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What Happened to Obama?
It was a blustery day in Washington on Jan. 20, 2009, as it often seems to be on the day of a presidential inauguration. As I stood with my 8-year-old daughter, watching the president deliver his inaugural address, I had a feeling of unease. It wasn’t just that the man who could be so eloquent had seemingly chosen not to be on this auspicious occasion, although that turned out to be a troubling harbinger of things to come. It was that there was a story the American people were waiting to hear — and needed to hear — but he didn’t tell it. And in the ensuing months he continued not to tell it, no matter how outrageous the slings and arrows his opponents threw at him.
(Image: Edel Rodriguez)
The stories our leaders tell us matter, probably almost as much as the stories our parents tell us as children, because they orient us to what is, what could be, and what should be; to the worldviews they hold and to the values they hold sacred. Our brains evolved to “expect” stories with a particular structure, with protagonists and villains, a hill to be climbed or a battle to be fought. Our species existed for more than 100,000 years before the earliest signs of literacy, and another 5,000 years would pass before the majority of humans would know how to read and write.
Stories were the primary way our ancestors transmitted knowledge and values. Today we seek movies, novels and “news stories” that put the events of the day in a form that our brains evolved to find compelling and memorable. Children crave bedtime stories; the holy books of the three great monotheistic religions are written in parables; and as research in cognitive science has shown, lawyers whose closing arguments tell a story win jury trials against their legal adversaries who just lay out “the facts of the case.”
When Barack Obama rose to the lectern on Inauguration Day, the nation was in tatters. Americans were scared and angry. The economy was spinning in reverse. Three-quarters of a million people lost their jobs that month. Many had lost their homes, and with them the only nest eggs they had. Even the usually impervious upper middle class had seen a decade of stagnant or declining investment, with the stock market dropping in value with no end in sight. Hope was as scarce as credit.
In that context, Americans needed their president to tell them a story that made sense of what they had just been through, what caused it, and how it was going to end. They needed to hear that he understood what they were feeling, that he would track down those responsible for their pain and suffering, and that he would restore order and safety. What they were waiting for, in broad strokes, was a story something like this:
“I know you’re scared and angry. Many of you have lost your jobs, your homes, your hope. This was a disaster, but it was not a natural disaster. It was made by Wall Street gamblers who speculated with your lives and futures. It was made by conservative extremists who told us that if we just eliminated regulations and rewarded greed and recklessness, it would all work out. But it didn’t work out. And it didn’t work out 80 years ago, when the same people sold our grandparents the same bill of goods, with the same results. But we learned something from our grandparents about how to fix it, and we will draw on their wisdom. We will restore business confidence the old-fashioned way: by putting money back in the pockets of working Americans by putting them back to work, and by restoring integrity to our financial markets and demanding it of those who want to run them. I can’t promise that we won’t make mistakes along the way. But I can promise you that they will be honest mistakes, and that your government has your back again.” A story isn’t a policy. But that simple narrative — and the policies that would naturally have flowed from it — would have inoculated against much of what was to come in the intervening two and a half years of failed government, idled factories and idled hands. That story would have made clear that the president understood that the American people had given Democrats the presidency and majorities in both houses of Congress to fix the mess the Republicans and Wall Street had made of the country, and that this would not be a power-sharing arrangement. It would have made clear that the problem wasn’t tax-and-spend liberalism or the deficit — a deficit that didn’t exist until George W. Bush gave nearly $2 trillion in tax breaks largely to the wealthiest Americans and squandered $1 trillion in two wars.
And perhaps most important, it would have offered a clear, compelling alternative to the dominant narrative of the right, that our problem is not due to spending on things like the pensions of firefighters, but to the fact that those who can afford to buy influence are rewriting the rules so they can cut themselves progressively larger slices of the American pie while paying less of their fair share for it.
But there was no story — and there has been none since.
In similar circumstances, Franklin D. Roosevelt offered Americans a promise to use the power of his office to make their lives better and to keep trying until he got it right. Beginning in his first inaugural address, and in the fireside chats that followed, he explained how the crash had happened, and he minced no words about those who had caused it. He promised to do something no president had done before: to use the resources of the United States to put Americans directly to work, building the infrastructure we still rely on today. He swore to keep the people who had caused the crisis out of the halls of power, and he made good on that promise. In a 1936 speech at Madison Square Garden, he thundered, “Never before in all our history have these forces been so united against one candidate as they stand today. They are unanimous in their hate for me — and I welcome their hatred.”
When Barack Obama stepped into the Oval Office, he stepped into a cycle of American history, best exemplified by F.D.R. and his distant cousin, Teddy. After a great technological revolution or a major economic transition, as when America changed from a nation of farmers to an urban industrial one, there is often a period of great concentration of wealth, and with it, a concentration of power in the wealthy. That’s what we saw in 1928, and that’s what we see today. At some point that power is exercised so injudiciously, and the lives of so many become so unbearable, that a period of reform ensues — and a charismatic reformer emerges to lead that renewal. In that sense, Teddy Roosevelt started the cycle of reform his cousin picked up 30 years later, as he began efforts to bust the trusts and regulate the railroads, exercise federal power over the banks and the nation’s food supply, and protect America’s land and wildlife, creating the modern environmental movement.
Those were the shoes — that was the historic role — that Americans elected Barack Obama to fill. The president is fond of referring to “the arc of history,” paraphrasing the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous statement that “the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” But with his deep-seated aversion to conflict and his profound failure to understand bully dynamics — in which conciliation is always the wrong course of action, because bullies perceive it as weakness and just punch harder the next time — he has broken that arc and has likely bent it backward for at least a generation.
