UPDATE: I'm scheduled to be on CNN Monday morning, 9/7, at 8:30am ET to discuss this post. Tune in.
My column that was published on Friday of this week was about the difference between a political party and a political movement - and I can't say I'm happy to see the lessons of that difference being highlighted so intensely and so negatively as they are with today's news that Van Jones was forced out of the Obama administration (and let's be real clear, despite the "resignation" billing, the White House's pathetic behavior this week makes clear Jones was forced out by the higher ups). This is a serious tragedy for the progressive movement on three levels.
First and foremost, Jones was one of the only movement progressives in a policymaking position in the Obama White House. By that I mean, he was one of the only people in the White House who came out of grassroots movement work and not just political/partisan hack work, and one of the only movement progressives put in a policymaking job, and not ghettoized into a political/tactical job. Whenever I got sick to my stomach at the thought of Obama's Team of Corporate Zombies - people like Rahm Emanuel, Tim Geithner, Larry Summers and Jim Messina - running the show, I was able to at least tell myself that hey, someone like Van Jones is at least in there somewhere fighting the good fight as he always has. No more - and that's a damn shame.Second, Jones being forced out will not mollify the racists, crazies, tea baggers, Republican congresspeople and other assorted conservative freakshows - it will only embolden them. When lynch mobs in the Old South lynched someone, when a witchhunting band caught a target in Salem, when HUAC "proved" the supposed communism of its victims, that didn't calm them down - it only intensified their bloodlust because it made them believe they could be even more successful in the future. So if the White House's political "gurus" believe booting Jones was the safe and prudent way to mitigate right-wing hatred, then they are as short-sighted and stupid as they've proven themselves to be in mismanaging the summer's health care debate. Seriously, folks - if you think you can appease or mollify someone who takes to the public airwaves and does this, then you are as crazy as that screaming lunatic is.
Finally, the Jones announcement will inevitably create a chilling effect on the aspirations of other movement progressives. Van is a fantastic person who has done fantastic work. He's kept his advocacy real and didn't compromise his principles. And so when he was appointed to a high-level White House job, it seemed to validate that you could, in fact, keep it real and also advance in American politics and government. That is to say, his story seemed to prove that an outsider could also succeed on the inside - and that outside advocacy doesn't automatically prohibit you from one day working on the inside.
Now, though, because of today's announcement, that lesson has been rewritten. Jones being tossed from the White House says that even in an administration headed by a former community organizer, progressive movement activists (as opposed to far-right conservative movement activists who are celebrated in D.C.) probably cannot hope to ever enter or rise in government.* I'm not saying that's an ironclad rule - but that is the message of this particular event, and you better believe that all the movement activists who know Jones or looked to him as a hero will get that message loud and clear. And that's a tragedy.
The obvious rejoinder to these points is that Jones supposedly brought this on himself by long ago making a mistake and signing a misguided petition about 9/11. Obviously, he made a mistake** - and he admitted that. But even if you don't accept that apology or admission of fault, the idea that him signing that petition means he's worthy of removal is just a pathetic argument that highlights the most damning hypocrisies of all. For instance, are we really expected to believe that Jones signing one random petition is a bigger problem than, say, Geithner accepting free room and board for the industry he is supposed to be regulating? I could make a huge list of such contrasts, including the tellingly different media/political Establishment treatments of "birthers" (cheered on) and "truthers" (totally ostracized) - but you get the point: the entire brouhaha about Jones supposedly awful transgressions is manufactured, considering the genuinely problematic transgressions of so many other White House officials are treated as no problem at all.
Let me just end this post by saying I'm sincerely disappointed about Jones getting kicked out of the White House for all three reasons I've laid out above - and also because I've been personally inspired by the guy. I've seen him speak, read his work and met him at the Democratic convention here in Denver. Out of all the activists and leaders I've met in more than a decade in movement politics, he's really one of the best. And while I hope - and expect - Jones will be back in movement politics soon, losing him as a voice in an Obama administration that is so mobbed up with corporate sycophants and political hacks is a real bummer.
