The Death of the Democratic Party
W.J. Astore
How quickly the abnormal becomes normal.
If you had told me three months ago that Russia would invade Ukraine and that the U.S. response would be $54 billion in "aid," much of it consisting of missiles, artillery, bullets, and other forms of weaponry, and that this huge amount of "aid" would be supported by every Democrat in the House and Senate, without exception, I don't think I would have believed you.
Not a single Democrat is against spending more than $50 billion that will serve to feed a war rather than putting a stop to it?
$54 billion represents roughly 80% of what Russia spends on its military for an entire year. How much is the U.S. government prepared to spend if the war drags on for the next few months? Another $54 billion? More?
The Democratic Party can't get all its members to vote for a $15 federal minimum wage, or for student debt relief, or more affordable health care and lower prescription drug prices, and similar promises made by Joe Biden as he ran for president in 2020. But weapons for Ukraine brings instant and total accord and rapid action.
Feeding the military-industrial complex and perpetuating war is more than a sad spectacle. It's more than the death of the Democratic Party. It heightens the risk of nuclear war with Russia, because the longer the Russia-Ukraine War drags on, and the more the U.S. gets involved in it, the riskier the situation in Europe becomes. What's needed is deescalation through negotiation, not escalation through more rhetoric about Putin being a genocidal war criminal who must go.
I've already witnessed the death of the Republican Party with its open embrace of Trump and Trumpism. And now I've witnessed the death of the Democratic Party with its open embrace of peace through war.
We are increasingly "a nation unmade by war," to cite a book written by Tom Engelhardt. We refuse to sufficiently help the poor and homeless here in America even as we airlift megatons of weaponry for Ukraine to wage a war that will likely be that country's curse rather than its salvation. Meanwhile, politicians in both parties use the war to justify even higher military spending in the next Pentagon budget. And if that war isn't enough of a driver, the mainstream media broadcasts war games on TV that posit a major war between the USA and China over Taiwan.
People dismiss me when I say I'm voting Green or Libertarian, that I want to vote for someone who's not a tool for more and more military spending and more and more war. The "smart set" tells me to vote for someone like Joe Biden because he's not quite as bad as Trump. But if we keep doing this, voting for Joe or the like because Trump and his followers are "worse," how will we ever free ourselves from incessant warfare and restore our democracy?
Isn't it high time for that "political revolution" that Bernie Sanders spoke about?
Coda: I know: the Democratic Party probably died in the aftermath of George McGovern's loss in 1972, after which party officials vowed never to nominate a peace candidate like McGovern again. It certainly died with the election of Bill and Hillary Clinton (two for the price of one!) in 1992. And it died a thousand deaths when Barack Obama won in 2008 and abandoned the political revolution he had briefly set in motion. Much like a Hollywood vampire, however, it keeps coming back from the grave, no matter how many stakes it drives through what's left of its own heart.
Update (5/21): Happened to see this on "the Twitter" this AM: