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robbo203
1st November 2010, 07:57
Good article from this month's Socialist Standard
http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/index.html

Not disillusioned enough

It is good that so many of Obamas followers are disillusioned. But they are not half as disillusioned as they need to be.

The once fervent supporters of Barack Obama say that they are more and more disillusioned with his politics. And the word should be apt since so many of them were intoxicated by the illusion that one single politician could transform a rotten social system. It seems, though, that many of those who describe themselves as disillusioned are accusing Obama of breaking his promises, rather than blaming themselves for falling prey to a nave illusion.

This seems a bit unfair to Obama, who made no secret during his campaign of his moderate political outlook. A central theme of his campaign, in fact, was the need for bipartisanism to counter the trend towards politics becoming too ideological. Those who now criticize Obama for being yet another spineless Democrat were not paying adequate attention to the statements he made during the campaign. Obama made no secret two years ago of his deeply-held principle of never sticking to any principle. He has never claimed to be anything but a pragmatist, which is a nicer way of saying opportunist.

There was, of course, that promise Obama made about bringing about some sort of change, but isnt it a bit unfair to hold him to such a sweeping and vague promise? And things have changed just not for the better. Over the past two years, millions of Americans have experienced the dramatic change of losing their job or home (or both).

Principled spinelessness
Those painful, negative changes might be easier for some to stomach if Obama had cracked down on Wall Street or ended the senseless wars in the Middle East. But instead he has left many Bush Administration policies intact; and even the few important policy changes that Obama has implemented have been tainted with his principled spinelessness (most notably, his healthcare reform that leaves the parasitic insurance companies in place and even presents them with opportunities for expansion).Yet here again Obama has more or less been true to the positions he held prior to the presidential election. Even if we go back a bit further, to his book The Audacity of Hope, published in 2006, we see that he proudly displayed his essentially conservative politics. Far from making promises to leftwing Democrats or posing as a progressive, Obama was careful to define himself as a political pragmatist, ready and willing to work with the Republicans.

Moreover, one of Obamas traits, as the book reveals, is a concern to not be caught in outright lies. He rarely resorts to statements that directly invert the truth in the style of Bushs We dont torture or Nixons I am not a crook. Rather, Obama likes to underscore the complexity of reality and the need for pragmatic solutions.

Wishful thinking
The idea that President Obama has broken his promises can only seem valid to those who against all the evidence he provided fashioned an image of him as the countrys progressive saviour. These are the people who helped make The Audacity of Hope a bestseller, but one cant help wondering if they got past the first few pages. Anyone who managed to at least read the prologue would have encountered the following passage, which might have given them pause for thought:

I am new enough on the national political scene that I serve as a blank screen on which people of vastly different political stripes project their own views. As such, I am bound to disappoint some, if not all, of them.

Had his readers reflected a bit on this insight, they might have questioned whether the Obama as saviour storyline was not simply a case of wishful thinking. But perhaps that is like asking someone in love to consider the possibility that the object of their love is not quite perfect.

Obamas warning in the prologue might be easy to overlook, but it is followed by countless examples throughout the book where he lays out quite clearly his conservative credentials and deep-rooted affection for the capitalist system, including a prominent passage in that same prologue where he informs the reader that (contrary to what those at Fox News might have believed) not an ounce of socialism will be found in the subsequent pages:

I believe in the free market, competition, and entrepreneurship, and think no small number of government programs dont work as advertisedI think America has more often been a force for good than for ill in the world; I carry few illusions about our enemies, and revere the courage and competence of our militaryI think much of what ails the inner city involves a breakdown in culture that will not be cured by money alone, and that our values and spiritual life matter at least as much as our GDP.

Obama thinks a lot of things in the book, and surprisingly few of his thoughts are in harmony with the views of his leftwing supporters, who worked so hard to get him elected.

Boots on the ground
Take his views on foreign policy, for example. This is an area where the views of the anti-war candidate Obama were thought to differ sharply from the hawkish approach of Hillary Clinton (now his Secretary of State!), not to mention the belligerent policies of Bush and McCain. In fact, Obama made it perfectly clear in The Audacity of Hope that he would deploy US troops when necessary, because like it or not, if we want to make American more secure, we are going to have to help make the world more secure. Rather than rejecting Bushs absurd and counter-productive war on terrorism, Obama wrote that the challenge will involve putting boots on the ground in ungoverned hostile regions where terrorists thrive. And lest the reader imagine that such military force would only be used in retaliation, Obama claims that we have the right to take unilateral military action to eliminate an imminent threat to our security. It is something of a mystery how Obama managed to convince so many that he was a foreign policy dove while at the same time publishing such views.

