Tags for This Article:

Iraq (5273)  Democracy (1927)  Democratic (1913)  Bush Reasons To Dump Impeach (1907)  Bush Failed Policy International (1659)  Bush Crimes (1447)  Bush Failure-in-Chief (1331)  Florida (964)  Other (962)  Bush Liar-in-Chief (907)  Torture (763)  Bush Reasons To Prosecute (743)  Sonoma County (712)  American Foreign Policy (695)  European Union (694)  New York (666)  Bush Enemy Of Civil Liberties (642)  Media-News (561)  San Francisco Bay Area (510)  Bush Denier-in-Chief (478)  New York City (437)  Sonoma (405)  Washington (396)  Bush Admin Isolation (377)  Bush Administration Incompetence (344)  New Hampshire (339)  Bush AWOL-in-Chief (326)  Chicago (322)  Americans-Things American (309)  Media New York Times (293)  Media Newspapers (289)  Connecticut (268)  New Jersey (262)  Americans (257)  New Mexico (257)  Awareness (255)  China (243)  Washington D-C- (237)  San Diego Metro Area (221)  Media Washington Post (218)  Japan (207)  New Orleans (188)  Writing (184)  San Francisco (164)  San Diego (158)  War (158)  Santa Cruz (150)  Santa Clara (143)  News Categories (142)  San Fernando Valley (132)  Media Washington Times (129)  San Mateo (122)  Australia New South Wales (121)  Santa Barbara (112)  Left Wing (105)  San Bernardino (99)  New Haven (98)  Santa Rosa (92)  Weekly World News (89)  Canada Newfoundland And Labrador (85)  New York (85)  New London (70)  Americans Asian (55)  Republic (22) 

Populum Tag Cloud
       Control Panel
Fine tune your search to access content
Articles
Diaries Products
Events All
All time
Last 6 mos
Last month
Last week
Last 24 hrs
From:
Month  Day   Year

To:
Month  Day   Year
Alphabet
Popularity
Count ON
Count OFF
This Level
Sub-levels

 

 

 

Tag(s): ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; (more...) ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;  (less...)
Add to My Group
September 26, 2007 at 17:39:55

LETTER TO THE FULLY COMATOSE AMERICAN LEFT

by Allen L Roland     Page 1 of 1 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 

