Monday, June 10, 2013
How Badly Are Things Going For Obama?
By Tom Kando
I just returned from vacation. Although I did keep up with the news, I refrained from commenting on it. This was healthy, but frustrating. Now, it’s time for me to get back into politics. There is so much bad news. Where do I even begin?
A warning to conservative readers: I am as pro-Obama as ever. Let me just touch upon a few random recent events:
1. June 7: Another mass shooting, this one in Santa Monica: More blood on the hands of the NRA and all those opposed to stricter gun control. Meanwhile, the president’s gun control legislation is going nowhere.
By the way: the murderer was shot dead, as often happens in such cases. But here is my stance on this, as well as on capital punishment: Death - whether it’s suicide-by-cop or the gas chamber later on - is way too soft a punishment. To be sure, whenever the safety of law enforcement and of the public dictates killing the mass murderer, there is no choice. However, it would be better to keep these animals alive. They should be forced to suffer, deprived of freedom, living in a stinking cell for the rest of their days, constantly aware of and confronted by their monstrous actions. That would be true punishment.
2. June 6: The California High-Speed Authority approves the first $1 billion appropriation to start building the bullet train: America is joining the ranks of other modern countries and moving into the 21st century. Once they experience the benefits of high-speed rail, Californians will not regret doing this. But for now, the president’s calls for New Deal-type infrastructure projects are mere whistling in the wind.
3. Much of the country is gearing up for Obamacare (the Affordable Care Act - ACA). The naysayers are in the majority - and they are wrong. Already, California shows that most insurance companies are on board and that premiums will not rise dramatically. The 26 reactionary states ( mostly in the South, the Midwest and the Rocky Mountains) that refuse to establish health exchanges do this purely out of spite: 100% of their cost would be born by the federal government for the first three years, and 90% after that. If they could, these mostly Republican states would deny Medicaid to millions of poor people. So in those states, the federal government will have to take over health insurance. That’s fine with me. After the dust settles, in a couple of decades, Obamacare will join Social Security, Medicare and progressive taxation as one of the pillars of a civilized society. It will be part and parcel of the American way of life, providing a safety net for the entire population, as universal health insurance does in all other modern countries. The naysayers will either be dead, or they will have to admit that they were as wrong as the luddites and the flat earth believers.
4. The avalanche of Obama administration pseudo-scandals: Benghazi: As I have been writing for many months, (see my October 20, 2012 post,http://european-americanblog.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-benghazi-pseudo-issue.html) there IS NO scandal here. There was confusion, disagreement among the State Department and the CIA as to what exactly happened, that’s all. The bottom line is that American diplomats were killed by radical Muslims. It turns out that it was an organized terrorist cell rather than a spontaneous anti-American riot. Big deal. No one lied, certainly not Hillary Clinton, the White House, or Susan Rice (the Republicans’ fall guy). Shit happens. Congress didn’t “investigate” an alleged scandal when 241 Americans were killed in Beirut during President Reagan’s presidency. Scandal schmandal.
5. Spying on Associated Press journalists and the “PRISM” scandal (the NSA acquiring telephone and Internet data on us): Whatever the merits of these accusations are, Republican criticism is pure partisan posturing. Only when Obama engages in “Big Brotherism” do they become holier-than-thou protectors of the Bill of Rights. In fact, they favor the surveillance state more than anybody. They happily trample on the First Amendment in order to combat perceived threats ranging from terrorism to unconventional lifestyles. Conservatives favor torture at Guantanamo, the indiscriminate use of drones, censorship, denial of habeas corpus, and the criminalization of various lifestyle choices. This is a case of the pot calling the kettle.
It IS true, however, that our society’s drift towards “Big Brotherism” and a surveillance-type society is worrisome.
6. The IRS scandal: The IRS discriminated against the political Right by raising the bar higher for conservative groups such as the Tea Party when it comes to granting them tax exempt status: This is probably the most damaging accusation of all. It therefore requires a separate post, coming up tomorrow.
