home / subscribe / donate / tower / books / archives / search / links / feedback / events / faq

 

What You're Missing in Our Subscriber-only CounterPunch Newsletter

Special Investigation: Why Did the World Trade Towers Fall?

A scientific explanation at last, from a physicist and mechanical engineer. P. Sainath recalls Gandhi's 9/11, one hundred years ago; Chris Sands reports from Afghanistan on the rise of the Taliban. What you just missed, but can still get, in our last newsletter: Paul Craig Roberts on the Collapse of America. CounterPunch Online is read by millions of viewers each month! But remember, we are funded solely by the subscribers to the print edition of CounterPunch. Please support this website by buying a subscription to our newsletter, which contains fresh material you won't find anywhere else, or by making a donation towards the cost of this online edition. Remember contributions are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now!

Get CounterPunch By Email for Only $35 a Year

Cockburn in Eureka on Saturday

Today's Stories

October 7 / 8, 2006

Alexander Cockburn
Wargasms and Orgasms


October 6, 2006

Alison Weir
Just Another Mother Murdered

Tiffany Ten Eyck / Mark Brenner
Made in (DeUnionized) America

Corporate Crime Reporter
Look Who's Behind "37 Reasons" to Vote for Big Business: Former Clinton PR Flak Mike McCurry

Juan Antonio Montecino
Cleaving a False Divide in Latin America

Walden Bello
A Siamese Tragedy

Christopher Brauchli
Rank Invitations: Dining with Bush

Brynne Keith-Jennings
Dan Burton in Nicaragua: the Congressman, His Stick and the Elections

Jonathan Cook
The Struggle for Palestine's Soul

Website of the Day
Fighting Hog Farms and Clearcuts in the Heartland

 


October 5, 2006

John Walsh
Turn the Page

Carol Norris
The Radical Right, the Myth of the Gay Child Abuser and You: a Psychotherapist on the Hysteria Over Foley

Paul Craig Roberts
Will November Bring Hope or Another Stolen Election?

Ricardo Alarcón
The Truth About the Embargo of Cuba

James Abourezk
Waterboarding the Constitution: After Torture, What's Next?

Nicola Nasser
Removing Hamas: Brinksmanship or Coup d'Etat?

Kirkpatrick Sale
Breaking Away: the First North American Secessionist Conference

Uri Avnery
Peace with Syria: Lunch in Damascus

Website of the Day
More Naughty GOP Messages


October 4, 2006

Elizabeth Terzakis
The Walls That Racism Built: Blood Revenge, the Death Penalty and Kevin Cooper

Paul Wolf
The Mushy Rebellion: Pakistan Under Musharraf

Sean Penn
The Arrogant, the Misguided and the Cowards

Dave Lindorff
Outrage as Misdirection: The Real Scandal isn't Foley

Diane Farsetta
For Sale: Iraqi Kurdistan

Sharon Smith
Democrats: Yes to War, No to Pedophilia

Felice Pace
Revoking 1776

Sara Roy
The Economy of Gaza

Website of the Day
Alexander Cockburn: the Video Interview (Part Two)


October 3, 2006

Jennifer Van Bergen
Compassionate Conservative Pedophiles

Greg Moses
The Infallible Empire: Junking Habeas Corpus

Stan Cox
Real Bad ID: a National Driver's License and the Fading Right of Anonymity

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
How Empires Die

Evelyn Pringle
Big Pharma Takes a Hit: Alaska's Supreme Court Outlaws Forced Drugging

Fred Wilhelms
SoundExchange and Unpaid Music Artists: Help Us Find These Musicians and Get Them Paid!

Michael Abelman
Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food: the Risks of Convenience and Consolidation

Gary Leupp
The Foley Follies

Website of the Day
Bush and Blair: Endless Love

 

October 2, 2006

Eric Hazan
Roadmap to Nowhere: an Interview with Tanya Reinhart on Israel/Palestine Since 2003

Mike Whitney
Bloodbath on 60 Minutes: Court Stenographer Finally Comes Clean

Norman Solomon
American Narcissism and Iraq

Assaf Kfoury
Meeting Nasrallah

Missy Beattie
The Meaning of "ummmm": Speaker Hasert and the Over-Friendly Congressman

Arthur Neslen
Lie Less in Gaza

Paula J. Caplan
How the Supreme Court Mangled My Research

Website of the Day
Predator Drones Target Bechtel

 

Sept. 30 / 0ct. 1, 2006
Weekend Edition

Paul Craig Roberts
The New Face of Class War

Marjorie Cohn
Rounding Up US Citizens: a Consitutional Shredding

Ben Tripp
Deviant Conservative Males: an Analysis

Ron Jacobs
A Dismal and Chaotic Place: Iraq According to Patrick Cockburn

Ralph Nader
Torturer-in-Chief

Mike Whitney
Iraq: The Breaking Point

Christopher Reed
It Pays to Raise a Ruckus

Seth Sandronsky
The Housing Bust: Excess Investment and Its Discontents

Fred Gardner
The Chancellor's Wife

Mokhiber / Weissman
Hewlett Packard and the Erosion of Privacy

Michael Dickinson
My Escape Attempt from Prison Transfer: Extract from a Diary in Turkish Police Custody

Alan Gregory
Fake Green: Top 10 Ways Politicians Pretend to be Environmentalists

Poets' Basement
Gardner, Landau, Lindorff, Davies,& Buknatski

 

 

September 29, 2006

Bruce Jackson
Chavez's Reading, Bush's Reading

Michael J. Smith
The Lobby Debate Does Manhattan

Emira Woods
Oil Trip: Record Profits for Exxon, Deprivation for Africa

William S. Lind
The Sanctuary Illusion: Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq as Theme Parks for 4GW

David Swanson
Mommy, What's Waterboarding?

