Swampscott, Massachussetts, isn’t the place you’d pick for
right-wing hatemongering. Sandwiched between the industrial cities Lynn and
Salem on Boston’s North Shore (and somewhat wealthier and more conservative
than both) Swampscott is a seaside bedroom community many people pass through
on their way to and from Boston. In fact, M was doing just that when she came
face to face with the kind of right wing tactics that have become infamous in
swing states.
A woman -- we’ll call her M the Voter -- takes the train to
work in Boston, and parks at the station in Swampscott. A proud Obama
supporter, she has a sticker prominently displayed on her car. She returned
from work to find a sheet of paper stuck under her windshield. It read, in
large caps, INDICTMENT. Below, the poster was more specific, informing her that
she had been “listed in our registry” and “relevant information will be
recorded and forwarded to the proper authorities.”
The creepy part is where it overlaps neatly with charges
that have spewed from the McCain-Palin campaign, with the vice presidential
candidate and other GOP mouthpieces talking openly about “real America,” “pro-America”
and “anti-America” parts of the country. In the same vein, our scary leaflet
warns that “True Americans cannot tolerate your acts of treason any longer,”
and invites the targeted Obama supporter to join friends in Iran, Syria, “or
any of those nations you support.”
For the most part, this is boilerplate “why don’t you go
live there” crap, part and parcel of the red-baiting-turned-war-on-terror
argument leveled at any who disagree. I get emails like this all the time,
though I mostly laugh at them, and figure it part of the price of writing and
publishing for a broad audience.
There are a couple things that are different here. One is
the citing of a federal statute stating that treason is punishable by DEATH
(again in bold scary caps), rendering the leaflet a form of death threat for
supporting the Democratic nominee for president.
The other is the time and place, in broad daylight on a
public street, and in a state where Obama has a 26-point lead. “I found it
really creepy,” says M the Voter. “Coming home alone, it’s getting dark -- it
just gave me a weird feeling.” So much so that she declined to have her name
appear in print. Other friends and observers were equally shocked, and all
mutter something along the lines of “if this is happening in Boston, just
imagine what they are doing in close states.”
Indeed, there is an ugliness that may itself be turning the
tide. Most have heard about the evil robocalls. Fewer might know of the harassment
of early voters in Fayetteville, NC, after an Obama rally there. Elsewhere,
a black bear was found shot to death, the carcass dumped on a campus lawn with
an Obama sign next to it. Still other early voters whose cars sported Obama
signs reported having their tires slashed.
Though Obama seems to have a solid lead in the polls and in
the Electoral College, no one in the campaign is taking anything for granted.
The senator cautions his troops against overconfidence, urging them to remember
two words: New Hampshire. He may have chosen two different ones: Mike Connell,
who, if whistleblower
Stephen Spoonamore is to be believed, is responsible for the “man-in-the-middle”
technology that facilitated data meddling -- and outright vote theft -- in past
elections. Mike Connell is working for John McCain.
While many on the left are wary of the centrist positions of
the Democrats, there can be no doubt that electing a man of mixed race to the presidency
will be some sort of victory in a country in which racism has played such a
dominating role in its history. Democrats have held power and sold out the
people who voted them in time and again, and many fear this time will be no
different. Still, it is very obvious that the forces of reaction see it as a
very great threat, despite the timidity and caution of Obama’s approach. The
hatred behind the vehemence of opposition to Obama is a scary and remarkable
thing. The constant undercurrent of references to untrustworthiness (read:
shifty?) and the “he’s not one of us” innuendo are getting sharper and more
virulent.
The right wing has proven it will do anything to win;
combining this religious fervor with a touch of race hatred is a volatile mix.
With their backs to the wall, it is no wonder the mask is coming off: even in a
sleepy Boston suburb, the enemy is everywhere to these types. While I wouldn’t
go so far as to say that the enemy of my enemy is always my friend, it is a
powerful motivating force, stiffening the spines of those more determined than
ever to see Obama through to victory. People are desperate for their vote to
mean something, to strike back against powerlessness they have felt against the
juggernaut of the last eight years. Obama may well be the vehicle that allows
them this relief. Undeterred, M the Voter is looking forward more than ever to
voting for Obama. But she is a bit more careful when she parks, and still doesn’t
want to be named.
Scan of actual pamphlet available on request
© 2008 Daniel Patrick Welch. Reprint permission granted with credit and
link to danielpwelch.com.
Writer, singer,
linguist and activist Daniel Patrick Welch lives and writes in Salem,
Massachusetts, with his wife, Julia Nambalirwa-Lugudde. Together they
run The
Greenhouse School and run
workshops and seminars on music and history. Translations of articles are
available in over two dozen languages. New CD available through the website at danielpwelch.com/dansshop.htm#CD: Let It Snow