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Medea Benjamin

Medea Benjamin

Posted: December 29, 2010 04:05 PM

This year was marked by turmoil at home and abroad, including a deepening financial crisis that continues to leave millions jobless and homeless, as well as ongoing and expanding wars. But despite the setbacks and disappointments, here is a list of victories to be thankful for, starting with three inspirational women.

1. On November 13, Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi was released from house arrest. In 1990 her party, the National League for Democracy, won the elections but the military junta refused to let them take power. Instead, Suu Kyi was kept under house arrest for almost 15 of the last 21 years. Her release brings great joy and hope to millions of people in Burma and supporters of democracy worldwide.

2. Dilma Rousseff was elected president of Brazil and takes power on January 1. Dubbed by the media "the most powerful woman in the world," Rousseff was tortured and jailed for three years for opposing Brazil's military dictatorship. She later became chief of staff for the popular outgoing president and former metalworker, Lula da Silva, whose policies of growth with equity have helped pull millions of Brazilians out of poverty. While some worry about Rousseff's commitment to the environment (she was also Lula's Energy Minister), the fact that a progressive woman from the Labor Party will rule a powerhouse like Brazil is cause for celebration.

3. Elizabeth Warren became "consumer czar." After the financial meltdown in 2008, Warren was appointed chairwoman of the five-member Congressional Oversight Panel created to investigate the banking bailout and oversee TARP. She won tremendous public support by sharply criticizing the banks and calling for greater transparency and accountability. Warren advocated for a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to protect borrowers from abuses in mortgages, credit cards and other consumer loans. On September 17 President Obama named her special adviser by to oversee the development of this new bureau.

4. The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Chinese literary critic and professor Liu Xiaobo. Liu, a critic of China's one party state, was sentenced to 11 years in prison for drafting a petition calling for free speech and open elections. The Chinese government usually escapes rebuke for its oppressive practices because the country is such an economic superpower. But according to Amnesty International, some 500,000 Chinese prisoners are in detention without charge or trial. Harassment, surveillance, house arrest, and imprisonment of human rights defenders are on the rise, as is Internet and media censorship. Repression continues for Falun Gong practitioners and minority groups, including Tibetans, Uighurs and Mongolians. The Nobel Prize for Liu Xiaobo has helped expose China's dirty secrets.

5. Speaking of exposing secrets, WikiLeaks has sent shock waves around the world by exposing the inner machinations of U.S. foreign policy. After a decade of illegal wars, lack of accountability, government secrecy and embedded journalists, WikiLeaks has given the public a much-needed look at the way the U.S. government continues -- under President Obama -- to cajole, bribe and strong arm other nations into supporting U.S. policies. We look forward to more revelations in 2011 and we hope more people will step forward to defend WikiLeaks and suspected whistleblower Bradley Manning!

6. Don't Ask Don't Tell was repealed. The LGBT community has been fighting to repeal Don't Ask Don't Tell since it was first introduced as a compromise measure by President Clinton in 1993. In an historic Senate vote on December 18 the policy was repealed and then signed by President Obama on December 22. While some find it hard to celebrate the ability of more people to now fight in U.S. wars, let's remember that this victory will help the gay community win upcoming, more important struggles for marriage rights and equality in the workplace.

7. U.S. troop levels in Iraq declined dramatically. While President Obama has presided over a disastrous surge of troops in Afghanistan, he does seem to be holding to his promise of ending the U.S. military presence in Iraq. The number of U.S. troops has declined from some 144,000 in January 2009 to roughly 50,000 today. The remaining troops are supposed to leave the country by the end of 2011. The U.S. invasion of Iraq, based on lies and resulting in the death and displacement of millions of Iraqis, is one of the most shameful episodes in our history. The sooner it ends, the better.

8. The health care bill passed. No, it was not a single payer bill and it didn't even have a public option, disappointing many of its original supporters. But the bill does extend health coverage to over 30 million Americans who would have otherwise been uninsured; it stops private insurance companies from rejecting people for preexisting conditions; and it allows children to remain covered by their parents' insurance until the age of 26. Taken as a whole, it represents a progressive shift in U.S. social policy, which is why it is being so viciously attacked by the right. And from the left, the fight for a single payer system, especially on the state level, is far from over!

9. The Senate ratified the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) between the U.S. and Russia. The New START provides modest reductions in the number of deployed strategic nuclear weapons, and includes monitoring and verification procedures. Unfortunately, to get Republican support the U.S. commitment to disarmament is countered by a new commitment to spend $180 billion over 10 years to "modernize" U.S. weapons and delivery systems. But not passing the treaty would have been disastrous. The new treaty will undoubtedly improve U.S.-Russia relations and will hopefully move us closer to the eventual elimination of nuclear weapons.