Jonathan Cook
Bad Faith and the Destruction of Palestine

Website of the Day
Jesus: the Recruitment Tapes


September 28, 2006

Sen. Russ Feingold
The Flaws in the Military Commissions Act

Ron Jacobs
The Generals, the Democrats and Iraq: One Policy, Two Parties

Mokhiber / Weissman
Scenes from Laura's Book Festival: Elmo Will Not Save You

Lee Sustar
A Left Challenge to Lula

Robert Jensen
Finding My Way Back to Church--and Getting Kicked Out

John Chuckman
America Has Just Lost Two More Wars

Evelyn Pringle
Inside America's Nursing Homes: a Hidden Tragedy of Neglect and Abuse

Nicola Nasser
Bush and Islam: Words vs. Deeds

Uri Avnery
Political Corruption in Israel

Website of the Day
Art Against the Empire


September 27, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
A Final Explosion Looms in Mosul

Camilo Mejia
Blowback From Iraq: Giving Terrorism a Reason to Exist

Pat Williams
Tax Burdens and Cheaters in the Rockies: Send Those IRS Mercenaries in Search of Montana's Land Barons and Oil Drillers

Ben Terrall
Failing Haiti: Another Bungled UN Mission

Ridgeway / Ng
Paul Weyrich Explaines His Opposition to the Patriot Act: a Short Film

Joe Allen
Where are the Mass Protests?

Andrew Wimmer
Don't Disappear Into a Black Hole

Franklin C. Spinney
Rumsfeld's AutoCarterization: Skullduggery in the Pentagon's Budget

Website of the Day
Model Nukes: the Photo Contest


September 26, 2006

Hani Shukrallah
The American Mind: When Historical Analysis is Reduced to Whim

William Blum
If It's Election Season, It Must Be Time for a Terror Alert

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Torturing the Obvious

Barbara Becnel
Witness to an Execution: a Slow and Very Painful Death

Paul Rockwell
Judicial Complicity in US War Crimes: the Watada Case

Dave Lindorff
Bush and Iran: Going to War to Save His Own Ass?

Rich Gibson
Lessons from the Detroit Teachers' Strike

Anthony Papa
The Danger of Meth Registries: "Have a Cold? Prove It, Then Sign Here"

Nate Mezmer
New Orleans is Back ... Without Blacks: Monday Night Football at the Superdome

Uri Avnery
Mohammed's Sword

Website of the Day
Only YOU Can Stop the Sale of Public Lands to Mining, Timber and Real Estate Corporations


September 25, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
The Most Dangerous Place in the World: a Journey to Iraq's "Taliban Republic"

Jonathan Cook
Human Rights Watch: Still Missing the Point on Lebanon

Joshua Frank
Did Maria Cantwell's Campaign Try to Buy Off Aaron Dixon?

Paul Craig Roberts
Is the Bush Administration Itching to Nuke Iran?

Robert Jensen
Defending Chavez on FoxNews

Dave Lindorff
Horowitz on Campus: This Mouth for Hire

Norman Solomon
Media Tall Tales for Next War

Dr. Charles Jonkel
Save a Grizzly, Visit a Library: "People like the Croc Hunter are Worse Than the Most Bloodthirsty Slob Hunter

Michael Dickinson
"The King's New Clothes:" a Play Written in a Turkish Jail

Alexander Cockburn
Flying Saucers and the Decline of the Left

Website of the Day
Great Bear Foundation

 

September 23 / 24, 2006
Weekend Edition

Jonathan Cook
How Israel is Engineering the "Clash of Civilizations"

Jeffrey St. Clair
Star Wars Goes Online ... Crashes

Dr. Anon
A Doctor's Life in Baghdad

Tom Barry
Oil and Political Opportunism

Carl G. Estabrook
The Darfur Smokescreen

Laura Carlsen
Mexico's Two Presidents

Todd Chretien
The Axis of Lesser Evilism

Dr. Charles Jonkel
From Grizzly Man to the Croc Hunter: the Global Media and the Death of Bears

Debbie Nathan
I Was Disappeared By Salon

Fred Gardner
Dustin Costa Struggles Against Invisibility

Fred Wilhelms
The Money Belongs to the Artists Who Created the Music

Seth Sandronsky
The Cruel Economics of Health Care in America

Ralph Nader
Mavericks at Work

Rev. William Alberts
"Specks" and "Logs" and 9/11

Jon Van Camp
Who is Hezbollah?

Heather Gray
Conservatives and Technology

David Vest
Jerry Lightfoot, RIP

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listenting to This Week

Poets' Basement
Landau / Davies

Website of the Weekend
Meet Me In The Morning: C. Wonderland & J. Lightfoot

Video of the Weekend
Is It a Bird? A Missile? Or, Just Perhaps, a Friggin' Plane?

 

September 22, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
Republic of Fear: Torture in Bush's Iraq, Worse Than Under Saddam

Michael Donnelly
It's the Manipulated Economy, Stupid!

Ramzy Baroud
The Next Palestinian Struggle

Evo Morales
"We Need Partners, Not Bosses": Address to the United Nations

Stanley Howard
Torture and Justice in Chicago

Sarah Leah Whitson
Hezbollah's Rockets and Civilian Casualties: a Reply to Jonathan Cook

JoAnn Wypijewski
Conservations at Ground Zero

Website of the Day
Cockburn in Atlanta: the Video Interview


September 21, 2006

Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad
"No Nation Should Have Superiority Over Others:" UN Address

Justin E. H. Smith
Ending the Death Penalty: Outline of an Abolitionist Program

Rick Kuhn
Australian Government Steps Up Attacks on Muslims: "I Certainly Don't Want That Type of People in Australia"

Mike Roselle
Ed Wiley's Long March: the Elementary School vs. the Strip Mine

Amira Hass
In the Name of Security: What Israeli Police Files Reveal About the Occupation of Palestine

Deborah Rich
From the Kitchen of Dr. Frankenstein: the Consumption of Gene-Engineeered Foods

Mickey Z.
10 Reasons Cars Suck

Saul Landau
Terrorism at Sheridan Circle

Website of the Day
Stop the Decapitation of Mountains!


September 20, 2006

Sharon Smith
Elections, Detentions and Deportations

Christopher Reed
Goodbye Koizumi, Hello Abe

John Ross
Mexico: Does AMLO Have a Future?

Joshua Frank
A Wasted Campaign: How Jonathan Tasini Helped Hillary Clinton and Distracted the Antiwar Movement

Arthur Neslen
The Clenched Fist of the Phoenix: What Made Israel Burn Lebanon, Again?

