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Saving Obama
"Now, I'd like to speak clearly and candidly to the American people . . ."
I believe him, with a passionate urgency - this new president, swept into office on a surge of hope and anger. I believe him without cynicism. After all, he has a terrifying job to do, a toxic legacy left to mop up. I cut him slack, listen for the sound, in his words, of the turning of the ship of state. How does he plan to engage the future? He's an intelligent and, I think, courageous leader. And he has a global constituency to back him up. All he has to do is speak to it, clearly and candidly . . .
I was numb to the lies and simplistic rhetoric of George W. Bush. But when Barack Obama tries to fill those incredibly small shoes, to rev up the same constituency of true believers (the constituency that didn't vote for him) and sell the same war - new! improved! - to the American people, I am not numb. The hope in my heart bursts into flying shrapnel. You're making a serious mistake, Mr. President.
In honor of the man I voted for, and who, I insist, must assert himself and address his constituency not just marginally but with the full measure of his intelligence and compassion, at the heart of what matters - true global security, the building of a just peace - I take a close look at Obama's most disappointing performance thus far: his speech last week "announcing a comprehensive, new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan." Here are four ways the president's speech failed his constituency:
1. It was simplistic. In the fine old tradition of military solutions to whatever, which brook no complexity of analysis, he fed us the same old story of good versus evil, even invoking 9/11. The formula for war never changes: Hype fear into hysteria, then propose the application of righteous violence to save the day. The bad guys who pulled off 9/11 are still in the mountains of Central Asia and they're "planning attacks on the U.S. homeland." It's as simple as that. We must root them out.
One of the prime assumptions here is that terrorism is subject to central control, as though aggrieved fanatics all take their orders from a single source, which can and must be bombed. Evil plans can't be hatched in London, Paris or New York.
2. The speech affected a selective concern for humanity. American dead matter most. "Attacks against our troops, our NATO allies, and the Afghan government have risen steadily. Most painfully, 2008 was the deadliest year of the war for American forces." Missing from the speech were any references to the Afghan dead - as many as 8,000 - caused by U.S. and NATO forces since 2001.
When the suffering of "the Afghan people" is evoked, the concern is suspect. ". . . a return to Taliban rule would condemn their country to brutal governance, international isolation, a paralyzed economy, and the denial of basic human rights . . . especially (to) women and girls." Is American compassion limitless or what? Yet women and girls constitute a high percentage of the collateral damage we churn up.
As Tom Hayden noted recently in The Nation: "Anything resembling genuine popular democracy in Afghanistan or Pakistan would end the Western military occupation, or at least the air war, house-to-house roundups, and mass incarceration at Bagram."
3. The speech, most speciously, presented war itself, as wielded by the U.S. and its allies, as consequence-free: an apparently surgical operation that will root entrenched evil from its mountainous redoubt. This aspect of Obama's speech is least forgivable. It failed to so much as hint that war is a clumsy tool, that high-tech violence wreaks incalculable environmental and human havoc, which always overwhelm its short-term strategic aims.
A few days after the speech, Jacques de Maio of the International Committee of the Red Cross castigated both sides of the conflict for their indifference to civilian casualties: "My point is that there is no such thing as a clean war and . . . what's going on in Afghanistan and in Pakistan right now is an ample demonstration of that," he said. The agency is anticipating that fighting in the area will displace as many as 140,000 people this year, according to Agence France-Presse.
Obama rode an American - a global - passion for peace into office, yet he spoke to us about expanding Af-Pak operations as though we had voted for ignorance and war.
4. The speech called for dialogue only among parties on one side of the conflict: the U.S. and the governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan. There was no mention of communication with the evil Taliban, our former Cold War ally, and no mention that huge, festering grievances in the Arab world against the West (the Palestinian situation, for one) are fueling terrorist activities and merit serious world attention.
The isolation of power has made our president a prisoner of the Washington establishment, whose "clear and desperate urge," Tom Engelhardt wrote recently, "is to operate in the known zone, the one in which the U.S. is always imagined to be part of the solution to any problem on the planet, never part of the problem itself."
We must demand accountability from the Obama administration (202-456-1111). It's too late to surrender, again, to cynicism, despair and more of the same.


