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==========================================
The Weathermen Redeemed, Part 1:
The Provocateur Exhumed
by Jared Israel
[Nov. 2, 2008]
Other articles in the "Weathermen
Redeemed"
series:Part 2: Obama's "I-was-only-8" Lie
http://emperors-clothes.com/8yearslie.htm
Part 3: Obama Forgets the Early '80s
http://emperors-clothes.com/forget.htm
Part 4: A Weatherman Dream in New York
http://emperors-clothes.com/dream.htm
Also see: A Nightmare of Human Potential
Reply to Bill Ayers' New York Times Editorial
http://emperors-clothes.com/realbill.htm
==========================================
Two leaders of the Weatherman faction that sabotaged Students for
a Democratic Society (SDS) in 1969, Bill Ayers and his wife Bernardine
Dohrn, who lived for a decade supposedly hiding from the Feds while
claiming credit for the occasional bombing and/or armed robbery, and who
are now exhumed in our post-modern world as socially prominent
professors, have become an issue in the U.S. election. This due to the
accusation that Ayers and Dohrn are linked to Barack Obama.
The Republicans’ accusation has been made from the far
Right perspective that Obama’s alleged links to Weathermen, whom the
Republicans say are representative of the radical student movement of
the ’60s, show he is a hidden socialist. This is all quite
misleading. To see why, we need to answer the question: who were the
Weathermen?
That done, we can examine what Obama and McCain are
saying – and not saying. Starting with Obama’s defense, we will
see that it incriminates him in ways not raised by McCain. And then
turning to McCain, we will see that the Republican attacks on Obama’s
connections with the Weatherman are not only completely misleading, but
hypocritical.
==========================================
Snobs with a License
==========================================
I have an unusual perspective on Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn. You
see, I know them. Not as friends. Quite the contrary. In the late 1960s,
I was co-leader of the Worker-Student Alliance (WSA) caucus, the force
within Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) that opposed the
Dohrn/Ayers/Mike Klonsky alliance of Weathermen and the like-minded.
The struggle within SDS was complex. Put briefly, the bone of contention
was how SDS, which had become a mass-based student organization first
because of the civil rights movement and then especially by organizing
student opposition to the Vietnam war, should view the American people –
working people. Worker Student Alliance (WSA) caucus members argued that
working people – white and non-white – were the key force for social
change, that students should be won to a pro-working class attitude, and
that in our campus struggles, for example as related to the Vietnam war,
we should fight for that attitude. (E.g., many people argued that the
Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) should not be allowed to recruit
and meet on campus because ROTC polluted the University as a Temple of
Knowledge, and so on. We argued that this argument reflected a
contemptuous elitism, implied a (non-existent) superiority towards the
students who joined ROTC, and moreover misdescribed the
university, which was an institution reflecting the nature of society,
not some superior, ivory tower. We said ROTC should be banned from
campus because it lured students, especially poorer students, into
becoming officers in an unjust war. We said that, instead, these
students should be given scholarships and decent jobs. While we
believed white people could overcome racism in common struggle with
non-white people, over shared problems, the Weathermen viewed white
American working people as being
the problem. The Weathermen hid their ideology of contempt behind
rhetoric about what they, oblivious to the irony, called “white skin
privilege.” I say “oblivious to the irony” because the Weathermen and
their allies disproportionately came from upper class backgrounds. In
any case, whatever their backgrounds, their ideology was a trendy
adaptation of the contempt for supposedly ‘crude’ working people they
had absorbed during their upbringings. They were snobs with a license.
Self-scrutiny? Please. Self-indulgence and self-glorification were their
watchwords, as they demonstrated.
Today, it is distressing to see on the internet young people looking up
to Ayers and Dohrn as heroes of the student movement of the ’60s. It
means that the Weathermen’s terribly harmful effects are being recycled.
In fact, the Weathermen were heroes only in their own minds. By the time
the Weatherman faction crystallized as such in 1969, its members had
precious little connection to campus campaigns against the war and
racism. (Some, like Bernardine Dohrn never had.)
The Republican Right calls the Weathermen Marxists and
says everyone in SDS was a Marxist. This is wrong on both counts:
1) Many and possibly most of the rank and file people
in SDS were liberals and even conservatives, angry about the war and
racism.
2) And while it is true that virtually all leaders of
the factions contending on a national level – leaders of the Weathermen
and their allies, on one side, and leaders of the Worker Student
Alliance (WSA) caucus on the other – did call
themselves Marxists, to assert that the Weathermen were in
fact Marxists is nonsense, not to mention unfair to Marx.
