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Hogwash, Mr. President
What is the state of the union? You certainly couldn't tell from that platitudinous hogwash that the president dished out Tuesday evening. I had expected Barack Obama to be his eloquent self, appealing to our better nature, but instead he was mealy-mouthed in avoiding the tough choices that a leader should delineate in a time of trouble. He embraced clean air and a faster Internet while ignoring the depth of our economic pain and the Wall Street scoundrels who were responsible-understandably so, since they so prominently populate the highest reaches of his administration. He had the effrontery to condemn "a parade of lobbyists" for rigging government after he appointed the top Washington representative of JPMorgan Chase to be his new chief of staff.
The speech was a distraction from what seriously ails us: an unabated mortgage crisis, stubbornly high unemployment and a debt that spiraled out of control while the government wasted trillions making the bankers whole. Instead the president conveyed the insular optimism of his fat-cat associates: "We are poised for progress. Two years after the worst recession most of us have ever known, the stock market has come roaring back. Corporate profits are up. The economy is growing again." How convenient to ignore the fact that this bubble of prosperity, which has failed the tens of millions losing their homes and jobs, was floated by enormous government indebtedness now forcing deep cuts in social services including state financial aid for those better-educated students the president claims to be so concerned about.
His references to education provided a convenient scapegoat for the failure of the economy, rather than to blame the actions of the Wall Street hustlers to whom Obama is now sucking up. Yes, it is an obvious good to have better-educated students to compete with other economies, but that is hardly the issue of the moment when all of the world's economies are suffering grievous harm resulting from the irresponsible behavior of the best and the brightest here at home. It wasn't the students struggling at community colleges who came up with the financial gimmicks that produced the Great Recession, but rather the super-whiz-kid graduates of the top business and law schools.
What nonsense to insist that low public school test scores hobbled our economy when it was the highest-achieving graduates of our elite colleges who designed and sold the financial gimmicks that created this crisis. Indeed, some of the folks who once designed the phony mathematical formulas underwriting subprime mortgage-based derivatives won Nobel prizes for their effort. A pioneer in the securitization of mortgage debt, as well as exporting jobs abroad, was one Jeffrey Immelt, the CEO of GE, whom Obama recently appointed to head his new job creation panel.
That the financial meltdown at the heart of our economic crisis was "avoidable" and not the result of long-run economic problems related to education and foreign competition is detailed in a sweeping report by the Democratic majority on the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission to be released as a 576-page book on Thursday. In a preview reported in The New York Times, the commission concluded: "The greatest tragedy would be to accept the refrain that no one could have seen this coming and thus nothing could have been done. If we accept this notion, it will happen again."
Just the warning that Obama has ignored by continually appointing the very people who engineered this crisis, mostly Clinton alums, to reverse its ongoing dire consequences. As the Times reports: "The decision in 2000 to shield the exotic financial instruments known as over-the-counter derivatives from regulation, made during the last year of President Bill Clinton's term, is called ‘a key turning point in the march toward the financial crisis.' "
Obama appointed as his top economic adviser Lawrence Summers, who as Clinton's treasury secretary was the key architect of that "turning point," and Summers protégé Timothy Geithner as his own treasury secretary. The unanimous finding of the 10 Democrats on the commission is that Geithner, who had been president of the New York Fed before Obama appointed him, "could have clamped down" on excesses by Citigroup, the subprime mortgage leader that Geithner and the Fed bailed out along with other unworthy banking supplicants.
Profligate behavior that has hobbled the economy while running up an enormous debt that Obama now uses as an excuse for a five-year freeze on discretionary domestic spending cuts that small part of the budget that might actually help ordinary people. Speaking of our legacy of deficit spending, Obama stated, "... in the wake of the financial crisis, some of that was necessary to keep credit flowing, save jobs, and put money in people's pockets. But now that the worst of the recession is over, we have to confront the fact that our government spends more than it takes in."