* For the 9/11 truthers out there, let me just say this: Yes, there is ample evidence that the government was grossly negligent in ignoring intelligence warnings about 9/11. And yes, there is evidence that the government has not been all that forthcoming about acknowledging that fact. To say that is not controversial at all - it's verifiably true, and to support better efforts to uncover the evidence around 9/11 isn't controversial either. But no, there is no evidence that proves or strongly suggests the government deliberately orchestrated 9/11. The 9/11 Truth movement has tried to aggressively harass/intimidate almost every person in public life - me, Van Jones, and everyone else - in an attempt to force people to sign onto its statements that the government wasn't just negligent, but orchestrated 9/11. These people are absolutely incessant - and their tactics and statements attempting to equate governmental negligence with governmental orchestration is as offensive as it is awful. It's the worst mix of bullying and conspiracy theorism - and it's not merely "controversial," it's unacceptable and it needs to end.
** By the way, that message is especially true for African American movement activists, because let's just be honest - the fact that the right chose to mount a hysteria campaign specifically around an African American, Jones, was no coincidence. The right didn't just randomly pick some mid-level guy working on noncontroversial issues (green jobs) - they were specifically looking for a black guy with movement politics in his background. Remember, he was targeted WAY BEFORE the 9/11 stuff ever came out - in other words, the right-wing started attacking him before those conservative voices ever even KNEW about the 9/11 controversy.
Hence, we can be assured the original targeting of Jones was a calculated move with race in mind - a move designed to fit the criticism into a larger racial backlash framework first perfected in the 1980s. That framework has created a simple reality: In America, governmental advancement is wide open for right-wing movement players, and you can even vaguely hope for a seat at the political table if you are a white progressive former hippe-turned-yuppie liberal. But if you are a black person with any enduring loyalty to progressive movement or social justice activism, the loud and clear message from politicians and the media is that you are not welcome anywhere near the halls of power, because you will be billed as some nefarious combination of Al Sharpton, Huey Newton, Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael and Willie Horton.


Salon.com
Comments
I know as an established, amazing writer/activist (too many descriptives to name), you don't need a "rating". But, we all need them at times, you know, for morale's sake? I'm guessing from your last blog piece any way.
I am going to piece tomorrow, wanted to today but the lack of rotating cover would kind of miss the "call to arms" bit about it. My hubby set up a facebook page to change the direction of the conversation, HOPEFULLY. I'm putting it out there...it can't hurt.
I would, beyond the earth and back, appreciate your support.
good post rated...
And take a look at some of the other people who've signed those petitions--many former office-holders, military leaders, etc.
Why does this 'conspiracy theorism' 'need to end', exactly?
what have you got against democracy?
To be clear, if Van were a corrupt, lying, political hack---like everyone on the GOP side of the aisle and a substantial number of folks in the Obama Administration---he would still have a job.
There is no room in politics for an honest person, faithful to the philosophy of equality and dignity for the least powerful amongst us.
Whoever is the next to convice advertisers mto leave his hate-mongering show. It isn't a co-incidence that Jones led that group and then was viciously attacked a couple of weeks after Beck's advertisers scuppered and a week after news of the scupper hit the media.
... as does Van Jones.
Van Jones deserves none of this.
He is someone who has worked within "the system" to create a position of advocacy that should create jobs and opportunities for the disenfranchised. He SHOULD HAVE BEEN celebrated from all sides of the political spectrum.
Instead - due to a combination of hate sewn on the right and cowardice sewn within the Obama adminsitration - we lose him and his work. Tomorrow he will be back to fighting for what is right on the municipal level. O, but that we'd have had him fight on the national level!
It is for shame...
bama has surrendered every time push has come to shove. It is very clear that he is a politician in the true Clinton mold -- not a person moved by principle, but one moved solely by expedience – whatever it is that will win him the most of whatever it is he seeks to win.
