In defense of Bill Ayers
By David Walsh
17 October 2008

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain and his supporters
are continuing to pursue their smear campaign against former
Weatherman radical Bill Ayers, now a professor at the University of
Illinois at Chicago.

In its desperation, the McCain campaign is attempting to link Ayers to
his Democratic opponent Barack Obama, claiming that the Illinois
senator has been “palling around with terrorists,” in the words of
Alaska governor Sarah Palin, the Republican vice presidential nominee.

In the final presidential debate Wednesday night, McCain returned to
the issue, declaring, “I don’t care about an old washed-up terrorist.
But as Senator [Hillary] Clinton said in her debates with you, we need
to know the full extent of that relationship.” He went on to claim
that Obama had “launched his political campaign in Mr. Ayers’ living
room” and that the Illinois senator “chooses to associate with a guy
who in 2001 said that he wished he had bombed more, and he had a long
association with him.”

Ayers once hosted an event for Obama early in the latter’s political
career and they both served on the board of an anti-poverty group, the
Woods Fund. Ayers contributed $200 to an Obama campaign in 2001.

Ayers, now an elementary education theorist and author of several
works on the subject, left his radicalism behind him years ago. Like
many of his generation, he slid back into liberal and community
politics.

A private citizen, with no official position in the Democratic
campaign, the former Weatherman has become the victim of a ferocious
and cowardly assault, aimed at furthering McCain’s electoral
ambitions. Ayers is coming under attack from people who have the
enormous resources of the American state and media behind them.

The effort is unlikely to move public opinion or put McCain in the
White House. However, given its source and the type of social element
the Republican Party is attempting to whip into a frenzy, it raises
the real danger of violence against Ayers and his family. The campaign
is utterly cynical and dishonorable.

The attack on Bill Ayers needs to be placed in its political and
historical context.

Born in 1944 in a Chicago suburb, the son of a prominent businessman
and philanthropist, Ayers was radicalized by the civil rights
struggles and the Vietnam War.

In his memoir, Fugitive Days, he writes of his thinking in the late
1960s: “Humanity itself, it seemed to me, was what was at stake. The
humanity of people in Vietnam and around the world, the humanity of
Black Americans, and, finally, my own humanity. You could not be a
moral person with the means to act, I thought, and stand still. The
crisis demanded a choice. To stand still was to choose indifference.
Indifference was the opposite of moral. If we didn’t speak out and act
up, we were traitors. To fail now was fatal, and so there was nothing
that could justify inaction. Nothing.”

However mistaken his eventual political choices, Ayers’s was part of a
generational experience. His sense of horror over US crimes in
Vietnam, the destruction of a small nation, and his shame that this
savagery was being committed in the name of the American people were
sentiments shared by thousands and thousands of college and high
school students, and young people in general.

The massive, lethal bombing raids, the use of napalm and other
barbaric weapons, the razing of countless villages, all justified in
the name of the fight for “democracy,” sickened vast numbers of
Americans, as did the unceasing lies and propaganda of the US
government, under both Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson and Republican
Richard Nixon.

It is entirely to his credit that Ayers took up opposition to the war
in Vietnam. The best members of his generation did the same.

It is useful to compare him to Sen. John McCain, his principal
accuser, both as a human type and in regard to the ‘violence’ in which
each engaged.

McCain’s father and paternal grandfather both became four-star US Navy
admirals. In fact, McCain’s father was commander of all US forces in
the Vietnam theater from 1968 to 1972.

The vast majority of those who served in the American military in
Southeast Asia were conscripts who had no choice in the matter. Most
didn’t want to be there and many came to hate the war and the army
officialdom.

McCain, on the other hand, welcomed the opportunity to participate in
the Vietnam War, to drop bombs and kill human beings who had done him
and the US population no harm. He had no scruples about it.

When he was shot down in October 1967, McCain was taking part in
Operation Rolling Thunder, an aerial bombardment campaign conducted
against North Vietnam from March 1965 until November 1968. His
specific target, which he failed to hit, was a power plant in the
center of Hanoi.

On December 31, 1967, the US Defense Department reported that American
planes had dumped 864,000 tons of bombs on North Vietnam during the
operation, compared with 653,000 tons of bombs dropped in the entire
course of the Korean War and 503,000 tons in the Pacific theater
during World War II.

Estimates of civilian deaths caused by US bombing in Operation Rolling
Thunder range from 52,000 to 182,000. The war eventually killed a
total of more than 3 million Vietnamese and wounded another 600,000.

As a leading member of the Weatherman group, Ayers admits to having
set off several small bombs, which blew up a police memorial and
damaged public buildings. No one was killed or injured in those
actions. Ayers was never charged with, let alone convicted, of a
crime.

His greatest sin, one might say, was holding very confused and
disoriented views. An examination of his political views is not the
subject of this article, but, in any event, they were not of a
criminal character.

Influenced by anarchism and Maoism, cut off from the working class by
the reactionary AFL-CIO bureaucracy, Ayers never found his way to
genuinely Marxist and socialist politics. Instead, his youthful
radicalism led him to terrorist operations. This was, above all, an
expression of extreme frustration. He was no doubt a courageous and
idealistic individual.

Not to his credit, he eventually found his way to ‘respectable’
politics. There is an element of tragedy in the political evolution of
Ayers and a good number of others of that generation.

On what moral scale shall we weigh McCain and Ayers? In however
confused a manner, the latter conducted a struggle on behalf of the
oppressed. The same can hardly be said of McCain.

Another key element in the Ayers controversy is the reprehensible role
played by Obama himself. The problem is not that the Democratic
hopeful ‘consorts’ with terrorists, but that he is a craven
opportunist and careerist of the first order.

To the extent that Ayers was a figure with a reputation and
connections within certain political circles in Illinois, as well as,
apparently, a fundraiser, Obama seized on that and made use of it.
When, as he entered the national political arena and the once-
advantageous relationship threatened to become a liability, Obama
turned his back on his erstwhile supporter and repudiated him,
declaring Wednesday night, for example, that Ayers had “engaged in
despicable acts with a radical domestic group. I have roundly
condemned those acts.”

This is not merely a personal failing of Obama’s. In recent years, the
Democratic Party and the media have enthusiastically joined in the
effort to discredit opposition to the Vietnam War and legitimize this
imperialist atrocity. It is not simply a matter of defending old
wrongdoings, but preparing to justify new ones, all over the world.

Thus, Obama never misses an opportunity to refer to McCain as an
“American hero,” when he could more properly be identified as an
“American war criminal.”

There is an utter lack of principle at every level of the liberal
establishment. No one in the mainstream media, with the honorable
exception of Thomas Frank writing in the Wall Street Journal, has come
to Ayers’s defense.

The New York Times has accommodated itself to the McCarthyite attack
on Ayers, describing him in one recent editorial as “a violent, 1960s
radical” and referring in another to “Mr. Obama’s ill-advised but
fleeting and long-past association with William Ayers, founder of the
Weather Underground and confessed bomber.”

We catch in this affair a small glimpse of what is to come if Obama is
elected: craven cowardice in the face of right-wing provocations and
treachery toward his supporters on the left, if only of a liberal
character.

One might add, as a postscript, there is such a thing as personal
honor, standing up for people who lent you support. Even during the
anticommunist witch-hunts of the Cold War, there were liberals who
defended Alger Hiss and others. One can only say of Obama’s behavior
in this episode: What swinishness!

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to