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Today's Stories February 20, 2007 Werther February 19, 2007 Paul Craig
Roberts Gary Leupp Ron Jacobs Michael F.
Brown Robert Jensen Roger Burbach Monica Benderman Sonja Karkar John Walsh Talli Nauman Website of the Day
Feburary 17 / 18, 2007 Alexander Cockburn Tao Ruspoli Gary Leupp Jeffrey St.
Clair Roger Morris Uri Avnery James Brooks Sen. Russell
Feingold Linn Washington, Jr. Michele Brand Fred Gardner Mitchel Cohen Mike Ferner David Swanson P. Sainath Mike Stark Missy Beattie Jonathan Franklin Website of the Weekend
Marc Levy Andrew Cockburn Glen Ford Greg Moses Ron Jacobs John W. Farley James Marc Leas Tim Rinne Albert Wan Website of
the Day
Patrick Cockburn Saul Landau Stephen Lendman Evelyn Pringle Michael Simmons Kevin Zeese Dave Lindorff Pete Shanks Peter Rost Lenni Brenner
/ Gilad Atzmon Website of the Day
February 14, 2007 Tao Ruspoli Dick J. Reavis Margaret Kimberly Christopher Brauchli Paul Craig
Roberts John Ross Michael F.
Brown Dave Lindorff J.L. Chestunut,
Jr. Don Fitz Michael Donnelly Dr. Susan Block Website of
the Day
February 13, 2007 Uri Avnery Patrick Cockburn Ralph Nader Marjorie Cohn Col. Dan Smith Col. Douglas
MacGreagor Thomas Power Nicola Nasser David Swanson Columbia Coalition
Against the War Website of the Day
February 12, 2007 Patrick Cockburn Paul Craig
Roberts John Walsh Dr. John Carroll,
MD Greg Moses Nicole Colson Dave Lindorff Ray McGovern Doug Giebel David Swanson Website of the Day
February
10 /11, 2007 Alexander Cockburn Gabriel Kolko Patrick Cockburn Jeffrey St.
Clair Kevin Alexander Gray M. Shahid Alam Greg Moses Paul Craig
Roberts George Ciccariello-Maher Kevin Zeese Turner / Kim George Duke Walter Brasch Shepherd Bliss Missy Beattie Peter Harley Pat Wolff Poets' Basement Website of the Day
Conn Hallinan Gary Leupp Lee Sustar Nikolas Kozloff Newton Garver Yitzhak Laor Dave Lindorff David Swanson Website of the Day
February 8, 2007 John V. Walsh Marjorie Cohn Trish Schuh Ron Jacobs Laura Carlsen Ramzy Baroud Brenda Norrell Bryan Farrell Judith Scherr Website of
the Day
February 7, 2007 Daniel Wolff Tao Ruspoli Tony Swindell Sharon Smith Ken Couesbouc Jeff Cohen Col. Dan Smith Tom Kerr Joshua Frank Adam Elkus Stephen Fleischman Website of
the Day
February 6, 2007 Diana Johnstone Gregory Wilpert Norman Solomon Dave Lindorff William Blum Mike Ferner CP News Service Evelyn Pringle Christopher Brauchli Alan Cabal Website of the Day
Dave Zirin Uri Avnery Ron Jacobs Paul Craig Roberts Newton Garver Bruce Anderson Saul Landau Ralph Nader James T. Phillips Mike Whitney Kenneth Rexroth Website of the Day
Alexander Cockburn Tao Ruspoli Jeffrey St.
