Evita North and South

Peronist President-elect of Argentina Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner‘s election might be said to presage the almost inevitable (she has Murdoch money) anointment of Hillary Clinton to succeed her husband in office, in what seems to be becoming rather a trend amongst a certain class of well-off and well-connected women. Mind you, there’s not a lot of sisterhood on display despite the superficial similarities; Kirchner is not happy to be compared to Clinton:

“Hillary (Rodham Clinton) was able to position herself nationally because her husband was president. She didn’t have a political career beforehand and that isn’t my case,” Fernández de Kirchner said in an interview with CNN en Español, referring to her 30-year career in Argentine politics.

That doesn’t bode well for future US/Argentine relations, does it?

But less flippantly, how did Argentina get to the political point where Peronism is once again in fashion? What happened to the people’s movements born out of the 2001 economic collapse? Bring yourself up to basic speed on the politics of the greater American continent and the contnuing malign influence of US foreign policy with John Pilger’s documentary, The War On Democracy. It’s now up on YouTube in ten parts here: if you have an acccount, load them all into ‘playlist’ and play back to back. Here’s part one to start you off:

Award-winning documentary maker John Pilger suggests that, far from bringing democracy to the world as it claims, the US is doing its best to stifle its progress. Talking exclusively to American government officials, including agents who reveal for the first time on film how the CIA ran its war in Latin America in the 80s, Pilger argues that true popular democracy is more likely to be found among the poorest in Latin America, whose movements are often
ignored in the West.

She may be female but Kirchner is no Michelle Bachelet. I’ll have no truck with the brand of feminsim that says any woman elected is better than none – a woman can govern just as badly and undemocratically as any man and that goes for Hillary Clinton as well as Kirchner. The Democrats and the Peronists both purport to be the champions of the poor, the little guys, the blue-collar and the dispossessed, but both actually work to advance neoliberal economic policy and corporate profit. It’s no coincidence that like the Peronistas both Clintons have adopted the Third Wayas their defining political stance, along with Tony Blair.

Kirchner may have more elected political experience than Clinton but just like Clinton there’s no denying she’s used her husband’s reflected popularity to boost her own quest for presidential power. Both are so firmly wedded to the notion of a corporate state they married it. That’s dedication to a cause, the cause of Evita Peronism.

By the time Nestor Kirchner announced he was stepping down to let his wife run, observers said she had fuller lips, tighter skin and a more lustrous auburn mane, prompting speculation about surgery and hair extensions.

It remains an open question whether this was a personal decision to offset the effects of age, a political strategy to court votes in an aesthetic-obsessed era, or both.

Newspapers gleefully reported that on foreign trips she brought large trunks of clothes and fashion helpers, and changed her outfit up to four times a day. Critics said the makeover was an effort to evoke the magic of Eva Peron, the icon who died in 1952 aged just 33.

Just like Evita, Kirchner’s clothes, shoes, handbags and hair are the stuff of gossip magazines and like Clinton she’s alleged to not be a stranger to Botox. It’s described as vanity but it’s something more insidious. It’s all about the image. masking state corporatism with an attractive, warm and fuzzy media-friendly facade. Don’t look at the policies, look at the hair!

To my mind Clinton’s at the very least a quasi-Evita Peronist. Trading on reflected glory? Check. Image management? Check. Cult of personality? Third Way-ist? Check. Corporately funded? Check. Hawkish on the military and defence? Soft on neofascism and torture? Check…

If the ascendance of Kirchner and Clinton tells women anything at all, it’s that we can only succeed to high office a] by marrying advantageously b] putting a softer, feminine face on the perpetuation of a political and economic system which keeps other women down and c] pandering to the corporate media’s trivialisation of politics. This is no big step foward for women.

This is how The Times described the Argentinian election – ‘Fatty’ v the new Evita in all-girl fight for Argentina” Murdoch himself may be bankrolling a woman for US president but that says it all about what the global press really thinks of women in presidential politics, doesn’t it?

The election of a woman in Argentina and the potential election of another in the US is not a sudden blossoming of equality, it’s the corporate status quo donning a velvet Prada glove over the hand holding the cattleprod.

Because to get back to my original point, that US and Argentinian politics are beginning to echo one another, the ironic thing about all this is that while the US (as Pilger shows) has been meddling in Argentinian politics for years in the cause of corporate world hegemony it’s rebounded and now both countries’ politics seem to be converging. Both have a politicised military, a greedy plutocracy, entrenched and growing social inequality and a fatal taste for the firm smack of authoritarian government. They’re more alike than they’d admit.

The US now has also a falling currency and an economy that’s could nosedive and has the potential to cause untold social disorder and chaos, just as Argentina did six years ago. What’s Hillary’s plan for that, if any? Will we see disposessed Americans selling their all on the streets like the residents of Buenos Aires had to? Americans north and south may find they have much more in common than they think.

Oh well, never mind. Let’s look on the bright side – at least their potential misery‘ll be misery with a kinder, gentler, less wrinkled face.