10. In a little noticed automobile obituary, the last Hummer rolled off the production line on May 24 -- a casualty of higher gas prices, the economic crunch and a shift in consumer preferences. The cool cars of today are no longer monstrous gas guzzlers but hybrid and electric cars. There are 28 hybrid models already on the market today. At least 12 plug-in electric cars are planned for 2011, kicking off a wave of new green vehicles.

And a few extras for good cheer:

1. At the White House Tribal Nations Conference on December 15, President Obama announced that the United States would support the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The statement is significant because the United States was one of only four countries that voted against the declaration when the UN General Assembly adopted it in 2007, and the last of those four to have reversed its former opposition.

2. In a policy reversal after the BP oil disaster, the Obama administration announced that it will not allow offshore oil drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico or off the Atlantic coast for at least seven more years. Meanwhile, offshore wind power is taking off from Maine to Georgia.

3. Foreign private security contractors were banned by the governments of Iraq and Afghanistan. Blackwater founder Eric Prince -- hounded by lawsuits and bad press -- felt compelled to sell the company and move out of the country.

4. Thanks to California's Proposition 19, also known as the Regulate, Control & Tax Cannabis Act, the debate on failed Marijuana Prohibition has arrived! Despite not passing, 4 million people voted to control and tax marijuana, with endorsements coming from new allies from the SEIU to the NAACP to law enforcement groups.

5. The government-supported student loan program was dramatically restructured, eliminating private banks and thereby ensuring that more money goes directly into the hands of low-income students.

I could keep the list going. It's an important reminder, as we go into what will be a very difficult new year, that people on all continents continue to struggle for a more peaceful, just, sustainable world. And as long as people keep organizing and mobilizing, there will be victories to celebrate.

 

Follow Medea Benjamin on Twitter: www.twitter.com/medeabenjamin

This year was marked by turmoil at home and abroad, including a deepening financial crisis that continues to leave millions jobless and homeless, as well as ongoing and expanding wars. But despite the...
This year was marked by turmoil at home and abroad, including a deepening financial crisis that continues to leave millions jobless and homeless, as well as ongoing and expanding wars. But despite the...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lance Manling
12:58 PM on 01/02/2011
Meanwhile, offshore wind power is taking off from Maine to Georgia.-All we are waiting for is a breeze!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dougaus1
10:46 PM on 01/01/2011
Another victory: the defeat of Proposition 23 in California. Voters there sent a message that they believe in the ability of clean energy technologies to create jobs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lance Manling
09:19 PM on 01/01/2011
The Hummer was a cool car. It is a very manly car, unlike the wimpy hybrids.
02:01 PM on 12/31/2010
Good list but I have to correct you on point 10. Which is completely innacurate.

Overall, SUV sales were up 22% in 2010, Hybrid ands electric sales were down 8,1% Hummer's demise wasn't due to the customers not liking the cars anymore it was due to the need for GM to consolidate brands.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:57 PM on 12/30/2010
I have no doubt that my mom's homophobic brothers foamed at the mouth when DADT got repealed. Hell, they probably did the same when Sonia Sotomayor got confirmed.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Jdaddy1951
05:46 AM on 12/30/2010
The repeal of DADT at the end of the year is a good thing, but I hope it also sends a message to Democrats, including President Obama, not to keep putting off other gay rights issues.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ray christl
HEMP can save us from ourselves.
04:14 AM on 12/30/2010
Thanks for mentioning Prop 19 and the relevance of cannabis re-legalization.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patterman
Retired attorney, professional actor/singer
02:55 AM on 12/30/2010
Much as I agree with Ms Benjamin, probably on a majority of issues, it still galls me to recall that she was one of the most public, prominent proponents of the candidacy of Ralph Nader in 2000, thanks to which we are in the situation we're in.
Thanks, Ralph and Medea.
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11:04 PM on 12/29/2010
Things to be happy about or question in 2010:

Pelosi lost control of the House - no longer will have to fear the left liberal laws she able to pass that died in the Senate.

Obamacare, the first steps to having it ruled unconstitutional have been sucessful and rightfully so snce it is illegal to force an American to buy anything.

How gas continues to increase from $1.80 when the Obama took office to over $3.35 now because of fail engergy policies. Shutting down drilling on the East Coast was stupid since the rest of the world is drilling there. Not allowing any new oil refineries or nuclear power plants.

Another day, another new czar..... can't believe liberals like this. Imagine if Bush appointed any how they would react differently and be screaming about abusing powers as they did with Cheney

Still no birth certificate. This could be dealt with and be in the past but the Pres still refuses, what is he hiding?

