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Today's Stories

October 20, 2003

John & Eileen Mellencamp
Peaceful World

Elaine Cassel
God's General Unmuzzled

 

October 18 / 19, 2003

Robert Pollin
Clintonomics: the Hollow Boom

Gary Leupp
Israel, Syria and Stage Four in the Terror War

Saul Landau
Day of the Gropenfuhrer

Bruce Anderson
The California Recall

John Gershman
Bush in Asia: What a Difference a Decade Makes

Nelson P. Valdes
Bush, Electoral Politics and Cuba's "Illicit Sex Trade"

Kurt Nimmo
Shock Therapy and the Israeli Scenario

Tom Gorman
Al Franken and Al-Shifa

Brian Cloughley
Public Propaganda and the Iraq War

Joanne Mariner
A New Way to Kill Tigers

Denise Low
The Cancer of Sprawl

Mickey Z.
The Reverend of Doom

John Chuckman
US Missiles for Israeli Nukes?

George Naggiar
A Veto of Public Diplomacy

Alison Weir
Death Threats in Berkeley

Benjamin Dangl
Bolivian Govt. Falling Apart

Ron Jacobs
The Politics of Bob Dylan

Fidel Castro
A Review of Garcia Marquez's Memoir

Adam Engel
I Hope My Corpse Gives You the Plague

Poets' Basement
Jones, Albert, Guthrie and Greeder

 

October 17, 2003

Stan Goff
Piss On My Leg: Perception Control and the Stage Management of War

Newton Garver
Bolivia in Turmoil

Standard Schaefer
Grocery Unions Under Attack

Ben Terrall
The Ordeal of the Lockheed 52

Ron Jacobs
First Syria, Then Iran

David Lindorff
Michael Moore Proclaims Mumia Guilty

 

October 16, 2003

Marjorie Cohn
Bush Gunning for Regime Change in Cuba

Gary Leupp
"Getting Better" in Iraq

Norman Solomon
The US Press and Israel: Brand Loyalty and the Absence of Remorse

Rush Limbaugh
The 10 Most Overrated Athletes of All Time

Lenni Brenner
I Didn't Meet Huey Newton. He Met Me

Website of the Day
Time Tested Books

 

October 15, 2003

Sunil Sharma / Josh Frank
The General and the Governor: Two Measures of American Desperation

Forrest Hylton
Dispatch from the Bolivian War: "Like Animals They Kill Us"

Brian Cloughley
Those Phony Letters: How Bush Uses GIs to Spread Propaganda About Iraq

Ahmad Faruqui
Lessons of the October War

Uri Avnery
Three Days as a Living Shield

Website of the Day
Rank and File: the New Unity Partnership Document

JoAnn Wypijewski
The New Unity Partnership:
A Manifest Destiny for Labor


October 14, 2003

Eric Ridenour
Qibya & Sharon: Anniversary of a Massacre

Elaine Cassel
The Disgrace That is Guantanamo

Robert Jensen
What the "Fighting Sioux" Tells Us About White People

David Lindorff
Talking Turkey About Iraq

Patrick Cockburn
US Troops Bulldoze Crops

VIPS
One Person Can Make a Difference

Toni Solo
The CAFTA Thumbscrews

Peter Linebaugh
"Remember Orr!"

Website of the Day
BRIDGES

 

October 11 / 13, 2003

Alexander Cockburn
Kay's Misleading Report; CIA/MI-6 Syrian Plot; Dershowitz Flaps Broken Wings

Saul Landau
Contradictions: Pumping Empire and Losing Job Muscles

Phillip Cryan
The War on Human Rights in Colombia

Kurt Nimmo
Cuba and the "Necessary Viciousness" of the Bushites

Nelson P. Valdes
Traveling to Cuba: Where There's a Will, There's a Way

Lisa Viscidi
The Guatemalan Elections: Fraud, Intimidation and Indifference

Maria Trigona and Fabian Pierucci
Allende Lives

Larry Tuttle
States of Corruption

William A. Cook
Failing America

Brian Cloughley
US Economic Space and New Zealand

Adrian Zupp
What Would Buddha Do? Why Won't the Dalai Lama Pick a Fight?