When Dr. King spoke of the great arc bending toward justice, he did not mean that we should wait for it to bend. He exhorted others to put their full weight behind it, and he gave his life speaking with a voice that cut through the blistering force of water cannons and the gnashing teeth of police dogs. He preached the gospel of nonviolence, but he knew that whether a bully hid behind a club or a poll tax, the only effective response was to face the bully down, and to make the bully show his true and repugnant face in public.
IN contrast, when faced with the greatest economic crisis, the greatest levels of economic inequality, and the greatest levels of corporate influence on politics since the Depression, Barack Obama stared into the eyes of history and chose to avert his gaze. Instead of indicting the people whose recklessness wrecked the economy, he put them in charge of it. He never explained that decision to the public — a failure in storytelling as extraordinary as the failure in judgment behind it. Had the president chosen to bend the arc of history, he would have told the public the story of the destruction wrought by the dismantling of the New Deal regulations that had protected them for more than half a century. He would have offered them a counternarrative of how to fix the problem other than the politics of appeasement, one that emphasized creating economic demand and consumer confidence by putting consumers back to work. He would have had to stare down those who had wrecked the economy, and he would have had to tolerate their hatred if not welcome it. But the arc of his temperament just didn’t bend that far.
The truly decisive move that broke the arc of history was his handling of the stimulus. The public was desperate for a leader who would speak with confidence, and they were ready to follow wherever the president led. Yet instead of indicting the economic policies and principles that had just eliminated eight million jobs, in the most damaging of the tic-like gestures of compromise that have become the hallmark of his presidency — and against the advice of multiple Nobel-Prize-winning economists — he backed away from his advisers who proposed a big stimulus, and then diluted it with tax cuts that had already been shown to be inert. The result, as predicted in advance, was a half-stimulus that half-stimulated the economy. That, in turn, led the White House to feel rightly unappreciated for having saved the country from another Great Depression but in the unenviable position of having to argue a counterfactual — that something terrible might have happened had it not half-acted.
To the average American, who was still staring into the abyss, the half-stimulus did nothing but prove that Ronald Reagan was right, that government is the problem. In fact, the average American had no idea what Democrats were trying to accomplish by deficit spending because no one bothered to explain it to them with the repetition and evocative imagery that our brains require to make an idea, particularly a paradoxical one, “stick.” Nor did anyone explain what health care reform was supposed to accomplish (other than the unbelievable and even more uninspiring claim that it would “bend the cost curve”), or why “credit card reform” had led to an increase in the interest rates they were already struggling to pay. Nor did anyone explain why saving the banks was such a priority, when saving the homes the banks were foreclosing didn’t seem to be. All Americans knew, and all they know today, is that they’re still unemployed, they’re still worried about how they’re going to pay their bills at the end of the month and their kids still can’t get a job. And now the Republicans are chipping away at unemployment insurance, and the president is making his usual impotent verbal exhortations after bargaining it away.
What makes the “deficit debate” we just experienced seem so surreal is how divorced the conversation in Washington has been from conversations around the kitchen table everywhere else in America. Although I am a scientist by training, over the last several years, as a messaging consultant to nonprofit groups and Democratic leaders, I have studied the way voters think and feel, talking to them in plain language. At this point, I have interacted in person or virtually with more than 50,000 Americans on a range of issues, from taxes and deficits to abortion and immigration.
The average voter is far more worried about jobs than about the deficit, which few were talking about while Bush and the Republican Congress were running it up. The conventional wisdom is that Americans hate government, and if you ask the question in the abstract, people will certainly give you an earful about what government does wrong. But if you give them the choice between cutting the deficit and putting Americans back to work, it isn’t even close. But it’s not just jobs. Americans don’t share the priorities of either party on taxes, budgets or any of the things Congress and the president have just agreed to slash — or failed to slash, like subsidies to oil companies. When it comes to tax cuts for the wealthy, Americans are united across the political spectrum, supporting a message that says, “In times like these, millionaires ought to be giving to charity, not getting it.”
When pitted against a tough budget-cutting message straight from the mouth of its strongest advocates, swing voters vastly preferred a message that began, “The best way to reduce the deficit is to put Americans back to work.” This statement is far more consistent with what many economists are saying publicly — and what investors apparently believe, as evident in the nosedive the stock market took after the president and Congress “saved” the economy.
So where does that leave us?
Like most Americans, at this point, I have no idea what Barack Obama — and by extension the party he leads — believes on virtually any issue. The president tells us he prefers a “balanced” approach to deficit reduction, one that weds “revenue enhancements” (a weak way of describing popular taxes on the rich and big corporations that are evading them) with “entitlement cuts” (an equally poor choice of words that implies that people who’ve worked their whole lives are looking for handouts). But the law he just signed includes only the cuts. This pattern of presenting inconsistent positions with no apparent recognition of their incoherence is another hallmark of this president’s storytelling. He announces in a speech on energy and climate change that we need to expand offshore oil drilling and coal production — two methods of obtaining fuels that contribute to the extreme weather Americans are now seeing. He supports a health care law that will use Medicaid to insure about 15 million more Americans and then endorses a budget plan that, through cuts to state budgets, will most likely decimate Medicaid and other essential programs for children, senior citizens and people who are vulnerable by virtue of disabilities or an economy that is getting weaker by the day. He gives a major speech on immigration reform after deporting a million immigrants in two years, breaking up families at a pace George W. Bush could never rival in all his years as president.
THE real conundrum is why the president seems so compelled to take both sides of every issue, encouraging voters to project whatever they want on him, and hoping they won’t realize which hand is holding the rabbit. That a large section of the country views him as a socialist while many in his own party are concluding that he does not share their values speaks volumes — but not the volumes his advisers are selling: that if you make both the right and left mad, you must be doing something right.
