WAR FOR POWER

[col. writ. 10\13\13] © ’13 Mumia Abu-Jamal

As the clock ticks down toward the looming debt ceiling, and the federal government shutdown, the parties stare at each other like adversaries across an abyss.

For they are at war with each other for political primacy: who will prevail?

China’s revolutionary leader, Mao
Ze-Dong, once wrote that “Politics is war without bloodshed.”

That may be so, but I, like any other war, certainly has no shortage of civilian casualties.

The loss of federal monies has created havoc across the nation, in an economy that is still on the brink of another recession. That members of Congress have intentionally stoked this public pain has sent congressional standing to an all-time low. According to at least one broadcast report, only 5% of the nation now regards Congress favorably.

When people understand that these are politically created crises, actually made by politicians, and therefore wholly artificial, even that astonishing figure may drop further.

The damage done to real people, to workers, to social programs, to children unfed is but a means to an end. That end? To turn Obama’s presidency into a broken, shattered disaster.

This politics as war, to nuke his legacy and his singular policy achievement: health car.

What is unacceptable to scores of conservative politicians is Obama’s success.

When President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Social Security into law (1935), he earned the unremitting enmity of the class from which he came: the wealthy.  They called him a ‘socialist’.

Sound familiar?

The political war now being waged today is far from over no matter what resolution comes in the next few days or weeks.

It will continue, thanks to the recent Citizens United case, as long as the wealthy can rent (or buy) politicians to do their bidding.

–© ‘13maj