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Who Cares in the Middle East What Obama Says?
This month, in the Middle East, has seen the unmaking of the President of the United States. More than that, it has witnessed the lowest prestige of America in the region since Roosevelt met King Abdul Aziz on the USS Quincy in the Great Bitter Lake in 1945.
President Obama at Middle East peace talks in Washington last year with Benjamin Netanyahu, Mahmoud Abbas, Hosni Mubarak, and King Abdullah. (EPA)
While Barack Obama and Benjamin Netanyahu played out their farce in Washington – Obama grovelling as usual – the Arabs got on with the serious business of changing their world, demonstrating and fighting and dying for freedoms they have never possessed. Obama waffled on about change in the Middle East – and about America's new role in the region. It was pathetic. "What is this 'role' thing?" an Egyptian friend asked me at the weekend. "Do they still believe we care about what they think?"
And it is true. Obama's failure to support the Arab revolutions until they were all but over lost the US most of its surviving credit in the region. Obama was silent on the overthrow of Ben Ali, only joined in the chorus of contempt for Mubarak two days before his flight, condemned the Syrian regime – which has killed more of its people than any other dynasty in this Arab "spring", save for the frightful Gaddafi – but makes it clear that he would be happy to see Assad survive, waves his puny fist at puny Bahrain's cruelty and remains absolutely, stunningly silent over Saudi Arabia. And he goes on his knees before Israel. Is it any wonder, then, that Arabs are turning their backs on America, not out of fury or anger, nor with threats or violence, but with contempt? It is the Arabs and their fellow Muslims of the Middle East who are themselves now making the decisions.
Turkey is furious with Assad because he twice promised to speak of reform and democratic elections – and then failed to honour his word. The Turkish government has twice flown delegations to Damascus and, according to the Turks, Assad lied to the foreign minister on the second visit, baldly insisting that he would recall his brother Maher's legions from the streets of Syrian cities. He failed to do so. The torturers continue their work.
Watching the hundreds of refugees pouring from Syria across the northern border of Lebanon, the Turkish government is now so fearful of a repeat of the great mass Iraqi Kurdish refugee tide that overwhelmed their border in the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf war that it has drawn up its own secret plans to prevent the Kurds of Syria moving in their thousands into the Kurdish areas of south-eastern Turkey. Turkish generals have thus prepared an operation that would send several battalions of Turkish troops into Syria itself to carve out a "safe area" for Syrian refugees inside Assad's caliphate. The Turks are prepared to advance well beyond the Syrian border town of Al Qamishli – perhaps half way to Deir el-Zour (the old desert killing fields of the 1915 Armenian Holocaust, though speak it not) – to provide a "safe haven" for those fleeing the slaughter in Syria's cities.
The Qataris are meanwhile trying to prevent Algeria from resupplying Gaddafi with tanks and armoured vehicles – this was one of the reasons why the Emir of Qatar, the wisest bird in the Arabian Gulf, visited the Algerian president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, last week. Qatar is committed to the Libyan rebels in Benghazi; its planes are flying over Libya from Crete and – undisclosed until now – it has Qatari officers advising the rebels inside the city of Misrata in western Libya; but if Algerian armour is indeed being handed over to Gaddafi to replace the material that has been destroyed in air strikes, it would account for the ridiculously slow progress which the Nato campaign is making against Gaddafi.
Of course, it all depends on whether Bouteflika really controls his army – or whether the Algerian "pouvoir", which includes plenty of secretive and corrupt generals, are doing the deals. Algerian equipment is superior to Gaddafi's and thus for every tank he loses, Ghaddafi might be getting an improved model to replace it. Below Tunisia, Algeria and Libya share a 750-mile desert frontier, an easy access route for weapons to pass across the border.
But the Qataris are also attracting Assad's venom. Al Jazeera's concentration on the Syrian uprising – its graphic images of the dead and wounded far more devastating than anything our soft western television news shows would dare broadcast – has Syrian state television nightly spitting at the Emir and at the state of Qatar. The Syrian government has now suspended up to £4 billion of Qatari investment projects, including one belonging to the Qatar Electricity and Water Company.