Norman Solomon
The Hollow Promise of Digital Technology

Michael Carmichael
The Vatican's Tyrant

Evelyn Pringle
The Merck Vioxx Litigation: a Scorecard

Hugo Chavez
Rise Up Against the Empire: Address to the United Nations

Website of the Day
Before You Enlist: Watch This Video!


September 19, 2006

Patrick Cockburn
Deadly Harvest: Lebanese Fields Sown with Israeli Cluster Bombs

Jeff Leys
Economic Warfare: Iraq and the IMF

Brian M. Downing
War, Taxes and Democracy

Col. Dan Smith
Dispelling Brutality

Liaquat Ali Khan
Presidential Incitements: Did Bush's Speech Violate Geneva Conventions on Genocide?

Ron Jacobs
Just Sign on the Dotted Line: Iraqi Oil and Production Sharing Agreements

Nik Barry-Shaw / Yves Engler
Canada in Haiti: Torture, Murder and Complicity

Lucinda Marshall
Air Paranoia: the Great Toothpaste and Hair Gel Scare

Saul Landau
The Pinochet Syndicate

Photo of the Day
Hold That Bridge!

Website of the Day
Scenarios for an Iranian War


September 18, 2006

Carl Boggs
Crimes of Empire

Uri Avnery
Peace Panic

Mike Stark / Jim Bullington
Ann Richards, the Original Texacutioner

Joshua Frank
Corporate E. Coli

John Murphy
The Price of Free Speech

Ramzy Baroud
Murdoch Almighty

Dave Lindorff
On Constitution Day

Bill Quigley
Showing Conviction at Echo 9

Website of the Day
Tutorial: How to Hack a Diebold Voting Machine

 


September 16 / 17, 2006
Weekend Edition

Tariq Ali
A Bavarian Provocation

Eliza Ernshire
Death and Tears in Nablus

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part 7): To Tilted Park

Mairead Corrigan Maguire
A Nobel Laureate Visits with Israeli Nuclear Whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu

Brian Cloughley
"Let Them Drink Coke!": Losing Hearts and Minds in Afghanistan

Ben Tripp
November Prognostication: Republicans Sweep!

Laura Carlsen
Bush and Latin America: War on Terrorism or Fight for Social Justice

Ralph Nader
Terror on the Road

Ron Jacobs
Shooting Sgrena

John Chuckman
Imperial Entropy

Robert Fisk
The American Military's Cult of Cruelty

Gary Leupp
The Pope's New Crusade: Defender of the West, Scourge of Islam

Lawrence R. Velvel
The Pretexter in Chief: Learning About Bush from Hewlett-Packard

Missy Comley Beattie
The Insecurity of Immorality

Adrienne Johnstone
Deporting Widows: the Nightmare of a Kenyan Immigrant

Mickey Z.
Why I Hate America

Jeffrey St. Clair
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Kearney, Orloski, Engel, Louise and Davies

Website of the Weekend
Still Life with Killpecker



September 15, 2006

Diana Johnstone
In Defense of Conspiracy: 9/11, in Theory and in Fact

Diane Christian
On Retaliation

William S. Lind
General Puffery: When the Military Brass Deceives

Lee Sustar
Bosses Take Aim at Undocument Workers

Dave Lindorff
Retroactive Immunity for Bush?

Ramzy Baroud
Presidential PR: Lost in the Bush Spin Cycle

Mokhiber / Weissman
The Cesspool

Jeffrey St. Clair
Glow, River, Glow: Radioactive Leaks and Plumbers at Hanford

Website of the Day
F-22: The Most Expensive Piece of Junk Ever Built?


September 14, 2006

Franklin Lamb
Israel's Use of American Cluster Bombs: a Walk Through the Rubble

Tim Wilkinson
Alan Dershowitz's Sinister Scheme

Dick J. Reavis
Mexico's Time of Troubles: Who Benefits?

Sam Husseini
9/11 Five Years Later: a Conspiracy to Silence

Doug Giebel
Democracies of Death: Why John Adams Wouldn't Recognize His Own Country

Bill Berkowitz
The Messaging Strategy of the Iraq War

Diane Farsetta
What Media Democracy Looks Like

Mary Turck
Targeting Refugees and Human Rights Workers in Colombia

Patrick Cockburn
Amnesty Intl Accuses Hizbollah of War Crimes, But Katyusha Damage "Much Less" Than Israel Claimed

J.L. Chestnut, Jr.
Ah, Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?

Website of the Day
The Shocking Truth About Inequality


September 13, 2006

Jack Bratich
Eyes Put a Spell on You: Signs of Surveillance in the Public Secret Sphere

John Ross
Welcome to the Nightmare: Al Qaeda de Mexico?

Christopher Brauchli
"You Had to Have Been There": Teaching Iraq and Iran

Dave Lindorff
Mourning in America: Bush Weeps? Who are They Kidding?

Antony Loewenstein
My Israel Question

Al Krebs
The Gates Foundation and African Agriculture

Leonard Peltier
Crazy Horse in Chains

Jim Bensman
My Adventures with the FBI: How I Was Targeted as a Terrorist

Website of the Day
FreedomWalk: Take a Moment for Leonard Peltier


September 12, 2006

Norman Finkelstein
Kill Arabs, Cry Anti-Semitism

Seth Sandronsky
The War on Nurses

John Walsh
Khatami Comes to Harvard

Alan Maass
"Islamic Fascism": the New Hysteria

David Krieger
Troubling Questions About Missile Defense

Nate Mezmer
September 12th, America

Kathleen Christison
The Coming Collapse of Zionism


September 11, 2006

Uri Avnery
State of Chutzpah

Patrick Cockburn
Palestinians Forced to Scavenge Rubbish Dumps for Food

Col Dan Smith
The Centrality of War in the Presidency of George W. Bush

Dr. Susan Block
Beyond Terror

Anthony Alessandrini
Forgetting 9/11

Dave Lindorff
Bush After 9/11: Five Years of High Crimes and Misdemeanors

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
What Happened?