As a practicing psychologist with more than 25 years of experience, I will resist the temptation to diagnose at a distance, but as a scientist and strategic consultant I will venture some hypotheses.
The most charitable explanation is that he and his advisers have succumbed to a view of electoral success to which many Democrats succumb — that “centrist” voters like “centrist” politicians. Unfortunately, reality is more complicated. Centrist voters prefer honest politicians who help them solve their problems. A second possibility is that he is simply not up to the task by virtue of his lack of experience and a character defect that might not have been so debilitating at some other time in history. Those of us who were bewitched by his eloquence on the campaign trail chose to ignore some disquieting aspects of his biography: that he had accomplished very little before he ran for president, having never run a business or a state; that he had a singularly unremarkable career as a law professor, publishing nothing in 12 years at the University of Chicago other than an autobiography; and that, before joining the United States Senate, he had voted "present" (instead of "yea" or "nay") 130 times, sometimes dodging difficult issues.
A somewhat less charitable explanation is that we are a nation that is being held hostage not just by an extremist Republican Party but also by a president who either does not know what he believes or is willing to take whatever position he thinks will lead to his re-election. Perhaps those of us who were so enthralled with the magnificent story he told in “Dreams From My Father” appended a chapter at the end that wasn’t there — the chapter in which he resolves his identity and comes to know who he is and what he believes in.
Or perhaps, like so many politicians who come to Washington, he has already been consciously or unconsciously corrupted by a system that tests the souls even of people of tremendous integrity, by forcing them to dial for dollars — in the case of the modern presidency, for hundreds of millions of dollars. When he wants to be, the president is a brilliant and moving speaker, but his stories virtually always lack one element: the villain who caused the problem, who is always left out, described in impersonal terms, or described in passive voice, as if the cause of others’ misery has no agency and hence no culpability. Whether that reflects his aversion to conflict, an aversion to conflict with potential campaign donors that today cripples both parties’ ability to govern and threatens our democracy, or both, is unclear.
A final explanation is that he ran for president on two contradictory platforms: as a reformer who would clean up the system, and as a unity candidate who would transcend the lines of red and blue. He has pursued the one with which he is most comfortable given the constraints of his character, consistently choosing the message of bipartisanship over the message of confrontation.
But the arc of history does not bend toward justice through capitulation cast as compromise. It does not bend when 400 people control more of the wealth than 150 million of their fellow Americans. It does not bend when the average middle-class family has seen its income stagnate over the last 30 years while the richest 1 percent has seen its income rise astronomically. It does not bend when we cut the fixed incomes of our parents and grandparents so hedge fund managers can keep their 15 percent tax rates. It does not bend when only one side in negotiations between workers and their bosses is allowed representation. And it does not bend when, as political scientists have shown, it is not public opinion but the opinions of the wealthy that predict the votes of the Senate. The arc of history can bend only so far before it breaks.
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181 Comments so far
Show All"One thing I do know, is that I don't want a repug in there. This is because most of them, do not really care about us here on the bottom. This is for sure..... some may question Obama's sincerity in this, but at least we KNOW where the repugs stand. Plus, the repugs, WILL CONTINUE TO RAPE AND PILLAGE THE EARTH FOR PROFIT..... NO MATTER WHAT. THEY CAN'T SEE ANOTHER PICTURE."
Tantrum, sure, have one, but first get your facts correct:
Obama continues mountaintop removal, Gulf drilling and coverup complicity w/BP and failure to prosecute the single greatest environmental disaster, at least before Fukushima--
More and escalating wars, torture, rendition, bailouts, offering up Social Security and Medicare, "health care reform"...refusal to prosecute admitted war criminals (Bush Cheney, Yoo, Bybee, Rice, Rumsfeld etc.,)
So what part of Obama is raping and pillaging at least as bad as the republicans do you not get?
Seriously. What the fuck are you talking about? Can you support a single point you made (did you even make one? Was it Obama ain't so bad?) or refute a single one of mine?
If the profanity throws you off, ignore it, and focus on the very real issues and perhaps you'll realize that certain situations require its use to properly convey meaning.
Here, the enormity of your ignorance demands strong language.
You should have read what I edited out.
yeah, I've been reading, I know all the sh*t that Obama has been pulling.... so you can ttake your attitude and......no, the profanity doesn't throw me off.... so, if you are soooooooo right about Obama's faults, which I agree are many, what to f* are you doing about it and what avenue do you propose we take to accomplish anything?
I wrote what I wrote, making the statement that yes, I have finally lost almost any confidence that Obama will do any thing along the lines of what is necessary..... and as for backing up what I said.....all I said was that he MAYBE a path, a tool, even..... and if you disagree with this,fine,but don't act as if I am falling at his feet, kissing them to beg for crumbs. If you really read the post, you'll see that is not what I was saying...... Now, again, what path do you suggest..... a third party candidate....ha!! or revolution? Come on........I know my idea was not much but after giving me both barrels for it, let's see what you have........If it's revolution...... I've pretty much written along those lines too. As I stated in my post, I go back and forth. I would rather work along the lines of non violent democratic avenues...... if at all possible, rather than violent............. but I have my days when I feel, like I know, that that is a pipe dream and the only thing we have left, is to fight.....Now, tell me again, that you have all the answers and ......yeah.....
I simply boggles my mind how difficult it is for folks to see that this system can't be fixed from within.