Amid all these vast and epic events – Yemen itself may yet prove to be the biggest bloodbath of all, while the number of Syria's "martyrs" have now exceeded the victims of Mubarak's death squads five months ago – is it any surprise that the frolics of Messrs Netanyahu and Obama appear so irrelevant? Indeed, Obama's policy towards the Middle East – whatever it is – sometimes appears so muddled that it is scarcely worthy of study. He supports, of course, democracy – then admits that this may conflict with America's interests. In that wonderful democracy called Saudi Arabia, the US is now pushing ahead with a £40 billion arms deal and helping the Saudis to develop a new "elite" force to protect the kingdom's oil and future nuclear sites. Hence Obama's fear of upsetting Saudi Arabia, two of whose three leading brothers are now so incapacitated that they can no longer make sane decisions – unfortunately, one of these two happens to be King Abdullah – and his willingness to allow the Assad family's atrocity-prone regime to survive. Of course, the Israelis would far prefer the "stability" of the Syrian dictatorship to continue; better the dark caliphate you know than the hateful Islamists who might emerge from the ruins. But is this argument really good enough for Obama to support when the people of Syria are dying in the streets for the kind of democracy that the US president says he wants to see in the region?
One of the vainest elements of American foreign policy towards the Middle East is the foundational idea that the Arabs are somehow more stupid than the rest of us, certainly than the Israelis, more out of touch with reality than the West, that they don't understand their own history. Thus they have to be preached at, lectured, and cajoled by La Clinton and her ilk – much as their dictators did and do, father figures guiding their children through life. But Arabs are far more literate than they were a generation ago; millions speak perfect English and can understand all too well the political weakness and irrelevance in the president's words. Listening to Obama's 45-minute speech this month – the "kick off' to four whole days of weasel words and puffery by the man who tried to reach out to the Muslim world in Cairo two years ago, and then did nothing – one might have thought that the American President had initiated the Arab revolts, rather than sat on the sidelines in fear.
There was an interesting linguistic collapse in the president's language over those critical four days. On Thursday 19 May, he referred to the continuation of Israeli "settlements". A day later, Netanyahu was lecturing him on "certain demographic changes that have taken place on the ground". Then when Obama addressed the American Aipac lobby group (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) on the Sunday, he had cravenly adopted Netanyahu's own preposterous expression. Now he, too, spoke of "new demographic realities on the ground." Who would believe that he was talking about internationally illegal Jewish colonies built on land stolen from Arabs in one of the biggest property heists in the history of "Palestine"? Delay in peace-making will undermine Israeli security, Obama announced – apparently unaware that Netanyahu's project is to go on delaying and delaying and delaying until there is no land left for the "viable" Palestinian state which the United States and the European Union supposedly wish to see.
Then we had the endless waffle about the 1967 borders. Netanyahu called them "defenceless" (though they seemed to have been pretty defendable for the 18 years prior to the Six Day War) and Obama – oblivious to the fact that Israel must be the only country in the world to have an eastern land frontier but doesn't know where it is – then says he was misunderstood when he talked about 1967. It doesn't matter what he says. George W Bush caved in years ago when he gave Ariel Sharon a letter which stated America's acceptance of "already existing major Israeli population centres" beyond the 1967 lines. To those Arabs prepared to listen to Obama's spineless oration, this was a grovel too far. They simply could not understand the reaction of Netanyahu's address to Congress. How could American politicians rise and applaud Netanyahu 55 times – 55 times – with more enthusiasm than one of the rubber parliaments of Assad, Saleh and the rest?
And what on earth did the Great Speechifier mean when he said that "every country has the right to self-defence" but that Palestine would be "demilitarised"? What he meant was that Israel could go on attacking the Palestinians (as in 2009, for example, when Obama was treacherously silent) while the Palestinians would have to take what was coming to them if they did not behave according to the rules – because they would have no weapons to defend themselves. As for Netanyahu, the Palestinians must choose between unity with Hamas or peace with Israel. All of which was very odd. When there was no unity, Netanyahu told us all that he had no Palestinian interlocutor because the Palestinians were disunited. Yet when they unite, they are disqualified from peace talks.
