Left and Right. Is it time to unite?

This article caught my eye and I thought it was an idea worth sharing.

AxXiom

 

Now Is the Time for a Left-Right Alliance


A rebel alliance already exists that could stop Bush administration attacks on the Constitution



by Thomas R. Eddlem


I'm currently a life member of the John Birch Society and formerly served on the staff of the organization for 13 years.
So why should any left-winger reading this care a fig about what I have to say?
Because of a conversation I had with another conservative magazine writer recently. In frustration at the unconstitutional excesses of the Bush administration, I blurted out to him: "The only people doing any good out there are the people at Air America." I expected to shock him with the statement, but his two-word reply shocked me: "And MoveOn.org."
We were both exaggerating for effect, but fact is, as my journalist friend continued, "We probably only disagree on, maybe, 25 percent of the issues." I'd have put the percentage a little higher, though I tacked an ending onto his sentence: "...and those issues aren't especially important right now."


When Air America started, I told myself and my friends that it would fail because it would be redundant. The Left already controls all the television networks besides Fox, along with most of the major newspapers. But here we are a year later, and the most penetrating news analysis on television is - and I'm not exaggerating here - Jon Stewart's Daily Show on Comedy Central.
I tuned into the Boston Air America affiliate when I became a community radio talk show host almost two years ago, thinking that I could use a few of their wild statements as a springboard to bounce my counterpoint. And although I got a few yuks out of quips about "Airhead America," I found that I agreed with the hosts more than I disagreed with them.


They criticized the Bush administration for deceiving us into the Iraq war. No problem there. They criticized Alberto Gonzales for his torture memos. Again, no problem. They criticized deficit spending, the PATRIOT Act, and corporate welfare. Hurray, hurray, and hurray!
So I called into a few "progressive" radio talk shows, identifying myself as a "right-wing radio talk show host," and explained my understanding of these issues. Stephanie Miller told me that I was a "not a very good right-winger." A liberal show host at my radio station even called me a "liberal."


But my views haven't changed one bit since I joined the John Birch Society during the Reagan administration. So this is not a conversion story.
What's changed is that the Bush administration has simply gotten that bad and that, according to some polls, we are almost at the point where most genuine conservatives realize it.
The Left and Right will never agree on the issues that liberal talk show host Ed Schultz likes to call "God, Guns, and Gays." Nor will we agree on most economic issues, such as Social Security or whether the federal government should have a role in health care.
Unlike the Hannitized Dittobots who call the so-called "right-wing" radio talk shows, you won't find me sporting "Club Gitmo" gear. I realize that what happened at Abu Ghraib could happen to any American faster than you can say "Jose Padilla."


These are some issues of common concern that could lead to cooperation between Right and Left. Does a "rebel alliance" against the evil neocon empire sound crazy? Not only has it already begun to take shape today, it's happened before.


The First Rebel Alliance


The American political Left and Right actively worked together on a project that literally saved the U.S. Constitution during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Back then, the Republican Party pushed for a balanced budget amendment to the U.S. Constitution and became frustrated at failing to get the two-thirds vote in Congress needed to pass it. So the GOP led a push toward the first constitutional convention (con-con) in more than 200 years by pushing state legislatures to call a con-con. They needed calls from two-thirds (34) of the states. By 1987, President Reagan and Vice President Bush needed only two more states to call a con-con, a convention that would have had the same power to tear up our existing Constitution and write a new one from scratch that our Founding Fathers had in 1787.


An odd coalition formed that paired Common Cause with Phyllis Schlafly's Eagle Forum and the AFL-CIO with the John Birch Society. Conservatives got resolutions condemning the convention from the Daughters of the American Revolution, the American Legion, and even the National Rifle Association, which feared that the convention would tinker with the Second Amendment.
An impressive array of letters from lawyers and professors, from Harvard's liberal Lawrence Tribe to Notre Dame's conservative Charles Rice, circulated on both sides.
But the alliance was far more intricate than merely an exchange of letters. Groups on the Left and Right coordinated letter-writing campaigns, and even spoke before state legislative hearings over which person testifying would bring up which points against the con-con.


