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Rockin’ the vote

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These days it’s almost impossible to avoid turning on the news or reading the paper without hearing stories about the politics of politics — that is, tales about the campaign trail, candidates’ families, scandals, and occasionally the candidates’ platforms.

Save for those moments when the candidates seek the support of voting blocs — the Jewish vote, the Latino vote, the female vote, the black vote — the predicaments of those on the margins of the United States and the world at-large receive scant attention. In this issue of InTheFray Magazine, we seek to broaden this year’s election dialogue by illuminating the interests and stories of the politically invisible.

Writing from the Democratic National Convention in Boston, ITF Contributing Writer Ayah-Victoria McKhail explores the media’s failure to cover the repression of free speech at the DNC in Tongue-tied. Harvard Ph.D. candidate Scott Winship, meanwhile, assesses the risks that the Democrats are taking by Compromising politics in order to send President George W. Bush back to Crawford, Texas. Complemeting Tak Toyoshima‘s Secret Asian Man cartoon about taking the Jap road,< b>Mikhaela B. Reid, our newest cartoonist, pokes fun at queers supporting President Bush in The boiling point. On Monday, August 16, ITF columnist and Managing Editor Henry Belanger will share his thoughts on the DNC.

Given the economic volatility that has predominated during the past four years, few can deny the decisive role that the economy will play on November 2. But as ITF Index Editor Laura Louison suggests in her review of David Shipler’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book The Working Poor (this month’s featured book from Off the Shelf), poverty isn’t merely an election year concern. For many, Louison discloses in Will work for food, impoverishment is a stark, everyday reality that demands national attention.

Of course, economic insecurity knows no borders — or age limits. As ITF Contributing Editor Michelle Chen reveals in Migrant makeover, teens from rural China who migrate to the city hoping to lift themselves from poverty by working in salons often pay a high price while supporting the country’s economic expansion. In nearby Vietnam, street youth participating in the Street Vision Project expose their economic struggles through their cameras in Street vision. Complementing these photos and highlighting the pervasiveness of the oppression experienced by children who lack economic standing, Josh Arseneau shares his poignant photos of child soldiers in West Africa, which we’ll publish on Monday, August 16.

Rounding out this week’s pieces are the visual works of art and the four poems performed by spoken word artists Joyce Lin (Understatement), Kate Hanzalik (Marilyn Chin tells my skin to run), Andre Michael Carrington (Boy rock), and Chavisa Woods (Totems) at InTheFray’s CROSSING BORDERS benefit in Manhattan last month. Special thanks to these fine poets and artists — and to all of our readers and friends who have continued to support our work here at ITF.

Laura Nathan
Editor
Austin, Texas

 

Muslims are not “monkeys”

In 2002, an Iranian history professor asserted that Muslims “should not blindly follow” clerics. The result? He was accused of apostasy and sentenced to death for blasphemy.

Hashem Aghajari, a veteran of the Iran-Iraq war and a member of the Islamic Revolutionary Mujahidin Organisation, a left-wing reformist political group, stated in 2002 that Muslims were not “monkeys” and that they “should not blindly follow” the clerics that lead Iran, a nation that is a mélange of an Islamic theocracy and a democracy. He was promptly handed a death sentence and has spent the past two years in jail. Thanks to popular protest and indignation, however, the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has ordered a review of his case, and Aghajari has been freed on bail.

Overwhelmed with joy at his provisional freedom, Aghajari stated: “I hope there will come a day when no-one goes to prison in Iran for his opinions, let alone be sentenced to death … I hope that all prisoners of conscience who have committed no crime will be released soon.”

Iran may not be the glorious Islamic republic that the revolutionaries envisioned in 1979 — indeed, this year hardline clerics abused their power and excluded approximately 2,500 pro-reform candidates from this year’s election — but this event speaks to the power of popular protest to effect change. While American foreign policy has tended to regard Iran — or any theocracy — as anathema to democracy, we should see this event as heartwarming evidence that popular opinion can have a voice in a democratic theocracy.

Mimi Hanaoka

 

Conventional collage, Day 4

These photos were taken at the Democratic National Convention on July 29, 2004, by ITF Contributing Editor Dustin Ross (unless otherwise indicated).