Clair Patrick Cockburn P. Sainath Sen. Russell Feingold Diane Christian Brian Cloughley Diana Barahona Timothy J. Freeman Conn Hallinan John Ross Greg Moses Missy Beattie Joshua Frank Evelyn Pringle Stephen Fleischman Muhammad Idrees Ahmad Poets' Basement Website of the Day
Chris Kutalik R. Gibson /
E. W. Ross Pam Martens John Feffer Daryll E. Ray Ronald Bruce
St. John Mitchel Cohen Website of
the Day
Diane Farsetta Marjorie Cohn Mark Scaramella Ranni Amiri Christopher Ketcham Winston Warfield Corporate Crime Reporter Thomas P. Healy Website of the Dau
January 31, 2007 Patrick Cockburn Jean Bricmont Tao Ruspoli James T. Phillips William Johnson Tim Wilkinson Evelyn Pringle Joshua Frank Ramzy Baroud Mickey Z. Website of the Day
Werther Kathy Kelly Uri Avnery Franklin Spinney William S. Lind Pariah Mike Whitney Rev. William
E. Alberts Fran Shor Anthony Arnove Website of the Day
Nurit Peled-Elhanan Patrick Cockburn JoAnn Wypijewski Ron Jacobs Dave Lindorff Kevin Zeese Reza Fiyouzat Pat Williams Website of the Day
January 27 / 28, 2007 Diana Johnstone Eliza Ernshire Patrick Cockburn David Rosen Greg Moses Bernard Chazelle Tao Ruspoli Hermán
Uribe Ralph Nader Paul Craig
Roberts Fred Gardner Brian Cloughley James Abourezk John V. Whitbeck Seth Sandronsky Alan Cabal Pam Martens Website of
the Weekend
Charlotte Laws Mike Ely /
Linda Flores Joe DeRaymond Phil Donahue Zia Mian Jeb Sprague Evelyn Pringle Missy Beattie Martha Rosenberg Website of
the Day
Patrick Cockburn John Ross Jeremy Scahill Frida Berrigan Paul Craig Roberts Jason Yossef
Ben-Meir Christopher Brauchli Holger W. Henke Dave Lindorff Julia Landau Website of the Day
January 24, 2007 Tao Ruspoli Paul Craig
Roberts Lt. Gen. William Odom Sharon Smith Brian M. Downing Heather Gray Ron Jacobs James Brooks Robert Day Website of
the Day
Trish Schuh Robert Bryce
Stephen Soldz John Blair Gloria La Riva Joshua Frank Patrick Cockburn Ralph Nader Dave Lindorff Uri Avnery Website of the Day
January 22, 2007 Manuel Garcia,
Jr. Jen Marlowe George McGovern Paul Craig
Roberts Norman Solomon Amira Hass Mike Whitney Ramzy Baroud John Walsh Website of
the Day
January 20/21 2007 Alexander Cockburn
Gail Dines
Newton Garver
Gilad Atzmon
Seth Sandronksy
Raphaelle Bail
Jim Goodman Larry Portis
Website of
the Weekend
Jonathan Cook
Glen Ford Dave Lindorff
Larry Portis
Website of
the Day
William Peace
Virginia Tilley
Michael Donnelly
B.R. Gowani
Larry Portis
Jason Hribal
Website of
the Day
Franklin Spinney John Ross Susan George Paul Craig
Roberts Joshua Frank David Lindorff
Col. Sam Gardiner
Marjorie Cohn
Saul Landau
Ron Jacobs
Susan Block Ken Couesbouck Website of
the Day
Roger Morris Paul Craig
Roberts Kathy Kelly William Blum Ralph Nader Saul Landau January 12 / 14, 2007 Patrick Cockburn David Rosen William S.
Lind Laith al-Saud Paul Craig
Roberts John Ross George Ciccariello-Maher Christopher Brauchli Robert Buzzanco Evelyn Pringle Peter Rost,
MD. Mike Whitney Yifat Susskind Saul Cohen Missy Beattie Stephen Lendman Website of
the Weekend
January 11, 2007 Ismael Hossein-Zadeh Paul Craig
Roberts Kathy Kelly Dave Lindorff Jeff Leys Richard W.
Behan Col. Douglas MacGregor Website of
the Day Speech of the Day
Peter Linebaugh Robert Fantina Patrick Cockburn Paul Craig Roberts Col. Dan Smith Ben Tripp Evelyn Pringle Ron Jacobs Mike Ferner Dave Zirin Website of
the Day Bootleg of the Day
R. T. Naylor Jonathan Cook Mike Ely and Linda Flores Joshua Frank Norman Solomon Sen. Russell
Feingold Joe Allen James T. Phillips Brian Concannon Leonard Peltier Website of the Day
January 8, 2007 Werther Jeff Leys Paul Craig Roberts Shulamit Aloni Dave Lindorff Sunsara Taylor Seth Sandronsky Dr. Susan Block Website of the Day
Alexander Cockburn Franklin C.
Spinney Paul Craig
Roberts Ralph Nader Walden Bello Marleen Martin Brian Cloughley Uri Avnery Saul Landau Ron Jacobs Joseph Nevins William S. Lind Gary Leupp Elisa Salasin George Ciccariello-Maher Beyond Chavistas and Anti-Chavistas: Deepening the Bolivarian Revolution Stefan Wray Michael Leonardi Richard Rhames Jeffrey St. Clair Barbara LaMorticella Website of the Weekend Song of the
Weekend
Jorge Mariscal John Walsh Christopher Brauchli Travis Sharpe Tom Barry Linda Schade
/ Kevin Zeese Tiffany Ten Eyck Mahmoud El-Yousseph Lucinda Marshall Website of
the Day
Patrick Cockburn Winslow T.
