SirotaBlog

Sirotablog

David Sirota is a political journalist, bestselling author and nationally syndicated newspaper columnist. He has appeared on CNN, MSNBC and The Colbert Report (video clips here). His blog is syndicated at Working for Change. Email: lists [at] davidsirota.com. RSS feed, Sirota's MySpace site and Facebook page. Download Sirota's Al Franken Show theme song.

E-mail List

Subscribe to David Sirota's e-mail newsletter:

EMAIL:

CONFIRM EMAIL:

Text version
HTML version


Writings

Articles by David Sirota:

The Huey Longs of Iowa
(Creators Syndicate)

Halloween & The Lead Monster
(Creators Syndicate)

The Captive-Industry Populism
(Creators Syndicate)

The Invisible Culture of Corruption
(Creators Syndicate)

Immoral, Not Inept
(Creators Syndicate)

Tyranny of the Tiny Minority
(Creators Syndicate)

Over the Dead Bodies...Again
(Creators Syndicate)

The Lesson of the DMV
(Creators Syndicate)

Get Busy Living, Or Get Busy Dying
(The Nation)

New Ways of Thinking On Election Reform
(The Oregonian)

When the Class War Goes Local
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Welcome to the Republican Asylum
(Radar Magazine)

Obama Struggles to Find His Line
(Radar Magazine)

Chicken Soup for the Outsourced Soul
(Radar Magazine)

Windows Into Populism's Rise
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Protesting & Legislating to End the War
(Baltimore Sun)

Pro-Union Hillary Harbors Labor Foes
(Radar Magazine)

The Marriage of Hypocrisy & Corruption
(Denver Post)

Democracy Haters
(In These Times)

Fast Track Hurts Montana Farmers, Workers
(Billings Gazette)

'Good Cop, Bad Cop' Needed
(San Francisco Chronicle)

What They Said, And When They Said It
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Flattening the Great Education Myth
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Embracing Populism
(In These Times)

A Majority Leader, Not a Follower
(Baltimore Sun)

Pinstriped Populist
(New York Times)

Learning from Lamont
(In These Times)

The War on Workers
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Big Money vs. Grassroots
(Washington Spectator)

Where Economics Meets Religious Fundamentalism
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Addressing America's Health Care Taboo
(Washington Examiner)

Who Must Really Answer for 9/11?
(Washington Examiner)

Legislating Under the Influence
(In These Times)

Who's Lieberman Represent? Not You.
(Hartford Courant)

Trivializing Corruption
(PBS Now)

Find Your True Center
(Washington Post)

Mr. Obama Goes to Washington
(The Nation)

Money Plus Secrecy Equals Trouble
(Baltimore Sun)

The Hostile Takeover of American Democracy
(Chicago Sun-Times)

Rick Santorum's Hostile Takeover
(Philadelphia Daily News)

Fighting the Hostile Takeover
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Supply-and-Demand Solutions
(San Francisco Chronicle)

The Seinfeld Strategy
(In These Times)

A Primary Concern
(In These Times)

Undermining the Ownership Society
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Workers On the Slag Heap of History
(Philadelphia Daily News)

The New Battle for States' Rights
(Tom Paine)

Fusion's Third-Party Path to the Center
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Free-Trading Away America's Security
(San Francisco Chronicle)

The Battle for the States
(In These Times)

It's Time for a Windfall Profits Tax
(Costco Connection)

Newt's New Con
(The Nation)

The Corruption Eruption Continues
(Washington Spectator)

A Health Care Solution
(Baltimore Sun)

Don't Ask, Don't Tell - Just Do It
(Washington Spectator)

On the Verge of Political Reform
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Why Not Get Warrants?
(Memphis Flyer)

Will the Dems Step Up In the New Year?
(In These Times)

This Is The Race
(In These Times)

Partisan War Syndrome
(In These Times)

Divvying Up Ohio
(American Prospect)

Hurricanes Rain on Bush's Tax Cut Parade
(In These Times)

The Deafening & Dangerous Silence on Taxes
(San Francisco Chronicle)

The Resurgence of Movement Politics
(The Nation)