Of course, cynicism grows the longer you live in the Middle East. I recall, for example, travelling to Gaza in the early 1980s when Yasser Arafat was running his PLO statelet in Beirut. Anxious to destroy Arafat's prestige in the occupied territories, the Israeli government decided to give its support to an Islamist group in Gaza called Hamas. In fact, I actually saw with my own eyes the head of the Israeli army's Southern Command negotiating with bearded Hamas officials, giving them permission to build more mosques. It's only fair to say, of course, that we were also busy at the time, encouraging a certain Osama bin Laden to fight the Soviet army in Afghanistan. But the Israelis did not give up on Hamas. They later held another meeting with the organisation in the West Bank; the story was on the front page of the Jerusalem Post the next day. But there wasn't a whimper from the Americans.
Then another moment that I can recall over the long years. Hamas and Islamic Jihad members – all Palestinians – were, in the early 1990s, thrown across the Israeli border into southern Lebanon where they spent more than a year camping on a freezing mountainside. I would visit them from time to time and on one occasion mentioned that I would be travelling to Israel next day. Immediately, one of the Hamas men ran to his tent and returned with a notebook. He then proceeded to give me the home telephone numbers of three senior Israeli politicians – two of whom are still prominent today – and, when I reached Jerusalem and called the numbers, they all turned out to be correct. In other words, the Israeli government had been in personal and direct contact with Hamas.
But now the narrative has been twisted out of all recognition. Hamas are the super-terrorists, the "al-Qa'ida" representatives in the unified Palestinian leadership, the men of evil who will ensure that no peace ever takes place between Palestinians and Israeli. If only this were true, the real al-Qa'ida would be more than happy to take responsibility. But it is not true. In the same context, Obama stated that the Palestinians would have to answer questions about Hamas. But why should they? What Obama and Netanyahu think about Hamas is now irrelevant to them. Obama warns the Palestinians not to ask for statehood at the United Nations in September. But why on earth not? If the people of Egypt and Tunisia and Yemen and Libya and Syria – we are all waiting for the next revolution (Jordan? Bahrain again? Morocco?) – can fight for freedom and dignity, why shouldn't the Palestinians? Lectured for decades on the need for non-violent protest, the Palestinians elect to go to the UN with their cry for legitimacy – only to be slapped down by Obama.
Having read all of the "Palestine Papers" which Al-Jazeera revealed, there is no doubt that "Palestine's" official negotiators will go to any lengths to produce some kind of statelet. Mahmoud Abbas, who managed to write a 600-page book on the "peace process" without once mentioning the word "occupation", could even cave in over the UN project, fearful of Obama's warning that it would be an attempt to "isolate" Israel and thus de-legitimise the Israeli state – or "the Jewish state" as the US president now calls it. But Netanyahu is doing more than anyone to delegitimise his own state; indeed, he is looking more and more like the Arab buffoons who have hitherto littered the Middle East. Mubarak saw a "foreign hand" in the Egyptian revolution (Iran, of course). So did the Crown Prince of Bahrain (Iran again). So did Gaddafi (al-Qa'ida, western imperialism, you name it), So did Saleh of Yemen (al-Qa'ida, Mossad and America). So did Assad of Syria (Islamism, probably Mossad, etc). And so does Netanyahu (Iran, naturally enough, Syria, Lebanon, just about anyone you can think of except for Israel itself).
But as this nonsense continues, so the tectonic plates shudder. I doubt very much if the Palestinians will remain silent. If there's an "intifada" in Syria, why not a Third Intifada in "Palestine"? Not a struggle of suicide bombers but of mass, million-strong protests. If the Israelis have to shoot down a mere few hundred demonstrators who tried – and in some cases succeeded – in crossing the Israeli border almost two weeks ago, what will they do if confronted by thousands or a million. Obama says no Palestinian state must be declared at the UN. But why not? Who cares in the Middle East what Obama says? Not even, it seems, the Israelis. The Arab spring will soon become a hot summer and there will be an Arab autumn, too. By then, the Middle East may have changed forever. What America says will matter nothing.