A new constitutional convention will be necessary. How one gets convened is anybody's guess, but while violence won't work, it's been amply demonstrated--even before corporations assumed total control via Citizens United and other victories (Clinton's repeal of Glass Stegal, NAFTA, etc.,) that ELECTIONS don't matter.
That leaves a general strike. Seen any real news from Europe lately?
A constitutional convention would be infiltrated by the fascists and would result in some thing worse, I'm afraid. But I *really* like the general strike idea. Frankly I see no other way any of this changes, since, as noted elsewhere, elections don't seem to matter... for all my voting life I've been forced to vote for Democrats because things got worse marginally more slowly when they were in power... now even that doesn't seem to be true.
Nothing *happened* to Obama. He is simply the corporate tool Matt Gonzalez told us he was in this article more than three years ago: http://www.counterpunch.org/gonzalez02292008.html
The power we are in the grip of now will yield nothing without a demand. It doesn't *have* to be violent... though I fear it will be... A nice, calm, peaceful general strike, three days in length, say, a week before the Democratic convention next year.
I know... dream on...
Such a Constitutional Convention wouldn't have to re-write the Constitution. It would only need to produce a single Amendment, "A Corporation is not a Person, and only has rights given to it by a legislature." That's it.
Another tweek should include the elimination of 501(c)(4)'s and their "anonymous" lobbying.
Such would stop Corporate lobbying, and give our country back to We the People. While we're there, we might as well re-institute Glass-Seagal, eliminate derivitives, and tax the rich and the speculators.
Of course, the Convention would be infiltrated by the fascists and msm would be in full propaganda mode, but it's the only real hope we have now.
CELTIC: I agree. The psychologist NEEDS to see what his own Rorsharch test delivers, so he offers a psychological analysis for what the rest of us see as blatant, unapologetic political double-dealing and/or malfeasance.
What's intriguing to me, from the article, is the LACK of bona fides for Obama. What kind of law professor publishes NOTHING? Doesn't it remind you of Eleanor Kagan? IF the CIA was in on grooming these Manchurian Candidates, the blank screens each left behind would have functioned as key components of their resumes. No opinions published makes it all the easier to NOT come off as the evident hypocrite. Blank slates are to be preferred.
I mentioned this in another thread that when I attended my 30th HS reunion, what was evident to me was that the B-students did better in the world, professionally, than the "really smart kids." Our society rewards mediocrity and those willing to conform far more than it does those prepared to lead the way and develop new paths, protocols, and I dare say... a higher philosophy.
'What kind of law professor publishes NOTHING? '
That statement stood out to me too, Siouxrose. Twelve years is way beyond the time professors are typically given to publish before they're shown the door (more than double actually). And then to only have published a biography/memoir as a Law professor, not an English or humanities professor, is beyond strange.
Reply moved to end of thread.
Westen: "those of us who were bewitched..." And you have a Ph.D.?
I never liked Obama going back to his summer 2004 DNC speech (pathetic drivel about picking yourself up by your bootstraps). I actually listened to his content in speeches, legislation, interviews, and his website.
It was always clear to anyone who had a high school education and cared to know that he was a candidate beholden to the special interests in finance, real estate, insurance, media, and energy who run this country.
That is why I voted for change in 2008: Ralph Nader.
I'm glad that someone said this in blunt terms. It's frightening to see how many people still believe that Obama is on their side, despite years of evidence that he long ago chose to side with the predatory class.
The predatory class views the rest of us not as fellow citizens, but as prey. And we're a very unusual kind of prey - one that doesn't have the sense to try to protect itself or to flee.
It is the American accent that has everyone confused. Very interesting indeed.
God bless America and the rest of the World too.
i just had to go thru the registration process to say this: dude, you're pathetic. as a canadian i got sucked in by an american friend deep enough to buy and read both of Obama's books. Then I discovered he apprenticed with Kissinger. Then the day after the elections, drones still massacred innocent tribes people, and continue many times more than Bush. Apart from the bloody reality, it is all nothing but spin, and as a psychologist you must be familiar with the BBC series, Century of the Self, explaining the advent of delusional politics. You only have hope because you want to believe in the system. But cash flow from illegal drugs is greasing the system worldwide. Don't think 'government, think 'criminal gang'. We have to reinvent the wheel.
BRAVO - I would add, however, that in today's world, if you don't get your message, your thesis, into your first paragraph, and make that paragraph short, many folks will flutter off before they get the message.
I say that as one who has much experience in concocting long boring paragraphs involving finally tuned thoughts that, ultimately, only a mother could love.
This article only nails part of it. Westen has addressed the surface "story". He is leaving out the republicans' strangle hold on the media (it's hard to explain anything when you have no megaphone for your team); republican sabotage of Congress (if Obama allowed a stalemate, no legislation would come out - simple); and the learning curve for decent people learning to deal with lies, cheating, back-stabbing, etc. I'm not happy with the result, either, but I blame the republicans. They are depending on us "fast food" Americans to expect immediate gratification. They are depending on us to take anyone other than President Obama and the Democrats. Look at these comments for proof. Obama has not been able to get clean legislation through Congress that is untouched by republicans; either it is stalled to death or it is "compromised"/corrupted by republicans. Hence, the watered down, weakened stimulus - republicans made it that way. We got legislation through, people. We got some good stuff. We can get more stuff a little at a time. But, put the blame where it belongs. Don't blame us, don't blame Obama for not being FDR. Blame the republicans/the bully. Yeah, you hit bullies back and keep hitting them. You gang up on them. Hit the streets; move your money to credit unions; register voters; call/write Congress; write letters to the editor; boycott corporations. We need to keep Obama and take down the bully ourselves. We did it before. We can do it again for as long as it takes. Our lives and the Supreme Court are at stake.