Merlin Chowkwanyun
The Strange and Tragic Case of Sherman Marlin Austin

Ben Tripp
Screw You Right Back: CIA FU!

Lee Ballinger
Grits Ain't Groceries

Mickey Z.
Not All Italians Love Columbus

Bruce Jackson
On Charles Burnett's "Warming By the Devil's Fire"

William Benzon
The Door is Open: Scorsese's Blues, 2

Adam Engel
The Eyes of Lora Shelley

Walt Brasch
Facing a McBlimp Attack

Poets' Basement
Mickey Z, Albert, Kearney


October 10, 2003

John Chuckman
Schwarzenegger and the Lottery Society

Toni Solo
Trashing Free Software

Chris Floyd
Body Blow: Bush Joins the Worldwide War on Women

 

October 9, 2003

Jennifer Loewenstein
Bombing Syria

Ramzi Kysia
Seeing the Iraqi People

Fran Shor
Groping the Body Politic

Mark Hand
President Schwarzenegger?

Alexander Cockburn
Welcome to Arnold, King for a Day

Website of the Day
The Awful Truth about Wesley Clark

 

October 8, 2003

David Lindorff
Schwarzenegger and the Failure of the Centrist Dems

Ramzy Baroud
Israel's WMDs and the West's Double Standard

John Ross
Mexico Tilts South

Mokhiber / Weissman
Repub Guru Compares Taxes to the Holocaust

James Bovard
The Reagan Roadmap for Antiterrorism Disaster

Michael Neumann
One State or Two?
A False Dilemma

 

October 7, 2003

Uri Avnery
Slow-Motion Ethnic Cleansing

Stan Goff
Lost in the Translation at Camp Delta

Ron Jacobs
Yom Kippurs, Past and Present

David Lindorff
Coronado in Iraq

Rep. John Conyers, Jr.
Outing a CIA Operative? Why A Special Prosecutor is Required

Cynthia McKinney
Who Are "We"?

Elaine Cassel
Shock and Awe in the Moussaoui Case

Walter Lippman
Thoughts on the Cali Recall

Gary Leupp
Israel's Attack on Syria: Who's on the Wrong Side of History, Now?

Website of the Day
Cable News Gets in Touch With It's Inner Bigot

 

October 6, 2003

Robert Fisk
US Gave Israel Green Light for Raid on Syria

Forrest Hylton
Upheaval in Bolivia: Crisis and Opportunity

Benjamin Dangl
Divisions Deepen in Third Week of Bolivia's Gas War

Bridget Gibson
Oh, Pioneers!: Bush's New Deal

Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
The Bush-Rove-Schwarzenegger Nazi Nexus

Nicole Gamble
Rios Montt's Campaign Threatens Genocide Trials

JoAnn Wypijewski
The New Unity Partnership:
A Manifest Destiny for Labor

Website of the Day
Guerrilla Funk

 

October 3 / 5, 2003

Tim Wise
The Other Race Card: Rush and the Politics of White Resentment

Peter Linebaugh
Rhymsters and Revolutionaries: Joe Hill and the IWW

Gary Leupp
Occupation as Rape-Marriage

Bruce Jackson
Addio Alle Armi

David Krieger
A Nuclear 9/11?

Ray McGovern
L'Affaire Wilsons: Wives are Now "Fair Game" in Bush's War on Whistleblowers

Col. Dan Smith
Why Saddam Didn't Come Clean

Mickey Z.
In Our Own Image: Teaching Iraq How to Deal with Protest

Roger Burbach
Bush Ideologues v. Big Oil in Iraq

John Chuckman
Wesley Clark is Not Cincinnatus

William S. Lind
Versailles on the Potomac

Glen T. Martin
The Corruptions of Patriotism

Anat Yisraeli
Bereavement as Israeli Ethos

Wayne Madsen
Can the Republicans Get Much Worse? Sure, They Can

M. Junaid Alam
The Racism Barrier

William Benzon
Scorsese's Blues

Adam Engel
The Great American Writing Contest

Poets' Basement
McNeill, Albert, Guthrie

 

 

October 2, 2003

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
What's So Great About Gandhi, Anyway?