78 Comments so far
Show AllObama is Israel's boy in the Whitehouse.
agreed
the author writes: "What America says will matter nothing."
if only that were true
the problem is they got guns and like the idf they will shoot your ass in the street
the reason why we can't see clearly might have something to do with the fact that we got our heads up israel's ass
I know this is nothing new for everyone here, but wanted to share anyway. The horror, the horror!
excerpt from GQ's "Just Desert" (May 26, 2011)
"One of the first things you notice in Iraq," McDowell told me, "is that the people are not there to kill you. They're not terrorists. They're not religious fundamentalists. They're just regular blue-collar guys like anybody else, and I felt uncomfortable with the way we were treating them. We'd go out on convoys, and we were instructed to run into civilian cars if they were in our way—just hit them with the Humvees. Guys were brought in and put outside in the sun all day with bags over their head—no food or water, no chance to go to the bathroom. It was disgusting. And most of these guys hadn't done anything. They were just in the wrong place at the wrong time, and they got thrown into a truck."
Poor, pathetic Obama--so many masters, so little time!
And Romney, Palin, and Bachman etc. are licking their chops. And the main-stream media is going to lock out any real progressive voices during the 2012 election season. Get ready for even more movement to the right as they all vie to get the voting public whipped up into an emotional frenzy of let's go back to the "good" old days.
Obama is corporates lackey. All US Presidents support Israel because they were, and still are, stuck in a cold war mentality in which a strongly armed Israel is a buffer against all that oil being usurped by the bad old commies.
Meanwhile, the people of that region are striving to throw off those tyrants we supported all these years and establish real democracies. One might think that a nation that calls itself a supporter of all free democratic people would support said efforts. One would be wrong, if only because our multinational business interests have trillions of dollars invested in the status quo.
To post one liners, especially misleading ones that imply that Israel is the tail that wags the dog, is to continue to encourage the anti-Semites who still believe that twelve rabbis rule the world. You just confuse the issue with that sort of post, I think . The reality remains that our entire foreign policy exists solely to support our business investments and nothing less mundane than that.
Hey DD---I agree that O is a corporate lackey, but what about the idea that if a US politician crosses Israel in any way, he/she will lose the support of the US media which is controlled or overly influenced by those of Jewish extraction. Media support is necessary for reelection. The lesson of Carter's reelection defeat is that he lost the media by standing up to the Israelis---cutting off their $ when they used their weapons for aggression instead of defense....
Just wondering what you thought of this analysis.
I'm very familiar with the argument that there's no difference between the two corporate parties, but I've never fully gotten behind the notion. I see differences. I think that had Gore been elected, there would be no war in Iraq; nor would we have a Supreme Court with a neoconservative majority ruling on things like Citizens United. I think that Carter was far better than Reagan who started the whole trickle-down economic bullshit that still drives that party.
Are the differences large enough? No way. Both are wedded to the market-economy/globalization/imperial project that will eventually destroy the planet. So maybe it doesn't really matter. Having a lightening rod in there like Bush jr. did much to galvanize the left, and O is doing much to suppress it.
But there are a million dead Iraqis who would be alive today if Gore was in charge of the ship---so it does make a difference.
You might be right Denruter---but the thing is, there's no way to be certain. The sock-puppet theory discounts the power behind the office the President and puts that power in the hands of the oligarchs and corporate elites.
Problem is: the Iraq war sure did seem to have "personal vendetta" written all over it. If the "war on Iraq was planned a long time ago", why didn't Pappy Bush just keep going to Baghdad when he pushed through Kuwait? Oh, well maybe it wasn't planned that far back... The whole thing seems too ad-hoc to me.
We have to look at how elections are bought. Correct, that is to say, right thinking people assume that a good person in the White House will change things.
Check out, "Best Democracy that Money can Buy," by Greg Palast on his website.
Obama was bought hook, line and sinker by Wall St., Goldman Sachs, the insurance industry, the drug industry.
Go to those websites that show how much each candidate gets from which corporation.
For years, the California governorship has gone to candidates who received millions in gifts from the prison guards union. Result? You can't drive from the Mexican border to Oregon without seeing a prison every 50 miles or so. It's a business. People have to understand that. Texas has all sorts of private prisons, built and operated by corporations that buy off the politicians, governors, senators, legislators.