Photo by Henry Belanger


Photo by Victor Tan Chen


Photo by Victor Tan Chen

 

Conventional collage, Day 3

These photos were taken at the Democratic National Convention on July 28, 2004, by ITF Contributing Editor Dustin Ross.

 

Warring factions

In the heart of Boston Common, amid the sunny sky and the neatly manicured lawn, one can find reason to pause during this week’s hectic Democratic Convention.

The American Friends Service Committee has created a poignant exhibit titled “Eyes Wide Open.” Displayed over acres of land are 900 pairs of combat boots, which represent the growing toll of American soldiers who have lost their lives in Iraq.

On both sides of the exhibit, one will also find a chilling reminder of the civilian death toll of this war. Two mountains of shoes have been erected to symbolize the deaths of over 10,000 Iraqi civilians, most of whom remain nameless.

It’s a stark reminder of what’s been lost over the course of this
devastating war. As the death toll mounts, people become accustomed to hearing new casualty numbers. We begin to expect this, and in the midst of it all, the human face of each and every valued life becomes blurred in those who have already met their death, and those who will inevitably face it. It’s a poignant reminder to remember the dreams lost and the lives cut short of each and every individual.

The plea is simple and it is hoped that its meaning will resonate at a time when the Democratic Party is showcasing its revitalized image to the American populace. With Senators Kerry and Edwards and the Democratic Party urging that more troops be sent to consolidate U.S. control over Iraq, the American Friends Service Committee and its supporters say: “Stop the Killing. Bring Our Troops Home. Fund the Dream.”

Noah Merrill, 25 and program co-ordinator for the American Friends Service Commitee, feels that this display higlights the human suffering of the war. “It touches people on a very visceral level — on a very emotional level. This transcends politics. I hope that some of the representatives of the Democratic Party take this opportunity to see this and to comment on it.”

Steven Lester, 28, who was taking a stroll through Boston Common, was moved by what he saw. “When you see each pair of boots, you imagine a person standing there. It’s a startling reminder of the fact that each of these represents a person who was a living being and is now dead.”

Mary Massie, 48, who came to see the display, thought it had a special significance during this week’s convention. “I think this definitely has a place here at the convention. It’s very moving and it really brings home the fact that it’s a real thing and that we’re going to have a whole lot more boots here if we re-elect Bush.”

Ayah-Victoria McKhail

 

Waging war

You can’t walk around the convention floor without bumping into a war hero. This election year, Democrats are trying to downplay their peace-and-love image and throw some men and women who know how to fire heavy weapons…

You can’t walk around the convention floor without bumping into a war hero. This election year, Democrats are trying to downplay their peace-and-love image and throw some men and women who know how to fire heavy weapons on camera. They include decorated soldiers from conflicts past, such as Max Cleland, the former senator from Georgia who lost three limbs in the Vietnam War. In a few hours Cleland will say some words about his fellow Vietnam Veteran, John Kerry, and present him to the convention’s assembled delegates for the first time.

Veterans, however, are a growing commodity, thanks to the ongoing hostilities in Iraq and Afghanistan. They include young men like Jeremy Broussard, a 27-year-old African American who served in southern Iraq as a captain in the U.S. Army, providing fire support to the Marines during the U.S.-led invasion of that country. Broussard, a native of New Orleans, is at the Fleet Center this week to show solidarity with the Democratic Party and its veteran nominee. “A big concern of mine is the [Bush] administration is not honest with the American people about what’s happening in Iraq,” he says. “… The main enemy on 9/11 was Al Qaeda. And Al Qaeda was in Afghanistan. We’re sending it all into Iraq, and what you’re seeing is Afghanistan is on the backburner.”

The Bush administration, Broussard says, has also failed to support the troops fully when they’ve come home, cutting pay and benefits for enlisted men and women: “They’re doing photo ops with vets, but in reality [veterans] are getting stabbed in the back.” Morale is at a low, he says: Before the Iraq War started, the worst assignment was in South Korea, guarding the no man’s land between that country and nuke-empowered North Korea. Nowadays, however, so many soldiers want to be transferred to South Korea that their requests are being denied. “They’ll go” to Iraq, Broussard says of his fellow soldiers. “They’ll do their service. But they don’t want to be there.”