All of official Washington, along with Wall Street, mobilized against this ad hoc grass-roots army. The national Republican Party backed a con-con to the hilt, along with Presidents Reagan and the elder Bush, and most Republican U.S. senators. Most "inside the Beltway" conservative organizations also backed the constitutional convention, making it the acid test for higher office within the Republican Party. Wall Street-backed business organizations underwrote the Republican Party campaign with donations and resolutions. And national Democrats divided, with many staying silent or even becoming verbally supportive of going to a con-con


But the results revealed the complete political isolation of the Washington, D.C., power brokers. The liberals were able to unify the Democrats in the state legislatures, while the conservatives were able to peel enough Republicans away from the Washington big shots in order to form a working majority coalition in favor of the Constitution.The coalition stopped the con-con steamroller cold, and in 1988 got the states of Alabama and Florida to pass legislation withdrawing their calls for a new convention. The legislatures of Louisiana, Utah, and Virginia followed with their own rescissions in later years, rolling the number of states calling for a convention back to a safer level.


The coalition sprang back into action in 1994 when popular Utah Governor Mike Leavitt got the idea to rename the con-con, calling it a "Conference of the States." The telegenic Republican governor again won the support of the national Republican Party and marketed it through the American Legislative Exchange Council, an organization of mostly Republican state legislators. Despite some quick and early successes by Leavitt, the coalition had effectively killed off the scheme by the end of 1995. After the victories, both sides claimed all the credit for themselves and tried to forget the embarrassing fact that they had allied themselves with the other side. But neither the political Left nor Right could have prevailed without the support of the other side.


Many on the Left may be tempted to pooh-pooh the impact of organizations such as the John Birch Society, the Eagle Forum, and the Daughters of the American Revolution. But like the Left, the Right maintains active organizations on the grass-roots level with no connections to Washington. Several have hundreds of local chapters of volunteers across the country, multi-million dollar annual budgets, and - in the case of the John Birch Society - a staff of 40 professional organizers it calls "coordinators." The Right is equally capable of putting letters into representatives' mailboxes from home districts and putting bodies into district offices of swing legislators during a legislative campaign.


The New "Rebel Alliance"


The entire U.S. Constitution had to be in danger in order for the Left and Right to work together in the past. That's just what it's taken for the alliance to form again. The U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights are in danger again today.


The issues the Right and Left are already working together on are related to the Constitution: (1) Exposing the Bush administration's policy to eliminate the right to trial, as in the case of Jose Padilla, (2) Stopping the Bush practice and advocacy of torture, (3) Ending the administration's unnecessary Iraq War, (4) Eliminating unconstitutional, warrantless wiretapping, and the most objectionable parts of the PATRIOT Act, (5) Stopping multilateral trade agreements such as CAFTA, renewal of the WTO, and the upcoming Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).
The current Rebel Alliance is completely ad hoc and has no formal organization, for several reasons. First, we don't trust each other. Groups on the "paleoconservative" Right - those not in the Bush neoconservative orbit who have strong ideological reasons for joining an ad hoc alliance - include some of the organizations most disliked by leftists: The John Birch Society, Phyllis Schlafly's Eagle Forum, the Rockford Institute, the "Buchanan Brigades" of Pat Buchanan's American Cause, libertarian-leaning Lew Rockwell and his Ludwig von Mises Institute. And, of course, Antiwar.com, where the Rebel Alliance meshes and works together best.


Of course, we "right-wingers" don't trust you leftists at all either. Leftists will always view conservatives like me as paranoid radicals, and conservatives will always view the Left as the ideological heirs of Joseph Stalin. It will be hard for either side to even shake hands on the banks of the Elbe River at the end of any alliance of convenience. But a lot more could be accomplished with a little more cooperation, even something as a simple as an e-mail or a phone call regarding tentative campaign plans on issues of mutual interest on critical issues related to the U.S. Constitution.


The second reason that any sort of formal organization in this new alliance is all but impossible is because groups on both sides will likely drop in or out of the coalition, depending on the organization's agenda - or even the clash of personalities involved.


Any successful Left-Right cooperation should focus upon the U.S. House of Representatives. The chief lesson of the con-con battle was that the executive branch and the Senate, the legislative chamber of 100 men and women who want to run the executive branch, were not greatly swayed by grass-roots pressure. But House members are literally running for reelection nonstop and are particularly susceptible to broad-based pressure from the districts. With the Left unifying the Democratic Party, it would only take the swing of a couple of Republican representatives by the right in any committee in order to launch a Watergate-style investigation on the indefinite detention of American citizens without trial or the contemptible policy of "extraordinary rendition."