Why now? It is an absurd demarcation to freeze spending when so many remain unemployed just because corporate profits, and therefore stock market valuations, seem firm. Ours is a union divided between those who agree with Obama that "the worst of the recession is over" and the far larger number in deep pain that this president is bent on ignoring.
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248 Comments so far
Show AllYou answered that in a very defensive way.
Was it you?
"You answered that in a very defensive way."
You are correct, I defend maxpayne's comment! LOL! I stand by my *actual* response to the flagged comment.
"Was it you?"
Max and I go way back. I have only flagged personal attacks and profanity, and not that much either. Overall, flagging is for pussies.
Jakenewton _ 'I have...flagged personal attacks and profanity'
And _ 'flagging is for pussies'
You do the math.
And ignore the sexism.
"sexism."
Nope, it's a reference to felines of any sex. As in "'fraidy cat". And yes, the few times I flagged, I was a pussy.
'Nope, it's a reference to felines of any sex'
Bullshit cowardice.
'And yes, the few times I flagged, I was a pussy'
We agree on something.
"Bullshit cowardice."
OK, you caught me. I'm a sexist. When I said people who flag comments are pussies, I was saying that they were vaginas.
LOL! *You* are the coward for running away from the fifty-nine deceits like a *pussy*.
No. I'm an individual of many flaws, but cowardice isn't one. Your mantra of the '59 deceits' is a typical Far Right tactic of deliberate distraction. Here is the website http://www.davekopel.com/terror/fiftysix-deceits-in-fahrenheit-911.htm so interested folks can see that for what it is. I'm glad, in some crazy way, that this nonsense has trapped you into conceding what you are, and what you think of women _ it does much for the state of your credibility, and the credibility of your peers on the Far Right.
Your "argument" against Kopel's work is false, it is a classic ad hominem. It doesn't matter to me why you choose to ignore the specific content of the paper and rely on the unsupported ad hominem that it is "facsist propaganda", the fact remains it stands unchallenged. That you would go this route is very unimpressive. If that's going to be your take I don't see what we have to talk about anymore, so have a nice weekend.
Your contention that I've ignored the paper is false. I've posted the website, yet again, so readers who're interested can see it for the rank bullshit it is. There are other websites that prove Elvis is still alive.
"Your contention that I've ignored the paper is false."
*Obviously* I was looking for a comment actually backed up by something. Your comment is the equivalent of "nyuh-uh". Anyone can call anything "bullshit" but that doesn't make it so.
See my reply to Zell January 30th, 2011 12:49 am. The individual points in the paper remain untouched by your sweeping non-specific declaration.
'Anyone can call anything "bullshit" but that doesn't make it so'
Bullshit
I try not to let this weakness get the best of me but once a while, even the "little" things like some drive-by flagger can drive me crazy.
If Moore was truly a progressive hero, he would have had something out attacking Obummer by now. As it is only rethugs are legitamite targets? not very good at nit-picking truths with blinders on.
>^^<
What a masterful job of hijacking and diverting a discussion.
Excuse us? *We* were having a discussion. If you don't like it, keep your yap shut and go somewhere else.
Excellent post! "Slapped on a full set of Clinton-Bush retreads" and "the Fed-QE morphine pedal to the metal"--that's exactly right.
DOUG T: Apt metaphor. I'm already nauseous from the ride.
Sioux, this is not directed specifically to your post, but to the probably 60-plus posts above yours that ALL have responded to Jake Newton's non sequitur about Michael Moore's take on Bush's speech, which has absolutely nothing to do with the subject of this article:
I have one question to all of you: WHY do you all bother wasting your time responding to Jake Newton's nonsense? I had to scroll half way down the thread just to get to comments having something remotely to do with the article. Please don't feed the troll!
Jake Newton can say things that make it harder to resist responding to and intelligent responses can be very helpful to all of us battling the same kind of illogical talk on the blogosphere. But I agree that there are posts of his where it's not worth responding to.
I second your emotion, anne.
