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FDR Went to Wisconsin to Battle 'Economic Royalists,' But Obama Avoids the State and the Fight
President Obama is interrupting his long vacation to bus across the battleground states of the Midwest this week, on an officially “non-political” journey that his aides obviously hope will renew a connection with the people who overwhelmingly elected him president in 2008. It is an essential endeavor, as Obama’s uncertain tenure has frustrated voters who once saw him as a transformational leader but now wonder whether there is a point to his presidency.
The disconnect between Obama and his base has grown more profound this year, as he has focused on the compromises of Washington while working people in Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and other states have engaged in “Which side are you on?” fights against a Republican austerity agenda that threatens the very underpinnings of civil society and democratic experiment.
Obama’s absence from the scene has raised questions about how the man who once promised to march with workers in defense of collective bargaining rights (“If American workers are being denied their right to organize and collectively bargain when I’m in the White House, I will put on a comfortable pair of shoes myself, I’ll will walk on that picket line with you as president of the United States of America. Because workers deserve to know that somebody is standing in their corner.”) could remain so distant from the struggles that matter most.
Nothing summed up the disconnection between Obama and the base so thoroughly as White House spokesman Jay Carney’s response to a question about last week’s Wisconsin recall elections. Even as the New York Times hailed the recall results as an “impressive” signal regarding voter opposition to unionbusting, while arguing that “voters around the country who oppose the widespread efforts to undermine public unions—largely financed by corporate interests—should draw strength from Tuesday’s success,” Carney said he did not know if Obama was paying attention.
Obama’s bus trip this week will bring him to an Iowa town within twenty miles of the Wisconsin border on Tuesday. That’s the same day that two Wisconsin Democratic state senators who sided with labor last winter face recalls mounted by the Republican Party and national conservative groups.
But Obama’s team has made no announcement of plans to cross the line into the battleground state.
Contrast Obama’s approach with that of the president who defined the modern Democratic Party.
Seventy-seven years to the day before Wisconsin’s recall voting, Roosevelt appeared at an August 9, 1934, rally in Green Bay.
Like Obama, FDR had been elected on a promise of “hope” and “change.”
Like Obama, FDR had tried with mixed success to deliver on that promise.
The thirty-second president went to Green Bay to explain to a crowd of sympathetic but worried Wisconsinites that the economic battles of the moment needed to be seen in the perspective of the great American contest between a privileged few that engaged in the “private means of exploitation” and the great many that had “waged a long and bitter fight for [their] rights.”
Roosevelt recalled that the Revolution was a struggle “against those forces which disregard human cooperation and human rights in seeking that kind of individual profit which is gained at the expense of his fellows.”
The old fight between patriotic proponents of economic justice and the Tory defenders of economic royalism had, Roosevelt argued, come to a head with the arrival of the Great Depression.
Recalling the 1932 election that swept Democrats to power and ushered in the New Deal era, the president argued, “In the great national movement that culminated over a year ago, people joined with enthusiasm. They lent hand and voice to the common cause, irrespective of many older political traditions. They saw the dawn of a new day. They were on the march; they were coming back into the possession of their own home land.”
“As the humble instruments of their vision and their power, those of us who were chosen to serve them in 1932 turned to the great task,” Roosevelt continued. “In one year and five months, the people of the United States have received at least a partial answer to their demands for action; and neither the demand nor the action has reached the end of the road.”
The primary barrier to action, the president explained, was erected by those who still entertained the fantasy that FDR could restore confidence only by “tell[ing] the people of the United States that all supervision by all forms of Government, Federal and State, over all forms of human activity called business should be forthwith abolished.”
So, like Obama, Roosevelt faced an opposition that claimed government was the problem.
Unlike Obama, however, Roosevelt refused to even entertain—let alone embrace—the absurd constructs of the private-sector fabulists who FDR said “would repeal all laws, State or national, which regulate business—that a utility could henceforth charge any rate, unreasonable or otherwise; that the railroads could go back to rebates and other secret agreements; that the processors of food stuffs could disregard all rules of health and of good faith; that the unregulated wild-cat banking of a century ago could be restored; that fraudulent securities and watered stock could be palmed off on the public; that stock manipulation which caused panics and enriched insiders could go unchecked.”
“In fact,” the president continued, “if we were to listen to [the anti-government crowd], the old law of the tooth and the claw would reign in our Nation once more.”