Amy Goodman / Jeremy Scahill
The Ashcroft-Rove Connection

Doug Giebel
Kiss and Smear: Novak and the Valerie Plame Affair

Hamid Dabashi
The Moment of Myth: Edward Said (1935-2003)

Elaine Cassel
Chicago Condemns Patriot Act

Saul Landau
Who Got Us Into This Mess?

Website of the Day
Last Day to Save Beit Arabiya!


October 1, 2003

Joanne Mariner
Married with Children: the Supremes and Gay Families

Robert Fisk
Oil, War and Panic

Ron Jacobs
Xenophobia as State Policy

Elaine Cassel
The Lamo Case: Secret Subpoenas and the Patriot Act

Shyam Oberoi
Shooting a Tiger

Toni Solo
Plan Condor, the Sequel?

Sean Donahue
Wesley Clark and the "No Fly" List

Website of the Day
Downloader Legal Defense Fund

 

September 30, 2003

After Dark
Arnold's 1977 Photo Shoot

Dave Lindorff
The Poll of the Shirt: Bush Isn't Wearing Well

Tom Crumpacker
The Cuba Fixation: Shaking Down American Travelers

Robert Fisk
A Lesson in Obfuscation

Charles Sullivan
A Message to Conservatives

Suren Pillay
Edward Said: a South African Perspective

Naeem Mohaiemen
Said at Oberlin: Hysteria in the Face of Truth

Amy Goodman / Jeremy Scahill
Does a Felon Rove the White House?

Website of the Day
The Edward Said Page


September 29, 2003

Robert Fisk
The Myths of Western Intelligence Agencies

Iain A. Boal
Turn It Up: Pardon Mzwakhe Mbuli!

Lee Sustar
Paul Krugman: the Last Liberal?

Wayne Madsen
General Envy? Think Shinseki, Not Clark

Benjamin Dangl
Bolivia's Gas War

Uri Avnery
The Magnificent 27

Pledge Drive of the Day
Antiwar.com

 

September 26 / 28, 2003

Alexander Cockburn
Alan Dershowitz, Plagiarist

David Price
Teaching Suspicions

Saul Landau
Before the Era of Insecurity

Ron Jacobs
The Chicago Conspiracy Trial and the Patriot Act

Brian Cloughley
The Strangeloves Win Again

Norman Solomon
Wesley and Me: a Real-Life Docudrama

Robert Fisk
Bomb Shatters Media Illusions

M. Shahid Alam
A Muslim Sage Visits the USA

John Chuckman
American Psycho: Bush at the UN

Mark Schneider
International Direct Action
The Spanish Revolution to the Palestiniana Intifada

William S. Lind
How $87 Billion Could Buy Some Real Security

Douglas Valentine
Gold Warriors: the Plundering of Asia

Chris Floyd
Vanishing Act

Elaine Cassel
Play Cat and Moussaoui

Richard Manning
A Conservatism that Once Conserved

George Naggiar
The Beautiful Mind of Edward Said

Omar Barghouti
Edward Said: a Corporeal Dream Not Yet Realized

Lenni Brenner
Palestine's Loss is America's Loss

Mickey Z.
Edward Said: a Well-Reasoned Voice

Tanweer Akram
The Legacy of Edward Said

Adam Engel
War in the Smoking Room

Poets' Basement
Katz, Ford, Albert & Guthrie

Website of the Weekend
Who the Hell is Stew Albert?

 

 

September 25, 2003

Edward Said
Dignity, Solidarity and the Penal Colony

Robert Fisk
Fanning the Flames of Hatred

Sarah Ferguson
Wolfowitz at the New School

David Krieger
The Second Nuclear Age

Bill Glahn
RIAA Doublespeak

Al Krebs
ADM and the New York Times: Covering Up Corporate Crime

Michael S. Ladah
The Obvious Solution: Give Iraq Back to the Arabs

Fran Shor
Arnold and Wesley

Mustafa Barghouthi
Edward Said: a Monument to Justice and Human Rights

Alexander Cockburn
Edward Said: a Mighty and Passionate Heart

Website of the Day
Edward Said: a Lecture on the Tragedy of Palestine


The Great Alejandro Escavedo Needs Your Help!


