Having been extremely critical of the Nation columnist Katha Pollitt in the past few years, with good reason, I've got to give credit where it is due. She wrote one of the best short columns about why Bernie Sanders isn't the white knight who his most ardent supporters and his campaign sell him as being. He's a white, male left-wing politician of his generation, a kind of quasi-Marxist economics fixated leftist whose views of even those issues weren't informed by the lives, experience and thoughts of women and members of racial minorities.
Bernie is a
traditional leftist for whom feminism is a distraction.
Why didn’t Bernie
get me? Well, there’s electability: I just don’t believe
Americans are ready for a 74-year-old self-described socialist with a
long far-left CV who would raise their taxes by quite a lot. By the
time the Republicans got finished with him, he’d be the love child
of Rosa Luxemburg and the Ayatollah Khomeini, and then it’s hello,
President Trump. There’s the question, too, of how much Bernie
could actually accomplish. Would he make an effective president, as I
think Hillary will—all the more so now that she’s been forced to
see that a significant part of the Democratic electorate is to her
left?
Part of the answer
is simpler, though: Bernie didn’t ask for my vote. Oh, you can go
to his website and find a page of boilerplate setting out his general
commitments to women’s rights: He’s in favor of equal pay,
reproductive rights, the ERA, the Violence Against Women Act,
childcare for all, and so on—a laundry list, indeed, of the causes
dear to the heart of those often derided by his supporters as
bourgeois feminists content with incremental change. I am aware, too,
that Bernie has a good voting record on those issues in Congress. But
there’s a difference between someone who votes the right way, and
someone who introduces legislation and champions the issue. He never
convinced me that gender issues, specifically the persistent
subordination of women in every area of life, were of much concern to
him. There were all those little tells. Pooh-poohing Planned
Parenthood and NARAL as “establishment” when he didn’t get
their endorsement. Arguing for parental leave because it allows a new
mother “to stay home and bond with her baby” instead of as
something that benefits fathers as well, and something that women
need in order to work and advance on the job. Doubling down on the
idiotic quip by his surrogate, Killer Mike (“A uterus doesn’t
qualify you to be president of the United States”), with the
pseudo-lofty pledge “No one has ever heard me say, ‘Hey guys,
let’s stand together, vote for a man.’ I would never do that,
never have.” Is there a word for someone whose entitlement is so
vast, so deep, so historically embedded, and so unconscious it
includes the belief that they got where they are by a resolute
devotion to fair play? It’s not reassuring that his senior campaign
staff, like his long-time political inner circle, is almost entirely
white and male.
And she points out, he also doesn't really get people of color.
At 74, you are who
you are. Bernie is a traditional class-based leftist for whom
feminism is a distraction. Abortion, as he told Rolling Stone, is a
“social issue.” Women’s mental and physical health, their
economic survival, their ability to determine the shape of their own
lives as men do, is a social issue? The clear implication is that
reproductive rights (like guns and LGBT rights, which he mentions in
the same breath) are secondary considerations, impediments to winning
broad support for his populist economic proposals. I can go to the
comment sections of AlterNet—or The Nation—and get that view any
day from the bros, but I really thought we’d be further along with
a white man who wants to lead a movement in a party that is majority
female and over a third people of color. (And that’s just
registered members—in 2012, 46 percent of people who voted
Democratic were people of color.)
After Indiana, the
GOP looks more likely than ever to nominate a racist, xenophobic
misogynist of staggering crudeness and mendacity. If elected, Trump
would consult with the conservative Heritage Foundation on Supreme
Court nominations. We could well lose what remains of a century of
progress for women, workers, LGBT people, and people of color,
including the right to vote itself.
Trump understands
very well that racism and sexism are crucial components of the
nationalistic insurgence he wants to lead; he appeals openly to some
of the darkest impulses in our political id. It is more than
disturbing that Bernie pays so little attention to these dangers.
He’s changed the debate within the Democratic Party by showing that
millions of voters want more than incremental, technocratic tinkering
with growing inequality. For that, I’m grateful. But when it comes
to dealing with the Republicans in November, I don’t think Bernie
gets the awful reality we’re facing. Hillary does.
I think that Hillary Clinton does get it and I am convinced that many of Bernie Sanders' supporters really don't get it or they really don't care. Young people who are used to the benefits of the legislation of the past century and unaware of the history of how their rights were won seem to believe they can't go away, even as they see them being taken away by the Berger, Rehnquist and Roberts courts. The lines I hear from callow young Bernie Sanders fans that warning about the consequences of Donald Trump replacing several Supreme Court members, that it's a "scare tactic" is chilling. For young women to say that, for women of any age to say that is especially troubling.
At this point, with him poised to serve as an active, intentional spoiler or, now that he has continued with the tactics of attacking Hillary Clinton, as one even if he goes through the motion of supporting her, I'm not sure Bernie Sanders is willing to face the consequences of what he really has done. If his window to make that pivot is still there, it's almost entirely closed now. With talk about his "movement" continuing and the Green grifters looking to absorb his "movement" into yet another Green spoiler disaster, it might already be too late.
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