Watergate's Lost Legacy
(American Prospect)

Fear, Loathing & the GOP
(In These Times)

Sending a Message on Trade
(Alternet)

Conversions on the Road to Reality
(Knight Ridder Newspapers)

Edwards' Own Trade Spotlight
(Charlotte Observer)

Debunking Centrism
(The Nation)

Green + Red = Blue
(In These Times)

The Democrats' Da Vinci Code
(American Prospect)

Top Billings
(Washington Monthly)

Vote for Bush or Die
(The Nation)

You Call This a Democracy?
(In These Times)

Debate School
(American Prospect)

The Greed Factor
(American Prospect)

Tricky Dick
(American Prospect)

Late, Great Middle Class
(Los Angeles Times)

Follow the Money
(Washington Monthly)

The Big Squeeze
(American Prospect)

They Knew
(In These Times)

When Left is Right
(In These Times)

These Dogs Don't Hunt
(American Prospect)

When Ignorance Isn't Bliss
(In These Times)

The $700 Million Question
(American Prospect)

Being Dick Cheney
(In These Times)

It's the Stupidity, Stupid
(In These Times)

The Fox of War
(Salon.com)

Clarke's Vindication
(Salon.com)

Bad Rerun, Worse Consequences
(Popmatters)

On Second Thought
(Ft. Worth Weekly)

Married Gay Martians on Steroids
(Popmatters)

The Failure of Populism?
(TomPaine.com)

G. Walker Bush, Texas Ranger
(Popmatters)

Will America Follow?
(Popmatters)

Bring On the Truth
(Popmatters)

The Motives of Intimigate
(Popmatters)

Profit America
(Popmatters)

The CEO-In-Chief
(Popmatters)

No Question, the Media Is Right
(Popmatters)

Use Trade as a Tool
(Baltimore Sun)


Writings

September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004
September 2004
August 2004
July 2004
June 2004
May 2004
April 2004
March 2004


BLOG ANNOUNCEMENT

Dear Loyal Readers:

You have reached the Sirotablog archives. Sirotablog has now moved off of davidsirota.com and permanently to my site at Credo Action. Please reset your bookmarks to www.credoaction.com/sirota

Rock the boat,
David

The Innocent Bystander Fable

“There are 232 Democrats in the House of Representatives,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) tells us in yesterday’s Washington Post. “There are 232 Democrats that believed that our policies in Iraq are failing.”

On this Memorial Day, these are comforting yet insulting words from a man who, according to the same Washington Post, less than four days ago “jury-rigged” a vote on the House floor to make sure the Iraq War continues - a vote that most of the 232 Democrats in the House supported (For background on this vote, see here - it was deliberately confusing). Hoyer’s platitudes speak to what I will call the Innocent Bystander Fable - a myth that has become a self-reinforcing ethos in our nation’s capital these days.

The Innocent Bystander Fable teaches that every politician in America except the President of the United States has absolutely no power at all to stop or even slow down the escalation of the war in Iraq - an escalation that is expected to deploy “more than 200,000 [troops to Iraq] — a record high number — by the end of the year,” according to Hearst Newspapers. This fable says that despite Congress’s constitutional power - no, responsibility - to wield the power of the purse and despite its constitutional power to declare war or revoke declarations of war, Congress nonetheless can do absolutely, positively nothing other than dutifully hand over a blank check war spending bill to the White House. We are simply expected to take comfort in the supposed fact that “232 Democrats believe our policies in Iraq are failing” - but are also expected to believe that none of them can do anything about the situation and that they are all just innocent bystanders, powerless to do anything to address the worst national security crisis in contemporary American history.

The Innocent Bystander Fable is convenient for all players involved, even if it is a fable - that is, “a story not founded on fact” or “an untruth,” as defined by the dictionary. For Democratic congressional lawmakers, it serves to cast a feel-bad-for-the-martyr light on them. In the House, they use devious parliamentary procedures to create situations that deliberately help continue the war, while delivering speeches saying they are trying to do everything they can to stop it. In the Senate, presidential candidates grandstand about voting against bills to fund the war - but refuse to back up those votes with any move to engage in a Mr. Smith Goes to Washington-style filibuster.