I only recently learned that the Internet term "troll" is derived from its piscatory sense, not as a derogatory reference to the gnarly, dim-witted fantasy creatures who live under bridges. (Although there's something to be said for the latter interpretation.)
Trolling is a method of fishing where one or more fishing lines, baited with lures or bait fish, are drawn through the water.
It's bleeding obvious that some people delight in "showing up to argue", just as I show up to pontificate and indulge my wit. They're like school debating-team aficionadoes gone wild, or fanatic racquetball players who show up at the court for a marathon pickup game.
Some insist that this kind of vigorous, often confrontational "debate" is salutary, and a worthwhile method of testing one's ideas and opinions. YMMV, but I also tend to start pumping scroll wheel when I reach the interminable serve-and-volleys.
OS, I very much look forward to your pontifications and witty remarks; CD would not be the same without them. If you're not a writer by profession, you certainly could be.
Agreed, anne. Obedient Servant could be writing, particularly for Common Dreams, I would expect.
OS,
Well said.
I call it the one upsmanship verbal tennis match. It's just another extension of the 'predatory, dog eat dog competition = good, cooperation = bad' mindset.
John Maynard Keynes once said, " Capitalism is the extraordinary belief that the nastiest of men for the nastiest of motives will somehow work for the benefit of all."
"When plunder has become a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it."
Claude Frédéric Bastiat
Great quotes.
Obama's speech was the usual, tepid, sunshine pumping irrelevancy that the SOTU has become in recent decades. It is easy to blame Obama and a long string of Presidents before him for what the speech and the nation have become.
Better we should blame the American electorate. We are after all the folks who have elected all the Presidents and Legislators. We are the people who run from one party to the other when the nation's structural problems are not instantly solved.
While I would like nothing more than a President or a party that was willing to put peak oil, the limits to growth and the threat to our republic from our skewed distribution of wealth in the spotlight, I can only imagine how that would be welcomed by the rest of the electorate.
I suppose we can say that the Obama and the Democrats aren't as bad as the Republicans, but they certainly seem to be working on it. If the Democrats were willing to take principled stands, they might find themselves overwhelmed at the polls, but they would be better prepared to clean up the mess after the Republican led collapse.
The people are kept dumb by the system just as slaves were kept dumb by their masters. Bona fide education is forbidden because it could lead to democracy and freedom which terrifies the elites. Young people with the means should leave the US. Its a failed state and conditions for most will continue to deteriorate. There is little future here for decent people.
jonabark
Yes, yes, yes. There can be no meaningful public dialog about the state of the nation until real information has entered public discourse including the MSM. Jimmy Carter pointed clearly at the problem, trying to take a stand in reality based thinking. Few rallied behind him, preferring Reagan fantasyland. But there is no meaningful escape to un-failed states. We are all in the same multi-national corporate civilization. Running away means empowering the war mongers and the good chance of world-wide resource wars. If 30% stopped paying taxes with demands of massive military cuts, ending overseas fighting, ending corporate personhood, building a green economy, and single pay healthcare we could bring the system to its knees. At 51% we win and the world begins to change course.
Democracy is scary when it is so much easier to steal from the vulnerable.
The MSM has only one skill, and that is to numb people into accepting the role of passive consumer. One of the biggest changes we need is to have at least 2 days every week with no TV and no radio and no internet, maybe evenings where there is lots of parties and hanging out with neighbors. In a democracy, people need to know each other.
SPECULATE: It can never be said often enough... that the people ARE being kept dumb.
MICHAEL PS suggests the electorate is responsible for whom it elects. Too bad we get two choices, both vetted by the make-fame machine way before they even get close to any pulpit. And with media in the hands of a few corporations (coincidentally several, direct beneficiaries of the make-war state), the "news" is hardly a reflection of genuine events, what motivates US domestic & foreign policy, or what's actually at stake...
And yet Michael inverts all that to blame those who don't recognize the degree to which they've been by turns: indoctrinated, hypnotized, programmed, and/or subliminally lobotomized.
Gotta love that reasoning. It's right up there with blaming Acorn for the global fiscal crisis, or peacemakers, for war.