Even pro-Kerry veterans like Broussard, however, are not necessarily enamored of the anti-war wing of the Democratic Party. Broussard says that he saw Michael Moore’s film, Fahrenheit 9/11, which includes interviews with soldiers serving in Iraq. But Broussard feels the depiction of soldiers in the film — for instance, a segment in which a G.I. speaks with relish of gunning down insurgents with heavy metal music ringing in his ears — was “two-dimensional.” “I want to make sure that people understand that soldiers are not mindless killing machines. No one enjoys it … But we’re there to do a job.”

It’s clear that Kerry needs to keep the anti-war faction of the party from breaking ranks while also not alienating veterans like Broussard, many of whom — in spite of the all the alleged deception and undisputed toll in human life in Iraq — do not wish the United States to pull out and leave a power vacuum in that Middle Eastern country. The abundance of veterans on the stage this week — including the former NATO commander, General Wesley Clark, tonight — seems to indicate that the Kerry team is leaning decisively in one direction.

Victor Tan Chen

Victor Tan Chen is In The Fray's editor in chief and the author of Cut Loose: Jobless and Hopeless in an Unfair Economy. Site: victortanchen.com | Facebook | Twitter: @victortanchen

 

Conventional collage, Day 2

These photos were taken at the Democratic National Convention on July 27, 2004, by ITF Contributing Editor Dustin Ross.

 

Random GOP’ers

Here’s a run-down of my run-ins with the GOP rapid-response team in Boston so far:

1.  Abercrombie guys and gals dressed up as giant flip-flop sandals with signs declaring Kerry to be without conviction. Are all Young Republicans this good looking?

2.  Man pushing baby in stroller outfitted with “Re-elect Bush/Quayle” sign. Not a typo.

3.  “God Hates America” protestors in the Democracy Pen under the T tracks. Why does God hate America, you might ask? Because we looooves the gays and the sodomy.

Hold the complaints — I’m aware that the real GOP operatives aren’t vicious haters, G.H.W. Bush fans, or attractive. But nonetheless, an interesting sampling of identifiable Republicans here in the lefty bastion of Massachusetts.

Scott Winship

 

The unbearable lightness of blogging

I’ve been checking the convention coverage this week, and I’m struck by the dearth of fresh, interesting pieces. Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick provides an apt description of one half of the problem:  

“There is always a rather weird quality to these conventions, in that these speeches are happening right in your living room, yet we in the press are somehow supposed to mediate the experience. We can’t hear as well as you do, or see as well as you do, but we’re supposed to triangulate your direct experience against the fact that we are here. As a consequence, there’s a lot of Media Hall of Mirrors stuff, wherein the press reports on the press, reporting on you.”

If journalists are supposed to give readers a you-are-there perspective but the readers are already there, it’s not surprising that much of the commentary strays deep into the Meta. See, for example, this post.

The other half of the problem is that nothing newsworthy is really occurring here! Not to deny that the experience of attending the Convention is incredible, but the speeches, with a few notable exceptions, are sanitized and generic. The whole four days is tightly scripted. And media representatives outnumber delegates by a 6-to-1 margin.  

Without new developments to report on, commentators have resorted to analyzing the irony, tragedy, drama, and triumph of key speakers’ performances. How must Howard Dean feel, knowing that he was on top for a while? How must Gephardt feel, knowing that the VP slot was nearly his? How frickin’ amazing is Bill Clinton? These are to some degree interesting questions, but they don’t lend themselves to fascinating commentary.

Anyway … omigod, did I tell you I saw Bono yesterday?

Scott Winship

 

MAILBAG: Feeling froggy? Why we care what focus groups think

Been watching the convention on C-SPAN? If you plan to keep watching between Boston and New York, keep an eye out for the focus groups. And beware. They should run a ticker, a la ESPN game scores, at the bottom of the screen: WARNING: INCREDIBLE TIME SUCK! They’re addictive reality television at its lowest ebb. Each group features handpicked characters who are supposed to represent demographics key to this year’s race — NASCAR dads, stay-at-home moms, blacks, Latinos. Most are culled from swing states such as Ohio and Pennsylvania, where people are generally nice and let you cut in traffic. But shut them in a room to talk politics, and they degenerate into characters more conflict-prone than the entire cast of Real World I, II, and III. Puck made more sense than most of these people.