Condi, Congress, Contempt and Resignation

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice testifies before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Middle East policy on Capitol Hill in Washington DC USA on 24 October 2007. Rice said on Wednesday the United States would cut off Iran's 'malignant' activities in Iraq and stop its destabilizing behavior across the region. EPA/MATTHEW CAVANAUGH

Could it possibly be that even Condi Rice is shocked at the depth of the incompetence and greed that are being publicly revealed by the Iraq corruption hearings?

Head of State Dep’t Anti-Corruption Office in Baghdad Is A Paralegal
By Spencer Ackerman – October 25, 2007, 11:35AM

How well are the State Department’s anti-corruption efforts in Iraq managed? Don’t ask Condoleezza Rice.

Rep. John Tierney (D-MA) laid it all out. Not only are there duplicative U.S. offices in Baghdad to oversee anti-corruption efforts — the Anti-corruption Working Group and the Office of Accountability and Transparency, to name two — but coordination is so bad that the OAT for months boycotted the meetings of the AWG. Rice said she was “not aware” of that.

What, officially ‘not aware’ or actually not aware? Or could it be both? Could it really be that she did not know and the depths of her ignorance are only now becoming clear to her? She’s certainly looking as though something’s knocked what little stuffing she had out of her recently. It could be from that… or maybe they didn’t have the patent Ferragamo boots in her size. Who knows.

Another point she wasn’t aware of: OAT has had, according to Rep. Tierney, four acting or permanent directors in the past ten months alone. The most recent one isn’t a diplomat or a trained anti-corruption official at all, but rather a “paralegal” who works at the U.S. embassy. “I should get back to you with a sense of how we manage these programs,” she replied.

Perhaps Rice actually didn’t know; not that that gives me have any sympathy towards her. Why didn’t she know? It’s her frickin’ job.

It could be she’s just been brought down to earth with a great big thud on learning that she isn’t the noble liberator of the barbarians and the heroine of her loyal underlings, but rather the aider and abettor of a gang of common thieves and murderers, but even so her ignorance was deliberate policy not inadvertence.

Plausible deniability they call it – with former attorney general Samuel “I don’t recall” Alito, it’s foremost proponent. It got so ridiculous that he had to resign, but he never actually admitted anything much.

Alito made sure he didn’t know anything that could condemn him – even if he actually did know, he made sure he officially ‘didn’t know’.

It’s a useful and convenent bit of sophistry, that – it covers up much administration wrongdoing and plasters over all sorts of festering sores. When you don’t know something you can’t be blamed and if everybody stonewalls, no-one gets caught. But the one thing you can’t escape from is the fact that an officer of state should know what’s going on their department.

That’s why Alito had to go, that and the ridiculousness of the country’s senior law officer being seen to deliberately obstruct a judicially-powered committee.

Whether Rice knew details about the fuckups and corruption in her department officially or otherwise is kind of irrelevant anyway, complicit as she is in the larger crime of the illegal invasion of Iraq, the unlawful killing of much of its population and the wanton destruction of its infrastructure. Everything else flows from that original offence and to even begin to list Rice’s resulting crimes is to pile Pelion upon Ossa.

But it’s looking increasingly less likely that she’s got the stamina for the long- planned attack on Iran, even though she is currently managing to hold the line in public:

During a hearing bristling with partisan snipes between Democrats and Republicans, the overall state of affairs in Iraq was never far from the surface. Pressed by committee members to acknowledge any regrets, Rice said that the war in Iraq had been difficult and expensive.

“Yes, frankly, it has been harder than I thought it would be,” she said.

But she defended administration policy and praised patriotic Iraqis who had risked their lives.

“I cannot by any means make up for the terrible sacrifice,” she said. “But I can say that I think nothing of value is ever won without sacrifice. And yes, I do believe that it’s been worth it.”

I expect it’ll be the same with Rice as it was with Alito: she’ll continue to deny she knew anything, say “I don’t recall” a lot and eventually resign, leaving Bush to make another dreadful recess appointment, perhaps the odious John Bolton (or someone equally rabid) who will push for nuclear strikes on Iran.

Rice has to be got rid of now , even if she is George’s best friend. She may be talking up Iraq success but anyone watching the hearings can see she’s at the end of her tether. If is the case that even she has been shocked at the depth and breadth of the corruption revealed in Iraq it could be that there may be some dark moral places that even Condi won’t go, unlikely as that might seem.

But that would mean she disagreed with Bush: that means disloyalty and if you ain’t for the Chimperor, you’re against him. You have to go, office wife or not.

Shooting Yourself In The Foot

Interesting events in Phoenix as a litigious sheriff unhappy with the way Phoenix New Times journalists covered him allegedly takes his revenge:

Michael Lacey, the executive editor, and Jim Larkin, chief executive, were arrested at their homes after they wrote a story that revealed that the Village Voice Media company, its executives, its reporters and even the names of the readers of its website had been subpoenaed by a special prosecutor. The special prosecutor had been appointed to look into allegations that the newspaper had violated the law in publishing the home address of Maricopa Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s home address on its website more than three years ago.

The weekly and its leadership has been in a long running battle with Mr. Arpaio, after the weekly published a series of stories about his real estate dealings.

