Double Standards
Bill Clinton and the “Anybody But Bush”
Movement
If the democrats take power this November they will probably continue
the same policies as Bush. We know this because Clinton did
basically
the same thing when he was in office. To think otherwise is to
ignore history and the democrat's records. The "Anybody but Bush"
(ABB) movement is founded on a basically irrational hatred of Bush that
completely ignores the record of the democrats the last time they were
in power. The ABB movement practices a
double
standard: when republicans do something it’s wrong but when democrats
do the
same thing it’s okay (or didn’t happen at all). In
party politics it is always the other party’s fault, never the
system’s fault. If a democrat were in
office and implemented the same policies Bush has most of the ABBers
would
support him. We know this because Clinton
implemented many of the same policies ABBers criticize Bush for yet
they didn’t
develop the same kind of hatred towards Clinton they have towards
Bush. Most outright supported Clinton and the
minority who didn’t support him did not develop the kind of irrational
hatred
towards Clinton they have towards Bush.
There are major continuities between Clinton’s policies and
Bush’s
policies, even if their rhetoric is different.
These continuities also illustrate the flaw in thinking that
putting a
democrat back in office will be a big change for the better.
The last time a democrat was in office he did pretty much the
same thing
the current occupant is doing, so given that the current nominee
doesn't disavow Clinton there’s no reason to think the next
democrat
in the White House will be much different.
Bush’s environmental
record isn’t very good, but neither was Clinton’s.
During the 1992 election campaign Clinton
and Gore
promised to shut down the East Liverpool incinerator, which spews
toxic chemicals into the air a quarter of a mile away from an
elementary
school, but once elected they refused to do so. The
Clinton administration’s enforcement of the endangered
species act was lax and he weakened it through several means, including
the “no
surprises” and “safe harbors” policies.
Funding of mass transit continued to decline under his
administration.
Clinton ended the ban on production and importation of PCBs,
stopped the phase out of Methyl Bromide (a toxic pesticide and ozone
layer
depleter), supported the weakening of the safe drinking water act (by
allowing
increased levels of arsenic and lead in drinking water), signed the
Salvage
Rider law (which cut down thousands of acres of healthy forests),
signed the
Panama declaration (which weakened protection for marine mammals
including
dolphins and whales), supported international distribution of
Recombinant
Bovine Growth Hormone, supported mountain top removal strip mining,
continued
subsidizing the sugar industry in Florida (which poisons the Everglades
&
diverts water away from wildlife that needs it), and lowered grazing
fees on
public land. Clinton also supported the
World Trade Organization (WTO), which weakened or removed environmental
protections, including the
weakening of the clean air act and the removal of part of the
Endangered
Species act's protection of sea turtles.
In 1996 former Sierra Club President David
Brower wrote, "President Clinton has done more to harm the
environment and to weaken environmental regulations in three years than
presidents Bush and Reagan did in 12 years."
Many in the ABB movement attack Bush for reducing civil
liberties through things like the PATRIOT act.
Yet, almost all democrats in congress vote for the patriot act
and Bill
Clinton supported many measures that reduced civil liberties and
expanded the
police state. He signed the Anti-Terrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, the forerunner to the PATRIOT
act. It allowed the INS to deport
immigrants based on secret evidence, made it a crime to support the
lawful
activities of any group the state department labeled a “terrorist
organization,”
and eliminated federal constitutional review of state death penalty
cases
(making the execution of innocent people more likely).
Much of the PATRIOT act consists of things
that Clinton was unable to pass during his term.
Clinton encouraged the militarization of the police, including
a program to put 100,000 more cops on the street. This
lead to political repression, seen at Seattle, and more
recent actions as well as a general increase in police brutality, such
as the
police torture of Abner Louima and the 1999 murder of Amadou Diallo
(who was
shot 41 times by police claiming they thought his wallet was a gun). Clinton supported Internet censorship,
signing the Communications Decency Act - which the Supreme Court
fortunately
struck down on first amendment grounds.