It certainly is fair of Westen to include Obama (and Congress) as a co-collaborator.
No we certainly don't need to keep Obama. The Supreme Court at 5/4 wouldn't be much different in action as 6/3,
Obama seems to be the wrong person for the job at this time. We need someone who can stand for progressive/liberal values. O is too conflict-averse, and I don't want another 4 years of that betrayal. I find it horrifying that O is attempting to undermine our safety nets of Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security.
donnielou,
Is that you again Thom Hartmann?
Wow, I thought you were calling me out on something I said, then I looked back and saw this 'donnielou.' Coincidence?????????? I am not to be confused with donnie.
Holy cow, someone out there not getting paid still believes this? Guess there's no depth to team loyalty, is there.
I am not sure that there is a candidate the republicans can put up that would make me vote for Obama again. True, I might not vote for his opponent, but voting for him would be like letting Casey Anthony babysit the kids.
I could hold my nose and vote for Romney instead. If Rick Perry or Michel Bachmann are up, well, it will be a wake up call.
These words articulate what I have been searching to say. But just knowing it still leaves me with the hollow feeling that there is no other choice for 2012, given the incredible nihilism of the Tea Party and the cruelty of the rest of the Republicans. Anybody got a plan?
Extemporalias,
Do exactly the opposite. Most of us here in CD feel almost the same about the Dims and Obama. Do exactly the opposite what they expected us to do.
I will probably vote for a third party or write in. I doubt we'll have a Dem primary, but someone decent could rise to the occasion.
Perhaps the 2016 election will encourage a progressive/liberal person/s with strong values and ethics and a willingness to be less conflict-averse than Obama.
Thank you for this piece. By far, the most intelligent and observant thing I've read all year.
"TimothySmith"
Observant?
The author states that he, "like most Americans," has no idea what Obama and the democrats believe on any issue.
If he still cannot see what Obama and Co. are about, then I wonder if it is because he likes illegal searches and seizures, illegal warmongering, corporate gouging, rampant pollution, and lies.
I think this is a pretty fair critique of Obama's serial failures. It may contain a heavy portion of naivete, as many have said, but that's always going to be the case in pieces published by the NY Times. They'll never print anything that ruthlessly excoriates the powers that be, or shows how vague and transitory the differences are between the monopolistic parties. It's not quite up to Matt Taibbi, but compare it to the soporific treacle of Jay Walljasper, today.
Obama isn't given much slack here, and Westen at least doesn't say he'll work for his re-election. The main point is that Obama is as least as much a total failure as a president as Hoover was, and may well turn out to be far worse. I definitely take that away from what Westen writes, and am willing to overlook the mandatory naivete, given the original venue of the piece.
I was at the inauguration too - reveling in the moment with the people I was with to listen to closely to the speech. So I did not realize. But as soon as Obama starting naming his team, I knew the promise of the adminstration to be truly transformative was over.
Does this writer of this needlessly complex piece understand that the president may view his attempt to psychologically diagnose him on the editorial page of the NY Times as sufficient reason to place him on his terrorist assassination list?
what is so complex about this piece?
is that what we've come to? Is O so fragile?
Great piece. What to do...? FIRST STEP: We got to get Big Money out! Can we expect any system that allows private money to buy in to elections, especially being unlimited as it is, to bring results that could be described as being democracy? NO! I think getting money out is most important.
the system is completely broken. "we the people" are not given consideration and if we don't stand up now, together, to demand that OUR needs be met we are dooomed. please join the effort to make our voices heard. october2100.org
"THE real conundrum is why the president seems so compelled to take both sides of every issue, encouraging voters to project whatever they want on him, and hoping they won’t realize which hand is holding the rabbit. That a large section of the country views him as a socialist while many in his own party are concluding that he does not share their values speaks volumes — but not the volumes his advisers are selling: that if you make both the right and left mad, you must be doing something right."
The "conundrum" has a simple solution. Obama's eloquence that the author so praises consists of nothing but vague, empty utterances, just like his meaningless campaign slogans like "change we can believe in" and "yes we can." This lack of substance is inherent in BO's personality. The man has no solid ideas of his own, and repeats every thought thrown his way by his advisors and supporters as well as by his critics and adversaries.
This commentary shows what's wrong with liberal psychologists. The problem isn't some character flaw in Obama. The problem is that he was elected through the financial backing of the rich Wall Street bankers and other oligarchs, and now he's performing the tasks they paid for. He's a wholly owned subsidiary of the oligarchy. The problem isn't his equivocal personality, the problem is his alliance with the forces of evil that control our society at this time.
Spot on loopless. Why can't people get this? And WHY has it taken them so long??? Obama' embraces this corrupt system, plain and simple. And he fraudulently duped many Americans with his "Change" bullshit.
NB: Reply to celticknot (1:36pm) moved here:
__________________
As long as you're citing simple stories, celticknot, please add "The Emperor's New Clothes" to the short list.
I don't want to be too hard on Westen's thoughtful, agonized moderate liberal progressive's post-mortem.
But the pregnant question of "What Happened to Obama", now posed in a thousand different ways, can be a misleadingly deceptive or inverted statement of the real question: "What Happened to Our Great Expectations?"
"Our", just to frame the question from Westen's perspective. Many of us never developed Great Expectations, even disguised as Realistic Expectations, and got varying degrees of grief for saying so all along.
As this comment explicates, pondering "what happened to Obama" really depends on the perception of Obama one formed in the first place.
Westen, to his credit, isn't oblivious to this complementary, and in my opinion logically antecedent, question. One sentence in particular caught my eye:
“Perhaps those of us who were so enthralled with the magnificent story he told in 'Dreams From My Father' appended a chapter at the end that wasn’t there — the chapter in which he resolves his identity and comes to know who he is and what he believes in.”
