likes of Daschle. His name only sullies your campaign." I nevertheless took part in two MoveOn delegations in 2003, lobbying Senator Lugar, first to oppose the invasion (fat chance), and then again to vote no on the $80 billion to fund it (again, fat chance). At this point, though, given their behavior on the war, and during election campaigns (2004, 2006), I have completely written them off. They are worse than useless, taking their marching orders from the Democratic leadership and blowing off their members. You can't even give them your input on various issues--it's clear they made their decision at the top regardless of how members voted, and the Action Forum, where members could post comments and communicate with each other, has been disabled. By all means go ahead and contact them (as suggested above) but don't expect them to listen. Great article, John and Sheldon. Norman Solomon has had some good critiques as well over the years. We need to call bullshit on stuff like this.
  • Reply to: Iraq: Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?   17 years 5 months ago
    I quit MoveOn after the last election, when they presented us a list of Democratic priorities which (surprise!) included no mention of ending the war. The simple explanation for MoveOn's position is contained between the lines of various documents: (1) Walt and Mearsheimer's "The Israel Lobby", (2) President Carter's "Palestine Peace: Not Apartheid", (3) authors Tony Judt, Ilan Pappe, Amira Hass, Uri Avnery/Gush Shalom, Tony Kushner, Independent Jewish Voices published in The Guardian Talkback, Michael Lerner's "Not a Light Unto the Nations", Amy Goodman, Eric Alterman, Ira Chernus, Michael Levine, Netanyahu, Avigdor Leiberman, Benny Morris, Tipsy Livni, Mat Yglesias, and on-and-on. The truth is out there!

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