“They did not have a warrant, but they told me that I was being arrested for unlawful disclosure of grand jury information,” Mr. Larkin said by phone from his home early this morning, after he was released from jail. Mr. Lacey remained in jail early this morning. Captain Paul Chagolla, a spokesman for the sheriff did not return a call for comment.

Steve Suskin, legal counsel for Village Voice Media, said that the arrests on misdemeanor charges of the newspaper executives represent an escalation in the conflict between The Phoenix New Times and Sheriff Arpaio, who has received national attention for his reputation for running tough jails.

“It is an extraordinary sequence of events,” Mr. Suskin said. “The arrests were not totally unexpected, but they represent an act of revenge and a vindictive response on the part of an out of control sheriff.”

Here’s one of the articles Sheriff Joe Arpaio is so unhappy about:

You get elected to public office, say, sheriff.

You start scowling like John Wayne and jam the jails full. You put the cons in stripes and house them in surplus Army tents, where four guards oversee 1,800 inmates.

Your detention officers beat up prisoners, while feeding them food unfit for a dog. A paranoid public afraid of crime is grateful because it naively believes your abusive policies will scare people from committing that next robbery and shooting.

Who cares if this is all baloney?

You drum up a few death threats along the way, because that generates free publicity chronicling what a bad-ass you are.

Who cares if innocent people go to jail?

The voters love it. Even as your office is besieged by tens of millions of dollars in lawsuits stemming from beatings and deaths in your Mother of All Dungeons.

The dead guys were druggies anyway, your public relations machine claims. And, hey, that’s what the county’s insurance policy is for — settling claims of distraught survivors.

What matters most is that your image as “toughest sheriff in America” has made you into a valuable commodity.

And that image is worth a lot.

More…

If Arpaiao hadn’t had those media executives arrested and the NY Times hadn’t picked it up, I and many thousands of others nation and worldwide never would have read that and known of the terrible allegations against him.

Hubris begets nemesis. You’d think an officer of the law would know that. Silly sheriff.

Uneasy The Head That Would Wear The Crown Presidency

Something’s perplexing me.

Why is it that, in a fiercely anti-monarchical country like the US, that Democratic candidates Edwards and Obama are not using that fiercely republican feeling as a campaign strategy?

Why not use the fact that, should Hillary Clinton be elected, there will have been two dynastic presidents back to back, as a weapon against her? You’d think it a no-brainer: they only have to point to Bush to show the dangers of the hereditary principle in politics. But no, on political dynasties they are silent, though it would likely gain them advantage. Why is that? Are they saving it for later or something?

If they leave it too long they’ll find that the Republicans have picked up that particular ball and run with it, despite the fact the right hardly have much ground to stand on themselves when it comes to political dynasties and nepotism. But when has the truth ever stopped this bunch of theives and conmen? They’ll use anything, they have no shame.

Of course it might be that the Democrats would prefer not to open that particular closet: without dynasties, nepotism and financial patronage of its own the party would collapse.

Best not to go there, perhaps – but they’d better go there, and fast, or the Republicans’ll get there first.

The Republicans are skilled in the art of offence as defence and before the candidates know it they’ll have had the Democrats painted (with the willing co-operation of the major media) as pro-monarchy and pro-elite and themselves portrayed as the party of the common man. If Hillary is nominated the wingnuts’ll be all over the blogosphere within minutes with their talking points, talking up a potential dynastic Hillarian gynocracy should she be elected. Expect Chelsea Clinton to be bgrought into it too.

There are any number of reasons why I think Hillary Clinton would be a disastrous choice for the Democratic nomination – in short I don’t think she’s qualified, she’s never run a city or a state – the dynastic thing is just one of them. But speaking purely from a campagning standpoint the candidates and the party must realise it’s an issue the wingers will use against them, and withg gusto. Never underestimate the blatant hypocrisy of Republicans, especially not when they’re getting desperate.

It seems to me that either Edwards or Obama or both must use the issue of mixing family and politics and the danger of establishing presidential dynasties against Clinton, both to advance their own cause and to preemptively draw the poison away from their party’s candidate should Clinton eventually be nominated.. So why haven’t they?

Romney’s Dodgy Aides, Part II

You’d think Mitt Romney’d learn to choose his campaign team better, after the last time, when his security chief turned out to be impersonating a police officer and threatening reporters…

Romney’s New National Security Adviser Said He’d Torture “In A Heartbeat”By Greg Sargent – October 16, 2007, 1:26PM

Retired General James “Spider” Marks, who has just been named a new national security adviser to Mitt Romney’s campaign, asserted in a 2005 interview that he would readily torture prisoners to save a soldier’s life or stop a terror bomb, saying: “I’d stick a knife in somebody’s thigh in a heartbeat.”

In announcing the appointment of Marks, the Romney campaign put out a press release emphasizing his “more than three decades of experience in the intelligence field.” But according to CNN, Marks also is a teacher of “interrogation.”

More…

How do you teach interrogation in an age of rampant torture? “No, I’ve told you before… stick the needle under the nail at a 20 degree angle, not 45.. dammit, electrodes go on the testicles, not the penis!”

Maybe having serial-killer tendencies is why Mitt picks ’em. It wouldn’t surprise me in the slightest.