The Weatherman ideology was a mush of de Sade,
Marcuse, Timothy Leary, Frantz Fanon (from whom they got deification of
third world leaders and a tragically wrong-minded notion of the
cleansing virtue of violence) and the PLO. (This at a time when the
American Left, broadly defined, was not enamored of the PLO.) The
Weathermen were into self-righteous, false-revolutionary posturing,
extreme anti-Americanism, glorification of any demagogue who happened to
be non-white, and grotesque self-indulgence. (They boasted that they all
slept with each other all the time, but how they had enough brain cells
left to remember doing so is a mystery since they routinely smoked
anything that would burn and couldn’t escape.) To see how little
Weatherman ‘thinking’ had (and has) in common with Karl Marx, check out
the articles Marx wrote during the U.S. Civil War.
[1]
The internal struggle in SDS came to a head at the June 1969 convention
in Chicago. That convention opened with a debate between me, as a leader
of WSA, and Mike Klonsky, an ally of the Weathermen and one of three
elected SDS national officers. (The others were Bernardine Dohrn, the
Weatherman chief who is now Bill Ayers’ wife, and Fred Gordon, from
WSA.) Klonsky attempted a sucker punch from the Super-Duper Left (that
was Klonsky’s pose - he should have had a cape), reading a purported
letter from Anna Louise Strong, an American living in China, purportedly
conveying a message from no less than Mao Tse Tung, stating that those
opposing the Weathermen et al. were counter-revolutionary, or
words to that effect.
In brief, I replied that I didn’t know whether or not the letter was
authentic, and if it wasn’t, then shame on Mike Klonsky. However, I
said, the letter might be authentic. If so, Mao was trying to dictate
policy to the American student movement, which was struggling to work
through very complicated problems about which he knew not a thing, and
in which arguments he had no business interfering anyway, and if this
was the case, then shame on Mao Tse Tung. This was received with
tumultuous applause from the majority of delegates, including many who
did not belong to any faction. They were much relieved to hear somebody
challenge Klonsky’s demagogic appeal to a new conformity.
That opening debate was a disturbing omen for Dohrn and Ayers and
Klonsky et al. As the convention progressed, the WSA delegates –
serious-minded people, who had joined SDS based on participation in
various campaigns on campus and the appeal of good thinking – these WSA
delegates, who were experienced and thoughtful, were having productive
discussions with other delegates who weren’t in any faction about the
politics and tactics of campus struggles, which the WSA people, unlike
the Weathermen and the Klonsky-bots, actually knew something about.
Seeing they could not defeat WSA politically, the Weathermen and friends
tried various disruptive tactics, and finally instituted a plan to
destroy SDS, with Bernadine Dohrn taking the floor and announcing to a
stunned majority that those who opposed the Weathermen were henceforth
and forever expelled – poof! – and then, in mercifully oblivious
self-contradiction, leading a walkout of some hundreds of delegates –
i.e., a minority – while the majority chanted “Shame!”
I initiated that chant. In retrospect, I was mistaken.
The Weathermen had no shame.
==========================================
Dohrn of the Living Dead
==========================================
Following their walkout, the Weathermen formed their own SDS, competing
with the legitimately constituted organization – “legitimately” because,
after all, it was the Weathermen who had walked out. Now there were two
national SDSs, each with its own version of the SDS newsletter, New
Left Notes. With no WSAers present to scold them with talk about
elitist attitudes and winning students to pro-working class ideas in the
context of on-campus struggle against war and racism and in support of
working people, Weatherman was free to express its essence. Which it
did.
For example, the Weathermen adopted as their hero one Marion Delgado,
who they claimed was a Mexican-American child that put a slab of
concrete on some railroad tracks, derailing a train and killing many
people. I don’t know if this tragedy in fact occurred, but that’s what
the Weathermen wrote in their version of New Left Notes. And they
adopted as their slogan “Marion Delgado - Live Like Him!” So, a)
Weatherman advocated emulating a murderously disturbed child. And b) in
specifically choosing a murderously disturbed Chicano child, and
presenting him as the poster-child of their “revolutionary struggle,” in
what they called “the belly of the beast,” they revealed the profound
depth of racism that underlay their phony fight against “white skin
privilege.” Yeah, they wanted to serve third world people. On a plate.