All in all, the public’s confidence in Obama and the credibility of his administration are taking severe hits. This is bad. It’s bad not in the ways in which Republicans are enjoying it, as they salivate at the prospect of regaining power during the next elections. It is bad for the country in ways which I will explain in my next post. leave comment here
11 comments:
I agree that so much is happening in such a short period of time. I too support our president and hope that politicians create laws that stop gun violence. We are now required by federal law to have emergency drills in case of a terriost attack on campus. I remember when this type of violence would be considered rare if anything. After the Santa Monica College shootings, I felt more sure than ever that we need to put a stop to making it so easy to purchase weapons.
Gail
Today, the big topic is PRISM, and Edward Snowden, who leaked it. The ACLU is already filing a suit, the Europeans are beginning to agitate for privacy guarantees, the snowball is rolling.
Would it not be surreal if THIS president, of all of them, were to end up in a position as the defender of the police state?
I am almost 100% sure that this cannot happen, but even the remote possibility of something like this happening demonstrates the absurdity of politics!
Welcome Back!
I like you remain a fan of Obama.
And once again you commented reasonably (and briefly)on timely topics. I agree wholeheartedly (with maybe a few caveats. . .of course).
Keep on writing!
I agree with every word. Thanks for speaking my mind. The Republicans have nothing else to fight with so they come up with things to blame Obama for. I wonder if someone took their collective brais!
So far, my post seems to elicit agreement. That's gratifying...
Thanks.
Bengasi is not a pseudo scandal. every president makes mistakes, covering them up hurts your credibility. Like when you hide the fact that it was an Al Qaeda attack, blaming some unknown film maker. Yes I know Bush started the invasion of privacy that Snowden revealed, but Obama continued it & apparently thinks it's ok to continue indefinitely. Using the IRS to attack your political enemies. It remains to be seen if the later was true but given the first two it doesn't sound implausible. The support for both parties have declined in dramatic fashion the last decade. The future if this is to remain on course is that voters will no longer be bullied into supporting the lesser of the ideologues. Adams & Washington loathed a two part system & rightfully so. The government does need to be cut dramatically in some areas and grown dramatically in others, neither party can accomplish this. It needs a surgeon to do the cutting but republicans carry chainsaws. The government has become unmanageable, in an era of cutting school programs there are still conferences in Vegas. As technology advances hopefully we the people can nix such things with a swipe of our app.
Thanks for your comments, Roy:
Benghazi: I do not believe that there was a cover up. The question was not whether to blame an unknown film maker or Al Qaeda, but a spontaneous anti-American riot or Al Qaeda. There WERE numerous spontaneous anti-American riots in the Middle East at that very moment, so that inference was understandable. (There was also a brief and passing discussion of the possible inflammatory role played by that anti-Muslim movie). Big deal.
Your other points: of course there is continuity between administrations, and I too, am disappointed by the Obama administration in some respects. I too, have long argued that our two major parties are in some ways Tweedle-Dee and Tweedle-Dum.
I agree with you that our problems are innumerable. The IRS malfunctioning, government waste, you name it.
But it’s important to keep our eyes on the ball: the essence of the Republican Party is this: $$$, the preservation of privilege for the few, retrograde policies (guns, sexual preference, birth control, foreign policy, etc).
I suppose the people can, out of sheer frustration, return power to the opposition party at the next election. Just as discontent with Lyndon Johnson due to the Vietnam War led to Richard Nixon’s election. This is called jumping from the frying pan into fire.
Item 1. When will the 1st rider use the HS rail to go from here to LA? In our grandchildrens' lifetime? Item 2. Where will the Federal Gov get the money to pay for the 1st 3years of ObamaCare? Fro Russia, China or us taxpayers? Item 4. You are right, SHIt happens and it is in the White House and that is not because he is black.
I can feel your apprehensions about items #1 and #2. As to Item #4, you and I could go around and around as to which branch of government in Washington is the most dysfunctional. But let's not.
To add to point 5. The program was started and designed under Bush.
Johnny is correct. For a discussion of and a debate about the recent leaks and the whole problem of our government spying on us, see our June 25 post on Snowden...
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