September 24, 2003

Stan Goff
Generational Casualties: the Toxic Legacy of the Iraq War

William Blum
Grand Illusions About Wesley Clark

David Vest
Politics for Bookies

Jon Brown
Stealing Home: The Real Looting is About to Begin

Robert Fisk
Occupation and Censorship

Latino Military Families
Bring Our Children Home Now!

Neve Gordon
Sharon's Preemptive Zeal

Website of the Day
Bands Against Bush

September 23, 2003

Bernardo Issel
Dancing with the Diva: Arianna and Streisand

Gary Leupp
To Kill a Cat: the Unfortunate Incident at the Baghdad Zoo

Gregory Wilpert
An Interview with Hugo Chavez on the CIA in Venezuela

Steven Higgs
Going to Jail for the Cause--Part 2: Charity Ryerson, Young and Radical

Stan Cox
The Cheney Tapes: Can You Handle the Truth?

Robert Fisk
Another Bloody Day in the Death of Iraq

William S. Lind
Learning from Uncle Abe: Sacking the Incompetent

Elaine Cassel
First They Come for the Lawyers, Then the Ministers

Yigal Bronner
The Truth About the Wall

Website of the Day
The Baghdad Death Count

September 20 / 22, 2003

Uri Avnery
The Silliest Show in Town

Alexander Cockburn
Lighten Up, America!

Peter Linebaugh
On the Bicentennial of the Execution of Robert Emmet

Anne Brodsky
Return to Afghanistan

Saul Landau
Guillermo and Me

Phan Nguyen
Mother Jones Smears Rachel Corrie

Gila Svirsky
Sharon, With Eyes Wide Open

Gary Leupp
On Apache Terrorism

Kurt Nimmo
Colin Powell: Exploiting the Dead of Halabja

Brian Cloughley
Colin Powell's Shame

Carol Norris
The Moral Development of George W. Bush

Bill Glahn
The Real Story Behind RIAA Propaganda

Adam Engel
An Interview with Danny Scechter, the News Dissector

Dave Lindorff
Good Morning, Vietnam!

Mark Scaramella
Contracts and Politics in Iraq

John Ross
WTO Collapses in Cancun: Autopsy of a Fiasco Foretold

Justin Podur
Uribe's Desperate Squeals

Toni Solo
The Colombia Three: an Interview with Caitriona Ruane

Steven Sherman
Workers and Globalization

David Vest
Masked and Anonymous: Dylan's Elegy for a Lost America

Ron Jacobs
Politics of the Hip-Hop Pimps

Poets Basement
Krieger, Guthrie and Albert

Website of the Weekend
Ted Honderich:
Terrorism for Humanity?

Hot Stories

Alexander Cockburn
Behold, the Head of a Neo-Con!

Subcomandante Marcos
The Death Train of the WTO

Norman Finkelstein
Hitchens as Model Apostate

Steve Niva
Israel's Assassination Policy: the Trigger for Suicide Bombings?

Dardagan, Slobodo and Williams
CounterPunch Exclusive:
20,000 Wounded Iraqi Civilians

Steve J.B.
Prison Bitch

Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber
True Lies: the Use of Propaganda in the Iraq War

Wendell Berry
Small Destructions Add Up

CounterPunch Wire
WMD: Who Said What When

Cindy Corrie
A Mother's Day Talk: the Daughter I Can't Hear From

Gore Vidal
The Erosion of the American Dream

Francis Boyle
Impeach Bush: A Draft Resolution

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October 20, 2003

The Dirty War of the Tough-Minded Liberals

Democrats Seek to Disappear Chomsky & Nader

By MARK HAND

About two weeks ago, I reviewed Diana Johnstone's Fools' Crusade, an excellent book that takes a critical look at U.S. and European intervention in Yugoslavia in the 1990s. Johnstone explains how a large number of people on the political left fell so deeply for the propaganda campaign to Hitlerize the regime of Slobodan Milosevic that they were willing to support NATO's brutal weeks-long aerial bombardment of Serbia.

