Barack Obama: Old package in a new wrapping
By Kéllia Ramares
Online Journal Associate Editor
Feb 15, 2008, 00:15
He's young. He's
black. And he's a great stump speaker. But if Barack Obama has you convinced
that he represents change, he's pulled the wool over your eyes.
He's a change only
on the shallow level of identity politics, just as Hillary is.
As the video, Barack to Hillary: I look
forward to you advising me,
illustrates, Barack Obama has many advisers from previous administrations,
including the Clinton Administrations. Are these advisers going to advise any
material change from the past? I don't think so.
If Obama truly
represents change, he would not be recycling advisers from previous
administrations.
One of his foreign
policy advisers is Zbigniew Brzezinski, who goes back to the Carter
Administration. Zbig is as imperialist as they come. He is the author of a book
called "The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and Its Geostrategic
Imperatives" (Basic Books, 1997). Here are a few choice excerpts
. . . it is correct to assert that America has become, as
President Clinton put it, the world “indispensible nation.” . . . Without
sustained and directed American involvement, before long, the forces of global
disorder could come to dominate the world scene. And the possibility of such a
fragmentation is inherent in the geopolitical tensions not only of today's
Eurasia but of the world more generally. [p. 195]
The last thing Zbig wants is what Peak Oil and climate
change is now demanding: more political localism and local control of resources
by the people of whose land they are a part. When this book was published in
1997, Big Oil thought it had discovered in the Caspian Sea basin oilfields that
would be greater even than those of Saudi Arabia. However, soon thereafter, the
oil companies found out that there was not nearly the amount of oil there that
they thought and they canceled projects.
In the short run, it is in America's interest to consolidate and
perpetuate the prevailing geopolitical pluralism on the map of Eurasia. That
puts a premium on maneuver and manipulation in order to prevent the emergence
of a hostile coalition that could eventually seek to challenge America's primacy,
not to mention the remote possibility of any one particular state doing so. . .
. The most immediate task is to make certain that no state or combination of
states gains the capacity to expel the United States from Eurasia or even to
diminish significantly its decisive arbitrating role. [p. 198].
A genuinely populist democracy has never before attained international
supremacy. The pursuit of power and especially the economic costs and human
sacrifice that the exercise of such power often requires are not generally
congenial to democratic instincts. Democratization is inimical to imperial
mobilization. [p. 210, emphasis mine]
Last but not least:
Moreover,
as America becomes an increasingly multicultural society, it may find it more
difficult to fashion a consensus on foreign policy issues, except in
circumstances of a truly massive and widely perceived direct external threat. [p. 211, emphasis mine]
People such as Zbig, at a minimum, would welcome an event
such as 9-11 as an opportunity to extend American hegemony.
If it's true that you are known by the company you keep,
what does it say about Barack Obama that Zbig is one of his foreign policy
advisers? And I believe him when he says he looks forward to Hillary advising
him, Bill, too. If you think Obama represents change, think again. And if you
are excited about his candidacy because he's black, remember the words of the
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. " . . . not by the color of their skin,
but by the content of their character."
There are some pretty sorry characters running for president
these days. I recently saw a question online: "How come we get to choose
from over 50 candidates for Miss America, but only 2 for president?"
Indeed, how come?
Journalist
Kéllia Ramares of Oakland, Calif., thinks it is high time we dropped out of the
Electoral College in favor of direct election of the president, with
ranked-choice voting on paper ballots counted publicly by hand. Her email is kellia@rise4news.net.
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