Wheeler M. Shahid Alam Raed Jarrar Bert Sacks Kathy Rentenbach Stephen Fleischman George Bisharat Peter Rost, MD Evelyn Pringle Website of the Day
January 3, 2007 Kathy Kelly Paul Craig
Roberts William Johnson Stan Cox Trita Parsi Declan McKenna Joe Bageant Nicola Nasser Missy Beattie Website of
the Day
Michael Watts Amina Mire James Brooks Alevtina Rea Al Krebs Peter Rost Niranjan Ramakrishnan John Stanton Website of the Day
January 1, 2007 Patrick Cockburn Uri Avnery Joshua Frank
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February 20, 2007 Twenty Years AfterCommon Sense About the Recent PastBy CARL G. ESTABROOK
Someone gave me a copy of *The Three Musketeers* when I was a boy, and I was captivated by Dumas' tale, and by the historical setting, although I knew nothing about 17th century France. I read that there were sequels, and was shocked to find that the first was called *Twenty Years After* -- and that the next, *The Vicomte de Bragelonne* was set another ten years on! An impossibly long period of time, I thought. How could the characters still be interesting, once they'd become so old? It was a revelation to my youthful insouciance that the characters in the sequels were even more interesting as the vicissitudes of their lives accumulated -- and the history, in the sense of past politics, became even more important, to them and to me. A detailed knowledge of the politics of the Fronde (1648-53) may not have been much use to me, then or now, but the picture of the interaction of the personal and the political never left me. Graham Greene remarks somewhere about the definitive intellectual influence of youthful reading, even if not always of the best sort. Just as Dumas' romances led on to an interest in early modern ecclesiastical and political history, so Isaac Asimov's use of Arnold Toynbee in his science fiction led to my finding Toynbee's study (in the abridged two volumes), and that led to the Master of Those Who Know historical changes, Karl Marx. Marx and Engels attempted to descry the determinants on politics and the person in the modern economic order, and so of course had very little to say about socialism. The collapse of official Marxism-Leninism in the last twenty years means that we can attempt to understand those determinants again. As Perry Anderson wrote more than thirty years ago, "The immense intellectual and political respect we owe to Marx and Engels is incompatible with any piety towards them." He noted for example that "Engels's historical judgments are nearly always superior to those of Marx. He possessed a deeper knowledge of European history, and had a surer grasp of its successive and salient structures." An important change in the past twenty years is that there is now no danger that Marx and Engels be taken as religious texts, and so the questions that they raised may be considered again. Noam Chomsky pointed out that "the disappearance of the Soviet Union is a small victory for socialism, much as the defeat of the fascist powers was." But the soi-disant Left in the US instead gave way to the fissiparous tendencies of "identity politics"; worse, instead of taking up anew questions of politics and society, the academy forswore "grand narratives" and -- claiming to be "radical" but not wishing to risk anything -- backed into the the blind alley of Postmodernism. Critic Terry Eagleton writes that academic cultural theory "has been shamefaced about morality and metaphysics, embarrassed about love, biology, religion and revolution, largely silent about evil, reticent about death and suffering, dogmatic about essences, universals and foundations, and superficial about truth, objectivity and disinterestedness. This, on any estimate, is rather a large slice of human existence to fall down on. It is also ... rather an awkward moment in history to find oneself with little or nothing to say about such fundamental questions." The universities' choice of the quiet life in the last generation made the existence of Common Sense and similar publications necessary. Most of them appeared on the internet, once that became possible, as a concomitant to political activism in America. It is simply a myth that activism died with the Sixties, important as the decade from the death of Kennedy to the withdrawal of US troops from Vietnam was for the destruction of the post-WWII ideological rectification campaign. That's why the Sixties are so reviled in the similar campaign of the last thirty years. It is also a myth that the ending of the draft in 1973 -- part of the Pentagon's response to the revolt of its expeditionary force in Vietnam, a matter still largely ignored by the histories of the era -- led to the end of the antiwar movement. On the contrary, the US government ended the draft because of the strength of the movement. It found what the French had found earlier in Vietnam -- that a colonial war cannot be fought with a conscript army. That's why it's unlikely that the Pentagon today will press for the revival of the draft. The movement of the 1970's -- broader and more inclusive in terms of issues than that of the Sixties -- produced what was paradoxically in effect the most progressive administration since WWII, despite its stated views: Nixon-Ford. That's part of the reason why *CounterPunch* has argued that "it has always been our position that Gerald Ford was America's greatest President," in spite of the major crimes of those administrations, from COINTELPRO to the invasion of Timor -- against which Watergate was a bagatelle. The trends were so frightening to the US elite that they said so publicly: in 1975 the Trilateral Commission -- the American members of which were drawn from the Brookings Institution, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Ford Foundation, with President Carter's National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski at their head -- published *The Crisis of Democracy*. The crisis was that there was *too much* democracy, that the public had got the dangerous idea that they could actually control the US government. That had to be quashed, and the Carter-Reagan years saw the counter-attack, at the high point of which, twenty years ago, the need for the discussion that *Common Sense* promoted became apparent. The anti-war movement of the 1980's -- largely church based and outside the universities -- was able to do what the Sixties movement had not been able to do. At the outset of the Reagan administration, the US government had wanted to put US troops into Central America, as the Kennedy administration had done in Vietnam. (In many ways the Reagan administration patterned itself on Kennedy's.) But the threat of public opposition -- the "Vietnam syndrome" -- prevented them from doing so. US government foreign policy had to go underground, in the vicious Contra war against Nicaragua, and throughout Central America. It was only in the administration of Reagan's successor, George Bush Sr., that the US was able to engineer a demonstration war in Central America (Panama, 1989) and then one in the Middle East in 1991, the principal success of which Bush claimed was to end the Vietnam syndrome. Nevertheless George Bush Jr.'s invasion of Iraq in 2003 was preceded by the largest world-wide anti-war demonstrations in history, contrasting sharply with the absolute silence that greeted Kennedy's invasion of Vietnam in 1962. One indication that comparisons between Vietnam and Iraq don't work too well is that, in the obscene calculus of killers and killed, the Bush-Clinton-Bush reduction of Iraq is only about a quarter of what Kennedy-Johnson-Nixon were able to do in destroying peasant society in Southeast Asia, a region vastly less important than the Middle East to the political elite of the US. Despite the present crimes of this most dangerous of American administrations -- its policies have brought us as close or closer to the use of nuclear weapons than those of any Cold War administration -- the US is a far more civilized place today than it was after the Second World War. What was possible for a Kennedy or a Reagan is not so easily done by a Bush Jr. -- and therefore the administration has had to launch direct assaults on the Constitution, notably in the Patriot Act, the Military Commissions Act, and Bush's signing statements. It has had to make ever wider war with little popular support, in anxious expectation that emergencies will produce that support: the Bush administration, more than any other since Truman's, needs alarums and excursions. Of course twenty years ago there was no dearth of prophets calling America back to what the public thinks of as American principles, and exposing how these principles are lied about by our ideological institutions, such as the universities and the press. It is for example twenty years since Noam Chomsky and Edward Hermann wrote *Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of Mass Communication* (Pantheon, 1988), where they put forth a model of how elite propaganda works in the US -- and why our rulers think it necessary. The very first task of the American political class is to hide the fact that its interests are different from and opposed to those of the vast majority of Americans (to say nothing of the rest of the world). It must neutralize public opposition. As the sociologist Robert Putnam has argued, one of the effects of the modern American political system is to dissolve those bonds, from sports clubs to labor unions, that have been recognized as essential for democracy from Aristotle though Tocqueville. American business wants you sitting in front of your TV or computer screen, watching your Ebay bid or a paradoxically named "reality" show. It certainly doesn't want you doing anything more politically than pulling a lever (or touching a screen) to ratify the rule of essentially indistinguishable candidates -- who will follow essentially the same policies (about which the public is often told only after the fact). This, too, is not all that new. "Your people, sir, is nothing but a great beast!" said the founder of the US economic system, Alexander Hamilton. It remains true today that the only enemy the executive committee of the US business class -- the US government -- fears, is the American public. The foreign policy elite of the US, the Council of Foreign Affairs, has just issued a lengthy report, *After the Surge*, arguing for down-playing the war the Iraq (not of course for abandoning its goals, the control of Middle East energy resources) because it is "Better to withdraw as a coherent and somewhat volitional act than withdraw later in hectic response to public opposition to the war in the United States." As the US government pushes ahead with its absolutely mad (but not irrational) drive for world hegemony -- and shows that it is entirely willing to risk even the survival of the race for control of the earth -- a true account of the political situation must, like the gospel, be preached in season and out of season. I admired the late anarchist, Karl Hess, who began his political career as a speech-writer for Barry Goldwater in 1964: he once suggested that "the most revolutionary thing you can do is get to know your neighbors." *Common Sense* has been doing that for the Notre Dame neighborhood -- and beyond -- for twenty years. La lutte continue. C. G. Estabrook recently retired as a visiting professor
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he hosts
two local weekly radio programs, one on politics, "News
from Neptune", and the other on poetry, "From Bard
to Verse: A Program of the Spoken Arts." In 2002 he was
the the Green party candidate for Congress for the 15th Illinois
Congressional District. He can be reached at: galliher@uiuc.ed
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