
From
the L.A. Weekly
OCTOBER 11 - 17, 2002
Dissonance
Case
of Spinelessness
What Dick Gephardt and the L.A. Times have in common
by
Marc Cooper
AS
I WATCHED GEORGE W. BUSH deliver his Big Speech on Iraq earlier
this week, I half-expected to see the freckled, grinning visage
of Dick Gephardt pop right out of the president's breast pocket.
But then I remembered the House Democratic leader had recently
attached himself to a lower part of Dubya's anatomy and was out
of view.
Throughout
Dubya's address, Gephardt's spirit hung heavily in the air. Indeed,
just a few days before Bush offered up what the spinmeisters called
his "closing argument" for war on Iraq, Gephardt performed
an obedient rollover for the White House. Brokering a sordid pact
with the president, Gephardt cleared the way for passage of a
House resolution giving Bush a veritable blank check for war.
On
the eve of the most important and far-reaching congressional vote
since the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolution, which set off the U.S.
war in Vietnam, Dick Gephardt pulled the rug out from under his
Senate colleague Tom Daschle, dozens of fellow House Democrats,
and millions of Democratic (and Republican) voters who oppose
this unilateral and reckless drive to war.
But
that's your problem, not mine. Fortunately, I can plead innocent
to being a Democrat. I am not now nor have I ever been, thank
you very much.
The problem we all share is that the congressional rubber-stamping
of the war in Iraq far transcends the transitory question of what
to do about Saddam Hussein. It codifies a radical turn in U.S.
foreign policy by legitimizing the new strategy of pre-emptive,
unprovoked military attack as cooked up by our Precog-in-Chief.
Bush's much-awaited speech on Iraq offered the same old unproven
innuendo attempting to convince Americans that Saddam could somehow
deliver a chemical-biological-nuclear football to the doorstep
of your neighborhood nursery school. "We refuse to live in
fear," Bush mumbled to his TV audience. But his entire address
was transparently designed to scare the bejesus out of average
Americans, who he is betting cannot tell the difference between
the Islamic nazis of al Qaeda and the secular cronies clustered
around Saddam.
The
only morally (if not legally) justifiable reason to invade Iraq
would be to dispose of a bloody dictator, liberate its people,
and pledge billions of dollars of aid and support to guarantee
a transition to an open and equal society. But the last time I
looked, the Bush administration wasn't really in the business
of fomenting armed revolution against tyrannical regimes (much
to the relief of our allies like Saudi Arabia and Pakistan --
the latter of which not only possesses nuclear weapons of mass
destruction but has also recently taken to brandishing them about).
So
if this unjustifiable attack on Iraq comes to pass, I don't want
to see so much as a single Democrat out there whining that this
is "George W. Bush's War." It's also Dick Gephardt's
war. And Joe Biden's. And every other Democrat who is voting this
week to authorize use of force.
Just
over a year ago, the local squishy liberals of the Southern California
Americans for Democratic Action held a "progressive"
conference here in L.A. -- pompously titled "Take Back America"
-- and it featured that same Dick Gephardt as keynote speaker,
no less. At the time, I used this column to publicly tweak the
softheaded conference organizers for inviting such an unctuous
lout to appear as their Chief Progressive. In return I was peppered
with e-mail from outraged liberals accusing me of playing into
GOP hands by my dumping on Gephardt.
So
who's laughing now?
Maybe now these Internet revolutionaries will redirect their e-mail
missiles toward Leader Gephardt and pledge to never again vote
for any of these Bush Democrats. Most likely not. Two years from
now you can bet these same progressives will be out there telling
us to vote for Al Gore because . . . well . . . you know . . .
Republicans are for war and Democrats are for peace.
MORE
ON THIS SUBJECT OF SPINELESSness . . . Was I absent the day someone
appointed the Los Angeles Times as official arbiter of who should
or should not be considered a legitimate candidate for election?
The Times was the official sponsor -- this last Monday -- of this
season's only public debate in the California governor's race.
Gray Davis was invited. As was Bill Simon Jr. But Green Party
candidate Peter Camejo -- registering in some polls as high as
8 percent to 9 percent -- was specifically un-invited. Times spokeswoman
Martha Goldstein said that Camejo didn't meet the "threshold"
of a 15 percent poll rating to merit inclusion -- the same noxious,
undemocratic standard used to keep pesky independent presidential
candidates out of national debates. That the National Commission
on Presidential Debates -- a shill controlled by the two major
parties and underwritten by big-money interests -- discriminates
against third parties should come as no surprise.
But
the Times is an independent media organization that lives and
dies by the First Amendment -- or so it claims. It has absolutely
no business stooping to this level and censoring what the voters
can hear. On the contrary, the Times has an obligation to bolster
and enrich the public debate -- not narrow it. Barring a legal,
on-the-ballot candidate like Camejo from the debate is an injury
to civil democracy.
But
it gets worse. After Camejo was banned, Bill Simon (for his own
obvious and not so noble purposes) invited the Green candidate
to be his guest and sit in the audience -- and to be available
to reporters after the debate. But the political police over at
the Times barred Camejo from entering the building and sitting
quietly in the audience as he had vowed.
Let's
be clear. This atrocity is not the work of the editorial department
of the Times. Rather, the gagging of Camejo is the handiwork of
the geniuses on the business side of the paper -- the folks who
organized the debate in the first place, and not out of any commitment
to public service, but rather as a promotional tool. They kept
Camejo out not because they feared his Green politics -- a subject
about which they are most surely vastly ignorant. Rather, the
Times' suits were afraid that if Camejo were allowed in, Governor
Davis would pull out (which he would have). And all those gobs
of free PR that the Times reaped from the debate would evaporate
(as it would have). But that would have been Davis' doing, and
he should have been allowed to publicly chicken out against Camejo.
After
the Times' Staples Center debacle, the new bosses from the Tribune
promised deep ethical reform. Censoring debate is a big step backward.
****