In the same way, their pose of adulation for manifestly corrupt and/or
demagogic and/or undignified non-white leaders – exactly the kind of
leaders nobody would wish on anybody they respected – was and is the
flip side of the standard racist attitude, that it is natural for
non-white people to have such leaders.
The media ate it up and spewed it out. Weatherman, made large by media
coverage, larger than death, had two terrible effects:
1) For many people, the widespread publicity about the Weathermen’s
ideas and actions discredited the very possibility of decent-minded
social change, pushing people to the hard Right and greatly reinforcing
racist attitudes. Big surprise there.
2) At the same time the massive media coverage falsely romanticized the
Weathermen into bizarre celebrities – Zorro, stoned – encouraging young
people who were upset about war and injustice to emulate these media
provocateurs, who cloaked the worst ideas in left-wing rhetoric.
The Weathermen are once again in the spotlight, and they are once again
having a terrible effect. I will try to counter this effect in the
context of refuting what Obama is saying about the Weathermen, and what
the Republicans are saying as well.
First I will deal with the web page where Democratic candidate Barack
Obama answers the charge that he is close to Weatherman leader Bill
Ayers. I will show that, in answering this charge, Obama spends most of
the page falsifying the record in order to prettify Bill Ayers and his
Weathermen, thus indicting himself far more harshly than his opponent
John McCain does. And he lies a tricky lie, which makes one wonder about
his past.
After that, I will take on the Republican side, raising the question: if
Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers are, as Republican nominee McCain says,
monsters, then why are they unpunished monsters? Ayers and
Dohrn came out in the open on December 3, 1980, a month after Ronald
Reagan won the presidential election. Why didn’t the Reagan Justice
Department prosecute them on numerous possible (and extreme) felony
charges, such as second degree murder? Why didn’t Bush Sr. or Bush Jr.?
I will show that the explanations (plural, and contradictory!) that the
media has put forward for why the government failed to prosecute Ayers
and Dohrn are not credible. The failure to prosecute Ayers and Dohrn,
who have publicly confessed to committing murder, at least in the second
degree, and other Federal and State crimes that have no statutes of
limitations, and who have not confessed to, but are convincingly linked
to, at least four murders in the first degree – this failure supports
the charge many people made in 1969: that key Weatherman leaders were
(and still are) agents provocateurs with the assignment of
destroying the very possibility of a decent Left in this country,
associating the notion of social change with gangsterism and corruption.
I will start my analysis with Mr. Barack Obama’s defense of Mr. William
Ayers.
==========================================
A Defense that Backfires
==========================================
During the Obama-Clinton Democratic primary contest, a debate moderator
raised the issue of Obama’s relationship with Ayers. In response,
Obama’s campaign website put up a special page, 40% of which is devoted
to quoting various sources rejecting the notion that Obama’s ties to
Ayers are of any importance, and 60% of which is devoted to defending
Weatherman Ayers. At the outset one might ask: why would Obama, who is
known for brutally divesting himself of liabilities (e.g., when mentor
Rev. Wright became a liability, Obama devoted one full hour to attacking
him on TV), and for whom Ayers was and is certainly a liability, create
a web page devoted to defending the reputation of Bill Ayers?
Relying on misleading documentation, deception and outright lies, the
Obama page depicts Ayers, and through him the Weathermen, as honest
idealists, who in the very distant past engaged in “violent actions,”
but who have now turned into model social reformers. In this way, Obama,
who is generally expected to become the next U.S. president,
rehabilitates the Weathermen, thus giving a poison gift to the people of
the world and attacking himself more harshly than McCain does.
Obama’s web page on Bill Ayers is 1200 words long. As noted above, less
than 40% is devoted to downplaying the significance of Obama’s
relationship to Ayers. I will ignore almost all of this self-defense,
since I am not in a position to judge the significance of Ayers sitting
on the same boards as Obama, and the like. I will discuss only what I am
in a position to evaluate: Obama’s much-repeated argument that he was
8-years old when the Weathermen were active, and his arguments, taking
up just over 60% of the page, defending Ayers, which I will refute point
by point.
It is stunning that the McCain campaign has not produced a detailed
refutation of this web page. This failure, and the message delivered by
Gen. Colin Powell, essentially ordering McCain to lay off Ayers,
[2]
suggest two things: 1) Obama is the candidate of the U.S. Establishment
and 2) the rehabilitated Weathermen are slated to be used as role models
for the Left, such as it is, worldwide.
We are in a mess, my friends. And Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers helped
get us there.
Continued in Part 2:
Obama’s “I-was-only-8” Lie