Wednesday, December 09, 2009

Obama Needs Our Prayers

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I made this little "Prayer For Obama" clip for the Drunken Sufis "song"-- but with no joy, none at all-- and I planned to post it at the bottom of the 6AM Afghanistan post. But then I found the Eric Massa clip and the Dennis Kucinich document and I figured they were more important. It's just a couple seconds long so it doesn't stand on it's own as a music post... and then I found Matt Taibbi's new Rolling Stone story, Obama's Big Sellout. It's about Wall Street, not Afghanistan, but it's another side of a dreadful card many of us are finally contemplating. Taibbi walks us through it:
Barack Obama ran for president as a man of the people, standing up to Wall Street as the global economy melted down in that fateful fall of 2008. He pushed a tax plan to soak the rich, ripped NAFTA for hurting the middle class and tore into John McCain for supporting a bankruptcy bill that sided with wealthy bankers "at the expense of hardworking Americans." Obama may not have run to the left of Samuel Gompers or Cesar Chavez, but it's not like you saw him on the campaign trail flanked by bankers from Citigroup and Goldman Sachs. What inspired supporters who pushed him to his historic win was the sense that a genuine outsider was finally breaking into an exclusive club, that walls were being torn down, that things were, for lack of a better or more specific term, changing.

Then he got elected.

What's taken place in the year since Obama won the presidency has turned out to be one of the most dramatic political about-faces in our history. Elected in the midst of a crushing economic crisis brought on by a decade of orgiastic deregulation and unchecked greed, Obama had a clear mandate to rein in Wall Street and remake the entire structure of the American economy. What he did instead was ship even his most marginally progressive campaign advisers off to various bureaucratic Siberias, while packing the key economic positions in his White House with the very people who caused the crisis in the first place. This new team of bubble-fattened ex-bankers and laissez-faire intellectuals then proceeded to sell us all out, instituting a massive, trickle-up bailout and systematically gutting regulatory reform from the inside.

I suggest you read the rest of Matt's article. It's a lot better than my sad little clip up top.

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3 Comments:

At 5:21 AM, Anonymous Balakirev said...

Perhaps we should have a Constitution that defines, not the operations of a federal government, but of people electing a federal government. Then we could include the clause, "The People shall invoke the right of Franchise to elect a President only if they shall first have proved to have researched the background of those who seek high office." Face it, guys: the Obama that ran for President was the joker in the deck. The one who got elected was the same one who served in Congress, as his record shows. He just delivered a very inspiring snow job, as I noted on several blogs last year.

 
At 6:19 AM, Blogger Publius said...

Dear Balakirev,

While I agree with you, It appears that no one is paying attention to the constitution we have, so I am not sure changing what it says would do us any good.

The Media elected Obama.

The little video in this post re-enforces the motto for this blog.

"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying the cross." -- Sinclair Lewis

Guess what? "It Can Happen Here!"

 
At 9:08 AM, Anonymous Balakirev said...

Publius,

I seem to recall the media being largely neutral on Obama, while McCain got himself one hell of a love affair from them--until he made the mistake of lashing out at them on the stage at the Republican Convention. Before that, what with all those ribs on the Bus to Nowhere (or whatever it was called), he sucked up to the media very well indeed, and got it back in spades. None of the national media outlets (or of course, any of the DC pundits) questioned McCain about his endless flipflops on issues. The media, on the other hand, began venting Obama birther conspiracies at that time, as well as some other examples of bacterial lifeforms that should never have been allowed out of newsroom labs.

Mind you, I'm not suggesting Obama had the incredibly tough time that, say, Gore had. And I agree with you to the extent that Obama never was questioned on the yawning gulf between his voting record and his rhetoric--but then, when has the national media ever done its job and stuck to this? Certainly not for Bush, who was touted as a compromising moderate, when in fact he was known in Texas as an incredibly insensitive hard-ass who played up to the far right.

 

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