131 Comments so far
Show Allthe obama admin is not doing anything it didn't promise to do, over and over and over during the campaign. so why all this easy belief?
obama is going to turn out to be WORSE than bush, worse for the average citizen, of the US or world. yes, he speaks so well. now we get our banalities in paragraph form, instead of the sentence fragment. other than that, what's the difference b/n him & bush? oh yeah, frozen embryos be warned!
Why this easy belief? Because Barack Obama repeatedly noted that he was consistantly against the invasion of Iraq, that he spoke out against it ( one tiny speech mostly ignored)before he even entered the Senate in fact. Because most voters are not as consumed by politics as those of us who post here and do not stay current on issues, therefore they are rather easily swayed by sound bites and untruthful rhetoric. Obama purposively portrayed himself as the anti war candidate and only those who dug deep knew it to be a false image.
Because the Cheney Presidency was perhaps the very worst in Amrican history and the electorate was desperate for change, any change, even false change.
Obama was 'against' the War UNTIL he was elected. Once in the Senate, he never met a War funding bill he didn't endorse. He supported the Patriot Act, illegal wire tapping, the new FISA bill. If you looked at his voting record, read his book and some of his speeches, you knew exactly what he was going to do and it is exactly what he's doing.
In the spirit of Obama, I think we should rename the office of President to the Great Renamer. Ohhhhh yes, he's the Great Renamer. (with deepest apologies to The Platters)
Oh yes, I'm the Great Renamer
Renaming what's not doing well
My need is such; I rename too much
I'm right wing but no one can tell.
Oh yes, I'm the Great Renamer
A drift in a world of my own
I play the game; but to my real shame
I've left you to dream all alone.
Too real is this feeling of make believe
Too real when I feel what my heart can't conceal.
Oh yes I'm the Great Renamer
Just laughing and gay like a clown
I seem to be what I'm not; you see
I'm wearing hope like a crown
Pretending that change will come around.
Too real is this feeling of make believe
Too real when I feel what my heart can't conceal
Yes I'm the Great Renamer
Just laughing and gay like a clown
I seem to be what I'm not you see
I'm wearing hope like a crown
Pretending that change will come around
'Don't get fooled again' - Pete Townsend
Renaming?
If there's little difference from Bush to Obama, then how about... ...Obushma?
It's sometimes hard to get over the hard feeling that the few of us who stood up and did the right thing are undermined by the majority that resigns itself to bad status quo. When I see these leaders screwing the very same folks who gave them their votes even to the point of blindly so, I don't know whether to laugh or cry at them but often just think that maybe next time they won't get fooled. Oh well, wishful thinking I suppose.
Red Rick
So you did know who the real President was!! You old socialist you.
Cant pull the wool over MY eyes, you betcha...Damn, where did I leave the Geritol?
Don't rub too much into the eyes....everything goes red.
Oh Thomas, nothing makes eyes go red and into tears than your post that 3rd parties can't win. See my reply for details.
I did....see my reply.
Jennifer,
Welcome to the "friends of Thomas M." conversion club. I have been on a mission here to bring Mr. More in from the dark. He is, despite living in Texas, worth saving.
Oh Red Rick, it's ok. I think that sometimes I take politics too hard on myself. I visit Texas occasionally myself with my family. My father's grandparents live in Lubbock. While the state's politics can vary as it's geographically large, even the countryside isn't really as conservative as it looks. Even Lubbock has a lot of friendly folks out there. I am well aware of the culture conservatism that exists and there's plenty of that 30 miles west of where I live and all the way into rural MO. I could easily say that if the Democrats had spent as much time campaigning in TX as they did in FL that both would be equal swing states. Beyond that though, looking at the election results and who our pols in Washington tie themselves to, it really doesn't matter where any of us are from. Between the Limbaugh dittoheads in rural MO and the Obamabots in Kansas City and St Louis areas, I think most everyone is in the dark. Even in San Francisco that was supposed to be the most anti-war place, pro-war Pelosi was overwhelmingly reelected over anti-war Cindy Sheehan. Red state or blue state, I think this electorate is overwhelmingly in the dark for having caved in to status quo. I just have to find some way to overcome this hard feeling as I can't afford to ruin my health. I think Thomas is slowly accepting your valiant efforts as he sees what's going on in Washington as we all get betrayed yet again.
