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The Laundry List
by Geov Parrish
Corporate media coverage of the presidential campaign bent over backwards
to
reinforce the assertion of both parties--epitomized by the anti-Nader
Democratic Party push--that there are significant differences between the
two
parties. There are, indeed, differences; but they are dwarfed by the
similarities.
For progressive voters, reproductive rights and diversity were two of the
only issues on which Al Gore and the entire Democratic Party ticket
in
Seattle--Maria Cantwell, Gary Locke, Jim McDermott, and on down the food
chain--are better than the Republicans. The Democrats also have a fairer
tax
plan, and Gore would make somewhat better Cabinet and mid-level
administrative appointments. There are a handful of other issues.
Meanwhile, here is a non-exhaustive list of over 120 issues on which some,
most, or all Democrats and Republicans both sell us out. As we awaken to a
future in which one of these two corporatist mediocrities will lead the
country for the next four years, now comes the hard part: organizing for
political change, both to stem the bad policies of the current regime and
to
create a viable alternative next time.
Ready?
Access to abortion, particularly for poor women, rural women, and
minors; suppression of RU-486; lack of funding for women's health care
issues; corporate-friendly Supreme Court nominees; conservative federal
judges; suspended habeas corpus; mandatory sentencing; prison-industrial
complex and prison labor; War on Drugs; death penalty; militarization of
police; aid to Colombia, Indonesia, Peru, Bolivia, Mexico, Nigeria, Egypt,
and Israel; not paying United Nations dues; undermining international law
and
independent international bodies; expansion of NATO; government-funded arms
sales; human rights; support for Third World despots; Iraq sanctions; Cuba
sanctions; immigration and border militarization; "humanitarian" military
interventions [sic]; military spending; National Missile Defense (Star
Wars),
and the militarization of space; plutonium in space; nuclear proliferation;
nuclear weapon de-alerting; Hanford clean-up; nuclear energy and nuclear
waste; 1872 mining law; factory fishing; "salvage" logging and clearcuts;
land exchanges; pollution credits, and cutting deals with polluters;
weakening of clean air and clean water standards; selling Alaskan oil
overseas; auctioning petroleum reserves; drilling in Alaska; global warming
and ozone depletion; weak fuel emission standards; biodiversity; bio-
engineered foods, forestry products, and farm animals; food irradiation;
deregulation of food safety standards; biopiracy (the patenting of life
forms); salmon recovery; breaching the Snake River dams; animal rights;
free
trade, NAFTA, GATT, WTO, the MAI, and fast track authority; preferred
trading
status with China; imposition of structural adjustment programs; media
mega-
mergers; the auctioning of publicly owned airwaves to the highest bidder;
utility deregulation; airline deregulation; commercialization of culture;
corporate control of higher education and research; lack of affordability
of
higher education; privatization of schools; lack of availability of child
care and day care; Internet privacy; tort reform; civil rights; the Equal
Rights Amendment; separation of church and state; erosion of the 1st, 2nd,
4th, 5th, and 8th Amendments; FBI and CIA COINTELPRO-type programs;
political
prisoners; welfare "reform"; dismantling the social welfare state; gender-
based wage inequalities; gap between rich and poor; homelessness; federal
housing programs; Social Security privatization; campaign finance reform;
proportional representation; Third Party ballot and debate access;
corporate
welfare; corporate crime; corporate tax reform; subsidies for exporting
corporations; labor organizing and Taft-Hartley repeal; sweatshops, union-
busting, and outsourcing; affirmative action; pushing drugs (e.g., Ritalin)
on children; maintaining an expensive, privatizeed health care system;
cancer-causing tobacco additives.
Get the idea?
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