Joshua Frank
Proving Nothing: How the 9/11 "Truth" Movement Helps Bush & Cheney

Jean Bricmont
The End of the "End of History"

Sprague / Emesberger
"You Are a Dog. You Should Die": Death Threats Against Lancet's Haiti Investigator

Website of the Day
Web Piracy

 

September 9/10, 2006
Weekend Edition

Alexander Cockburn
The 9/11 Conspiracy Nuts: How They Let the Guilty Parties of 9/11 Off the Hook

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon: In the Footsteps of Vladimir Putin (Part Six)

Greg Grandin
Good Christ, Bad Christ: Testament of the Death Squads

Peter Stone Brown
Bob Dylan's Swing Time Waltz in the Face of the Apocalypse

Ralph Nader
X-Raying Greed

Brian Cloughley
Rumsfeld at the American Legion: Dead Babies and Nazi Propaganda

Col. Chet Richards
Crossroads at the Litani

David Model
Tailoring the Case Against Iran: Cut from the Same Old Pattern

Dave Himmelstein
From Bil'in to Birmingham

Ron Jacobs
War and the Power of Words

Fred Gardner
Is Medical Pot Image a Turn-Off to Teens?

Mike Whitney
America's Economic Meltdown

Josh Gryniewicz
In the Belly of the Bentonville Beast: Working for Wal-Mart

Daniel Gross /
Joe Tessone
An IWW Story at Starbucks

Joe Bageant
Inside the Iron Theater

Nicole Colson
The Colbert Factor: Some Truthiness, At Last

Alexander Billet
Thirty Years of "White Riot": Long Live The Clash!

Poets' Basement
Engel, Louise, Buknatski, Davies, & Orloski

 

September 8, 2006

Uri Avnery
"I'm a Leftist, But ...": the Liberals' War on Lebanon

Paul Craig Roberts
Books Are Our Salvation

Bill Quigley
Judge Says: "No Clowning Around Our WMDs!"

Robert Jensen
Parallel Purges: Academic Freedom in Iran and the US

Norman Solomon
Perception Gap: The War on Terror as Others See It

Keith Bolin

 

September 8, 2006

Uri Avnery
"I'm a Leftist, But ...": the Liberals' War on Lebanon

Paul Craig Roberts
Books Are Our Salvation

Bill Quigley
Judge Says: "No Clowning Around Our WMDs!"

Robert Jensen
Parallel Purges: Academic Freedom in Iran and the US

Norman Solomon
Perception Gap: The War on Terror as Others See It

Keith Bolin
The Future of the Family Farm

Kristin S. Schafer
The Global Trade in Deadly Pesticides

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part Five)

Patrick Cockburn
Gaza is Dying

Website of the Day
Help the Bismark 3!


September 7, 206

Marjorie Cohn
Why Bush Really Came Clean About the CIA's Secret Torture Prisons

Sharon Smith
Downward Mobility: No Recovery for Workers

René Drucker Colín
The Fraud in Mexico

Michael Donnelly
Bush Family Values: About Those Nazi Appeasers

John Borowski
Scholastic Peddles a Fictitious Path to 9/11 to Kids

Lucinda Marshall
Bombing Indiana

Charles Sullivan
Katrina and the New Jim Crow: Ethnic Cleansing in New Orleans

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon: Part Four

Jonathan Cook
How Human Rights Watch Lost Its Way in Lebanon

Website of the Day
Rasta! Reggae's Joe Hill

 

September 6, 2006

Stephen Soldz
Protecting the Torturers: Bad Faith and Distortions frm the American Psychological Assocation

Dave Zirin
Cops vs. Jocks: the Shooting of Steve Foley

Ramzy Baroud
The Gaza Maze: Who Gained Most from the Fox Reporters' Kidnapping

Noel Ignatiev
Democrats, Pwogs and the Lesser Evil Folly

Dave Lindorff
Bombing Without Regrets: The US and Cluster Bombs

Norman Solomon
Spinning Troop Levels in Iraq

Binoy Kampmark
The Death of Steve Irwin and the Politics of the Zoo

Jeffrey St. Clair
A Premature Burial: the Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part Three)

John Ross
The Death of Mexican Presidency

Website of the Day
Flaming Arrows

 

September 5, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Will Robert Fisk tell us the whole story? Time For A Champion of Truth to Speak Up

Patrick Cockburn
Better Not Meet at the Casbah

Mike Whitney
The Worst Secretary of Defense in U.S. History? You Be the Judge

Roland Sheppard
The Civil Rights Movement is Dead and So is the Democratic Party

James Petras
As Bush Regime Faces Twilight Slide, How Much Havoc Can Paulson Wreak?

Alexander Cockburn
Will Bush Bomb Teheran?

 

September 4, 2006

Clancy Sigal
The Women Who Gave Us Labor Day

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon: Part 2

Anthony Alessandrini
The Great Debate about Aroma Coffee: Why I Boycott

Dennis Perrin
The Great Debate in Tarrytown: Straight Zion, No Chaser

Daniel Cassidy
'S lom to Slum

Paul Craig Roberts
The War Is Lost

 

September 2 / 3, 2006

Uri Avnery
When Napoleon Won at Waterloo

Jeffrey St. Clair
A Premature Burial: the Remaking of Cataract Canyon

Ralph Nader
The No-Fault White House

Noam Chomsky
Viewing the World from a Bombsight

Allan Lichtman
Arrested Democracy: Letter from the Baltimore County Jail

Stanley Heller
When Criticism of Cluster Bombs is "Anti-Semitic"

Rana el-Khatib
Invasion's Child: the Making of Issa

Peter Montague
Taking on the Pentagon: Chemical Weapons to Burn

Laura Carlsen
Mexico on a Collision Course

Dr. Susan Block
Bush Hate Rising

Joe Bageant
Roy's People: Why Progressives Need to Listen to Orbison, Not Policy Wonks

Scott Stedjan / Matt Schaaf
A New Generation of Landmines?

Gary Leupp
The Emperor Has Been Exposed

Stephen Fleischman
The Great American Oligarchy

Paul Balles
Has Ahmadinejad Already Checkmated Bush?