JenniferBedingfield
Thanks for reminding folks how large Texas really is and how many people live here.
Our population is three times larger than Swedens and you could drop their country in one of our small corners. Our population is a third the size of France and very diverse.
There are fools up North that see only "Rednecks" and Longnecks in Texas.
There are also fools who see an opportunity for a punch line. Texas elected Bush as Governor, twice I believe,led the world in executions and teenage pregnancies, and, aside from Austin, a place I dearly love, is a backwoods backwater inhabited by savages.
This is , of course, hyperbole and humor, excepting for the truth within it.
Well, we darn sure apologize for electing Bush twice and even worse letting him cross the border,but those teenage girls are hard to control. Though we have never been able to match China or the Muslim world in executions.
Teen age girls can be educated on the methods of birth control if not ways to overcome hormones and the inevitable attractions of teen age boys.
Those Teen Age boys can be persuasive and we do have a bit of a problem with our backward brothers here who don't believe you should teach sex education, protective methods, etc....they prefer the "say no" method that has worked oh so well don't ya know!
Keep both wheels on the road!
Red Rick
And I Sir appreciate your efforts to bring me in from the darkness of Liberalism. I also am appreciative of your kindness in over looking my status in being from Texas.
But be warned! After watching our fearless leaders for the last 14 years in particular, I have a hidden agenda. I am secretly trying to convert you to Liberalism while telling you something else.
I do appreciate the opinion that I am worth saving, an opinion not shared by all I am saddened to say.
There is always hope, Thomas. It is conceivable that I may fall off my motorcycle, incur brain damage, and become a Liberal.
Which proves beyond the shadow of a doubt that there is ALWAYS hope!
Heee! Thanks for the belly laugh this fine morning...
My pleasure!!!!!!!!!!!
Sad but true.
As many here posted, with the exception of one comment about fighting the Iraq war more intelligently, Obama made no reference to ending the occupation. He said that he would remove "combat" troops. And true to his word, combat troops have been re-labelled as "reconstruction advisors" or some such nonsense. This is nothing that was not predictable and indeed it was predicted by many. Go, read his, elequent speeches again, it's all there in black and white.
"he speaks so well."
No. No he doesn't. He READS well. Extemporaneous speech from this man is an exercize in interpretation of what someone who stutters ALOT says.
It's already implicit in the first comment, and I expect it will be made more directly in the comments to follow: that passionate Obama-believers like Koehler have forfeited their privilege of Obama criticism because he is doing in officed nothing that he had not "promised" to do when he was a candidate. While I have an impulse to such response myself, I don't think it's strategically wise to try to place of a statute of limitations (which expired with the election) on recognition of the shortcomings in his policies. I find Koehler's objections to the Afghanistan speech quite cogent and relevant. I like to think that objections coming from his supporters would be more effective in infuencing not only Obama but the "court" of public opinion. So how about if we use more of the parable of the lost sheep and "rejoice" and praise the sheep which came home to true progressive conciousness while we Kucinich-Sheehan-McKinney supporting types never really left the barn. I'd be very happy if I had seen "I told you so" for the very last time.
Yes Jerry i am one of those too...
I have been thinkin now is the time to be sharing ideas about building a new coalition of all parties and independents in order to unite the strength of us who want real Truth Justice and Peace.... The real deal and organize to win.
I suggest: Truth Justice and Peace.... a broad coalition of all who have been working for it and those who just want it.
Anything with "Party" in the name does not sound like the real deal.
Anyone want to spread the Idea around?
We are the people and we have the power.
Jim, old friend I know we "parted ways" during the election but am glad to think we could get back together on the other side. I said as much to Ralph Nader when I had a chance to meet him, and I was supporting McKinney, he seemed responsive to the idea, and I'd hope he and his followers would be in on any such "coalition." I have a few contacts from the Nader campaign and would be happy to contact them. I'm based in Florida (Gainesville) as are you, and maybe we could get some specifically Florida things going. There's nothing like living close enough to your peers that you have a chance to see them now and again. jerrydrose11@yahoo.com
Yes, during Obama's campaign the bad war was Iraq, and the good war would be had in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Obama needed a good war to show that he could be a tough guy. It was absolutely transparent.
