I wonder if the CPUSA gets a little tingle running up their legs, too. They’re endorsing the Obamamessiah for President — shocker — even though he isn’t quite the perfect little Communist:
Barack Obama is not a left candidate. This fact has seemingly surprised a number of progressive people who are bemoaning Obama’s “shift to the center.” (Right-wingers are happy to join them, suggesting Obama is a “flip-flopper.”) It’s sad that some who seek progressive change are missing the forest for the trees. But they will not dampen the wide and deep enthusiasm for blocking a third Bush term represented by John McCain, or for bringing Obama by a landslide into the White House with a large Democratic congressional majority.
A broad multiclass, multiracial movement is converging around Obama’s “Hope, change and unity” campaign because they see in it the thrilling opportunity to end 30 years of ultra-right rule and move our nation forward with a broadly progressive agenda.
This diverse movement combines a variety of political currents and aims in a working coalition that is crucial to social progress at this point. At the core are America’s working families, of all hues and ethnicities, whose determination to move forward does not depend on, and will not be diverted by, the daily twists and turns of this watershed presidential campaign. They are taking the long view.
Notably, the labor movement has stepped up its independent mobilization for this election. It is leading an unprecedented campaign to educate and unify its ranks to elect the nation’s first African American president. Last week, AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Richard Trumka told the Steelworkers convention that there is “no evil that’s inflicted more pain and more suffering than racism — and it’s something we in the labor movement have a special responsibility to challenge.”
If Obama’s candidacy represented nothing more than the spark for this profound initiative to unite the working class and defeat the pernicious influence of racism, it would be a transformative candidacy that would advance progressive politics for the long term.
The struggle to defeat the ultra-right and turn our country on a positive path will not end with Obama’s election. But that step will shift the ground for successful struggles going forward.
One thing is clear. None of the people’s struggles — from peace to universal health care to an economy that puts Main Street before Wall Street — will advance if McCain wins in November.
Let’s keep our eyes on the prize.
Yes, let’s keep our eyes on the prize. We’ll have gulags and totalitarianism in no time, my dear comrades. Just keep votin’ the lefties into office.
Liberals will read this and immediately start screaming shrilly about how it’s right-wing FASCISTS!!!!!!! (their favorite insult ever, by the way) who actually advocate these things. But let’s keep in mind that the Communists are trying to get us away from the right wingers. Just get away from the right wing and the government will take care of everything in your life for you, and we’ll have wonderful income redistribution, and capitalism will be abolished, and if you think it’s not the best thing since Disneyworld and sliced bread, well, you’ll see things our way eventually, and if not… well, we can take care of that.
Exit question: how many Americans see an endorsement from the Communist Party as a positive?
Hat Tip: Little Green Footballs
No surprise there. I wasn’t the first to notice this, but check out the iconography being used. It’s eerily similar to some other iconography used by some dubious “leaders” of the past century.
http://philmon.blogspot.com/2008/08/idealists.html
I noted a similar endorsement by the socialists. I decided it would be a good voting litmus test:
http://philmon.blogspot.com/2008/07/voting-litmus-test.html
Silly me. I thought that the DNC was the Communist Party of USA.
I’m with Ironwolf, I thought they were one in the same.
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