Since this isn't the last of the gajillion articles of its kind that has been, and will be, published here, I feel entitled to make the gajillionth reference to my brother, a now deeply sadder-but-wiser Obama supporter who tried to persuade me to share his enthusiasm during the 2008 campaign.
Like Westen, my brother-- who I've come to treat as a sort of one-person "control group" to contrast to my own experience-- was also enthralled with the magnificent story Obama told in "Dreams From My Father".
After becoming intrigued with Obama when he entered the international spotlight, my brother read the book and urged me to do the same. At the time, it heightened his enthusiasm for Bonnie Prince Obama. It gave my brother a compelling understanding of who Obama is, and therefore what kind of president he might be.
I honestly "meant to" read it, but given my usual procrastination, I developed a settled aversion to Obama that outpaced and overwhelmed my dutiful intention.
All this to say that it strikes me as a circular process: those who found Obama attractive in the first place, or reciprocated Team Obama's cynical marketing "hooks", projected a relatively optimistic and benevolent perception of Obama onto him-- a projection that became cumulatively more comprehensive and complex over time.
And the other crucial characteristic shared by Westen, my brother, and so many caught up in Obamamania is a predilection to buy into the standard, orthodox, normative, rationalized and intellectualized approach to politics that prevails in contemporary Amerikan culture.
I don't know if my brother plays chess any more, but it's no coincidence that while we were growing up, he was an enthusiastic and skillful chess player; he also dabbled in card games, even teaching me to play bridge to increase the pool of available players during a mercifully brief craze in his early teens.
I, on the other hand, am averse to chess and card games.
This biographical digression is presented to propose that it may be some mental "game-friendly" precursor that jump-starts citizens to instinctively buy into the pragmatic, common-sense pop poli sci "horse race" model of politics, and affect a detached, abstract inclination to set aside "personal" ideals and especially intuitive feelings in favor of a supposedly unsentimental and shrewd strategic-thinker "game-player" mode.
So, typically moderate, intelligent citizens are taken by a "likely" horse in the preliminaries, and if they're not put off or more attracted to a rival, develop a rooting interest in them.
And then it's off to the races: as "their" horse gallops around the track, fans tend to cumulatively build an elaborate fantasy upon their original first impression.
They discount or discredit indications that their horse may not be what they thought in the first place. In fact, they superciliously contest and reject evidence and opinion inimical to their positive view.
For instance, my brother reflexively and emphatically countered any qualm or criticism I offered about Obama as the campaign progressed with maxims and clichés from the Inside Politics 101 Handbook: selecting sinister Clintonistas and notorious banksters for his "transition team" and cabinet was Obama "wisely consolidating the party"; breaking his word and voting for draconian, authoritarian FISA legislation was "sensibly running to the right as Democrats MUST".
There were many other "pat" explanations too numerous to fully elaborate upon here: Obama had the double burden of being a "historic" (i.e. Person of Color) candidate AND a Democrat; he was "Jackie Robinson"; he couldn't be made to look like a "weak sister" on defense and national security; he had to support the Wall Street bailout to reassure the dubious reactionary masses that he wasn't some kind of socialist, Muslim Wild Nigger, and so forth...
So a few years down the road, it's "The Emperor's New Clothes". Westen, my brother, and possibly millions of others are staring wistfully at their well-thumbed copy of "Dreams From My Father" sitting on the shelf and wondering "what happened to Obama".
None of this is to say that things HAVEN'T happened to Obama-- of course they have. But before that question can be pursued, it has to be disentangled from the preliminary question of "What happened to our fantasy about Obama, and where did it come from in the first place?"
Otherwise, all of this tormented inquiry will fade away to the back burner as the reluctantly disillusioned and bemused inquirers turn their eyes upon the next slate of likely horses trotting up to the starting gate.
as His Bobness wisely put it: "don't follow leaders."
I read 0's book to get a taste and came away convinced he was an admitted adulation junkie - no more.
You're so right about that.
I was a "staging location director" for the Obama campaign. I volunteered for three months of Saturdays, coordinating other volunteers who went door to door to spread the word about Obama.
It was election night when a feeling of unease settled in my heart.
I asked the campaign office what I should do with all of the notebooks we had used with our volunteers during the campaign. I expected to hear back that I should hang on to them. I wanted to hear that I'd be called back up to canvass the day after the inauguration. I knew that the only way we'd get the laws we want from congress would be with the support of every American who voted for Obama. I was ready to canvass for an end to the wars, then for national health care, then for strong and effective climate change legislation, then for serious reform on Wall Street, then for gay marriage, then for...
I was ready to be one of the people helping to tell the story and inspire the public to pressure their members of congress and lend the political will needed to make such critical and powerful changes.
Instead, the director at the Obama campaign offices in my town told me to toss the notebooks.
Dread settled in my heart. "We're not going to win these battles in Congress without the support of the people." I thought to myself.
Sadly, I've not been proven wrong.
Your post makes it about "the people," and their lack of engaged support. It's a deft way of sidelining the more loathsome truth that no one is standing up for the public's interests, and the captured media rushes in to blur every debate with pre-conceived talking points. These are to the nourishment of the mind what fast food pabulum is to the stomach.
IF the public was given genuine information (which is to say, the deregulation of media had not handed the control of perception over to the very agents prepared to utilize it for their own ends), and IF the public had representatives who gave a damn about anything other than war (Mars rules) or profit (Mammon), then your comment would be worthy of respect.