Goldman Sachs does not give Obomber millions just to be nice. They expect a lot in return. Like a lack of regulatory legislation that would put a halt to their theft of billions one way or another.
Do you think Goldman Sachs millionaires would jeopardize their largesse for one minute if they thought that giving Obama all that money would not result in all sorts of benefits?
That's the way elections are run in the U.S., no matter who gets elected. If Gore would have been elected, he, just like all the rest of the dumbocrats and repugnicans would have been bestowing favors on corporate America for his four years, rest assured.
Are you serious, Higgs Boson?
"I think that had Gore been elected, there would be no war in Iraq..."
Is this the same Gore that had JOE LIEBERMAN as his Vice Presidential candidate? You say this with a straight face?
The fact that Joe was on the ticket does not mean that Gore was a secret right-winger. In electoral politics it's common practice to use the VP selection to balance out a perception or commonly held belief that the candidate leans too far one way or another. Big money saw Gore as too liberal, so Gore balanced out the perception with the selection of a right-winger. It's the power the VP is given afterwards that matters---and we'll never know what that may or may not have been. Many VPs have had zero power in their administrations...
If you don't see that having Lieberman on the ticket speaks VOLUMES
then it's pretty well impossible to explain the obvious to you.
Agreed.
And I never said that Gore was a secret right-winger. I'm talking about a Gore a
Administration, not Gore himself. And quite frankly, I think being screwed out of the election changed his politics.
And the same Gore from whom we heard no word of protest when he was Clinton's vice president and the Clinton/Albright sanctions on Iraq were killing tens of thousands of Iraqi children - a price that a recent post quoted Albright as saying the Clinton "national security team" had been determined to be "worth it".
Firstly, the media is controlled, as is every thing else in this nation, by white anglo saxon protestants. You do the same damn thing that I cautioned Ocean about. The reactions to criticisms of Israel are based upon foreign policy concerns, upon profit motives, and not upon some damn Jewish conspiracy to rule the world.
It might interest you to note that, within Israel, there is as much criticism of that government by the youth and the left as there is in this nation about our own governance. We fight capitalism not religious differences, and the sooner folks like you understand this the sooner we can focus upon the real enemies.
I'm not talking about a Jewish conspiracy to rule the world, just what Paul Craig Roberts referred to when he said: "Today the US media is owned by 5 giant companies in which pro-Zionist Jews have disproportionate influence."
The enemy is the tyranny of market based capitalism.
Thanks, Higgs Boson.
Doubledeee lives in an alternate reality where it's "anti-semitism" to state what you just wrote about the zionist dominance of the US media.
Better than you residing in a sewer thinking your commentary to be useful at all. Hint: It is juvenile trash.
Touchy touchy.
I consider it a badge of honor to be insulted by a zionist shill such as you, doubledung. It means you've run out of lies; so you must resort to insults.
With every post you show your worthlessness and your abysmal ignorance. Thanks so much for dimninishing yourself thus.
There is no greater critic of Israel on this forum than am I. I just understand the difference between the actions of a state and criticism of a religion for the actions of that state.
Considering that you began the insult process youself ,moron, you show ,yet again, that your brain is the size of your dick, really tiny!
Perhaps you just masterbate to damn much?
You are the idiot here. I have never equated zionism and judaism.
Too bad you don't put as much effort into actual thought rather then inane insults.
Provide one reputable link proving your supposition.
A cursory google search displays a plethora of white supremacist screed. The best I could come up with was this:
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1365
which actually refutes the notion.
I'm certainly not wedded to the idea. It does seem to be a canard, used by the rightist to deflect criticism of their fascistic, corporate agenda.
Aha...;-)
Thanks for showing that, despite the incredible stupidity of the unseemly named one, there are reasonable folks with whom it is a pleasure to converse.
Snopes is a useful source in deflating the scads of misinformation out there. Welcome to the light. Now, back to criticism of Israel.
".Firstly, the media is controlled, as is every thing else in this nation, by white anglo saxon protestants."