The catch is, now that the singular goal of the presidency is won, the goals are too many, the people needing pleasing to diverse.
From before his inauguration, Obama had thrown progressives and true liberals under the bus.
Health care, Middle East policy, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, openness, change, the middle-class and poorer Americans.... At what point has he clearly sacrificed conservative votes he never had anyway to fulfill promises he made during his campaign.
Whom won't he throw under the bus? The Israel lobby, Wall Street billionaires and his major campaign contributors, massive health insurers and big Pharma.
Money. That's what Obama won't sacrifice.
His own words brought him down.
The progressives I've been talking to today have given up on Obama. He's now on his own. Hope he's happy with his new buddies on the right.
Expect the Dems to lose many of their seats in the House and maybe even the majority in the Senate in 2010. Then maybe Obama will be smart enough to fire the incompetent(s) who gave him the bad advice to fire Van Jones.
Absolutely. Remember what happened when Clinton threw Lani Guinier under the bus? She deserved better than she got, and Clinton's walking away from her only served to embolden the loonies. In fact, Clinton's highest poll ratings precisely coincided with times during his presidency when he stood up to Gingrich and the rest of the nut job bullies, and refused to back down. His lowest ratings happened when he "appeased" them.
Obama is fast becoming another Jimmy Carter -- a nice guy who tried to infuse niceness into politics and instead became an object of ridicule; a well-intentioned but hapless and ineffective one-term democrat followed by three consecutive hard right Republican terms. Nobody wants a weakling to be the President of the United States.
I'm sorry Van Jones isn't still in the WH. Maybe we'll find out that he couldn't turn his back on his ideals and/or curiosity about world events and the quest for truth. So he stood up. And resigned.
Mr. Sirota, there may be aggressive truthers among us, but their message, to question and compare and determine, through critical thinking, what did happen on 9/11 is not something to be ashamed of, as you imply. To me, that is a "invisible cloak" excuse for shielding your mind from one horrific possibility that a democracy's leaders could do such a thing.
Isn't it easier to dismiss than to deal? With the urge to get sick or flee to New Zealand or get drunk most nights...Because, until you acknowledge the possibility and investigate it and figure it out for yourself, you enable the facts to remain murky and off-limits.
You cannot move forward and attend to the results if you are fully satisfied with the so-called official story.
That's not conspiracy or kooky or extremist.
It might help Progressives DO SOMETHING instead of feeling disappointed in Barack Obama as President. Or in the disgust that Glenn Beck is still on and still ranting, while Van Jones disappears, silenced into obscure organizing...
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=49f_1172526096
Obama has reached out and tried to satisfy the rightwingers in this country enough--more than enough. They're not having it. To them it's a sign of weakness and, ultimately, even if he did what would please them, he'd still be black and that's too much to handle. The more the Obama-hate plays out, the more obvious the racism becomes. I can't fathom what it must be like to think like birthers and Glenn Beck fans.
I am sorry to say I never heard of Van Jones until Beck began his little campaign. I'm also sorry to say on Beck's Twitter he's named a few new targets.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/06/glenn-becks-next-target-c_n_278470.html
I know liberals and progressives like to play fair, but I just don't think we can at the moment. And I'm sorry to say that, too.
But I am confused and disappointed that the message seems to be that progressives need to abandon the Obama administration because he is not radical or courageous enough. Friends, we progressives are a very small part of a Democratic Party (many of us are not even part of the Democratic Party) that has elected only three presidents since the beginning of the Nixon administration in 1969! Thats 30 years friends.
Barak Obama is President of the entire United States, which includes a whole lot of people (a vast majority of the country) whose political views range from liberal to moderate to conservative to wacko.
The issue for me is that Glenn Beck's program about Van Jones had no substance what so ever to it. It was name calling and hyperbole, Republicans behaving badly, from start to finish. And it worked.