Good points, Siouxrose. The people are systematically deceived and duped. It is effectively impossible for them to vote 3rd party given the overwhelming propaganda to which they are subject. Most americans don't have the privilege to spend lots of time reading articles on Common Dreams, let alone posting comments after them.
I sometimes vote for a major party candidate if I find one that I really do want to vote for. I sometimes vote for a major party candidate that I find tolerable if I consider their opponent dangerous. Mostly I vote for third party or independent candidates despite the certainty that they will not win election. Just imagine what might happen if enough of the people who are disgusted with the two party system would do as I do instead of accepting the big two choices or just not voting and then complaining.
So true, Michael.
I say it all the time, if all the people who didn't vote because they didn't like the two choices, choose to vote for what's behind door number three, we'll crush the two party system, and whatever we call the rest of us, "progressives"? "realists"? we'll have a chance to stand up for what we believe in!
and CB, I love that you "indulge your wit" here, I share your need to pontificate, thank God there are people like us that not only speak, but listen.
But that argument with the troll made me scroll too.
It was comical to watch the responses get more and more smooshed to the side as they replied to each other over and over...
Right. We should blame ourselves. We elected him, a mistake I assure you will be rectified in two years.
And I'm sorry, I fail to see any difference between the republican and democratic establishment at this point.
Yes
It wont be rectified in two years anymore then electing Obama instead of another republican in the last election "rectified" anything.
Please detail which Candidate you see coming to power 2 years from now who will "rectify" things.
I will point out that NOTHING will be rectified by this Current Congress even though there many new faces duly elected. Its just more of the same.
Obama and (most of) the Democrats not as bad as the Republicans??!? Hmmmmmm............. THAT'S debatable. They're definitely getting there, if they're not there already.
I don't think truth is a bad thing. Indeed, the United States suffers from the "always thing positive" mantra, as Barbara Ehrenreich wrote about a couple of years ago -- just think positive. I run into people like this all the time with regard to my substance-addicted son -- two failed rehabs under his belt by 26 -- and at this point I would of like to punch their lights out. I live this reality every single day and don't need anybody to sugar coat it -- or the incredibly-difficult position I am most likely going to have to make, because he is slowly dying before my eyes. Believe me, I would like to close my eyes to it and just think positive. Ehrenreich wrote about her bout with cancer and the problem with people like this. Sometimes it is better to acknowledge the intense pain -- whether it be for an individual or a nation.
Dear Samalabear,
So sorry for the pain you are going through with your son.
Did we really? I mean,do we REALLY know that the last two presidents of US or those congress critters were elected as the term is commonly understood? The last time I checked, Shrub was appointed by the Supreme Court and that lily livered Gore conceded instead of preserving our sufferage by contesting the decision and the election results.
And since then our votes disappear into a mysterious black electronic box that has been proven hackable at multiple levels, before during and after the polling places are closed and the votes are tallied. I think you are making a lot of assumptions, there.
Now, that is not to say I don't agree with your assessment of much of the electorate. Lots aren't real savvy or paying attention all through the political cycles, not just at election time. Many persons don't have or won't practice critical thinking skills and act on emotionalism uncoupled from observing reality consistently. I don't know if that is any way to run a country, but I'm not loving the results when we put the whole thing together.
Just the point I was going to make. SCOTUS appointed and then the fraud in OHIO.
Is there any way to get rid of the infernal machines? My son always uses an absentee ballot - and then wonders what happens to it:)
"Why now?"
Ah, Mr. Scheer, because now is when Phase II of neofeudalism kicks in.
As Tom Hartmann reminded viewers last night in his interview with Richard Trumka, many conservative philosophers since the 1950s and 1960s believed that the reason society was so "unstable" during those decades - "unstable" meaning the beginning of the women's rights and civil rights movements, opposition to Vietnam, etc - was that the middle class was TOO PROSPEROUS.
Yep, because the middle class had too much money and time on their hands, they could focus on absurd things like equality, justice and peace.