Soon after writing the review, I came across an op-ed piece in the Washington Post by E.J. Dionne that proved Johnstone's thesis was not exclusively applicable to the period of Yugoslavia's breakup. Certain left-of-center opinion-makers are as feverish for U.S. wars of conquest in the 21st century as they were for the military campaigns against Serbia in the 1990s. In the post-9/11 world, liberals have forgotten that, as Johnstone explains, "humanitarian intervention was the standard pretext for all the Western imperialist conquests of the past."

In his column, Dionne confers high praise on a new book edited by George Packer entitled "The Fight Is For Democracy," which contains writings by what Dionne calls a "gathering of tough-minded liberals." What makes these liberals so tough-minded? In Dionne's mind, a tough-minded liberal (TML) is someone who's not afraid to give the U.S. military a green light to wage war under certain circumstances. In other words, the TMLers support invading and pillaging countries as long as the invading and pillaging is performed in the name of American democracy.

Dionne locates rhetorical gems in Packer's book that he believes prove certain liberals "are ready to criticize their own side." Here, Dionne distorts the debate over U.S. foreign policy occurring on the left. Since when did Noam Chomsky and others of his libertarian socialist bent switch to the Democratic Party's side? I would suggest that Dionne's American empire-loving liberals are as far apart ideologically from the legions of Chomskyites as members of Social Democrat Friedrich Ebert's regime, who used the German Freikorps to kill Rosa Luxembourg in 1919, were from the leftist revolutionaries of post-World War I Germany.

In his paean to establishment liberalism, Dionne drafts essayist Michael Tomasky into the TML brigade on the merits of his contribution to the Packer book. Tomasky's essay, "Between Cheney and Chomsky: Making a Domestic Case for a New Liberal Foreign Policy," includes a passage that could easily serve as the rallying cry for Dionne's TML brigade. "There was a liberal case for invading Iraq which has nothing to do with trumped-up arguments about Saddam's nuclear capability and everything to do with the suffering of the Iraqi people - that is, it has to do with free elections, freedom of assembly and speech, equality under the law, everything we say we hold dear and need to be willing to support, even militarily if it becomes necessary," Tomasky writes.

Tomasky's belief in invading a country for its own good represents American liberalism in its most classic sense. Liberals are secular missionaries whose aim is to travel the country and the world, sermonizing about the sanctity of American culture and government. Tomasky's essay shows how establishment liberals aren't far removed at all from the much-maligned neocons running the Bush administration - both groups are committed to a radically interventionist U.S. foreign policy.

Tomasky is the new executive editor of American Prospect, the house organ for such tough-minded liberals of the Democratic Party as Robert Kuttner, Paul Starr, Robert Reich and Bill Moyers. Prior to taking over as executive editor of TAP in September, Tomasky wrote an attention-grabbing treatise in July on the proper methods for stamping out the voices of political parties that might siphon votes away from the chosen candidates of the Democratic Party.

Tomasky attacks the Green Party for daring to consider running a candidate in the 2004 race, what Democrats are promoting as the most important presidential election in U.S. history - because the marketing message, "Vote for the lesser of two evils," didn't work in 2000. The Democrats want to scare those leftists who are disgruntled the two-party system into voting for whomever is the nominee of the Democratic Party. Unlike many people attracted to the democratic political message of the Green Party, Tomasky takes pride in the fact that he and his fellow TMLers have had the decency not to abandon the Democratic Party.

In the TAP essay, Tomasky warns his readers about how the Green Party might once again make Ralph Nader its nominee, or how the Greens could turn to Cynthia McKinney. If it fails to attract a candidate with name recognition, the Greens are viewed as foolish enough to run someone else, an act that Tomasky worries still would take away enough votes from the Democrats to give G.W. Bush a sure victory at the polls next November. "[S]hort of a megalomaniac whose tenuous purchase on present-day reality threatens to cancel out every good thing he's done in his life, or a discredited anti-Semite, they'll settle for someone less distinguished," Tomasky writes of Nader, McKinney and the Greens.