Ingmar Lee
Canada's $450 Million Gift to Bush: the Softwood Lumber Slush Fund

Jane Stillwater
Burning Man: the Good, the Bad and the Evil Twin

Ron Jacobs
Dylan Faces the Apocalypse, Again

St. Clair / Bossert
Playlist: What We're Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Grima, Engel, Orloski and Davies

Website of the Weekend
To New Orleans: a Photo Journal

 

September 1, 2006

Uri Avnery
Olmert Agonistes

Paul Craig Roberts
Of Wolves and Men (and Impotent Democrats)

Bill Ayers
Exclusionary Signs of the Times

Kevin Zeese
The Best War Ever

Xochitl Bervera
The Forgotten Children of New Orleans

Norman Solomon
Bush vs. Ahmadinejad: a TV Debate We'll Never See

Alexander Cockburn
Hezbollah Denounces Nasrallah Interview as a Fake

Richard Neville
Rupert Murdoch's Victims

Website of the Day
The Uranium Flood

 

 

 

 

 

 

Subscribe Online

Weekend Edition
October 7 / 8, 2006

Outsourcing Grassroots Politics?

Activism, Incorporated

By JIM B.

Does door-to-door canvassing build, or does it in fact debilitate, progressive political power? Does paying the canvassers--instead of using volunteers--change the answer to that question?

Columbia University sociology professor Dana Fisher endeavors to answer these questions in her slim new book on the Fund for Public Interest Research, called Activism Inc.: How the Outsourcing of Grassroots Campaigns is Strangling Progressive Politics in America (Stanford University Press, 2006). The Fund for Public Interest Research is a national canvassing outfit that runs door-to-door campaigns for the Sierra Club, Human Rights Campaign, state Public Interest Research Groups, and others. The other two main questions she attempts to address are the big ones on so-very-many people's minds lately (thank God):

1) why do we keep getting our asses kicked?, and

2) what has the Right done over the last few decades to become so powerful and effective?

These are very good questions. Activism, Inc., unfortunately, does a piss-poor job of answering them.

It is an analytically incoherent book--enthusiastic endorsements from countless disgruntled former canvassers, progressive political figures (Bill Bradley, Ralph Nader), and esteemed left commentators (Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman) notwithstanding. Despite the import and interest of the questions it seeks to answer, and despite the good points sprinkled throughout it about (among other things) our profound lack of progressive "grassroots infrastructure" (tightly organized groups of people connected to national political movements), Activism, Inc. turns out to be a shallow, muddled, unrewarding account of Fisher's research into the Fund for Public Interest Research. (She calls the Fund "the People's Project" in the book, by the way: one of the conditions the Fund placed on her research was that she not use their name. The Fund has acknowledged that they are "the People's Project" since Activism, Inc. was published, however.)

Cutting the book's many promoters some slack, I'm guessing they hadn't actually read the whole thing when they provided their endorsements. The synopsis sounds so good--a critique of the outsourcing of door-to-door canvass operations, concluding that what the left needs is to rediscover real organizing, to make a long-term investment in building political power through nurturing a "densely connected and locally rooted" grassroots base--that, as you read through it, you keep thinking, "Okay, now it's going to deliverhere comes the payoff ... now she'll make her real point"

Then about halfway through you realize it isn't coming. You realize the author is pretty much clueless about what organizing is, never mind how to jump-start it in our society today.

The most concise and incisive appraisal of Activism, Inc. is provided, surprisingly, right on the back of the book: in an attempted endorsement, William Schambra of the Hudson Institute really nails it (presumably intending to say something quite different): Activism Inc. is an "imminently readable, insightful volume."

Any minute now..

For all its weaknesses, Activism, Inc. provides a useful stimulus to debate and reflection on the questions it attempts (but fails) to answer. It has already generated a fair amount of discussion among progressive activists, the staff of progressive organizations, and canvassers--and as bad as the book is, the discussions have, it seems to me, been often useful and constructive. Despite its analytical incoherence, Activism, Inc. contains a number of important and accurate observations about 1) the profound weakness of the left's "grassroots infrastructure," and the strength of the right's grassroots infrastructure, in the U.S. today, and 2) the harmful aspects of canvass operations like the very large one run by the Fund for Public Interest Research. Among the most useful (for anyone trying to figure out how to help push our country in a more liberal, progressive or left direction) of these observations:

"The transition of American [sic] civil society away from nationally federated and locally grounded civic groups to what has come to be known as 'mail-in membership' in tertiary associations" (p. 8) is a great big fat strategic problem for us.

Similarly: "Even though professional advocacy-oriented groups are growing in number, they 'have lost much of their popular base, focusing instead on Washington-based, staff-led activities.'" (p. 9, quoting Margaret Weir and Marshall Ganz). Damn straight.

While many liberal and progressive organizations have made this shift away from direct interaction with (and actual organizing of) their base, the right has moved in the opposite direction, to great effect in recent elections: e.g., "The Bush campaign believed that the most effective way to mobilize sympathetic voters was to rally them to contact people they already knew. The campaign identified reliable voters (those who tended to vote in every election) and encouraged them to motivate their less reliable friends and neighbors who happened to have similar beliefs. Getting a phone call from your church friend Bob, or a visit from Betty the next-door neighbor, is more likely to mobilize a sympathetic vote than a college student who comes to town only to work on the campaign: Bob will be at the church picnic on Sunday, and Betty will be available to watch the kids the next time you need a babysitter." (pp. 104-5) It's hard to believe anyone could fail to understand this, of course, but Fisher is right that the Democrats and several prominent liberal organizations do appear to have not understood this for a number of years now.

The Fund provides its canvassers with insufficient training, and it does not sufficiently educate them on the political campaigns they will recruit members/donors to support.

The Fund's practice of regularly moving canvass directors from one city or region to another means that canvass directors often have

1) little intimate knowledge of the political, social and cultural contexts of the communities where they are running door-to-door canvasses (this knowledge being, naturally, a critical component determining the success or failure of any grassroots effort);

2) no ability to tap into their own networks of friends, family and contacts to strengthen their work; and

3) little long-term accountability to the communities where they are working.