It reads like psy-ops to me... a message planted here to yet again blame "The People" for not holding Obama's feet to the fire... as if ANY of the systems, from banking, to media, to elections, to tax laws REMOTELY favor citizens, or respect the lowest denominators of fairness or justice.
Please... this goes way beyond the passed out playbooks that went into the trash.
"Siouxrose"
I think the point "Elinor Sparks" was trying to make was/is that she began to realize she had merely been used as a disposable tool when she previously expected to be jubilant because she bought into the hype.
I see her(?) comment as an admission of her guilt and, possibly, her shame.
The fact that Obama and the democrats in general had clearly and repeatedly shown a corrupt corporate allegiance and disdain for equal justice during the campaign and so many people chose to ignore those actions makes her comment (if genuine) possibly a step toward real change for her.
Perhaps "Elinor" is searching.
You are a good guide, but I think you have (as I have on occasion - so people tell me) read more into her comment.
"but I think you have (as I have on occasion - so people tell me) read more into her comment." That is, of course, possible. I went with my gut reaction... however, since Mercury, the planet that is to the human perceptual networking what the antenna is to the insect, is now in a tricky retrograde, it's plausible that my "data" system is off.
Gerard: Thank you for the insights. I may not be on the mark here, but my instincts tell me something is pre-fab, or fabricated about the "Elinor" post.
Obama is not post -racial, but a captive of white racial perception. Once he turns fiery and castigating, many whites flee. The angry black man is still a haunting specter. Obama cannot take anybody on in a prolonged and raging battle; never has, never will. He learned his limits early, and gladhanding became his specialty. So now, we, too, have become captives with him; the "we" being the majority of Americans who think unemployment is the major problem and that we should first tax the rich or cut Pentagon spending before slicing MDCR and SS, In doing just the opposite, post- racial Barry flouted from the popular will, fleeing the fight for the vindication of his Party's legacy. Coward of the County or Pragmatic Politician? You decide.
The idea that Obama refuses to vociferously oppose whites further to the right than his own considerably right-wing stance out of fear that he might cause these "haunted" white folks to flee his negritude I find scant evidence to support.
Dr. Cornell West has provided a better analysis of Obama: That he and his background have little to nothing in common with the American black experience of the vast majority of blacks living in the lower 48 States. Obama was born in Indonesia. His mother worked for a CIA connected organization as a translator and Obama later worked directly for a CIA front organization himself. He was raised by his white mother and white grandmother. He grew up in Hawaii, which as anyone who's spent any time there knows, the white culture there is dominant and very affluent and that is the culture that he identified with.
Where he sought education he hung around with young white upper-middle-class and upper-class elites, culminating in that portion of his education in Ivy League Harvard and his teaching stint at the University of Chicago--home to the most white-dominated and ultra-conservative school of economics in the country. He identifies with affluent conservative neo-liberal Ivy League white people far more than he identifies with any statistically significant black sub-culture in America. He surrounded himself with such people as economic advisors and administration managers. He fully shares their neo-liberal policy beliefs that have yielded ZERO policy benefits of any kind for the vast majority of American blacks.
He is in every sense, a conservative Ivy League oreo, to use authentic 1970s era urban black parlance.
"ELINOR SPARKS"
If you were at any time during the campaign of 2008 dismissive of any of us who saw Obama and Co. as the incorporated corruption which they are, I hope you can contact those people and apologize for enabling this debauchery.
You can still work to achieve those things you listed in your post, but they will never happen within either of the corporate controlled parties, which clearly worship money and see equal justice as trivial.
Game-playing mind control is deep in the republicans and the democrats alike.
Even so-called "progressive" democrats cannot be trusted as long as they chose to stay within the clubhouse.
The "pragmatic" game is their favorite. It is where they sell off human rights and lives in favor of winning a corporate controlled position of power.
weren't most obama votes kinda like buying a car without taking it for a test drive first?...
as checking him out by way of researching him and his previous work records...
might have shown potential buyers that he really wasn’t worth their vote!...
or at least that’s how this’un felt after some laps on that test course!...
Professor Westin is precisely the sort of corporately co-opted liberal academician that Chris Hedges refers to in his critique on the death of the liberal class.
He's a self-identified message consultant to DLC Democratic "leaders." He MAY be taking his first belated baby steps (that hopefully won't stray from the logic path) toward realizing the complete and total sham-wow the Democratic Party has become. But more probably he imagines in his airtight corporate mind that he is helping to pressure Obama leftwards from within the Party when there is not and never has been an Obama desirous of moving in that direction and he's shown nothing but contempt for the left-wing of his Party and its voting constituents. Westin is clearly either in denial about or too ignorant of tri-partisan economic neo-liberalism (being a psychologist/corporate consultant at a corporatist anti-labor, ostensibly Methodist, actually more Zionist private university).
His article is riddled with errors, ignorance and mischaracterizations, and he too timidly acknowledges, "Like most Americans, at this point, I have no idea what Barack Obama — and by extension the party he leads — believes on virtually any issue" yet he blames all adverse Democratic policies since January 2009 on Obama and does not examine with any specificity the crucial role Obama's fellow neo-liberal Democrats in Congress have played in aiding and abetting these destructive policies.
Far too little far too late, Professor Westin. If self-enriching "message consultants" for the DLC like you won't bolt the Party to help build something better then just keep your burbling re-thinking of things you should've thought through over two years ago to yourself instead of spreading your dubious mixed bag of ignorance, good intentions and half-truths.
Examples:
"After a great technological revolution or a major economic transition, as when America changed from a nation of farmers to an urban industrial one, there is often a period of great concentration of wealth, and with it, a concentration of power in the wealthy...That’s what we saw in 1928, and that’s what we see today."