In that sense, at least, they are representative of a pissed-off, polarized country where no one trusts the “facts” presented to them by either party or the media. The New York Times observes most voters have already made up their minds, and members of the opposing party disapprove of the president more than ever before. The group from Dayton that appeared on C-SPAN earlier this week alternately blamed Bush and Kerry for the loss of manufacturing jobs overseas, abortion law, and the war in Iraq. Their chief complaint: The candidates have no mind of their own and are pandering instead to focus groups just like them.

The candidates have reason to care what these characters think. According to The Cincinnati Enquirer, “The ‘Dayton housewife’ set the standard for the average middle-American voter. Richard Scammon and Ben Wattenberg, in their 1970 book The Real Majority, argued that candidates who spoke to her issues win presidential elections.” Or, as one reviewer wrote, they “Attempted to warn the Democratic Party not to pander to ‘trendy’ groups of voters, but instead to focus on the ‘unpoor, unblack and unyoung’ [sic] (that is, the average American voter) in order to achieve success at the polls. Much has changed in this country in the intervening thirty-odd years, but its message is one that, actually, the Republicans have been heeding more nationally.”

As opposed to Dayton Stepford wives of yore, the Enquirer found, “By and large, these swing voters are a gloomy bunch. Asked to describe the mood of the country, they use words like ‘unsettled,’ ‘upheaval’ and ‘falling apart.’” They also use words like “teeter totter” “schmaltzy” and “froggy.” “‘Things start looking good, and then they start to teeter-totter back down,’ said Jody Blair, 33, a Centerville housewife, mom, puppeteer and former teacher.” What do people like Blair really tell us? Not much about the election, but they certainly show a colorful America unafraid to share its opinions — bizarre and baseless though they may be.

One group member said she decided to vote for Bush based on a chain email letter that claimed Teresa Heinz Kerry failed to provide health insurance for employees. If this was genuine Reality TV, she would have been voted out of the airless office space right then. Instead, the C-SPAN moderator kept her hushed up while counterparts dismissed Nader as “a fossil” and “a hippie,” and called Kerry “stiff” and “schmaltzy.” But Cheryl Maggard, 48, a house cleaner from Lebanon, Ohio, came up with the best dis on a candidate yet – “froggy,” for President Bush. She was, of course, talking about his stance on the war in Iraq. “He jumped too quick,” she said, veering off into a mixed metaphor. “You don’t get into a fight if you don’t know where the exit is.”

—Anonymous

 

Putting on a happy face for the party

The modern-day political convention, at its best, is a lovefest, where egos are coddled and factions appeased, and the party reemerges as a united front, singing the praises of their chosen leader. The Democratic Nation…

The modern-day political convention, at its best, is a lovefest, where egos are coddled and factions appeased, and the party reemerges as a united front, singing the praises of their chosen leader. The Democratic National Convention has so far stuck to the script. After more than a year of sometimes brutal campaigning in the primary season, Democrats of every pedigree are coming together to pay their respects and collectively kiss the ring of the all-but-anointed Democratic candidate, John Kerry. One of the less-than-obvious singers of Kerry’s praises was Dennis Kucinich, the Ohio congressman and the last person standing alongside Kerry in the Democratic primary race (at this point, just symbolically). “We Democrats are one,” he said. “We are left, right, center. We are one for John Kerry.” While the anti-war Kucinich railed against the “distortions and misrepresentations” that had brought the U.S. military in full force into Iraq, he maintained that a John Kerry victory would “not just be the victory of one party, but … a victory of faith over cynicism.”