The Fund's mode of operation discourages canvassers from engaging in conversation with all the people who are not likely to give money or become members of whatever organization they are canvassing for. Since the canvassers' performance is judged primarily--and in many canvassers' account, exclusively--on the amount of money they raise and the number of members they recruit, it does not make sense for them to "waste time" talking with people who are not clearly "sympathetic."

She reports that in southern California the Fund has closed one office to prevent canvassers from establishing a union and made other attempts to dissuade canvassers from organizing. If these allegations are true, that fact alone warrants widespread, public and spirited condemnation of the Fund by progressives and leftists, of course.

It's these kinds of observations that I assume Fisher's endorsers and defenders have focused on, blocking out the rest of what she says (or rather fails to say). She makes some incisive--though far from original--points about the failure of liberal, progressive and left organizations to build a real base, and the right's strength in that area. Also, if her characterization of the Fund for Public Interest Research's canvass operation is accurate, then the Fund--along with any other organization running similar operations, naturally--represents a truly counterproductive force sucking energy out of the progressive movement it purports to strengthen. (And even if Fisher's characterization departs a bit from the reality by exaggerating the negatives and failing to take account of some positives, it may still be true that the Fund's net effect on progressive power is negative.)

But what she doesn't say--yet seems to think she's saying--is:

1) what her research means about door-to-door canvassing as a mode of operation or tactic, beyond the case of a single, specific organization she profiles; and

2) what we might do to correct the tremendous errors of strategic judgment evident in the divorced-from-the-grassroots progressive/liberal model of political "organizing" she (rightly) homes in on with her criticism.

I got the impression, reading Activism, Inc, that the author was actually 100% unacquainted with any model of political organizing outside of door-to-door canvassing--and I bet many other readers had the same impression. An account of the failings of one organization running door-to-door canvassing operations, however large, is--if uninformed by even any comparison with the other national organizations doing door-to-door canvassing, never mind reference to any model of real political organizing--not exactly illuminating.

Just a few pages into Activism, Inc., you begin to realize that when she refers--usually with a capital "L"--to "the Left," she is not talking about anything remotely leftist. Instead, for Fisher "the Left" essentially means "the Democratic Party and organizations aligned with it." Just as the range of political organizing models she perceives seems to be limited to two--the benighted outsourced-canvassing model of "the Left" she knows and the impressively high-touch, locally-rooted model of the Republican Party--her grasp of the range of political positions in opposition to the right appears to be limited (like that of so freakishly many otherwise intelligent hyper-educated middle-class people) to roughly the interval on the political spectrum between Bill Clinton and Al Gore.

Another basic problem of Fisher's analysis: she makes dozens of pleas in the book for there to be more paying jobs for idealistic, educated, smart young progressives wanting to get into politics. I hear this complaint and plea all the bleedin' time: "they (progressive organizations) don't pay enough to keep talented young people, and it's too hard to find jobs." Plenty of smart, well-intentioned people offer this as a key piece of their explanation for why the right has been kicking our asses lately.

It's true, of course, that the right invests in young people it sees as potential future leaders, providing them with financial security so they can develop their skills as "public intellectuals" of the right. And it's true that this is an important and successful component of the right's strategy. But does that mean it's the strategy we should take on for ourselves? The biggest problem for us today is the lack of real organizing on the left (along with the lack of a unifying political vision, as explored later in this essay), not the lack of well-paying activist jobs for recent graduates from the nation's most prestigious universities (the group most of Activism Inc.'s interviewees represent). People throughout our society, including the most impoverished and marginalized and also including students in many of our top universities, are simply not being engaged in meaningful organizing often enough as volunteers and members and participants: that's the core problem. If it were corrected, then we could use our collective resources to offer more jobs to more organizers and activists (hopefully with most of them "coming up" through organizing, rather than checking off the "nonprofit activist" career-path box upon graduation from college). The creation of more jobs for "professional activists" divorced from real organizing, real bases of people, is--I would contend--more an exacerbation of the fundamental problems we're facing than a solution to them.

(A related fallacy and blindness in Activism, Inc. is the suggestion that door-to-door canvassing is the only point of paid entry into progressive activism for students at or graduates of top-flight universities. I think the SEIU, for one, would very much beg to differ. And while we're mentioning Fisher's apparent ignorance about the primary form of organizing of the last 100+ years (trade unions).at one point she contrasts the challenges of organizing for issue organizations like the ones that hire the Fund with the ease and security of the "built-in constituency" AFSCME can rely on. Excuse me?

I don't look at all these questions of organizing models, political positioning, 'professional activism,' and unions with much intellectual distance, I should say. Models of organizing are things I come into practical contact with on a daily basis, trying to assess their various virtues and failings as best I can, to have as much of a real effect on propelling our country and world toward dignity and respect for everybody as I can. My opinions are shaped--and perhaps clouded--primarily by the different kinds of activism and organizing I have been involved in or witnessed up-close. More to the point in addressing the extremely limited scope of Activism, Inc--despite its hilarious pretensions ("At the heart of this book is the question: what is the role of citizens in democracy in America?" (p. 107))--I canvassed during the summer after my freshman year of college, for an organization that was either one of the Fund's clients or a near relative of the type of canvassing operation Fisher describes. Like most of the young people Fisher describes, I was a middle-class white kid attending a prestigious university, seeking a first experience in political activism. Like them, by the end of my summer canvassing I was pretty cynical about the motivations of the organization I worked for; and I found the daily work of "meeting quota" (raising enough money to keep the canvass directors happy with me) both challenging and emotionally draining.