When he ran for election in 1992 Clinton pledged to free
political
prisoner Leonard Peltier, but he was still in prison when Clinton left
office. The rate of capital punishment
increased
under Clinton, as did the rate of incarceration.
Clinton’s expansion
of the prison system, due mainly to the “war on drugs,” caused the
United
States to imprison more people than any other country in the world,
both in
absolute terms and as a percentage of population. All
of this was done at a time when crime rates were decreasing.
Democrats attack Bush over the poor state of the economy,
but the economy actually started going downhill at the very end of
Clinton's
administration, in late 2000. The stock
bubble of the 1990s caused the recession and it occurred while Clinton
was in
office. Clinton's boom was founded on
corporate fraud from the likes of Enron and WorldCom.
The corporate crime wave occurred mainly while Clinton was in
office, whose administration was just as complicit as Bush. It was just exposed while Bush was in
office. The reason most Democratic
leaders haven't attacked Bush over this is because they're just as much
in bed
with these criminals as the Republicans.
Most of the benefits from Clinton's boom went to the wealthier
sections
of society. Economic inequality
increased under Clinton, just as it has under Bush.
None of this excuses the Bush's handling of the economy, his
administration's
response to the recession it inherited from Clinton has been awful, but
there
are strong continuities with the Clinton administration.
Liberals often criticize Bush over his tax cuts for the rich
and generally waging a class war in favor of the rich, but Clinton did
the same
thing. Clinton reduced the capital
gains tax rate in 1997. This
disproportionately benefits the rich, since a large percentage of their
income
comes from capital gains but most Americans make little or nothing from
capital
gains. Corporate welfare (subsidies and
tax loopholes for the rich & big business) greatly increased under
Clinton's administration, in his second term alone corporate welfare
rose by
over 30%. Clinton also attacked the
poor by, among other things, abolishing the Aid to Families with
Dependant
Children program ("welfare reform").
The increase in poverty under Bush is, in part, due to this
class war
against the poor by Clinton, which undermined the social safety net. After winning election in 1992 Clinton made
Lawrence
Summers an official in his administration and later appointed
Summers
his last Treasury Secretary in 1999.
Before Clinton was elected, in 1991, Summers, then chief
economist for
the World Bank, issued a memo reading:
"Just between you and me, shouldn't
the World Bank be
encouraging MORE migration of the dirty industries to the LDCs [Less
Developed
Countries]? ... I think the economic logic behind dumping a load of
toxic waste
in the lowest wage country is impeccable and we should face up to that.
...
I've always though that under-populated countries in Africa are vastly
UNDER-polluted ... The problem with the arguments against all of these
proposals for more pollution in LDCs (intrinsic rights to certain
goods, moral
reasons, social concerns, lack of adequate markets, etc.) could be
turned
around and used more or less effectively against every Bank proposal
for
liberalization."
Some democrats attack Bush over outsourcing, but Clinton
supported NAFTA, GATT, the WTO and "free trade" generally, which
caused outsourcing to go from a trickle to the current flood. Under Clinton the budget for the federally
funded Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) increased by over
30%. OPIC gives loans and guarantees to
companies intended to encourage investment in "developing" countries,
which tends to encourage outsourcing.
For example, Kimberly Clark transferred 600 jobs to other
countries as a
result of this funding and Levi Strauss transferred 100 jobs overseas
for the
same reason. In other words, the
government gives loans to companies, through OPIC, to ship American
jobs
overseas and Clinton increased OPIC's budget from under $100 million to
$3
billion. Under Clinton 14% of OPIC's
loans went to Citibank. Robert Ruben,
one of Clinton's Treasury Secretaries, became director of Citibank
after
leaving office. Under Bush OPIC's
budget decreased to $800 million. The
problem with outsourcing is not that it "steals American jobs," as
nationalists argue, but that it replaces relatively high paying jobs
with lower
paying jobs, causing the rich to get richer and the poor to get poorer. Clinton's policies were even more
pro-outsourcing than Bush's.