The progressive movement is always going to be a small group of people working on a local level to make change and hoping to touch the hearts and minds of enough moderates and independents to occasionally make big change when the timing is right.
If we turn and shout down our national leaders when they don't live up to progressive perfection, we only commit the same kind of scorched-earth politics that Glenn Beck and his friends do on a daily basis.
Nothing is built up. Nothing is improved. We just get to feel self-righteous and we remain isolated and small and our visions and values are further from being realized.
And do think those self inflicted wounds have a real and negative effect on our ability to slog out of the sewage George and Dick left behind? The GOP has been dropping burning bags of dog crap at the White House door since the day Obama moved in. They ring the bell and if Obama doesn’t come out to stomp it while Republicans laugh, we feel betrayed. WTF? In our wounded rage, we seem to be forgetting just who the mob really is trying to lynch.
Nothing either emboldens nor dissuades the shameless and irrational., and it's a fool's errand to think otherwise. And let's face it, everyone is replaceable and Mr. Jones is no different. It's also likely that he was either not forthcoming with the administration, or he couldn't recognize the potential problem. bad news either way. You can blame Obama for hiring him but not for firing him.
It is judged to be 'impossible' that a sitting president would allow a foreign power to attack their country. Just like it's judged 'impossible' that a sitting president would declare war on another nation 'just because he can'.
I believe that somewhere in the middle lies the answer. The Bushies were played by their notorious strong ties to certain members of the Arab community. And that plane in Shanksville was shot down.
The whole "Republicans are a$$holes" line (I don't care how true it is.....let guys like Dick Cheney engage in childishness like that) had to have been the last straw.
Interestingly, the 9/11 "truther" stuff I figure wouldn't have been a big deal to Beck since a lot of the hard-Right is convinced 9/11 is part of the "New World Order" conspiracy and was orchestrated to give the Feds unlimited power in a time of "war" (against terror).
But to get back to Jones.....the guy was leading the "Green Jobs" office and I didn't hear enough about that from him or the Administration. He was getting pub from the fact that he was a loose cannon and I don't think Obama is comfortable with guys like that (Biden says enough "wait, what did he say?" lines for one White House, thanks).
Van Jones is a racist, talking about how no black kid did a Columbine. If I said "you don't see white kids dressing up like L.A. drug dealing gangster killers, writing songs about beating up ho's and dealing their drugs while they kill each other with utter abandon", people would call me a racist. I was standing next to a group of African Americans at the movies last week and I heard the "N" word about 500 times! If I used that word I could lose my job!
Van Jones supports the convicted cop killing murderer Abdul "what's his name".
So, we have an admitted radical communist racist who supports murderers as well as being a conspiracy theory lunatic, ALL BY HIS OWN ADMISSSION! HE SAID THESE THINGS! ON TAPE!
So Obama is friends with Bill Ayers (domestic terrorist who planned to kill lots of people as a form of protest), Reverend Wright (racist minister who hates and damns America) and Van Jones (admitted radical communist, racist and conspiracy nut).
Anybody see a disturbing pattern here?
Max Conrad
September 07, 2009 11:24 AM.
Yes. A pattern of Obama throwing people under the bus.
I love the lefties!
Robert Byrd, former Grand Wizard of the KKK - he's OK because he's a Democrat....
Bill Clinton, committed willful felony perjury in front of a Federal Grand Jury - he's OK because he's a Democrat (and everyone know Clinton couldn't open his mouth without lying)....
Teddy Kennedy, expelled from Harvard for cheating (his family paid off the school to let him back in), who killed a woman while he was drunk and then ran off to his bootlegger family and lawyers to save himself instead of the poor woman who took two hours to suffocate to death in cold water, career drunk and womanizer, who also attempted secret deals with the Soviet Union to undermine the President of the United States in exchange for help getting elected president - he's OK because he's a "liberal lion"....
Sandy Berger, who stole and destroyed documents from the National Archives regarding the Clinton Administrations handling of pre 9/11 intelligence - he's OK because he's a Democrat....