Unlike the 2000 election, Tomasky says Democrats this time around should play hardball with Ralph Nader who still hasn't ruled out accepting a Green Party invitation to run for president. Attack him right now, "with lupine ferocity," Tomasky says. "Say he's a madman for thinking of running again. Blast him especially hard on foreign policy, saying that if it were up to the Greens, America would give no aid to Israel and it would cease to exist, and if it were up to the Greens, America would not have even defended itself against a barbarous attack by going into Afghanistan."

Tomasky does his Democratic Party colleagues a disservice with this attack list because it once again shows how closely the Democrats are aligned with the Republicans on many issues, especially those related to foreign policy. Democrats are as fond of giving aid to the apartheid regime in power in Israel as Republicans. Bombing and occupying Afghanistan was an overwhelmingly bipartisan endeavor as was giving John Ashcroft a blank check to wage war on civil liberties in the United States through the passage of the USA Patriot Act.

The fact that the Democrats voted in lockstep with the Republicans to take away some of our freedoms here at home immediately after 9/11 seems to have escaped Tomasky. He writes that had a Democrat been selected for the Oval Office in 2000, the United States would not have had the Patriot Act. Really? Does Tomasky have information about the 9/11 attacks that he isn't sharing? The implication is the twin towers of the World Trade Center would not have collapsed under the leadership of a President Gore.

But the only way we could have avoided the Patriot Act with Al Gore as president was to have prevented the 9/11 attacks. Because had those attacks occurred under the watch of a Gore/Lieberman administration, Gore and his spineless Democratic colleagues in Congress certainly would have sprinted to draft a liberty-eroding bill to "fight terrorism" at home to prove to the establishment media that they could be as tough-minded as Republicans.

Democrats had plenty of practice with riding roughshod over the Bill of Rights during Clinton's two terms. Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair wrote in a November 2001 article entitled "The Press and the USA Patriot Act Where Were They When It Counted?" that the contents of the terrorism bill that the Bush administration sent to Congress on Sept. 19, 2001 surely were very familiar to Democrats because "in large part they had been offered by the Clinton administration as portions of the Counter-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996."

In the 1960s, Democrats also were firmly supportive of the U.S. military's slaughter in Southeast Asia as well as the FBI's war against dissent here at home. But in his essay contribution to "The Fight Is For Democracy," Tomasky argues that the war in Vietnam was not the work of liberals in Washington and that President Johnson was forced into escalating U.S. involvement because he was worried about the political cost of withdrawal. Tomasky cites a statement Johnson made to his friend, Georgia Democratic Senator Richard B. Russell, during Johnson's presidential campaign against Barry Goldwater. "They would impeach a president that would run out, wouldn't they?" Johnson asked Russell.

Tomasky reveals that he believes the U.S. war in Vietnam was wrong. If you combine this claim with his allegiance to the Democratic Party, then it's not surprising that Tomasky blames the escalation of U.S. military involvement in Vietnam under both Kennedy and Johnson on "conservatives" in Congress. The conservative arguments in 1964-65 were "dead wrong," Tomasky writes. "They forced us into a war we shouldn't have fought."

In 1968, at the height of U.S. intervention in Vietnam, Tomasky argues that public opinion shifted toward a "liberal foreign policy," a trend that lasted through 1978. Since then, the general public has returned to a mood of allowing Washington as much leeway as it needs to place its stamp - militarily, if necessary - on the rest of the world. The Chomskyites and others on the left have failed to recognize this shift in U.S. public opinion, Tomasky argues.

In this new world, Tomasky says that liberals must have something "to be for" with regard to foreign policy in order to counter the competitive advantage held by the Republicans in taking credit for expanding the global U.S. empire. Tomasky explains: "While doing the above to contend against Cheneyism, liberals must make a clear break with Chomskyism as well."

Tomasky urges liberals to "separate themselves explicitly and conclusively from the Left, and from those vestiges of the liberal foreign-policy argument that suggest equivocation about America's capacity as a moral force."

Clearly, Tomasky's vision of something "to be for" doesn't include a foreign policy that softens the sting felt by many countries who come into contact with the endless tentacles of U.S. government and corporate interests. On the contrary, Tomasky's current vision for U.S. foreign policy is based on maintaining U.S. primacy around the world.