Bush's policies on the media tend to favor the concentration
of the media into a few large corporations.
So did Clinton's policies. He
signed the 1996 Telecommunications Act and the Digital Millennium
Copyright
Act, which encouraged media monopolization at least as much as Bush.
Bush has a poor record on gay rights, but Clinton's record
(if not his rhetoric) wasn't much better, as shown by his signing of
the
Defense of Marriage Act and his "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy.
On abortion, Clinton signed an order banning any American
funds to pay
for abortions overseas. Bush only
expanded this to include cutting off funds to any group that offers
abortion as
an alternative. Under Clinton the
number of abortion providers dropped to the lowest in 30 years. A large number of counties don’t have
abortion providers. This effectively
denies many women the choice to have an abortion since if there is no
abortion
provider around then you obviously can’t choose to have an abortion.
Clinton’s foreign policy could best be described as “cruise
missile imperialism.” ABBers attack
Bush for his alleged unilateral “go it alone” foreign policy and for
invading
Iraq on false pretenses. Both were
largely a continuation of Clinton’s policies.
Clinton increased funding for the military. He
also bombed more countries than any other
peacetime president, including Yugoslavia, Sudan, Iraq, Somalia and
Afghanistan. In 1998 he bombed alleged
terrorist training camps in Afghanistan (which were built by the CIA
for
Islamic terrorists in the 1980s) supposedly being used by Osama Bin
Laden and a
factory in Sudan Clinton alleged was producing chemical weapons for Bin
Laden. No proof that this factory was
producing chemical weapons was ever provided and it was later proven
that the
plant was actually a medicine
factory. This probably resulted in
thousands of deaths (there was no investigation so we can’t know the
exact
number) because the source of medicine for many Sudanese was cut off.
When Bush invaded Iraq, he went to the UN and attempt to get
international support and UN approval to invade Iraq.
He failed to get that support and invaded anyway but he at least
tried to get UN approval. When Clinton
attacked Yugoslavia in 1999 he didn’t even try to get UN approval, he
just
bypassed it completely in favor of a unilateral assault.
Nineteen nations, all of NATO, technically
signed up to the war but the US (with UK assistance) took the lead role
and did
most of the fighting, just like Bush’s “coalition” in Iraq. Most of the world was against the war, there
were even small riots in front of US embassies. Unlike
the Iraq war, the US did have the support of West European
governments, but the rest of the world was against it (some were
extremely
upset). One of the administration’s
slogans was “multilateral when we can, unilateral when we must,” which
is
virtually the same as Bush’s policy.
In Yugoslavia the government was fighting a war with the
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), which advocated independence for the Kosovo
province of Yugoslavia. The official
pretext for Clinton’s bombing of Yugoslavia was that it refused to sign
up to
the Rambouillet peace accords and was committing “ethnic cleansing”
(genocide)
in Kosovo as part of the war. These
pretexts were disproved, just as the pretexts for the Iraq war were
disproved. Clinton intentionally sabotaged
the peace negotiations between the KLA and Yugoslavia, which the US
mediated,
by inserting the infamous “Appendix B” into the Rambouillet accords,
requiring
Yugoslavia to allow NATO “peacekeeper” troops to occupy the entire
country (not
just Kosovo). Obviously, Yugoslavia is
not going to agree to just let the US take the whole country over.
During the war all sorts of allegations were thrown around
about hundreds of thousands of Kosovars being massacred, rape camps
being set
up, mass graves littering the province and so on.
NATO’s own investigations, after the war was over, failed to
find any proof of these accusations.
There were atrocities, as in almost every war, but nothing even
remotely
approaching genocide. NATO’s bombings
killed more people than the so-called “ethnic cleansing” which
allegedly
motivated it. Just as there were no
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, there was no ethnic cleansing in
Kosovo. Furthermore, the CIA later
admitted that it began supporting the KLA even before the bombing
started. In other words, Clinton
intentionally
instigated the whole conflict, using the KLA as a proxy army to attack
Yugoslavia and create a situation where he would have an excuse to bomb
the
country.