The previous night the symbolism had been even more intense: at the podium was Howard Dean, the former governor from Vermont, once Kerry’s chief rival for the nomination, the man who shocked many in the political establishment with the grassroots, Internet-enhanced campaign that his supporters waged. A moderate governor who, as presidential candidate, rallied liberal anger against Bush’s foreign policy, Dean used to quip on the stump that “I represent the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party.” He was speaking a different line last night. “We are all here to represent the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party,” Dean declared, adding that he stood “shoulder to shoulder” with his former rival.

As Dean ended his speech with an admonition that “only you have the power,” fluorescent blue and red stripes billowed across the stadium-sized TV and the song “We Are Family” pumped through the speakers. It was jubilant; it was corny; it was what you expect of a convention. Like soldiers closing rank, each of the week’s speakers — from liberal mavericks like Dennis Kucinich to centrists like Bill Clinton — have struck the same themes of unity (of party) and adulation (for Kerry). Kucinich, for instance, has taken the most radical position of any major Democrat against the Iraq War — he calls for an immediate withdrawal of troops, a highly improbable scenario even in a Kerry administration. Meanwhile, the Democratic Party platform approved this week outlines a strategy for Iraq that is all but the same as the Bush administration’s, as Middle East expert Juan Cole has pointed out: There is no strong anti-war plank, and a Kerry administration would remain committed to staying in Iraq for the foreseeable future.

The spirit of solidarity has even sunk into the psyche of those Democrats who stand outside the party establishment – the young “Deaniacs” who brought the Vermont governor to the national stage last year, the multitudes of angry men and women who felt their anger channeled by Michael Moore’s film Fahrenheit 9/11, the progressives who heard their ideals expressed most articulately by the congressman from Ohio. Both Dean and Moore spoke at a local forum sponsored by the Campaign for America’s Future, a liberal think tank, this week. At the “Taking Back America” forum, organizers referred to the week’s event as an “alternative convention.” Sure enough, the rhetoric at the afternoon panel on Tuesday far surpassed the bland pronouncements at the convention hall. “You will not win this election by being weak-kneed and wishy-washy. The only way this is going to happen is if you be forthright and say what you believe … If you [Kerry] move to the right, you will encourage millions to stay home — the people who are already discouraged” from voting. Moore, the baseball-capped, blue-jean-wearing, and just generally rumpled documentary filmmaker who has been dubbed (by conservative critics) as the “leader of the hate and vitriol celebrity set,” also fired back at his enemies. “They aren’t patriots,” he said. “They’re hate-triots. They believe in the politics of hate.”

That said, even liberal warriors like Moore are slick and/or savvy enough to realize that they can’t leave 2004 to the whims of wavering voters. Moore, a stalwart supporter of Green presidential candidate Ralph Nader in 2000, now has little patience for the 2004 re-contender. “A word about Ralph Nader,” he said, as a chorus of Democratic boos cascaded down. “You’ve already done your job. The Democratic Party of 2004 is not the Democratic Party of 2000. The work has been done by Dean and Kucinich. Even the Al Gore of 2004 is not the Al Gore of 2000.”

In truth, the party is still diverse and contentious in its thinking. This united front is just a temporary state of grace. Kucinich, the Ohio congressman and (still un-conceded) presidential candidate, hinted as much in interviews this week: He is throwing his support behind Kerry, he said, because after the election he believes the anti-war movement can convince Kerry to change his mind on Iraq. In other words, Democrats are going to do anything it takes to win — but if Kerry does win, the old battles are likely to resurface with renewed vigor.

Victor Tan Chen

Victor Tan Chen is In The Fray's editor in chief and the author of Cut Loose: Jobless and Hopeless in an Unfair Economy. Site: victortanchen.com | Facebook | Twitter: @victortanchen

 

Angels and aliens

If Monday was the night for the party’s stars, Tuesday was the night to show off its diversity. California Congressman Mike Honda spoke of his Japanese American family’s internment a half-century ago. African American p…

If Monday was the night for the party’s stars, Tuesday was the night to show off its diversity. California Congressman Mike Honda spoke of his Japanese American family’s internment a half-century ago. African American poet and activist Maya Angelou performed, followed by Arizona American Indians singing the national anthem in the Tohono O’odham language. Rhode Island’s U.S. representative, Jim Langevin, rolled out to the podium in his wheelchair to extol the virtues of the all-but-anointed Democratic candidate, John Kerry. But the night’s most dynamic speaker, by far, was Barack Obama, the all-but-elected candidate for senator in Illinois, a biracial graduate of Harvard Law School who has distinguished himself in the segregated city of Chicago for his ability to build bridges across racial lines.

