The current issue of the UTNE Reader (May – June ’07) carried a short but
sensibly provocative article protesting the stagnation and the cul-de-sac
nature of street protests that involve nonviolent civil disobedience.
Joseph Hart, the author, asks why the current antiwar movement is so
impotent, despite “a staggering 67 percent disapproval of President
Bush’s handling of the war – a level that matches public sentiment at
the tail end of the Vietnam War, when street protests, rallies, and student
strikes were daily occurrences.”
He believes it is because, quoting Jack DuVall, president of the
International Center on Nonviolent Conflict, that “a street demonstration
is only one form of protest and protest is only one tactic that can be used
in a campaign. If it’s not a part of a dedicated strategy to change
policy, or to change power, protest is only a form of political
exhibitionism.”
Both gentlemen are being incomplete. Even without a military draft in place
to arouse a larger public, the protestors against the Iraq war have affected
the 2006 elections, performed sit-ins in Congressional offices, filed
lawsuits against Bush’s violations of people’s civil liberties, brought
Iraqi spokespeople to meet with influential Americans, worked with Iraq
veterans against the war as well as with numerous former high ranking
military, diplomatic and intelligence officials now retired from service in
both Republican and Democratic Administrations who openly opposed the
invasion at the outset.
Clearly all this has not been enough to move the Democrats to decisive
action.
The obstinate, messianic militarist in the White House remains unmoved. With
his ignorance of history itself becoming historic, this latter day
obsessively compulsed, King George thinks he’s a 21st century Winston
Churchill.
Through the wide arc of his persistent lawlessness, Mr. Bush has done the
country much damage here and abroad. But he has also demonstrated how
variously the rule of law can be swept aside with impunity. He is both
outside and above the Constitution, federal statutes, international treaties
to which the U.S. is solemn signatory, and the restraints of the Congress
and the federal courts.
A major restructuring of our laws to embrace the outlaw Presidency under Mr.
Bush, or any like-minded successors, now has a solid empirical basis from
which to move forward. Presidential outlawry did not start with Mr. Bush. It
has been building up for a long time going from the episodic to
institutionalized forms.
For example, it is now routine for the courts to opt out of giving any
citizen, group or member of Congress legal standing on matters of foreign
and military policy even to plead their cases against the President. Here
the courtroom door is closed.
For Mr. Bush, what would be repeated criminal negligence by anyone else,
there has been immunity from lawsuits by families of soldiers – and there
were hundreds of them – who died because they were not provided with body
and Humvee armor over three years of more in Iraq. Immunity even from
equitable lawsuits seeking a mandamus for obligated action ignored by the
President.
The Bush officials had the funds with which to procure these shields but
somehow the Halliburtons got more of their urgent attention.
Clearly, the diverse opposition to Bush’s war needs to move to higher
levels. More meticulous lobbying in Congressional Districts, more pressure
to initiate impeachment hearings, more exposure to what the Iraqi people,
suffering so terribly, want, much more organized focus by the retired,
established military and civilian officials whose previous courage and
experience give them great credibility today.
The number of active duty soldiers petitioning their member of Congress to
end the war now exceeds twelve hundred. Since 72% of the soldiers in Iraq
wanted the U.S. out within six to twelve months in a Zogby poll released
very early in 2006, there is more potential from this source of actual
military theatre experience.
The timid, anti-war members of Congress require more than all this
opposition. Apparently they are looking for intensity, for more people
having the war on their minds, demanding that the huge monies for this
overseas destruction be turned into providing necessities for their
communities.
These lawmakers seem to need to be buttonholed whenever they return to their
Districts. In Washington, they keep saying things like, “Yeah, I know the
polls but Americans are more interested in American Idol and their iPods.”
So, Americans, start the buttonhole movement – at their Congress
members’ town meetings, at the clambakes they attend this summer, at the
local parades where they strut, over at their local office (see the yellow
pages listing under U.S. Government for the addresses and phone numbers) and
through letters and telephone calls. You count when you make them count you.