For congressional Republicans, the Innocent Bystander Fable keeps the war they openly back going. Whereas in their majority years of the past, they have asserted Congress’s power against a Democratic president in military actions, they now berate any congressional proposal to slow down this war as unacceptable “micromanaging.”

And for media pundits, the Innocent Bystander Fable keeps them in good graces with the Beltway politicians whose approval they so desperately pine for. Take Newsweek’s Jonathan Alter, who in the wake of Democrats handing Bush a blank check uses his column this week to berate “the left” for demanding Democrats fulfill their campaign promise to use their power to end the war. Alter, like other pundits, would have us believe the vast majority of Americans - Republicans and Democrats - who tell pollsters they want Congress to end the war is just a tiny segment of “the left” (for reference, 82 percent of Americans now tell pollsters they want Congress to either fund the Iraq War only with binding conditions, or cut off funds completely - apparently “the left” is now almost the entire country). Alter then says “it’s juvenile to toss around threats or make it seem as if voting wrong on this bill means you aren’t sincerely against the war.”

This, of course, is an eloquent regurgitation of the Innocent Bystander Fable (and one that was ably backed up by E.J. Dionne last week as well). Demanding accountability is “juvenile,” according to Alter, because Important and Very Smart Pundits like Jon Alter understand what he believes the rest of us in the Unwashed Masses don’t have the mental capacity to fathom: That is, the very Serious and Non-Juvenile - and non-existent - reasons why Congress is supposedly just an innocent bystander that can’t do anything. And, he adds, it’s especially juvenile to - gasp - have the temerity to float the idea of actually using our democratic elections system to run antiwar candidates against those who support the war. The horror!

Alter does all this, of course, while actually admitting in his column that he urged Democrats to make ending the war the central thrust of their 2006 campaign. He says Democrats “lack the votes” to do anything other than write President Bush a blank check, making no mention of the fact that if they did nothing at all and didn’t pass any bill, they would have taken a major step toward ending the war (I’m not necessarily saying that should have happened - I support a timetable for funding to be reduced and stopped on set dates in the future so there is adequate time to plan for a redeployment - but the point is that the ultimate power over the situation clearly rests in the Congress, no matter how many pundits try to say otherwise). And he makes no mention of the devious parliamentary tactics employed by the Democrats he worships that were designed to fool the public - precisely the secretive, manipulative and Dick Cheney-esque tactics that led folks to say they were behaving like “Dick Cheney Democrats” last week (ha, silly us for thinking a political “journalist” should bother to report on what actually went on in the U.S. Congress when writing an opinion column attacking people for criticizing what actually went on in the U.S. Congress).

But then, to Alter, expecting politicians to actually fulfill the promises he admits he asked them to make - or at least expecting them not to try to deceive us when they break said promises - is “juvenile” because the Innocent Bystander Fable and the media power-worshiping it justifies must continue soldiering on in order to insulate the Establishment from any real pressure. “Reasonable people can disagree over tactics,” he sums up. That’s true - but they can’t disagree over the actual facts of what Congress can and cannot do to end a war, as elucidated in the Constitution of the United States. Only unreasonable people desperately clinging to the Innocent Bystander Fable in order to appease and worship power can disagree about that.

The saddest part of all this is that while the Washington Establishment seeks refuge in the Innocent Bystander Fable, the actual innocent bystanders - American troops, their families and Iraqi civilians - get stiffed. As Washington’s career politicians trip over each other to delegate all of their power to the most unpopular president in three decades, as pundits desperate to be in the good graces of the Beltway’s Important People come out guns blazing in defense of total capitulation, our soldiers continue to be ordered into the most unpopular war in five decades with no plan to bring them home safely, and Iraqi civilians are caught in the crossfire of an increasingly bloody civil war.

If Memorial Day is a time to remember the sacrifice our soldiers make for our democracy, then it is also a time to ask whether the democracy they are sacrificing for is living up to its promise. How can we ask soldiers to make the ultimate sacrifice of life and limb for our democracy, when those who are supposed to be guarding our democracy here at home - our elected officials and our media - so clearly believe our democracy is just another cheap cliche that exists merely for use as filler in poorly written speeches and even more poorly written horse-race punditry?