With those words, Roosevelt took a side.
He did not imagine the possibility of compromise with those who wanted to return to the “tooth and claw” past.
Obama needs to do the same thing. He needs to recognize the seriousness of the contemporary economic debate. And he needs to take a side, standing against today’s Tories and for the new order where it is understood that the purpose of government is to achieve “the improved conditions of the whole population and not a small fraction thereof.”
Were Obama to take a similar stand this week, were he to echo Roosevelt’s call for economic justice, the mood would shift—in Wisconsin and nationally—because voters would know, finally, which side their president is on.
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93 Comments so far
Show AllIf Obama wins re-election next year, it will only be because the GOP nominee is a total loon (this appears likely). Either way, though, we lose ....
'If Obama wins re-election next year, it will only be because the GOP nominee is a total loon...'
That's the plan. Fear gets things done, even the unspeakable, like Democrats voting for an extremist who would privatize social security, education, the prisons, et al., and install a sophisticated and ubiquitous police state (inspecting grandma's soiled diapers notwithstanding).
The buzz words for accomplishing all this used to be '911' then 'Sarah Palin,' and now it's 'Michelle Bachman.' The names change but the objective remains the same--to plunder and ravage the world by whatever means necessary.
Thanks VP
At the very least, brother.
John, I gave up hoping Obama would start acting like FDR in 2009. What, on earth, is taking you so long?
"I have not yet begun to fight!" And Obama never will.
Oh Heavens! Whats' worse, Obama trashing the Democratic Party or so-called progressives who still wonder what he's up to?
Here's another "What Obama needs to do..." article. We will be inundated with them between now and Nov 2012. The fact that Obama is doing what he wants to for the people he wants to (Wall St) seems lost on Nichols/Solomon/KvdH et al.
At this stage of the came to keep looking for O's "inner FDR" is non-sensical.
Keep hoping John...Hope and Change is what it's all about isn't it.
A truly realisitic view of things came the other day from former Salt Lake City mayor Rocky Anderson who, in effect, resigned from the Democratic Party. He called the Dems a "... a gutless, unprincipled party bought and paid for by the same interests that buy and pay for the Republican Party." He also called for a "...new political party that actually will advocate for and promote the interests of the public rather than the narrow interests of the wealthy who bought and paid for not only Congress but the White House."
Obama has shown which side he's on. Which side is Nichols on?
"Which side is Nichols on?"
Why Obama's of course. He may complain about him all he wants but in the end he and the other nicy-nice liberals will bow down and kiss the ring of the Emperor in Chief, otherwise we might elect a scary crazy person who would kill children with drones, tap your phones, bail out the oligarchs, start wars in Libya and God knows what else. At least Obama doesn't say he does those sorts of things.
It's important for these NIchols' types to to hear the right things, actions are merely superfluous.
Q
Bravo
John Nichols, Thom Hartman and Norm Solomon are all beating the same drum about Oblahblah and the Dims. Yesterday, eleven CD'ers (including me) in a row commented critically on Norm Solomon's clueless article, "Democrats Must Push Back." All of those comments were subsequently removed. When I checked back for the third time last night, there was still not even a place to make a comment. Interesting.
"Nichols' bilge"
____________
You meant to write "Solomon's bilge", of course.
But it's an easy mistake to make-- the bilge is so uniform that even when it trickles in from different sources it all seems to run together.
“because voters would know, finally, which side their president is on.” It is more accurate to say “because John Nichols would know, finaly, which side his president is on.” I am pretty sure most voters do know which side Obama is on. It is hard not to know unless he/she is till trapped in Obamamania. I sometimes wonder why establishment liberals like John Nichols have a hard time accepting what Obama is. I think it has something to do with their ego; they do not want to admit that they were duped by a consumate conman.
Hey, John. I think it is already quite clear to most of us what side Obama is on, and it's not ours.
Mr. O is not on our side. So let us act like grown ups and stop pretending there is some misunderstanding. Mr. O swerved far right as soon as he won the election and appointed corporate criminals to head agencies and cabinet positions. Shame on you Barack Obama.
"JJW"
He was far right (by his own actions) BEFORE the election of 2008. He called it being "pragmatic" and the majority of voters were too desperate to allow themselves to face the truth.