But having experienced frustrations very similar to those Fisher documents among the Fund's canvassers does not make me any more forgiving about the deficiencies of Fisher's argument. Canvassing is hard, she claims. Turnover is extremely high. Burnout is a recurrent problem. Some people are naturally good at canvassing, and many people are not at all good at it. Some people enjoy canvassing, while many dislike it a great deal. Engagement in in-depth exploration of an issue with supporters, or constructive debate with skeptics, is often limited by the exigencies of delivering a good 'rap' to as many people as possible in a limited period of time. Fisher repeats these points as though they were "findings" of her research, and as though they logically lead to condemnation of paid door-to-door canvassing as a tactic. But they are truisms. You would be hard-pressed to find anyone involved in canvassing who would disagree with these assertions. (Many canvassers take the difficulty and high turnover as points of pride, in fact.) "Exposing" these facts through the recitation of anecdotes from canvassers, as Fisher attempts to do, is a meaningless intellectual activity: the assertions being made are not in question. They don't add up to anything, don't make any point about what works and what doesn't, or why. The meaningful questions related to her research--at the level of door-to-door canvassing, rather than the broader level of what the hell should we be doing to reverse the right's ascendancy and make things better?--would be:

1) knowing these very real limitations and challenges, does door-to-door canvassing still make a positive contribution to progressive power?;

2) if yes, under what conditions does canvassing make a positive contribution and under what conditions is its effect negative?; and

3) specifically, does the outsourcing of canvass operations (by activist organizations, to 'canvassing professionals') kill their positive effects? Somewhat amazingly, Activism, Inc. makes no real contributions--even small ones--to answering these questions.

Rather than arguing a position on such questions, Fisher makes clear what she thinks of canvassing (right on the cover, in the book's subtitle) and then proceeds to simply quote from and describe her impressions of people she talked with who are critical of canvassing, as though these anecdotes "speak for themselves" in confirmation of her (completely evident, but never actually argued and defended) position.

(An aside: I sincerely hope this is not indicative of what passes for scholarship in the social sciences these days. I haven't spent much time in a university setting in the last few years, so I don't know..is this lack of argumentation often considered acceptable when the research methods are dubbed "qualitative" and "participatory"? There's a lot that folks in the social sciences can do to help us organizers and activists be more effective in our efforts, I believe--a sociologist friend once likened social movements and community organizations to fighter jets, and the role of a social scientist to that of a jet technician: "someone you can call in to check the gears, do a tune-up, diagnose and maybe fix whatever problems they find, talk it over with you from a different perspective than you're used to, and improve the jet's overall performance." We have a real need for such help from people with the time, resources, intellectual training, and research tools to study different social-change efforts and draw lessons on what works and what doesn't, when, and why.)

So: enough bashing and dissecting. What lessons can we draw about what works and what doesn't, when and why?

First of all, we have to establish that the comparison between door-to-door canvassing as a tactic and the cultivation and development of a base of organized people as a strategy is meaningless: these two exist on different levels of political activity, and therefore different levels of analysis. Without an organizing strategy, the very best tactic executed to perfection is likely to be ineffective in altering the political balance of power. Canvassing divorced from any actual strategy for organizing people is not likely to produce anything significant. Yet these assertions do not add up to the conclusion "canvassing is useless" or "canvassing is counterproductive." Far from it. They simply acknowledge that organizing is what matters, having a political strategy you're trying to execute is what matters; and that door-to-door canvassing's role within that strategy must be determined based on an assessment of its utility in a particular context in the execution of your strategy. The real question, in other words, is not whether canvassing is remotely comparable, in terms of its results and its objectives, to developing an organized base: it is not, for the first is simply a tactic among other tactics, while the second is a bedrock principle of any winning political strategy. The real question about door-to-door canvassing, put broadly, is whether it is itself good or bad, useful or not. And personally, I don't have a confident answer to that question--though I have a strong hunch the answer comes in the form, "Canvass operations are useful under x and y conditions, and not useful under a and b conditions." In other words, I don't think there's a simple "yes" or "no" answer on the question of the utility of paid door-to-door canvassing operations. They are neither generally deplorable nor a definite blessing. They are useful under some conditions and not under others. It all depends on how they are run, and as part of what sort of strategy. Outsourcing may be one of the conditions that defines whether a canvass is useful or not--I don't know, and Fisher's book doesn't help us toward knowing. Since 1) the complicated questions of when and why canvassing operations are useful--and when and why they are not useful--remain largely unanswered, and since 2) canvass operations are generally very limited in their focus and goals and scope, compared to other, more comprehensive and ongoing forms of engagement between social-movement organizations and people, there's every reason to think that academic researchers can really help us to better understand what works and what doesn't, to understand within what strategies and under what conditions it makes sense to use a paid door-to-door canvass.

But there are bigger questions at play here as well, not about the tactics of canvassing but about organizing strategy. Fisher touches on these broader matters when commenting on some of the right's political successes--among the more lucid moments of the book. Attention to the right's successes has been growing by leaps and bounds among leftists, progressives and liberals over the last couple years, which can only be a good thing. Fisher uses a nice phrase to characterize a basic difference between the approaches of the left and right in their approaches to their base: "laying sod versus cultivating the grass." Countless liberal organizations and Democratic electoral campaigns attempt to simulate grassroots organizing--or more precisely: to convince not only their funders and the media but also, primarily, themselves that what they are doing is grassroots organizing--rather than invest any time and energy (not to mention intelligent understanding of human beings' motivations and complexity) in it. This simulation/delusion is performed various ways:

a) by running a canvass operation as their one and only form of interaction with non-political-professionals (and calling that "grassroots organizing")--as in the case of some of the Fund's work;

b) by showing up once every two or four years, just before elections, in communities where they have maintained no connections or base since the last time they came in talking about "social change" and "building power"; or

c) by serving as "the voice of the people in Washington" on some narrowly-defined policy issue that is their organization's particular and carefully-defined "mission"--with no connection other than funding (and sometimes not even that) to normal people outside the Beltway--and working like dogs to recruit a couple Republican supporters for their position (and demonstrate always, to everyone including themselves, their "non-partisan" credentials), and being rewarded for their tireless efforts with the occasional policy-change "victory" so miniscule that someone looking at the issue from a distance simply could not perceive it.