Afghanistan is also undoubtedly strategic for Obama's regime partners who undoubtedly exert lots of pressure.
Hopefully others can point to effective ways to advocate for peace.
Obama needed a good war to show that he could be a tough guy.
This is a disease that seems to inflict everyone who ever attains the highest political offices in this country. Obama does not see himself as a small boy with a cap pistol wearing a military Halloween costume, which is what George Wanker Bush was. I think he sees himself as some kind of Lawrence of Arabia figure, a warrior and an intellectual. In the film "Lawrence of Arabia", Lawrence executes a man he rescued from certain death in the desert. Later he tells General Allenby that he enjoyed the experience. This, apparently, is Obama. Blood lust appears to be part and parcel of the ego of those who want to sit on the top shelf of power.
-Obama needed a good war to show that he could be a tough guy
It is more concrete than that. Many dollars are made making very expensive tanks, toilets, planes, helmets etc.
You can't make a killing on that stuff the way they have, without a boogey-man, preferably a third world one to beat up on.
America needs to start employing nurses and doctors to care for those millions without healthcare, teachers for those who don't get to continue their education. And making things instead of buying it from China against IOUs all the time wouldn't hurt.
Afganistan is the least of Obama's problems. He wasn't elected to spread money to Corporations like manure on a garden. Nobody elected him to concern himself with less important things while our citizens lose their jobs and ability to support their families.
Few voted for him so he could concern himself with political activism instead of dealing with our economy. No one with more than one brain cell voted for him to still be campaigning 2 and 1/2 months into office. Nor did anyone expect him to display such poor judgement in choosing people to deal with this terrible recession. Geithner can't even fill staff positions and continues the policies he and the Bush boy's started.
And to make it worse the sheer arrogance and stupidity displayed by Congress daily is turning people against us too. The stupidity is staggering.
If the Republicans had any leadership at all they would already be kicking our butts again. And they will find some. Don't be surprised what 2010 will bring.
There's a good article by Jerry Mazza today at Online Journal, concerning the disastrous influence of Larry Summers.
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_4548.sht
There's a good article by Jerry Mazza today at Online Journal, concerning the disastrous influence of Larry Summers.
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_4548.sht
An excellent article indeed Mr. Chips! And a good point about who really is calling the tunes. I had to cut it down to http://onlinejournal.com to get it to come up though.
I'm sure Paul Volker is grateful Larry won't work in the same room with him...Volker couldn't stand the stink.
What I still cannot understand is why the US feminists who rose up in anger over Summers' vacuous comments at Harvard to push him out of that largely ceremonial position hardly raised a peep when Obama nominated Summers for one of the most important jobs in the country. The levels of manipulation and the sophistication of the manipulators never ceases to amaze me.
They're not real feminists. They're just DP apologists. In fact, I once wrote a letter to one of those feminist groups asking them why they're not paying attention to people such as Sheehan, Kucinich, Nader, and Mckinney to name a few. Surprisingly, I received the most insulting reply telling me to get a sex change and even called me a "closet Republican" who's out of touch with feminism !!
It seems that no matter what the social/cultural issue, the corporatists can co-opt the movement associated with it far more extensively than most would believe. About the only movements I can imagine the corporatists would not co-opt would be those based on economic justice, i.e. creating a more egalitarian society in terms of wealth. That is directly opposed to corporatist goals and so it would be impossible for them to co-opt it (though they could distract it with astro-turf faux populist groups), so they would instead try to just crush it.
"That is directly opposed to corporatist goals and so it would be impossible for them to co-opt it (though they could distract it with astro-turf faux populist groups), so they would instead try to just crush it."
That reminds me of Thomas Frank's "What's the Matter With Kansas?" whereby both sides keep the culture wars going to distract the voters while the economic selling out goes without question. I heard that Hitler did the same thing to distract and crush the middle class in Germany. My understanding is the cultural populism and even market populism work when nobody effectively brings up economic populism. Unfortunately, in 2006 and 2008, most of the Democrats ran a faux economic populism campaign only to do the Kabuki dance once in. As I've noticed, ideological battles are often nothing but dumbshows. Wear the mask, win entrance to the door, then take off the mask and go to bed with Satan. Enforcing honesty has gotten too tough to manage on the pols.
kivals
Darn good question!