The owners are now parading a bunch of seemingly insane "candidates" all across the corporate media to scare the voters into supporting their agent Obama again.
Fear is no justification for complicity and pretty much everyone who voted for Obama did so because they were afraid that they would end up with what they were, in fact, voting for.
Obama is just one liar out of very, very many lying Corporate "candidates."
Since the Big O hit the G(overment) Spot in '08 by sucking on the financiers' teat, he's been yanking their crank and it's Wall Street that is reveling in orgasmic delight while the rest of us only got f*cked. Expecting the O'Eunuch to grow some balls and switch his orientation will be as unrewarding as jerking off to Michelle Bachmann or Sarah Palin.
1. To focus on Obama, AS IF he is not typical of the democrats, is worse than useless.
2. It does not matter if Obama (or anyone else from his administration or his party) goes to Wisconsin. If he went there, he would be using words and, if you haven't figured it out yet ( ! ), his words are worse than meaningless.
3. If you still believe that Obama and the democrats see the majority of people as their "base" and/or that the democrats serve different corporate interests than the republicans, then you are stupid and a danger to society.
John Nichols wants us to focus on Obama, believe Obama's words, and believe that the democrats are working for different interests than the republicans. In short, Mr. Nichols is stupid and a tool of deception and an enabler of social disintegration.
So true. His words are worse than meaningless. Geraldine ferraro was right. I'm black and now its clear that a black front man in these times was the most dangerous option.
Nichols and rest of The Nation are stuck in their Democratic Party cacoon. There isn't much good to say about Obama and the Democrats so for the most part they attack the Republicans (although deservedly) and hold out hope for the Democrats (undeservedly). As a result, The Nation still stays in business catering to Demo-bots and the Nation's writers get invited to appear on Sunday morning political talkshows.
no problem with me giving FDR credit as a rich guy, that actually changed his thinking and did some good. BUT don't forget the goddamn times. Half the democrats in the 30's were actual REAL LEFTISTS...and REAL LIBERALS...in the good sense. Now you have a majority of the party being basically right wing by any reasonable measure of the term. Nancy Pelosi represents the most 'progressive district' and with money, in the country. BUT she is right wing. Except for women's choice rights. How so? corporate ag, free corporate trade, loves wars, wants to overthrow latin american left of center democracies, single payer off the table.
You take FDR out of the times, where he even said after a tour of the country early that 'he was scared of a revolution and something had to be done'..and the fact that the majority of the unions at the time were 'left' not conservative like the AFL...that general strikes were happening etc. ..then you set yourself up for more leaderworship. The people PUSHED the democrats left of center, and the actual insurrections taking place opened the door for left democrats.
you have to fight power with power. And power does NOT RESIDE in a third party or lesser of two evils. It resides in a large minority of the people being a threat to the actual capitalist system and its corrupt democracy. ...or a majority...in which case...even better things 'could' happen. Power resides in the people when the people are learning to unleash their real creative potential, to learn their power ....their work supports it all....their denial of apathy ....their ability to create REAL peoples' democracy and start doing workers' direct action and management without a leninist cadre leadership...THEN these people will shake in their shoes...and crumbs will fall from the sky...and maybe our govt will commit less mass murder.
Yeah, Pelosi is definitely a rightist, theres no doubt. The Democratic party is filled with rats and moles.
Just to buck up your gut and energize your political fight-energy hopefully OFFLINE too, easily Google an audio clip of FDR's 1936 challenge to the USA's oligarchs, at Madison Square Garden -- sometimes entitled "I Welcome Their [the oligarchs'] Hatred."
Hear what a halfway honest US president said to the public back then about the ruination of the USA's economy at the hands of privileged sociopaths-- and hear it while letting yourself FEEL by comparison what Obama and the Dems are NOT saying, nor proposing to do, NOW.in 2011.
Believe me, this is no useless exercise .
Americans today direly need to be re-energized by a central and morally sane political voice like FDR's again-- even if his message can only be heard now, ONLINE, as seeming 'history.'
Especially because there's no longer any live and centrally audible/ honest pol to say it aloud and firmly today (B. Sanders/ R.Nader, et al notwithstanding), we need to hear and feel what good voices we can, from our not too distant past.