Our troops - past and present - deserve better than that. They deserve better than Washington politicians and their word-twisting consultants engineering an Innocent Bystander Fable as a transparent way to pass the buck. They deserve better than armchair columnists sitting in comfortable offices saying elections - the core of democracy, after all - are really not to be taken seriously and portraying the vast majority of Americans who oppose the war as some sort of tiny, ultra-fringe cult. They deserve, in short, a political system that actually tells the truth, and one that actually believes in democracy - not one that wages a guerrilla war against it.

P.S. I’m truly hopeful and optimistic that Democrats are going to start understanding all this - and the absurd nature of the Innocent Bystander Myth - after going home to face their constituents. I really am. But I don’t think pressuring them now by letting them know that their votes for the blank check were unacceptable is somehow “counterproductive.” In fact, it’s the opposite. Letting them know that their behavior was unacceptable in the past will give them more incentive to stand up in the future. This is Movement Building 101.

COMMENTS: Go to Sirota's Working Assets site to comment on this entry

The Uprising

The Uprising David Sirota's new book is "The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall Street and Washington." Due out on May 27th, 2008, the book is a work of investigative journalism. It is a firsthand narrative account inside America's new populist movement, from the streets of New York City to the halls of Microsoft to the deserts at the Mexican border. Go to The Uprising's official website to see a schedule of Sirota's book tour. The book is now available for pre-order at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Borders, Tattered Cover, Powell's, or through your local independent bookstore. The Uprising will also be available as an audiobook, which you can pre-order here. For a high-resolution media-ready photo of the book's cover, click here. Stay tuned to this site for Sirota's book tour schedule and media appearances.

Blogads




About David Sirota


David Sirota is a full-time political journalist, best-selling author and nationally syndicated newspaper columnist living in Denver, Colorado. He blogs for Working Assets and the Denver Post's PoliticsWest website. He is a Senior Editor at In These Times magazine, which in 2006 received the Utne Independent Press Award for political coverage. His 2006 book, Hostile Takeover, was a New York Times bestseller, and is now out in paperback. He has been a guest on, among others, CNN, MSNBC, CNBC and NPR. His writing, which draws on his extensive experience as a progressive political strategist, has appeared in, among others, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Baltimore Sun, the Nation magazine, the Washington Monthly and the American Prospect. Sirota was a twice-a-week guest on the Al Franken Show. He currently serves in a volunteer capacity as the co-chairperson of the Progressive States Network - a 501c3 nonpartisan organization.

In the years before becoming a full-time writer, Sirota worked as the press secretary for Vermont Independent Congressman Bernard Sanders, the chief spokesman for Democrats on the U.S. House Appropriations Committee, the Director of Strategic Communications for the Center for American Progress, a campaign consultant for Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer and a media strategist for Connecticut Senate candidate Ned Lamont. He also previously contributed writing to the website of the California Democratic Party. For more on Sirota, see these profiles of him in Newsweek or the Rocky Mountain News. Feel free to email him at lists [at] davidsirota.com Note: this online publication represents Sirota's personal views, and not the official views of the organizations he works with.


Video Clips

Sirota on Lou Dobbs Tonight (CNN) – 5/14/07

Sirota debates Ann Coulter (CNBC) – 8/11/06

Sirota debates John Stossel (CNBC) – 6/16/06

More Clips:

7/28/07 - Sirota on Bulls & Bears (Fox News)

6/23/07 - Sirota on Cashing In, Part 1 (Fox News)

6/23/07 - Sirota on Cashing In, Part 2 (Fox News)

4/19/07 - Sirota at PSN Gala (C-SPAN)

6/22/06 - Sirota at Atticus Books w/ Ned Lamont

6/16/06 - Sirota on PBS Now

6/14/06 - Sirota on The Colbert Report (Comedy Central)

6/11/06 - Sirota at YearlyKos (LinkTV)

5/8/06 - Sirota at American Progress (C-SPAN)

2/22/06 - Sirota on Countdown (MSNBC)

SirotaBlog