Bullshit! http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-stein19-2008dec19,0,4676183.column This is just a start.
Your lying denial of Jewish dominance of the media is pathetic. Your accusations of anti-semitism are clearly an attempt to stifle open discussion and thwart the truth.
Jewish dominance of the media is really not an issue except where zionist bias is concerned. then it is a very large problem that distorts US debate about middle east policy. US media is so biased towards zionism that it is less critical of Israel than Israeli media!
I agree about zionist domination of the media, but to conflate judaism with zionism is erroneous. There are many individuals who happen to be Jewish that are not Zionists.
Agreed. If I gave the impression hat I was equating jewish and zionist, that was not my intention.
When I wrote that jewish dominance of US media was not a problem except where zionist bias was concerned, I was attempting to make that differentiation.
While the vast majority of American Jews are pro-zionist, I applaud those American Jews with the integrity and courage to criticize Isreali apartheid.
"To post one liners, especially misleading ones that imply that Israel is the tail that wags the dog, is to continue to encourage the anti-Semites"
This is deceptive propaganda that would absolve AIPAC and deny the power of zionists in the media, government and banks. The stranglehold that zionists have on the Federal government is real and very destructive. But Doubleduh would deny this in order to avoid "anti-semitism." (DD's "anti-semitism" is itself a liars word. Arabs are semites too! Yet anti-semitism only refer to jews? The very use of the word "anti-semitism" in this context is racist.)
To deny the power of the Israeli Lobby is misleading and dangerous. It doesn't help to hide that deception behind the appearence of anti-imperialism. To be anti-imperialist is to be anti-zionist, it's that simple.
If you wonder why so many here think you useless and childish this post of yours is a great starting point. If you are as mentally challenged as your post makes you out to be I apologize and encourage you to continue wearing that helmet and riding the little yellow school bus.
Hey when all else fails and you can't defend your POV with logic, exploit children with special needs in your irrelevant insults.
End All US Aid to Israel Now!
Boycott the zionist apartheid theocracy!
No more dual citizenship zionists in US government or military!
As it happens moron you cast the first stone, thinking, I suppose, that distorting my screen name the height of sophistication and wittiness. It aint and you aint even close. If you cant take it then dont dish it.
Grow the fork up idiot child.
Your petty insults prove nothing DoubleDick!
You are a pig brained jackass, and cannot refute the influence of the Israeli Lobby; so you resort to personal insults.
You obviously have no integrity, let alone intelligence.
I don't live in the middle east and I don't care what he says. Turns out he is liar and a wall street shill.
Neither do I, but Obama's fluffy rhetoric on the Middle East isn't the least bit surprising, especially because the United States has NEVER been an honest broker regarding this whole untractable situation anyhow.
This just proves that Robert Fisk is an anti-semite [/sarcasm]
What Harry Belafonte said about Colin Powell would also be apt for Obama.
If I did live in the middle east I suspect I would care most of all about clean water, a reliable food source, safety, and living in my place of birth without hearing constant explosions, automatic rifle fire, and without the menace of a foreign invader everywhere I looked.
"the kind of democracy that the US president says he wants to see"
you know - the "one man, one vote" kind.
where he's the One Man: the Decider.
"One of the vainest elements of American foreign policy towards the Middle East is the foundational idea that the Arabs are somehow more stupid than the rest of us, certainly than the Israelis, more out of touch with reality than the West, that they don't understand their own history. Thus they have to be preached at, lectured, and cajoled by La Clinton and her ilk – much as their dictators did and do, father figures guiding their children through life." Yes, and one of the truly most staggeringly ignorant -- truly, even from him, incredibly ignorant - utterances of this ilk was Obama's instruction to "the Arabs": "Obama Cites Poland as Model for Arab Shift".
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/29/world/europe/29prexy.html?_r=2&hpw
Great article! I had no idea that Israel sponsored the formation of Hamas the way we sponsored the al-Qa'ida group. Now, both use them as foils for imperialistic expansion. Very revealing and also revolting.