Like listening to powerful music, doing this can have a useful effect when all else seems lost,
What made him think that last weeks elections were a waste of time? He always has an excuse for throwing libs under the bus. The funny thing is how republicans act as if he isn't their agent, all the fake hatred as he gives you more than even Reagan did.
Bang,bang bang.
Will John N ever get 'it'? No way John is a shill for the dims. and as you well know it's approaching the 'lessor' time-frame, at which point we will be obstructed and obfuscated by TPTB. BYW I've been following your posters' logic for quite awhile, big mahalos
I despise Obama with all of my heart and soul.
"lakeqi"
All of your heart and soul?
That seems like too much energy to waste on a man who is merely a typical corporate tool. Both houses of congress and both the democrats and the republicans are loaded with people (conniving, lying, warmongering, greedy) like Obama.
Your energies will be better served by focussing them away from the corporate parties.
You may not win any elections, but you will feel more peace.
The more upset we become, the more they are winning. They don't deserve the attention.
Time to get rid of the men. The republicans are already flirting with this - Palin and Bachmann. But we can do better - Klein and Warren.
Hero worship never did anything. Had the Unions called for a nationwide general strike, Mr O would not be ignoring Wisconsin because it would hurt Wall Street. If the Unions won't fight, then it is time for ordinary citizens to organize.
Take a look at Egypt, an Obama like hero didn't overthrow the government, the people did. Just ordinary citizens that stood their ground and had enough.
I am appalled by these dishonest efforts to rationalize President Obama's indefensible duplicity.
The reality is painfully hard to admit: those of us who voted for him were scammed – deceived as U.S. voters have never been deceived in my lifetime.
Obama won the presidency by cloaking himself in the Big Lie of "change we can believe in."
But ever since his inauguration, he has been showing us his true identity.
He has proven himself to be Barack the Betrayer, the nation's first Trojan Horse president, a Wall Street mercenary disguised as an African-American Democrat.
How could such an outrage happen?
Obama's candidacy was the most cunningly Machiavellian deception ever fostered by the U.S. Ruling Class.
(The damning proof is in the 2008 campaign-finance data revealed by OpenSecrets.org.)
Obama's election may be the most politically ruinous choice in our national history, not the least because he has disillusioned and embittered the electorate to an extent probably without precedent.
Not only has he damaged the credibility of the Democratic Party beyond any possibility of repair; his ever-more-blatant submission to the capitalist aristocracy facilitated the explosion of racism and demagoguery that reduced the Republican Party to a nation-destroying cult of Ayn Rand anarchists.
To those of us who see Obama clearly – especially those of us who now because of his betrayals must live our final years beneath the sword of death-dealing reductions in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid – his Judas-like behavior is the defining characteristic of his presidency.
Indeed the last two years are naught but a chronicle of the deceptions for which Wall Street paid him so generously in 2008.
How does Obama do it?
He speaks eloquently of hope but hides behind the Democrat name while imposing hopelessness – the slave-state economy all capitalists secretly desire but no Republican dared make real until now.
And now too it's a Republican – Speaker of the House John Boehner – who applauds the damage inflicted by Obama's treachery.
Obama, says Boehner, gave me “98 percent of what I wanted."
Wake up, people. How many times are we to be fooled?
Obama is the seductively smiling mortician inviting us to participate in the burial of the American Dream, the glibly persuasive coroner at the inquest for the American experiment in constitutional democracy.
The fix is in; our coffin lids are being nailed shut.
Obama is imposing on us the same zero-tolerance capitalist governance we witness with such horror in the banana republics.
Absolute power and unlimited profit for the Ruling Class, total subjugation and genocidal poverty for all the rest of us – that will be Barack Obama's legacy.
Unless of course we are bold enough to acknowledge the magnitude of our defeat – and courageous enough to organize for resistance.
How I Spent My Summer Vacation
By Barry Obama
I went on a big bus tour, but didn't really see much, didn't say much, didn't do much and then I went home.
Calling Code Pink!
- -
Excerpt from “FDR Went to Wisconsin to Battle 'Economic Royalists,' But Obama Avoids the State and the Fight” by John Nichols :
Obama’s absence from the scene has raised questions about how the man who once promised to march with workers in defense of collective bargaining rights (“If American workers are being denied their right to organize and collectively bargain when I’m in the White House, I will put on a comfortable pair of shoes myself, I’ll will walk on that picket line with you as president of the United States of America. Because workers deserve to know that somebody is standing in their corner.”) could remain so distant from the struggles that matter most.