Obama’s father herded goats in Kenya before coming to the United States as a student; his mother, who is white, grew up in Kansas. One grandfather was a cook serving the British colonizers; the other worked on oil rigs and farms before signing up for Patton’s army in Europe. Obama’s remarkable life story testifies to the promise of opportunity for all in this country; he declared: “I stand here knowing that my story is part of the larger American story, that I owe a debt to all of those who came before me, and that, in no other country on Earth, is my story even possible.” When his speech ended, the crowd erupted in cheers, and the stadium screen in the Fleet Center flashed a live feed from Obama’s church, Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, where elderly black women in summer dresses clapped with exuberance.

Obama is almost certain to win come November (the Republicans have so far failed to field a candidate in his race). He is months away from becoming the only person of African descent in the Senate and, with his echoes of Clinton-style eloquence, will surely be a star in the national Democratic Party for years to come.

The other revealed talent last night was Teresa Heinz Kerry, the candidate’s wife and First Lady in waiting. Conservative analysts immediately assailed her for a “self-indulgent” performance, and it’s true that her speech was as much, or more, about her views than those of her husband’s. (Is a wife not supposed to speak her own mind? She insisted on this right: “My only hope is that, one day soon, women — who have all earned the right to their opinions — instead of being labeled opinionated, will be called smart or well-informed, just as men are.”) But it also showed that Heinz Kerry has the makings of an international superstar — sort of like a sub-Saharan version of Eleanor Roosevelt. Starting her speech in measured, accented English, she soon moved on to phrases of welcome in Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese. She spoke of growing up in Mozambique (a dictatorship where her father voted for this first time when he turned 73), her student activism against South African apartheid, her immigrant’s journey to the United States of America. Heinz Kerry wrapped up her remarks with a quintessential American quotation, the elegant oratory from Lincoln’s first inaugural address in which he urged his fellow citizens (on the eve of war) to rise above their old enmities and recognize their common destiny. “The mystic chords of memory, stre[t]ching from every battle-field, and patriot grave, to every living heart and hearthstone, all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”

It was a night to remember those better angels: the diversity — and tolerance of diversity — that has made this country strong. Convention organizers intend to highlight the party’s inclusiveness throughout the week. It’s not just a matter of race, gender, or place of origin, of course. The larger message is that Americans of all political beliefs — liberal and conservative — can fall behind the Kerry-Edwards campaign. Last night, speakers from Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick to New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson to Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy appealed to their audience in this spirit of national unity. “There is not a liberal America and a conservative America,” Obama said. “There is the United States of America.” At another point in the night, a message flashed across the big screen, describing a Republican Vietnam veteran who had decided to vote for Kerry thanks to the Bush-induced morass in Iraq. Republicans, it was implied, can be reasonable people, too.

But how well will the Democratic Party’s touted diversity play in the rest of the country — especially in those “battleground” states where the election (so the experts say) will be won and lost? Take just one of last night’s wild cards: Heinz Kerry. Will she attract women voters who want to hear someone with the courage to say (invoking Eleanor), “It is time for the world to hear women’s voices, in full and at last.”? Or, will she drive away conservatives who are made uncomfortable by the prospect of a strong woman? (It is a sad fact that this is still a concern in a national election in 2004.) Will Heinz Kerry’s foreign origins and her menagerie of difficult-to-pronounce languages draw the admiration of voters? Or, will her background further suspicions that she is an alien in political waters reserved for the native-born elect? (It’s not without good reason that Kerry refuses to speak his fluent French in earshot of American reporters.) Last night, the party was united; the next few months will show us whether the party can unite the country.

Victor Tan Chen

Victor Tan Chen is In The Fray's editor in chief and the author of Cut Loose: Jobless and Hopeless in an Unfair Economy. Site: victortanchen.com | Facebook | Twitter: @victortanchen