Tell A Friend

View Ratings | Rate It  

How is it that so few "public intellectuals" have been found, within the confines of this formidable, impetuous American democracy, who can bring up the idea of impeaching George W Bush for lying?.... I might be mistaken, but it seems to me that a large part of the country is waiting for this ~ through the looking glass of the American "left" lies a desert of sorts, a deafening silence, a cosmic ideological void that, for a reader of Whitman or Thoreau, is thoroughly enigmatic.: Bernard-Henry Levy / French philosopher 
As far as I'm concerned the coup of our Republic has already occurred and both Parties are complicit in this coup where our constitutional democracy has been replaced by a plutocracy with martial law just another 9/11 event away. Daniel Ellsberg feels the same way ~ http://www.consortiumnews.com/2007/092607a.html
The only patriot who has stood alone refusing to be part of Bush's unconstitutional war and occupation of Iraq as well as honoring his oath to protect the constitution is Lt Ehren Watada ~ who still faces trial for refusing to obey orders to deploy to Iraq which he correctly perceives to be an unconstitutional and illegal war.
Sometimes it takes a knowlegeable visitor, who once experienced America's former greatness, to travel through our Republic and be shocked by the ineptitude, apathy and passivity of the progressive left. This letter was written in 2006 so it is now no longer a semi-comatose but a  fully comatose American left. 
And his key finding,which I also deeply sense, is that a clear majority of the American public want another choice versus the policies of George Bush and Dick Cheney ~ but there are few political leaders who have the courage to offer that choice. 
Bernard-Henry Lévy, the French philosopher, bemoans "the semi-comatose state in which I found the American left" in the course of his journey through America ~ and files this letter of deep concern  ~ which is even more valid today than almost two years ago.
Allen L Roland
http://blogs.salon.com/0002255/2007/09/26.html
A LETTER TO THE AMERICAN LEFT
By Bernard-Henry Lévy
Translated from the original French by Charlotte Mandell
The Nation
February 27, 2006 (posted Feb. 8)
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060227/levy
Nothing made a more lasting impression during my journey through America than the semi-comatose state in which I found the American left.
I know, of course, that the term "left" does not have the same meaning and ramifications here that it does in France.
And I cannot count how many times I was told there has never been an authentic "left" in the United States, in the European sense.
But at the end of the day, my progressive friends, you may coin ideas in whichever way you like.  The fact is:  You do have a right.  This right, in large part thanks to its neoconservative battalion, has brought about an ideological transformation that is both substantial and striking.
And the fact is that nothing remotely like it has taken shape on the other side -- to the contrary, through the looking glass of the American "left" lies a desert of sorts, a deafening silence, a cosmic ideological void that, for a reader of Whitman or Thoreau, is thoroughly enigmatic
The 60-year-old "young" Democrats who have desperately clung to the old formulas of the Kennedy era; the folks of MoveOn.org who have been so great at enlisting people in the electoral lists, at protesting against the war in Iraq and, finally, at helping to revitalize politics but whom I heard in Berkeley, like Puritans of a new sort, treating the lapses of a libertine President as quasi-equivalent to the neo-McCarthyism of his fiercest political rivals; the anti-Republican strategists confessing they had never set foot in one of those neo-evangelical mega-churches that are the ultimate (and most Machiavellian) laboratories of the "enemy," staring in disbelief when I say I've spent quite some time exploring them; ex-candidate Kerry, whom I met in Washington a few weeks after his defeat, haggard, ghostly, faintly whispering in my ear: "If you hear anything about those 50,000 votes in Ohio, let me know"; the supporters of Senator Hillary Clinton who, when I questioned them on how exactly they planned to wage the battle of ideas, casually replied they had to win the battle of money first, and who, when I persisted in asking what the money was meant for, what projects it would fuel, responded like fundraising automatons gone mad: "to raise more money"; and then, perhaps more than anything else, when it comes to the lifeblood of the left, the writers and artists, the men and women who fashion public opinion, the intellectuals -- I found a curious lifelessness, a peculiar streak of timidity or irritability, when confronted with so many seething issues that in principle ought to keep them as firmly mobilized as the Iraq War or the so-called "American Empire" (the denunciation of which is, sadly, all that remains when they have nothing left to say).
For an outside observer it is passing strange, for instance, that a number of progressives needed, by their own admission, to wait for Hurricane Katrina before they got indignant about, or even learned about, the sheer scale of the outrageous poverty blighting American cities.
For a European intellectual used to the battlefield of ideas, it is simply incomprehensible that more voices weren't raised long ago, in the name of no less than the force of "the Enlightenment," to denounce the ridiculous fraud of the anti-Darwinian supporters of "intelligent design."
And what about the death penalty?  How can it be that there isn't yet, within the political parties, especially the Democratic Party -- which everyone knows will never budge on the question without decisive internal pressure -- a trend of opinion calling for the abolition of this civilized barbarity?
And Guantánamo?  And Abu Ghraib?  And the special prisons in Central Europe, those areas where the rule of law no longer applies?  I know, of course, that the press has denounced them.  I know you have journalists who, in a matter of days, accomplished what our French press still hasn't finished forty years after our Algerian War. 
But since when does the press excuse citizens from their political duties?  Why haven't we heard from more intellectuals like Susan Sontag -- or even Gore Vidal and Tony Kushner (with whom I disagree on most other grounds) on this vexed and vital issue?  And what should we make of that handful of individuals who, after September 11, launched the debate about the circumstances in which torture might suddenly be justified?
And I'm not even talking about Bush.  I won't even mention Bush's gross lies about the Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, except for the sake of assembling the conclusive evidence.  I know, of course, that you denounce him -- but mechanically, I am almost tempted to say ritualistically. 
And yet the United States nearly impeached Nixon because he had spied on his enemies and lied.  They impeached Clinton for a venial lie about inappropriate conduct.  How is it, then, that it took so long to draw a parallel between those lies and a lie about which the least you can say is that its consequences were anything but venial? 
How is it that so few "public intellectuals" have been found, within the confines of this formidable, impetuous American democracy, who can bring up the idea of impeaching George Bush for lying?
Some will retort that the "public intellectual" is a European specialty, that we shouldn't blame Americans for their infidelity to a tradition that is not their own.  What do such killjoys make of the Norman Mailer of the 1960s?  Of the Arthur Miller of *The Crucible*?  Or of that golden age of civil rights awareness, when great writers enunciated what was right and good and true?
Others will object that the massive, resounding mobilization of civil society is not an American custom.  All you need to do to convince yourself of the untruth of this is remember the 1960s and the movement for civil rights, then for the rights of minorities in general, which were the honor of the country and did not stem, let it be emphasized, from any of the major political parties.
Still others will wax ironic about the disease of writing up petitions, a French specialty, warded off by American pragmatism.  Here the objection is more serious; and I know the fatuity that can exist in the mania for nonstop political engagement in the name of myriad causes -- but aren't you afflicted, my American friends, with the radically opposite sickness? 
Hasn't the ethics of sobriety won once too often, with you, over the ethics of conviction?  And how could one not yearn for a petition that would address our common nausea when faced with the spectacle of a diabetic, blind, nearly deaf old man, pushed in his wheelchair to the San Quentin execution chamber in California?
I might be mistaken, but it seems to me that a large part of the country is waiting for this.  Everywhere, in the innermost reaches of America, you can meet men and women who hope for great voices capable of echoing their impatience in a momentous way.  If I were an American writer, I would try to ponder the lessons of the totalitarian century and those of democracy, Tocqueville-style, all at once, in the same breath, and with the same rigor.
Allen L Roland
http://blogs.salon.com/0002255/2007/09/26.html
 

Freelance columnist Allen L  Roland is available for comments , interviews  and speaking engagements  ( allen@allenroland.com

 

Take action -- click here to contact your local newspaper or congress people:
IMPEACH BUSH AND CHENEY NOW BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE

Click here to see the most recent messages sent to congressional reps and local newspapers

http://www.allenroland.com

Allen L Roland is a practicing psychotherapist, author and lecturer who also shares a daily political and social commentary on his weblog and website allenroland.com He also guest hosts a monthly national radio show TRUTHTALK on Conscious talk radio www.conscioustalk.net

 

Bookmark this page: (what's this?)