This liberal interpretation is grounded in the simplistic narratives included in U.S. history textbooks. America's policy of isolationism of the 1920s and 30s turned a blind eye to the fascism that was taking hold in Europe and Asia, or so the story goes. After defeating the original Axis of Evil, America then found itself confronted by the menace of communist totalitarianism, which provoked successive U.S. presidential administrations into committing many mistakes, the Vietnam War being the biggest. The disappearance of the Iron Curtain in 1990, however, gave the United States a new lease on life to make up for its sins of the past by spreading its style of democracy around the world with impunity.

Since nuclear war with the Soviet Union is no longer a possibility, the liberal missionaries now realize they must use this window of opportunity to forge ahead with purpose and fortitude to transform the undemocratic world into the image of America. As ambassadors for what is good about America, the liberal missionaries are taken aback when pundits on "their own side" criticize their efforts to galvanize world opinion behind U.S.-style democracy, especially now that the countervailing force that existed during the Cold War has crumbled.

The anger against the likes of Noam Chomsky and Gore Vidal has been building among the liberal missionaries since the fall of the Berlin Wall. Out of this anger emerged the tough-minded liberals who now feel they must remove their shackles in order to confront their enemies on the left. Friction has always existed among the various shades on the left side of the U.S. political spectrum, especially since the Russian Revolution of 1917. These simmering hostilities have occasionally boiled over into virtual war, with anger against Johnson's war in Vietnam and the resulting 1968 Democratic presidential nomination fiasco serving as clear examples.

Another showdown is brewing for 2004. In his American Prospect essay, Tomasky lobs a grenade toward his enemies on the left. "Nader is obviously out to kill the Democrats," he writes. "The collateral damage, to regular citizens whose lives are directly affected by which party is in power, is not his concern. He has long since quit caring about that. It's time a Democrat killed back."

It's apparent that anti-imperialist forces on both the left and the right in America have nothing in common with those tough-minded liberals and neocons who dominate foreign policy in Washington. Although not a pure anti-imperialist, Dennis Kucinich represents the closest thing the Democrats have to someone who will roll back the dangerous empire-building policies of the last 25 years. Kucinich isn't viewed as evil incarnate by Tomasky because the Ohio congressman can be easily neutralized through his decision to work inside the Democratic Party.

Political aspirants who dare to work outside the Democratic Party and who continue to challenge the radical foreign policy direction of the tough-minded liberals are now public enemy number one. When George Packer refers to a "fight for democracy" in his new book, he's not referring to battles against Osama bin Laden or Saddam Hussein. Instead, Packer, Tomasky and their fellow TMLers have declared war on Americans of all political stripes who oppose U.S. efforts to flex its political, economic and military muscle around the world.

Mark Hand is editor of Arlington, Va.-based Press Action. He can be reached at mark@pressaction.com.

 

Weekend Edition Features for Oct. 18 / 19, 2003

Robert Pollin
Clintonomics: the Hollow Boom

Gary Leupp
Israel, Syria and Stage Four in the Terror War

Saul Landau
Day of the Gropenfuhrer

Bruce Anderson
The California Recall

John Gershman
Bush in Asia: What a Difference a Decade Makes

Nelson P. Valdes
Bush, Electoral Politics and Cuba's "Illicit Sex Trade"

Kurt Nimmo
Shock Therapy and the Israeli Scenario

Tom Gorman
Al Franken and Al-Shifa

Brian Cloughley
Public Propaganda and the Iraq War

Joanne Mariner
A New Way to Kill Tigers

Denise Low
The Cancer of Sprawl

Mickey Z.
The Reverend of Doom

John Chuckman
US Missiles for Israeli Nukes?

George Naggiar
A Veto of Public Diplomacy

Alison Weir
Death Threats in Berkeley

Benjamin Dangl
Bolivian Govt. Falling Apart

Ron Jacobs
The Politics of Bob Dylan

Fidel Castro
A Review of Garcia Marquez's Memoir

Adam Engel
I Hope My Corpse Gives You the Plague

Poets' Basement
Jones, Albert, Guthrie and Greeder

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