Some great nonsense here. America did not become a nation of predominantly industrial workers until the tail end of World War II in the mid-1940s. Up until then two-thirds of Americans still worked a job that was linked in some way to agriculture. Most of rural America still lacked electricity until FDR's truly progressive Rural Electrification Act. Until the original, truly liberal GI Bill only one-in-three American adults owned their own home. By the mid-1960s that was transformed to two out of three.
Westin refers to a great technological revolution or major economic transition concentrating wealth today when there has been no transition away from economic neo-liberalism for 40 years, but rather a constant, (first bipartisan now tri-partisan) steady imposition of more and more of its "free market fundamentalist" ideas over that time frame to the point where both the originator of neo-liberalism, Milton Friedman, and his idol Ayn Rand would proudly applaud its spectacular achievements in tri-partisan propaganda {exhibit A: The recent phony "debt ceiling debate") and its New Gilded Age over-concentrations of wealth and real political power in the hands of the billionaire class.
"Absolute advantage free trade" begat a new treaty (NAFTA) in 1994, but it existed as a major pillar of neo-liberal economic theory since Milton Friedman began to openly attempt to refute the Keynesian "consumption function" in the 1950s.
To give you an idea how wrong and hare-brained Friedman's pillars of neo-liberal theory have been, he claimed that monetary policy alone could have prevented the Great Depression as part of his attempt to refute Keynes, who argued that monetary policy is ineffective during deflationary-to-depression conditions, and that stimulative deficit spending by the government is needed to decrease mass unemployment under those conditions. We see the egregious failures of Ben Bernanke's "monetary policy fixes" of the economy all around us. Team Obama have fired their load on that score. The only thing they've got left as confirmed neo-liberals is QE3--that will work no better than QE2 or QE1 did except as a back door speculatory increase on the global price of food and oil.
Friedman believed in a volunteer military; full spectrum deregulation of corporations; opposition to Affirmative Action (as a form of--in his view--universally unwarranted government interference in the economy); minimizing taxes on the super-rich under all circumstances; corporate collectivization of formerly family-owned small- and medium-sized farms into giant agribusiness farms (a la the CED); legalization of usury; absolute advantage corporate contract "maximization"; maximization of volume & distribution of transactions (the Walmart Big Business import/foreign labor reliant model); vouchers to undermine the public school system; privatization of Social Security and Medicare; "free trade" without labor or environmental protections and many other policy horrors now destroying First World economies, undermining EU universal and single-payer health care systems, and undermining American public school systems, food and drug safety, infrastructure safety, financial and health security in old age, military human force structure health and psychological well-being, barriers to economic racial discrimination, etc.
Forty years of Milton Friedman's neo-liberalism has created what Citigroup investment analysts gleefully described as a "plutonomy"--an economy of the super-rich, by the super-rich and for the super-rich that is making or has already made the very last vestiges of a government "of the people, by the people and for the people" perish from this earth--not just here but everywhere that neo-liberalism has been practiced over the last forty years. The Walmart/Exxon/Halliburton/Blackwater/Lockheed-Martin global scale industrial mode of fascism is the result.
Westin is either ignorant, deluded or duplicitous in suggesting that Obama's decision not to move left is simply due to his emotional temperament or his electoral strategies and tactics. He knows Obama taught law in the academic heart of neo-liberal economic theory at the University of Chicago and surrounded himself with economists who either graduated from there or are decidedly wed to the same school of thought, yet he never acknowledges this. This puts him in the same category of intellectually half-truthful or on-the-make liberal academicians like Professor Paul Krugman and Professor Robert Reich.
CD eds need to quit wasting our time with this dithering Dim apologist shit.
Bravo, metal, for a superb and informative comment.
I too am tired of these psychobabble Obama apologists: "he's not really a war criminal and venal robber baron at heart; he's just a misunderstood, idiotic eunuch, who doesn't really understand the constitution, basic economics, or fundamental morality". I'm not just tired of them; these endless rationalizations are insulting and infuriating. Westen and overpaid veal-pen liberals like him are an integral part of the problem. Basta!
hear, hear, Doug, Metal.
I am also tired.
Tired of the blaming of "we" and "us" and "our" for electing the wrong people, for driving cars, for living in suburbs etc. Many of us are not journalists, lawyers, teachers, who read and study professionally, but are people who are busy just keeping it together. We absorb what we get from the media we happen across and are often unknowingly misinformed. The plutocracy hires a lot of psychologists to advise them on how best to misinform us.
I have respect and sympathy for my neighbors who don't have time to read multiple foreign newspapers and instead get their news in the car and on the Fox channel at work. It is unfortunate that Unions did not see the need to own an network to keep their message in front of the public and to counter the anti-union propaganda that has been steady for at least the past 40 years.
On the surface, Obama offered hope of some sort of a return to pre-W peace and prosperity, but the signs of his switcheroo were there,
Still for most people, in a battle between Wishful Thinking and John McCain, Hope & Change wins every time.
So thinking people can see that as Simon said:
Sitting on a sofa on a Sunday afternoon
Going to the candidates debate
Laugh about it, shout about it
When you've got to choose
Ev'ry way you look at it, you lose
I agree with the very first poster-this article does nail it, almost perfectly. I, too, wish we could find a viable third party candidate, but the odds of doing that and putting together any practicle amount of needed financing, especially after the "Citizens United" fiasco, seems alomst impossibly daunting. How I wish Obama had a spine and had a heart to fight the good fight-to just stand for something with resolve and with confidence, so I could, perhaps, believe in someone again. I'm afraid I just don't believe in him anymore, and haven't for awhile now.