NETSCAPE      DIGG THIS      Add This Page to Mr Wong!           NEWSVINE      DEl.ICIO.US      Looksmart Furl      My Web      Tag!RawSugar      Blink List     (More...)
Comments: Expand   Shrink   Hide  
5 comments

I'm a US Army Soldier.
CJI'm a US Army Soldier.

Criminal

Ehren Watada is a criminal and needs to be prosecuted under the subversion laws and the UCMJ.  The military is just to weak to stand up for what is right.

by CJ (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 16 comments) on Thursday, September 27, 2007 at 1:19:26 PM
 


My goal at this point in my life is to wake up the sleeping American public. Am a lowly public servant who'll likely be working til I'm 65 since universal healthcare doesn't seem to be on its way to our nation any time soon. My spare time is spent speaking out for Peace and an end to war as the solution to any problem our country sees as affecting it.
paz loveMy goal at this point in my life is to wake up the sleeping American public. Am a lowly public servant who'll likely be working til I'm 65 since universal healthcare doesn't seem to be on its way to our nation any time soon. My spare time is spent speaking out for Peace and an end to war as the solution to any problem our country sees as affecting it.

Chickenhawk

I think your pen name says it all. You are likely one of those who believes that others should join the military and be sent off to fight so you can have all the oil and SUVs you want. Lt Watada is an extremely thoughtful, principled man. He did not swear an oath to obey illegal orders, he swore he would protect and defend the CONSTITUTION...against all enemies foreign AND DOMESTIC. That would include the so-called C-in-Chief, or Chief Chickenhawk. I thank "god" every day for the courage of Lt Watada.

by paz love (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 71 comments) on Sunday, September 30, 2007 at 11:40:28 PM
 


DOB -- September 20, 1940. Became active in civil rights and peace movements in 1962. Active in socialist and antiwar movements -- 1963-69. Active in Gay Liberation from 1969 to present.
rhalfhillDOB -- September 20, 1940. Became active in civil rights and peace movements in 1962. Active in socialist and antiwar movements -- 1963-69. Active in Gay Liberation from 1969 to present.

DUTY TO DISOBEY UNJUST LAWS

   He should no more be prosecuted than a citizen of GermanY in the 1940's who refused to participate in the invasion of France should have been prosecuted.  When the laws are unjust, we have a duty to disobey them.  For example, slavery was legal in the United States before the Emancipation Proclamation and it was illegal for the slave to escape and for anyone to help him or her to escape.  But there was still a duty to disobey that unjust law.

Robert Halfhill   rhalfhill@juno.com

by rhalfhill (3 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 307 comments) on Thursday, September 27, 2007 at 8:26:45 PM
 


Allen L Roland is a practicing psychotherapist, author and lecturer who also shares a daily political and social commentary on his weblog and website allenroland.com He also guest hosts a monthly national radio show TRUTHTALK on Conscious talk radio www.conscioustalk.net
Allen L RolandAllen L Roland is a practicing psychotherapist, author and lecturer who also shares a daily political and social commentary on his weblog and website allenroland.com He also guest hosts a monthly national radio show TRUTHTALK on Conscious talk radio www.conscioustalk.net

COMMENT

 He should no more be prosecuted than a citizen of Germany in the 1940's who refused to participate in the invasion of France should have been prosecuted.

Absolutely true, and he will eventually be seen as a true patriot and hero for his stand against Bush's unjust war and occupation of Iraq.

Allen L Roland

 

by Allen L Roland (907 articles, 7 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 355 comments) on Thursday, September 27, 2007 at 8:45:09 PM
 

 

5 comments

 

Tell A Friend

 


Copyright © OpEdNews, 2002-2008

Blog Ads

 

 

 

 

Most Popular Articles
in the Last 2 Days
(by Recommend Emails)

Keith Olbermann Broke Up With Me! by Shannyn Moore

Children dying in Haiti, victims of food crisis exacerbated by four devastating tropical storms Posted by Stephen Fox

Study Confirms Genetically Modified Crops Threaten Human Fertility and Health Safety Posted by sadelaine

Surviving an Economic Crash: Resources and Tips by Kathryn Smith

Home Depot Founder: Retailers Who Don't Support GOP "Should Be Shot" Posted by Joan Brunwasser

SO SAY THE BANKERS: Learn to Love the 'AMERO' by Patrick Henningsen

A Turkey By Any Other Name--Is Still the Governor of Alaska by Brasch

Congress Opposes Bush Pardons by David Swanson

Fate of Lakotahs Highlights America's Failed Native American Policies by Stephen Lendman

Senate testimony by police captain reveals 9 sticks of missing dynamite in 'Omaha Two' bombing case by Michael Richardson

Go To Top 50 Most Popular