Thomas, what are you talking about? Barry made himself perfectly clear and he even spread his "hope and change" pixy dust to seduce the voters? I was working my butt out and trying to warn others about Barry's and McSame's plans to continue Dubya's horrible hell but noooooooooooo, they wouldn't LISTEN. I and countless other 3rd party supporters were laughed at, ignored at, and attacked at as "spoilers" ! How the hell can you tell us that Barry was voted to serve the people's interests when Obama already made his positions crystal clear and like every election, people vote on all that stupid celebrity and personality bullshit all the while mistreating 3rd parties and their supporters as cassandras ?!?!? Seeing the way things have gone, I don't know whether to laugh or cry at the folks who voted for Barry or Mcsame !
2010 needs to be the year of INDEPENDENTS knocking sellouts in both parties out and hopefully in 2012 we can have a strong progressive minded independent who will get a higher percentage of votes or even win in 2012.
There is no possibility of a third party, or of 'independents', mounting an electoral threat to the Propertarian Party with its two right wings. Independents will not be able to put together a coherent set of ideas, but will be split between right opposition and left opposition. They won't be able to work together because they work for separate ends.
I refuse to believe that one. I still think it's possible for them to win although I do know they have a long ways to go and all those policies from state to state to jump through. If God wants America to live, he should wake up more people so that they'll see what policies against Independents must be reformed or dropped altogether. With the way Democrats and Republicans are getting worse day after day, I'm not giving up my vote for Independents no matter what !
"If God wants America to live, he should wake up more people so that they'll see what policies against Independents must be reformed or dropped altogether."
Well then why do we need to bother? We just have to wait for God to wake up more people!
AAAARRRGGHH ! What's the matter with you ?
Sarcasm, hopefully....
I hope so. I didn't mean to bring God into the picture but after doing my part while everyone else sat by, I felt completely helpless in trying to frame my reply that I invoked God. I am religious a little but not by much by the way.
To me that sounds so desperated...
Beny Rudolph
JenniferBedingfield April 3rd, 2009 12:58 pm
There is no reason for you to vote for anyone but whom you choose to. That said, there is not a viable third party available. Each of the current could make great strides in the next 10 years and might get up to 5% of the vote by a miracle. But there is no way any of them would win.
They are too narrowly focused. Period.
OK...fire away Jennifer, RR, et al, but I'll bet money on it.
Thomas,
We all are well aware of the tough odds but the way you and countless others negatively frame it is like parents telling their children that they'll always fail because of handicap x ! Well ? What about your state of TX? If you love your state like I do mine, can't you at least take the time to try to push for reforming the rules that are keeping 3rd parties from having any say whatsoever ? Look, I'll open my heart up to the Democrats and Republicans when they can clean their acts but the only way I see them even considering it is if 3rd parties give them a really tough scare. I know there are tough rules in my state of MO but usually most independent candidates have no problem getting their. However, all this negative thinking against 3rd parties and falling for those sleazy corporate media polls to keep the same two parties in their dirty status is just plain WRONG WRONG WRONG ! Maybe they all won't win right away but you have to GIVE THEM A CHANCE TO GROW ! you remind me of my parents who used to keep criticizing me for putting education and career first and negatively thinking that I'd be a loser. Well, I may not have gotten married but at least I'm not in a financial hell for having the courage to choose a non-conforming path. And you're claiming that 3rd parties are narrowly focused isn't necessarily true. Sure, some of them run on single issues but Nader and Mckinney ran on a broad set of issues but were unfairly cast aside. For anyone to tell me that no third party is viable is just plain wrong. They're viable but they're being unfairly persecuted and stifled much like child abuse !! I feel a bit too upset right now. Excuse me while I clear my eyes and try to catch my breath! :.(
Goodness, didn't want to upset you, but that is the way I see it. Remember the only real close third party threat came out of Texas. 19% I believe it was.
Red Rick and I have had this discussion, he is a third party guy, though he knows they will never win anything.(I think)
Its more possibility vs. improbability. None of the Third parties now have any broad based appeal that I see. But Red Rick will tell you I'm occasionally wrong!