Only two years until Obama can to the private sector where he never has been before and work in a small business.
12:55 AM on 12/30/2010
Where do you live where gas was still $1.80? When Obama came into office, gas was over $3 a gallon where I live--still is. And it increased steadily during Bush's tenure--so let's look at the facts. The fact that you talk about the supposed lack of a birth certificate tells me you believe only what conservatives tell you. Maybe if you did some research on your own instead of buying into everything Fox News tells you, you will find that most of what you have put up there is bunk and nonsense. :)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nkurland
I'm going to leave this planet alive
10:08 PM on 12/29/2010
I really don't see how the health care reform (if it can be called reform) can be considered a victory after the debate and the amount of ill will ignoring the economy generated. We passed a bill modeled on an AHIP proposal that will leave 25 million Americans uninsured in 2020. Where exactly is the victory?
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BillyClub
07:10 PM on 12/29/2010
Kudos! CODEPINK activists will continue to make a difference for the good in 2011!
Aesculus glabra
My micro-bio is empty
11:38 PM on 12/29/2010
"Code Pink has been criticized for actions at demonstrations at the Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington, DC. The criticism has centered on the use of tactics such as displaying coffins and chanting aggressive slogans. Speaking about the display of coffins, Kevin Pannell, an amputee and former patient at the hospital, said it "was probably the most distasteful thing I had ever seen. Ever. We went by there one day and I drove by and [the anti-war protesters] had a bunch of flag-draped coffins laid out on the sidewalk. You know that 95 percent of the guys in the hospital bed lost guys whenever they got hurt and survivors' guilt is the worst thing you can deal with."
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
06:56 PM on 12/29/2010
You picked the not-so-bad accomplishments of the Obama administration. Since I was hoping for FDR, I am disappointed. But what choices do I have? You laid those out. So, reluctantly, thank you.
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11:05 PM on 12/29/2010
we still have not paid off the debt from FDR, get out your checkbook and pay
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Nigel Patel
People who are against government, govern badly
10:28 AM on 12/30/2010
At least FDR taxed wealth at reasonable levels.
If taxes were even brought back to Eisenhower levels there would be no deficit. (and no excuse for right wingers to try to take Social Security and Medicare away from us.)
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
09:40 PM on 01/02/2011
Think about this, "Less", if you are an American --

"paying taxes should be seen as a public responsibility rather than an individual burden to be avoided"

from a local activist, anonymous.
04:55 PM on 12/29/2010
You need to reevaluate #10. Americans are not buying hybrids or electrics in large numbers. Without government subsidies there would even be less sold. American consumers like larger cars that have good performance. They are rational and will continue to buy cars that represent value.

Right now the technology is not there in terms of cost and performance. You can get a Volkswagen Jetta and get 30 mpg and a Prius is 50 mpg. Jetta costs $20K and a Prius $29K. At 15K miles per year and $3 per gallon of gas there is about a $600 per year of advantage for the Prius. That is, you will never get the increase in cost back and the Jetta is larger on the inside.

Many of the people driving the Priuses and other hybrids are wealthy people having them as second or third cars with much larger ones as the primary cars. I see a lot of wealthy people driving their Priuses to their large houses (I guess one cannot be inconvenienced saving the earth).

If a family has 3 children small hybrids are out of the question and based on the tone of the article you probably view say the Yukon hybrid as not really a hybrid in the spirit of saving the earth.
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freddychef
Tue,4 Nov '14 Dems take House! & Majority Senate!!
05:14 PM on 12/29/2010
and yet, for all your blather, you fail to accept the huge decline in gas guzzuling SUV sales.
05:31 PM on 12/29/2010
I didn't think I needed to state the obvious. If gas prices go up then consumption goes down and that can be in the form of less driving or buying more fuel efficient cars. So yes if gas prices go up it is likely that low mileage cars/SUVs will have reduced sales.

The economic rationale also hold for buying hybrids/electrics as I "blathered" above. Also, Americans like bigger cars and will revert to them whenever it makes economic sense. We drive longer distances and more miles per year with more individuals in our families than other countries. If a family has 3 children, the only real alternatives are mini vans or SUVs, especially if you want to car pool.
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11:06 PM on 12/29/2010
Hummer are out of business because of the bailouts, nothing else. they will come back since Americans love big cars.
04:46 PM on 12/29/2010
Yet another article claiming to find a possible light at the end of the black tunnel which the Obama presidency has become, hoping against hope that this will not turn out to be yet another oncoming train as has been the case for health care reform, Afghanistan, habeas corpus, investigating Bush-era war crimes, the Copenhagen AGW accords etc.

Those who are fed up with the constant stream of excuses and Polyannish perspective promoted by Progressives for Obama such as Medea Benjamin are urged to join Chris Hedges, Cindy Sheehan, Russell Banks, Noam Chomsky, and over 4800 others in signing on to the "Open Letter to the Left Establishment" posted at www.protestobama.org.
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Princess Fiona
Some can't see the forest through the trees!
04:54 PM on 12/29/2010
I took a look at your link and I would suggest before anyone signs on they think aboutthe words on it. IMO they are empty and meaningless... I do not see you "hoping against hope" then you publish the link?