Whether the canvassers are paid, whether they are outsourced, whether they "really know their stuff" or are no more knowledgeable than most people about the specific issue they're canvassing on, what matters, in the end, is the ability to return to a "door you've knocked"--to a human being, family or group of people--and engage them in something lasting, substantial, reciprocal and educational. And the ability to involve them in something organized and empowering--that is to say, an effort that challenges power (usually financial and political and ideological) with power (usually human and moral). This is an area where all the Saul Alinsky-based groups have a great deal to teach us, and an especially great deal to teach the ineffectual, conciliatory, fearful liberals: in summary form, if you are not threatening and challenging some power you consciously oppose, there is an extraordinarily good chance you are not achieving anything worthwhile in terms of improving people's lives. This is a very unfortunate truth, no doubt, but its recognition roughly marks the transition from the illusions of a healthy childhood to the clear-seeing emotional maturity of a healthy adulthood. (In empires--unfortunately for us--consumers' varied forms of consumption are designed and orchestrated in ever more sophisticated and encompassing ways to extend and maintain the psychological conditions of childhood and adolescence. This is the great surprise about meeting real-life "Americans" for most people in the Third World who have not had that opportunity before: we are so childish and so deeply ignorant. This is very hard to square, at first, with what they know of the U.S. empire's power, cunning and brutality.)

But the Alinsky form of opposing power is not sufficient, of course. That model takes a basic insight--one almost entirely absent from our national discourse these days--about the need to fight if you hope to win, and the need to oppose power with power, and does almost as little as possible with it: it defines powers narrowly, challenges them with a deeply formulaic strategy, and wins predictably narrow victories. These victories are actual victories, which should be a slap-across-the-face wake-up to the countless liberal and progressive organizations and "movements" out there that never give the (few) people they involve in their campaigns an opportunity to experience the empowerment of actually winning something. But the victories of Alinsky groups are generally narrow and local; rarely if ever do they contribute to the creation of a new political circumstance in which similar groups of citizens will not have to form and fight and win in other places to achieve the same basic gain. They do not catalyze political change, really--just the resolution of a particular community's "unique" problems.

This is where ideology comes in. (Or "ideas" or "principles" or "objectives," if the word "ideology" sounds sour or antique to you.) I described above the importance of organizing people to "challenge power (usually financial and political and ideological) with power (usually human and moral)." This description of most existing attempts in our society to really organize and fight--whether by Alinsky groups or unions or workers' centers or Latino/a immigrants' organizations or the many bad-ass local groups around the county that don't fall into any easily-defined category of political activity--underscores a critical point. While the right holds most of the financial and political power, and we on the left hold most of the human and moral power (if only more people would fight with that power like these sorts of groups do, rather than being blown around by the stupid liberal winds of poll-data and what the media pundits are saying "the center" wants to hear), the biggest battle is the one we (liberals, progressives, and even in the end those of us on the left) are not even fighting today: the battle over ideology. For the most part, the various groups really challenging power with power through organizing (the types of groups listed above) are not, at this sad historical moment, doing so with a consistent, coherent, inspiring ideology and vision. And the right has been pounding away for years on an extremely consistent, coherent, and appealing (if not inspiring) ideology in just about everything they do, to the point that today not just centrist Democrats but plenty of self-described progressives subscribe to the core principles of the wacked-out neoliberal economic vision that is the centerpiece of the contemporary rightwing program. Until we fight them on that terrain as well--until all our battles are infused with the language and clear-eyed vision of the different society we're trying to bring into being (the "daughter of socialism" is my shorthand, borrowed from a friend, for this vision)--we're going to keep getting our asses kicked like we have been these last many years. Little shifts in the balance of power between Republicans and Democrats will prove almost irrelevant to the achievement of our long-term goals of dignity, justice and peace..just watch.

In the end, real organizing and ideology are deeply linked. When the left has either one of these without the other--as with the Alinsky-based models (real organizing without ideology) and countless 20th-century manifestations of intellectual socialism (ideology without real organizing)--the right has the opportunity, if it has both (as it does in the U.S. today, in spades), to beat the living shit out of us. The advances they have made in recent years, and what these mean in concrete terms for the lives of millions of people here and billions around the world, are simply breathtaking and rather spirit-killing to behold. At this moment when even politically clueless, intellectually befuddled "pragmatist" liberal Democrats like Dana Fisher--stuck on a narrowly defined and poorly conceived exploration of one organization's door-to-door canvassing operation--are still making intelligent analytical comments about the impressiveness of the right's recent achievements in grassroots organizing, we simply cannot miss the chance to build understanding of and commitment to the deep inter-dependence--the mutual necessity--of real organizing and ideology.

(If "ideology" still sounds a bit grating, or if this is all sounding a bit obtuse, please give "worldview" a try--check out the excellent and very un-obtuse materials on "worldview" on the web site of the Grassroots Policy Project: http://www.grassrootspolicy.org/.)

The political problems we're facing are--obviously, I think, for most people--not going to be resolved by the choice of the "correct" tactic in the short-term or for the next election. They are problems that were long in the making, and that are going to take us a while to reverse. There is useful academic work to be done assessing the relative virtues and faults of various tactics for mobilizing people and sustaining membership organizations--Activism, Inc. tries, but fails rather desperately, to be part of that useful literature. But far beyond those sorts of narrow questions, the mere existence of and interest in a book like Activism, Inc. calls attention to the desperate desire, at this political/historical moment in our society, among not only leftists but many progressives and Democratic liberals, for real engagement with the central (and deeply inter-related) questions of political strategy: how to organize, and around/with/toward what ideology. Let's not squander this moment.

Jim B. is an educator and agitator. He thinks everyone on the left should have kids--not just because we can't let the bastards on the right outbreed us, but because there's no remotely comparable way to maintain your sense of joy and purpose while throwing yourself daily into the struggle. There's nothing more deeply satisfying than being a parent -- and also no better reason to fight the capitalist radicals with every bone and breath.







 

 

Now Available
from CounterPunch Books!
The Case Against Israel
By Michael Neumann

Click Here to Order Michael Neumann's Devastating Rebuttal of Alan Dershowitz

WHAT'S INSIDE
Grand Theft Pentagon:
Tales of Greed and Profiteering in the War on Terror

by Jeffrey St. Clair

 

CounterPunch Speakers Bureau

Sick of sit-on-the-Fence speakers, tongue-tied and timid? CounterPunch Editors Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St Clair are available to speak forcefully on ALL the burning issues, as are other CounterPunchers seasoned in stump oratory. Call CounterPunch Speakers Bureau, 1-800-840-3683. Or email beckyg@counterpunch.org.

The Book on 9/11 the White House Denounced as "ABSOLUTE GARBAGE"