Clinton’s policy towards Iraq set the stage for the invasion
of Iraq. In 1998 Clinton signed the
Iraq Liberation Act, which made regime change in Iraq official US
policy. Clinton waged a terrorist car
bombing campaign
against Iraq, whose targets included school buses, and attempted to
overthrow
the Iraqi government via coup. Madeline
Albright, who later became Clinton’s secretary of state, said in a May
1996
interview on “60 Minutes” that she thought the death of 500,000 Iraqi
children
due to sanctions on Iraq was “worth the price.”
Clinton repeatedly bombed Iraq throughout his term.
In 1998 Iraq stopped cooperating with
weapons inspectors, claiming they were being used by the US as spies. Clinton had the inspectors withdrawn and
launched Operation Desert Fox, a major bombing campaign against Iraq
much
larger than his previous bombings of Iraq.
Afterwards the US continued bombing Iraq on an almost daily
basis until
the invasion. A later UN investigation
found that Iraq’s allegations were true; the US was using the
inspectors to spy
on Iraq. Bush merely escalated
Clinton’s aggression against Iraq from a low intensity war to a
full-fledged
invasion, an escalation that probably would not have been possible had
Clinton
not been laying siege to Iraq for his entire term.
Clinton’s bombings of Iraq were completely unilateral, without
UN
approval and carried out solely by the US and UK.
Clinton’s pretexts for all this were the same pretexts used
by Bush to invade Iraq, but with more emphasis on weapons of
mass
destruction and less emphasis on Al-Qaeda.
On February 4th, 1998 Clinton said, "One way or the other, we
are determined to deny Iraq the capacity to develop weapons of mass
destruction
and the missiles to deliver them. That is our bottom line."
On February 17th, 1998 he said, "If Saddam
rejects
peace and we have to use force, our purpose is clear. We want to
seriously
diminish the threat posed by Iraq's weapons of mass destruction
program." In his defense
of Operation Desert Fox on December 16th, 1998 Clinton
argued
that, “Saddam Hussein must not be allowed to threaten
his
neighbors or the world with nuclear arms, poison gas or biological
weapons”
and that, “The best way to end that threat once and for all is with
a new
Iraqi government.” On February 18th,
1998 Secretary of State Madeline Albright said, “Iraq is a long way from [here],
but what happens there matters a great deal here. For the risks that
the
leaders of a rogue state will use nuclear, chemical or biological
weapons
against us or our allies is the greatest security threat we face.” Clinton’s
National Security Adviser Sandy Berger warned, “he
[Saddam Hussein] will use those weapons of mass destruction again, as
he has
ten times since 1983.”
The
state department kept Iraq on its list of states that it claims
“sponsor
terrorism” every year Clinton was in office.
Part of a 1998
indictment of Osama Bin Laden by Clinton’s justice
department read, "Al Qaeda reached an understanding with the
government of Iraq that al Qaeda would not work against that government
and
that on particular projects, specifically including weapons
development, al
Qaeda would work cooperatively with the Government of Iraq." The use of the fact that Iraq under Saddam
Hussein was a dictatorship in order to demonize Iraq and justify
aggression
towards it has been a staple part of US war propaganda since the Gulf
War and
continued to be so under Clinton. All
the lies used by Bush to justify conquering Iraq were inherited from
Clinton.
Senator Hillary Clinton voted for the invasion of Iraq and
her husband agrees with her stance.
