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Mild-Mannered Bernie Sanders: A Conscience
Americans Don't Want
By Ben
Tanosborn
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 8, 2015
Seriously… a Democratic alternative to Hillary Clinton for the US
presidency, are you nuts? Crazier yet… from a carpetbagger Vermonter
with Brooklynese Jewish roots; are you puffing on still federally-outlawed
sweet cannabis?
Senator Bernie Sanders is a true anomaly in American politics,
equally disliked by all shades of the political Right, and most shades of
the lukewarm political Left. Bernie is the conscience most Americans
prefer to keep locked up in a closet; a lamp of reality which must never be
turned on, allowing us to continue living in the midst of a deceitful, and
dark, political fantasyland.
Coincidentally amazing that the least two populated states, Vermont
(49th) and Wyoming (50th), have given us two contemporary politicians so
diametrically opposed in their humanity: A compassionate senator, Bernie
Sanders, and a cruel, malevolent vice president, Dick Cheney… curiously two
modern day reincarnations of those celebrated historical figures in both
states: Ethan Allen from patriotic and placid Vermont; and Buffalo Bill from
the wild and wooly West of Wyoming. [Somewhat ironic, we must add,
that Cheney would be the one swearing in Sanders in 2006 as the newly
elected Junior Senator from Vermont.] America’s corporate press would
much prefer not to have to contend with the likes of this Bernie Sanders
fellow, a self-identified “democratic socialist” – socialism possessing a
taint impossible to overcome in the pigheaded confines of a
politically-monolithic and faux democratic America. But, whether out
of journalistic courtesy or an opportune show-of-disdain, Candidate Sanders
was given a few television rounds, a coverage which allowed him to display a
cool and collected political temperament in an often glacial interview
climate, Katie Couric (YAHOO) likely offering the best journalistic demeanor
and Wolf Blitzer (CNN) the worst among the non-confrontational segment of
the media. [An unexpected “treatment” from Blitzer if we consider
their backgrounds; both also experiencing the loss of family during the
Holocaust…]
It’s only reasonable, and expected, for Fox News or CNBC to be
antagonistic to someone like Senator Sanders whose views are anathema to the
political Right and Wall Street but, shouldn’t 80 to 90 percent of Americans
be more receptive to views advocating a better life for them? Not just
economically championing what Bernie identifies as the disappearing middle
class, but also at the vanguard of privacy and civil rights, his voice
dating back to his nay vote in Congress in 2001 during the initial passage
of the Patriot Act. He, together with 62 Democrats and 3 Republicans
were soundly defeated (5 to 1 vote) in the House; Feingold, the sole nay in
the Senate in that October 2001 vote.
Bernie is the epitome of a squeaky-clean politician standing for all
progressive, popular causes that would deliver him the populist vote most
anywhere in the world… except in this America of ours. Restraining an
anarchical economic globalization, substantially raising the minimum wage,
adequately funding Social Security, bringing infrastructure spending to an
appropriate standard in line with other first-world nations, narrowing the
incredible gap which exists between haves and have-nots, are top issues that
the good senator from Vermont would eagerly tackle in debate with anyone,
Democrat or Republican. Unfortunately, his candidacy, unlike those of
fairly successful independents (Anderson and Perot come to mind during the
last 35 years), has little or no appeal to an electorate in the puppetry
hands of a wealthy, powerful elite.
I have discussed at length with journalists and academics, both
American and foreign, the impossibility for a third-party or independent
candidate to make headway in any significant way in American elections,
whether local, state or federal. Most interesting, however, is the
view from an old peer of mine in graduate school who is in his twilight
professorial years at a European university… and I say most interesting
because he has followed Bernie Sanders’ political career since first elected
as sole congressman for Vermont in 1990; my professor-friend’s curiosity
aroused by Sanders’ ascendancy to Congress from the left side of the
political spectrum.
“Mr. Sanders,” my friend tells me, “will not be politically undone
because of the stigma ‘water-boardingly’ forced on socialism in the US; nor
for his friendship with Castro’s friend, Noriega; nor for Stone’s [I.F.
Stone] political endorsement; nor for his solidarity with the working man
and fiery attacks against his nemesis one-percenters. Even those he is
trying to help will turn against him for one simple reason: his constant
remarks using European countries as models (economically, socially and
politically) for America. That is a sin no American, whether rich or
destitute, is willing to forgive.”
Apparently, my friend from graduate school not only took back home a
PhD diploma from an American institution, but also an intimate knowledge of
how the American mind thinks, or is taught to think. Obviously, Bernie
Sanders was not as fortunate in getting that same knowledge while a student
in Political Science at the University of Chicago.
Still, Vermont should take pride in its adopted son, a mild-mannered
politician, honest and courageous like few others ever elected to serve in
congress.
***
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