Hmmm, how to counteract such a phenomenon without alarming the populace in general?
How to force people back into a form a feudalism in which the vast majority exist as serfs and peons subject to the wished, desires and directives of their manor lords?
Enter the BIG LIE: neoliberalism.
How about "inventing" a theoretical model basically arrogates wealth from the middle and lower classes to the societal elites all in the name of "efficiency", "globalization", "modernization", etc etc?
Once implemented internationally - through the assistance of a vast network of bought and paid for sycophants in the media, academic and corporate worlds - this system can be then be used to justify the "austerity measures" needed to finally subjugate the middle class citizens of the world and lower them to the status of indentured servants and slaves.
No time for equality, justice and peace now, huh, pissants?
Just wait for the next false flag terror attack as that will be the next shoe to drop and further accelerate our society down the trajectory we are headed on.
Thom Hartmann and Richard Trumka are great for the occasional squawk directed vaguely in the direction of the new Democratic Party corporatocracy . . . before falling obediently into line. It's not worth wasting much time to figure out what they're saying when the end result is always the same.
So I guess to be a true leftist we can't listen to anybody, read anything or converse with anyone who isn't "approved" by some mysterious authority that you know about even if what they say is true and correct?
I agree that Hartmann and Trumka leave tons to be desired but that doesn't mean they don't possess some knowledge which might be useful to understand where we are headed.
Hartmann was basically stating a fact, a fact that many here probably don't know about as they weren't even born yet - wink - so I don't really get your drift as to what there is to argue with.
I also don't see the problem of allowing others to do work for us in strengthening our arguments and positions no matter how vanilla their solutions to such problems may be.
For example, Joseph Stiglitz, Michael Hudson and other leftie economists aren't full-blown Marxists but many rightfully still find their observations pertinent to bolstering our opinions and theories about what needs be done in this country even though they still are capitalists.
edited for typo
You are exactly right.
But, be ready for all the fools who will label you a 'conspiracy theorist'. Of course, it's a conspiracy, which anyone can know if they take the time to read and learn.
"Conspiracy theories" should be called what they really are: models for understanding unknown things.
Much like how it is useful to sometimes view the structure of the atom as a mini-solar system and other times as a an electron cloud, the models help us get a better grasp of an entity that we have no chance of actually observing.
To examine/describe the movements and actions of certain groups of people in our society that the vast majority of us will never have direct experience with through the assigning of motive and conscious plotting doesn't necessarily mean that that is exactly what is going on, but it does help us get a better understanding of the societal results the movements these elite groups have upon our society and the world as a whole.
Beautiful. Thanks.
Neo Lib/Cons have said USA wages need to be on par with third world wages( please do your own research).
Oilybomber wants to give corporate tax breaks when they have the highest profits, worker productivity and hoarded liquid assets in history.
25% of the last tax cut went to the bloated (not "top" not "elite", use a negative term please).
Oilybomber is as bad as Bush except for importantly not having killed as many people, but he has cemented greater fascism into the USA jurisprudence and political structure his environmental record is about the same as Bush, abysmal.
Obama has only been in office two years and the bodies are piling up. Give him time -- by the time he ends his reign he will outdo Bush in the area of killing, too.
Neo Lib/Cons have said USA wages need to be on par with third world wages( please do your own research).
Oilybomber wants to give corporate tax breaks when they have the highest profits, worker productivity and hoarded liquid assets in history.
25% of the last tax cut went to the bloated (not "top" not "elite", use a negative term please).
Oilybomber is as bad as Bush except for importantly not having killed as many people, but he has cemented greater fascism into the USA jurisprudence and political structure, his environmental record is about the same as Bush, abysmal.
POLYCARPE: Incisive and powerful post. Thank you. You're one of the rare posters in this forum who sees through BS, and can astutely connect a lot of dots.
Thanks, SR, I'm only on intermittently so I sometimes don't get to respond to your kind words and then I feel the post is so old that you won't see my responses.
Thanks.