Liberals are pinning their hopes on Democratic chances in November, but even a slight Democratic majority in the House of Representatives in January (a divided government I dearly hope will come to pass) would not solve the problem. Genuine reform and controls on the unitary executive will elude the nation without the assistance of the Right, as Democratic reforms either die in the closely locked Senate or by Democratic neocon implants in the House (there are Joe Lieberman types in the House too!) Whatever happens in November, the Left is going to need the Right to peel away more Republicans away from Bush and find more congressmen like Rep. Ron Paul of Texas.


A little more coordination of effort could go a long way toward saving the U.S. Constitution from the depredations of the Bush administration, both before and after November.
Down with the neocon Evil Empire! Long live the new Rebel Alliance!


http://www.votestrike.com/rebe...

Comments

It's an interesting

It's an interesting article, but I'm not yet ready to unite with anyone on the left, and doubt I ever will be.  OK, so they don't like the excesses of the Bush aminstration and neither do true conservatives.  Well, I don't like affirmative action and neither does the KKK.  However, my reasoning is that I don't like racism in any form; theirs is because they do embrace racism and are proud of it.  I don't like special rights for homosexuals or any other segment of society, and neither does Westboro Pseudo-Baptist Pseudo-Church.  But I will never stand along side them in any way, shape or form, because their motivations are hate, desire for attention, and the hope that someone will hit one of their no-fighting-skills-having punk members so they can sue; while my motivation is the belief in equal rights as opposed to special rights. 

 Many of us are frustrated with the hijacking of our party by neo-cons who have no idea what conservative idealogy is and means.  But that in no way should that inspire us to swap spit with people who's sole purpose is to destroy free enterprise, the Constitution, and the American way of life.

Is the glass half empty or half full?

It strikes me that we are awfully good at assessing someone else's heart and very poor at assessing the wickedness in our own heart. Maybe the other guy has better motivations than I give him credit for and maybe mine are less pure than I would like for others to believe. In any event middle America is more about freedom and personal responsibility than the globalists wanting to control us would have us all to believe.

The best thing about this last political cycle is all the wonderful friends I have found in middle America who love life and liberty and care about each other being able to pursue their goals as well - even if we do not agree on all the details. Maybe if we get close enough to loosing everything we will find that we can in fact work together.

Maybe it is just a dream . . .

Blessings,
Sandie

I agree that it's hard to

I agree that it's hard to assess someone's true intentions. However, based upon what the left has demonstrated about themselves, they are against: 1) Free Speech 2) Right to Bear Arms 3) Free Enterprise 4) Strict Adherance to the Constitution 5) Faith-based Charity programs 6) Parental Rights 7) States' Rights 8) Right-to life 9) The Individual ...I could probably think of more, but will stop there. I can't in good conscience join hands with anyone who doesn't believe in the above, or at least a huge portion of it. Nor can I with a straight face call someone who doesn't believe in the above a patriot.

I'm not putting anyone here down, especially my buddy Axxiom.  I thin, we're probably all cut more or less from the same bolt of cloth.  However, I do feel that we need to be careful who we buddy up with.  Just because liberals don't like Bush and neither do conservatives doesn't mean that liberals and conservatives agree.  We dislike him for different reasons.

Eddlem's Proposal

In the abstract, Mr. Eddlem's proposal has a lot to recommend it.

However, as Mr. Eddlem should know better than anyone (since he was Research Director for the Birch Society), the position of the John Birch Society since its inception in 1958 has been that virtually all of our national leadership (left and right) since the Administration of Woodrow Wilson has been composed of Communists, Communist sympathizers, and assorted other "un-American" or "subversive" characters -- many of whom they insist should be considered "traitors".

Furthermore, (and this is perhaps even more important!)  most Birchers have informed me that they subscribe to a political spectrum which is constructed as follows:

EVERYTHING DESPICABLE and harmful to freedom belongs on the LEFT SIDE of the spectrum (liberalism, socialism, communism, fascism, nazism, and all other forms of what Birchers regard as "collectivism")

EVERYTHING DECENT AND HONORABLE belongs in the middle (the "pro-Constitution", limited government area)

THE EXTREME RIGHT is limited exclusively to "anarchy".

In this scheme of things, the Birch Society places itself in the MIDDLE of the political spectrum, and every left-of-center individual, organization and publication in our nation's history has been presented by the JBS as an ENEMY of our Constitutional Republic! 