Obama's superior intelligence was always highly overrated. In fact, while he might have seemed smart compared to Bush (as any life form higher than an amoeba would), Obama has proven to be ignorant of history, easily manipulated by craven bureaucrats and generals, and cowardly when facing anyone other than an old man on a dialysis machine. If he wins a much-undeserved second term, it will only be because of three things: Wall Street money; liberals who are even more ignorant, manipulated and cowardly than he is; and a Republican presidential candidate with even less integrity and intelligence than Obama. The dumbing-down of America in action.
Obama's superior intelligence is in clever marketing and a sociopath's ability to lie and charm. Let's face it donna, people of good wil, people who care about peace and people's needs have been COMPLETELY outmaneuvered and outspent in the electoral arena. We have lost truth in the press. We are trapped. There are no viable choices. Nobody worthwhile has been able to make it past the corporate filtration system and onto the ballot. Laziness and the belief that Obama will make a difference has blunted any popular drive to build viable alternatives on the national level.
Some of my friends are upset that I will not support Obama. But three wars continue unabated and another has been added, the economy is in the hands of Goldman Sachs et al, civil liberties are kaput, privatization of schools intensifies., mortgage relief is a sham and a complete failure, there is backpedaling on drilling and environmental laws, Obama's silence signals tacit approval of destruction of collective bargaining. Green jobs? Fuggedaboutit except for a few token showcase programs. All this under his watch and with the collaboration of both parties does not represent any deviation from Bush's policies, just a more polished and skilled implementation. Even his Supreme Court appointees voted wrong on police invading a home without a warrant if they claim to smell marijuana. That may not seem so important, but it is a brownshirt kind of ruling.
We have a lot of work to do if the electoral arena is to have any meaning on the national level. There are some worthwhile local battles. Social Security and fracking are touchstone issues in my state.
"Even his Supreme Court appointees voted wrong on police invading a home without a warrant if they claim to smell marijuana. That may not seem so important, but it is a brownshirt kind of ruling."
It is very frightening.
I am new to this site and have not been impressed with what I have read here so far, mostly global warming articles that make me roll my eyes. But this article is good stuff. Nice history lesson and an accurate assessment of Obama. Like another poster has said, sometimes it can make a difference who is in office. Surely if Gore had won then things would look much different today. As I feel about Obama today. I don't know who the GOP will end up tossing into the fire next year, but I am very hopeful that person will not do a worse job then Obama, who finds ways to let people down here and across the world.
You may continue to roll your eyes until you are permanently cross eyed for all I care. Have you not read of the extremes of climate we are experiencing. Do you continue to hide your head in the sand while towns are being destroyed by tornadoes and island nations are threatened by rising seas? Read something, anything regarding climatology and stop acting the fool.
Do me a favor and go to wikipedia and look up tornado alley. Spring and early summer have always been the time for tornados in the midwest. I will grant you that this season is the worst we have had in about 60 years but tornados are nothing new in that part of the country at this time of year. And the record snowfall this winter is due to the warming effect as well? The cold weather is because of the warming? Genius! Mother Nature has always done her thing. Tornados, earthquakes, floods, droughts, hurricanes, volcanic activity, all just part of the earth doing its thing. Man thinks it has such an impact on the earth and in fact it is quite the opposite. The earth has its impact on us. In the seventies, the big thing was another ice age coming. Today it is global warming. You can find evidence to support either side. But not on this site. All doomsayers saying the end is near here. Carbon emissions are going to keep on spilling out at the breakneck speed and guess what, tomorrow, the next day, the day after that, we'll still be here. I am more concerned with the mess in Washington DC. You and Al Gore have fun building that ark.
"The cold weather is because of the warming?"
Could be. Edited highlights :
A higher mean sea temperature means air can carry more moisture. In winter, it dumps this as snow on continental masses like North America and Europe. Snow cover reflects sunlight (heat) locally from the landmasses. They get colder - at least, in winter they do - though the mean sea (and average global) temperature is higher.
The trick here is to look at global annual averages. Record winter snowfall on landmasses at temperate and higher latitudes is consistent with a rise in mean sea temperature.
All climatologists agree that severe weather is a symptom of global warming. This guy is either a troll or he welcomes the kool aid he drinks.. Back under the bridge for him!