I'm a conservative that judges people by their ideas, behavior and associations. If a Democrat has a good idea I will support them (like Clinton on NAFTA).
Liberals hate Conservatives just because they are Conservative. I graduated high school with 650 students, two of which were African American. One was my locker mate senior year (by mutual choice) and both are still close friends. One of the first times I fell crushingly in love at first sight was with a beautiful African American woman who is still the most charming and funny woman I am privileged to call a close friend. I made a fool of myself chasing after her and in the end she turned me down with a kind tenderness I still treasure.
I think gay marriage should be legal because of my conservative views. Marriage is nothing but a legal contract between to consenting "human beings" who want to share their personal and legal lives together. To discriminate against homosexuals goes completely against the non-discrimination spirit of this country.
But all I hear from liberals is that if someone is conservative they are racist haters who want gays sent to hell and will dance for joy as we spill toxic waste into the Yellowstone River.
Grow up! Conservatives don’t want the government to tax us to death with their giant programs with massive overhead and regulations. Conservatives want REAL education in schools, not the “feel good” pabulum that leaves children unable to compete intellectually with the rest of the world. Conservative want to run a business without having to knuckle under to historically corrupt labor unions who tack on so much overhead with their excessive benefits and parachute packages that American companies can’t compete globally! Why should a Labor Union own a luxury golf course?
In the end, the extreme left is as blindly racist towards conservatives as the worst segregationists.
I say the “extreme” left, because I recognize that all “progressives” are not self described radical communists or domestic terrorists, as are Obama’s good friends and political appointees Van Jones & Bill Ayers.
Blackflon September 07, 2009 11:51
And what does that tell you about Obama?
That he will throw a friend under a bus if it is in his best interest to do so. This is the man you elected, a student of the radical Saul (the ends justify the means) Alinsky and political pro trained in the notoriously corrupt Chicago political machine.
Are you really surprised?
I had high hopes for a strong president behind an agenda I could support. Someone with no patience for stupidity and hatred.
My greatest wish would be that Barney Frank's town hall sessions would be a model for Obama.
How-to guide to organizing your local hate radio BOYCOTT http://www.britell.com
It doesn't matter what they do, the right is going to scream and rant and throw tantrums. Ignore them, I say, and do whatever you like.
One doesn't govern by doing what one "likes".
- the continued warrant-less wiretapping,
- the continuation and expansion of (Obama's) wars into Pakistan,
- abuses continue at Guantanomo, Bagram, Abu Graib, that include indefinite detention
Most galling are the statements by Obama and his administration basically saying to us *move-on* from seeking accountability for torture and crimes against humanity committed by the Bush administration. This attitude reflects the Republican echo chamber's words when refusing to allow a Florida recount.
The latest outrage is Obama's apparent caving in to Republicans, blue dog democrats, right-wingers and the insurance lobby on the public option.
Democrats could remain in power for decades if they passed meaningful healthcare reform... yet Obama has bent down and kissed Republican ass to try and get a Republican to vote for healthcare reform. The Dems should use the 50 vote rule for the reconciliation process and pass healthcare reform with the Repugs -- forget about bipartisanship. That's crap. The Repubs do not practice bipartisanship.
Mr. Sirota, while I am pleased that you support Van, I am disappointed with your statements labeling 9/11 truthers offensive, awful, intimidating, bullying and aggressive. The bottom line is, the government has a conspiracy theory that is implausible. Gross negligence is not an acceptable or reasonable explanation for truthers. Truthers have an alternative conspiracy theory that is supported by scientific research and physical evidence. A two year peer-reviewed study by scientist of the dust from the world trade center revealed the presence of military grade nanothermite. The world trade centers were not brought down by the *intense heat* created by the plane crashes. The presence of nanothermite means that explosives were used to destroy the buildings.
The Dems should use the 50 vote rule for the reconciliation process and pass healthcare reform without the Repugs -- forget about bipartisanship.