Bill Clinton supports the war; he only differs with Bush in that
he
thinks it would have been better to wait a little longer before
invading. In a June 2004 interview he told
Time
magazine, “I have repeatedly defended President Bush against the
left on
Iraq … I don't believe he went in there for oil. We didn't go in there
for
imperialist or financial reasons” and that “You couldn't
responsibly
ignore [the possibility that] a tyrant had these [weapons of mass
destruction]
stocks. I never really thought he'd [use them]. What I was far more
worried
about was that he'd sell this stuff or give it away. … So that's why I
thought
Bush did the right thing to go back. When you're the President, and
your
country has just been through what we had, you want everything to be
accounted
for.” He also claimed after the
weapons inspectors left Iraq in 1998:
“there were substantial quantities of botulinum and
aflatoxin, as I recall, some bioagents, I believe there were those, and
VX and
ricin, chemical agents, unaccounted for. Keep in mind, that's all we
ever had
to work on. We also thought there were a few missiles, some warheads,
and maybe
a very limited amount of nuclear laboratory capacity.
After 9/11, let's be fair here, if you had been
President, you'd think, well, this fellow bin Laden just turned these
three
airplanes full of fuel into weapons of mass destruction, right?
Arguably they
were super-powerful chemical weapons. Think about it that way. So,
you're
sitting there as President, you're reeling in the aftermath of this,
so, yeah,
you want to go get bin Laden and do Afghanistan and all that. But you
also have
to say, well, my first responsibility now is to try everything possible
to make
sure that this terrorist network and other terrorist networks cannot
reach
chemical and biological weapons or small amounts of fissile material.
I've got to
do that.
That's why I supported the Iraq thing. There was a lot of
stuff unaccounted for.”
During the 2000 election Bush, unlike Gore, was against
“nation building” (taking other countries over, like in Iraq and
Afghanistan)
but that was obviously thrown out the window.
Gore called for increasing military spending by $10 billion over
the
next ten years, while Bush only wanted to raise it by $5 billion over
the next
ten years. According to Clinton foreign
policy adviser Strobe
Talbott, "the Bush administration was right to identify Iraq as
a
major problem. A President Gore…would have ratcheted up the pressure,
and
sooner or later resorted to force."
Subjected to the same political pressures as Bush and
surrounded by
advisers like Talbott, Gore would have probably reacted to events in a
manner
similar to Bush. Those who argue that
Gore would have been less aggressive than Bush and would not have
invaded Iraq
are arguing that the more aggressive & militaristic candidate would
actually have been less aggressive & militaristic, which is fairly
absurd.
The invasion of Iraq was the outcome of geopolitics and a
changed domestic situation, not which man occupied the White House. After the gulf war the US laid siege to Iraq
with sanctions and bombings. As this
siege progressively degraded Iraq’s military an invasion became more
likely,
because defeating Iraq’s military in a war became easier & cheaper
the more
the siege degraded it. At the same
time, attempts to overthrow the government and install a pro-US one
through
terrorism, coups, etc. continually failed.
The failure of these covert attempts to topple the government
and the
decreasing costs & risks of an invasion created pressure to invade
Iraq,
which, given enough time, would eventually lead to an invasion. This process was accelerated by 9-11 because
it decreased domestic opposition to wars in general and enabled the
government
to decrease opposition to the invasion by scaring the public with
fantasies
about how Iraq was working with Al-Qaeda to launch terrorist attacks on
the
US. The same pretext of “fighting
terrorism” could be used to keep US bases in the region for as long as
the government
wanted. 9-11 accelerated many of these
trends, but they were still basically a continuation of Clinton’s
policies.
The
Bush-haters position is not founded on the
policies Bush has implemented, which they complain about.
If it were they would be Clinton haters,
too. Most ABBers’ position is based
primarily on a blind irrational hatred of the other party and, partly,
also a
reaction to the different media images of Clinton & Bush. When Clinton ran for office he claimed to
advocate a mildly liberal reformist platform, once in office he
abandoned it
and went with a conservative program.
Today, most leaders of the Democratic Party don’t even pretend
to
support that mildly populist reformism Clinton espoused in 1992. To think that the next democratic
administration will be any different is asinine. Clinton’s
administration gives us an example of what we can
expect if the democrats take power this November: more of the same.