[For further specific corroborating details, see the Birch Society's 4-volume series entitled, "Biographical Dictionary of the Left" by Francis X. Gannon, the Birch Society's Research Director prior to Mr. Eddlem.

Consequently, given the Birch Society's "take-no-prisoners", "us" (good) versus "them" (evil) interpretation of our politics --- there is simply no basis for common ground.

Lastly, there is the matter of the historical record regarding the judgments of our country's most prominent and respected conservative anti-communists --- i.e. GIANTS within the conservative intellectual, political, and activist communities --- such as: Russell Kirk, James Burnham, Sen. Barry Goldwater, Sen. John Tower, Frank Meyer, Eugene Lyons, Ronald Reagan, J. Edgar Hoover, James J. Kilpatrick,---and so many others

ALL of these individuals have warned us against making common cause with the Birch Society (or similar groups) and they have denounced the Birch Society and its arguments with such terms as: "extremist", "irresponsible", "irrational", "lunatic fringe" and "fanatics".

For further info:  Ernie1241@aol.com   and see:  http://ernie1241.googlepages.com/home

Take no prisoners, you say?

I find so many things to take exception to in your comments on this article, but since the original issue was about the possibility of magnifying tolerance in order to unify politically polarized Americans on principal in order to effectively oppose a grave threat to us all, I will try to stick to that point.

Ernie, you just blazed in here like a banshee to comment on this article which advocates a gentle-ing of partisanship.  Your fire-talk causes just the sort of "take no prisoners" attitude that you accuse JBS of!

 I just coordinated and event where this idea was central to the keynote speaker, a well-respected, conservative activist who advocates just this type of alliance between left and right as important in such dangerous times as these.  JBS members Ron Paul supporters, Democrats, Libertarians, mainstream Republicans and probably even a couple of neo-cons all came together quite nicely.  These are people who, besides sharing a love of liberty also have in common enough savvy to train their focus to the matter at hand and realize the blessing of allies without constraining themselves to only ideological clones.

 I cannot argue with your "research" but you are so certain of the ideology of JBS that you just skipped over the message the man himself is giving! I am sure that Mr. Eddlam knows exactly what his own views are.  Since that doesn't line up with what you "know" about the group you just ignore that inconvenient fact.    

Here is another anomaly for you.   The INDIVIDUALS I know that are JBS members are some of the finest people I know.   In fact, my respect for these people is such that it was based on my personal experiences with them alone that I joined them when invited and was pleased to have been asked. At the time I had no knowledge or preconceived ideas about the group and did not know that some do not judge the organization kindly or that by being a member I could be mischaracterized.   Having said that, I must take issue with the prejudiced manner in which you have characterized JBS members.   I would be hard-pressed as a Constitutional activist in this state to avoid The John Birch Society because they are highly involved with the same issues that are near and dear to my heart.  We invariably move in the same circles and if they showed any sign of being sinister as you say, I would have long ago put distance between myself and them.  I have not and I'll wager that my uncanny judge of character has not failed me on this count. 

I am proud of my JBS friends-they are some of the most tireless, well-educated activists I know.  I bring, along with my dedication to seeing this country re-claim its founding principle of individual liberty, the ethical wisdom of judging the individual based on their merit.  The non-entity collective of JBS and its history that you find despicable for harsh intolerance, rigidity and unfairness happens to be made up of real, live people and may I suggest that you seem to be representing well the very traits you claim to abhor.   Are you familiar with the classic council of Nietzsche? The one that warns those who fight monsters to very be careful when they peer into the abyss, and to always remember, he cautions, that as you do, the abyss is also peering into you.

 Are you wearing the darkness that you see? Maybe the Birch Society members I know are  just the rare exceptions to your broad accusations, but I doubt it.   The nature of people to resist being typecast leads me to distrust the simplicity of stereotyping.   I truly despise any attempt to pigeonhole any person based on any one feature whether it be race, sex, religion or any other category.  That, to me, is a completely undisciplined line of reasoning and violates the principle of justice.  You hit a nerve with your tirade because the one misgiving I have about being a JBS member is the same one I have with being a member of any group whether by choice in affiliation or by chance of birth.  It is this, That based on one, isolated fact among all in my entire biography I would be unfairly judged or even worse, pre-judged, with no chance of being seen for who I actually am.  I hope you find whatever it is you are looking for in all of those papers.  I also hope you realize that whatever it is you think you know, whether it be about France or people, that pages are no substitute for a living investigation.

AxXiom