- - - - -
Excerpt from “Bush 'shoe thrower' claims he was tortured in prison” September 15, 2009:
That chance came at the news conference, when [Muntadhar] al-Zaidi threw both his shoes at Bush and called him a "dog," two of the worst insults in the Middle East. Bush ducked the shoes and was not hurt.
- - - - -
Excerpt from “Bush 'shoe thrower' claims he was tortured in prison” September 15, 2009:
Muntadhar al-Zaidi said he was beaten with cables and pipes and tortured with electricity immediately after guards removed him from a news conference for hurling both shoes at Bush. He said he was taken into another room and beaten even as the news conference continued.
Article URL: http://articles.cnn.com/2009-09-15/world/iraq.shoe.thrower_1_zaidi-baghdad-jail-sentence?_s=PM:WORLD
* * * * *
My Comment:
Well, a group of people like Code Pink could call attention to Obama's hypocrisy and the similarities between Barack Obama and George W. Bush and Bush's pal Dick Cheney by calling Obama a "dog" and throwing pairs of pink tennis shoes at him while he is out on his bus tour instead of out walking in comfortable shoes with protesting or striking union members in Wisconsin or in any other part of the country like he said would
Of course, they might all get electricuted and arrested like Andrew "Don't Tase Me Bro" Meyer or even worse subjected to other types of torture as well like Muntadhar al-Zaidi.
But don't worry, I don't think Obama would get hurt.
Barack Obama is pretty good at ducking the truth and has good reason to be confident that whenever anyone notices his lies (and we do), the mainstreet media will barely notice and the juggernaut of that one billion dollar campaign warchest / hope chest that he is amassing will do the trick.
It's called "free" speech for politicians and wealthy people and corporations, but not for the people.
- -
University of Florida Taser indicident [featuring Q&A after John Kerry's Constitution Day address, September 17, 2007]
Wikipedia URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Florida_Taser_incident
- -
University of Florida student Tasered at Kerry forum
YouTube URL: www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bVa6jn4rpE
Excerpt from "FDR Went to Wisconsin to Battle 'Economic Royalists,' But Obama Avoids the State and the Fight" by John Nichols:
Were Obama to take a similar stand this week, were he to echo Roosevelt’s call for economic justice, the mood would shift—in Wisconsin and nationally—because voters would know, finally, which side their president is on.
* * * * *
My Reply:
Mood shift? Not likely.
Too many voters and non-voters wouldn’t believe him if Obama were to echo Roosevelt. They already know that mere rhetoric won’t produce any jobs and they know whose side in the class war Barack Obama is really on.
Ideological and partisan blindness.
How else could John Nichols possibly not see that Barack Obama is actually working for the "economic Royalists?"
Media reformist turn propagandist?
It is our fault that we did not get off our asses to challenge the failed economic system to change and one reason is that John Nichols and we still think that we can make an unfair system fair
"There is nothing more unequal, than the equal treatment of unequal people."
Thomas Jefferson
An Infinite Succession of Presents
“To be hopeful in bad times is not just foolishly romantic. It is based on the fact that human history is a history not only of cruelty, but also of compassion, sacrifice, courage, kindness. What we choose to emphasize in this complex history will determine our lives. If we see only the worst, it destroys our capacity to do something. If we remember those times and places—and there are so many—where people have behaved magnificently, this gives us the energy to act, and at least the possibility of sending this spinning top of a world in a different direction. And if we do act, in however small a way, we don’t have to wait for some grand utopian future. The future is an infinite succession of presents, and to live now as we think human beings should live, in defiance of all that is bad around us, is itself a marvelous victory.”
Howard Zinn
Remy Germain wrote:
It is our fault that we did not get off our asses to challenge the failed economic system to change and and one reason is that John Nichols and we still think that we can make an unfair system fair
*,* * * *
My Reply,
Remy Germain,
Neither the Thomas Jefferson quote nor the Howard Zinn quote you included in your comments seems to support the last part of you own statement. Perhaps you would have liked to have said more.
In any case, I suggest that we get off our asses again and do something and then do something else and something more after that.until we replace, change, and transform the system, or whatever you want to call the changes we must make.
Revolution?