But the surprising gap between what Obama himself pledged to do and the sort of president many of his supporters hoped he would become is not limited to the realm of foreign policy. For domestic policies as well, the real Obama has turned out to bear almost no resemblance to the second coming of FDR that more than a few had predicted or expected. At this point, I suspect, many disillusioned Democrats would be satisfied with a pale imitation of LBJ.

Yet how can Obama be blamed for those false expectations? In his book, even while recognizing that FDR saved capitalism from itself through his New Deal reforms, Obama does not fundamentally criticize Reagan for setting about dismantling aspects of the welfare system. He even says that there is a good deal of truth in Reagans central insight that the liberal welfare state had grown complacent and overly bureaucratic. And Obama, not surprisingly, praises Clinton, who put a progressive slant on some of Reagans goals, for achieving some equilibrium by creating a smaller government, but one that retained the social safety net FDR had first put into place.

Hardly the stuff of socialism
Obama is not so forthright in explaining his own welfare policies, but he implies that welfare should be a bare minimum. We should be guided throughout, he writes, by Lincolns simple maxim: that we will do collectively, through our government, only those things that we cannot do as well or at all individually and private, leading to a dynamic free market and widespread economic security, entrepreneurial innovation and upward mobility. This is hardly the stuff of socialism or even of West European social democracy.

But there were many, even self-described socialists, who thought that Obama, whatever his statements during the campaign, would be compelled by the economic crisis itself or a growing working class movement, to enact policies similar to the New Deal of the 1930s. This expectation allowed such leftists to adopt the stance of backing Obama in the election without explicitly supporting his politics adopting the posture of critical support of which they are so fond. (I cant help wondering, though, why such socialists cant set a goal higher than once again saving capitalism from itself.)

Yet in the midst of the continuing Great Recession, Obama has not budged from his belief that the solutions to the problems plaguing the United States can be found lying in the middle of the political road, so to speak, just waiting to be picked up. This is the belief he wrote about back in 2006, and his policies in office have been based on it.

An anti-Bush without Bush
Still, it was understandable that so many were drawn to Obama, despite his relative honesty regarding his own conservatism. Millions were sick to their guts of Bush and the Republicans and it was indeed time for a change. The cautious, compromising attitude of Obama could even appear principled compared to the reckless pigheadedness of Bush. The charisma of Obama was based on his self-presentation as the anti-Bush. Clearly, Obama appeared at the opportune time, when much of the population was desperate to believe that the country could change for the better, after eight long years when everything Bush touched turned to shit. This was the basis for the foolish or audacious hope that Obama could, almost single-handedly, set things right.

Obamas once overpowering charisma has faded away, however. Now that few can remember exactly what it felt like to loathe the neocons, he no longer glows in the reflected light of the burning rage against Bush. Obama without Bush is a far less compelling act like a straightman in a comedy duo who decides to go solo.

So people went from the nave view that Bush is the root of all evil to the equally simplistic idea that Obama could uproot that evil. And now we have a sense of disillusionment due to the persistence of deep-rooted problems despite the election of Obama. Yet the idea that Obama has betrayed us is based on the initial illusion that he could rescue us from problems that are deeply rooted in capitalism itself. This notion, in turn, is no different from the superficial idea that those problems arose from Bushs stupidity or mendacity. It is pointless to transform Obama from a saviour into a new scapegoat.

It is good that so many of Obamas followers are disillusioned. But they are not half as disillusioned as they need to be! Only when millions of people finally give up the illusion that capitalism can be fundamentally reformed to somehow create a more humane world will we be on the road to real social change.

MICHAEL SCHUAERTE

B0LSHEVIK
1st November 2010, 18:22
Obama is spineless. I was always very wary of him, how during the debates he so eloquently went around answers and instead only left more questions. I saw how many 'liberals' could be attracted to him, but I could also see how he would be two faced, on health care reform, and on the wars mainly. But when he came in, boy, even I was surprised to see how willing Obama is to bend over backwards to please the right-wing. He's a afraid of confontational politics. He's afraid of being identified as believing in a set of principles. Hes weak. Has no leadership skills, and worse of all, the right wing has already caught on.

He's two faced. He fucked Honduras. He fucked health care reform. He fucked the Iraqis/Afghan people. He fucked the Cuban embargo (its still there). He fucked health care reform. He fucked all to benefit Wall St. He pardoned Wall St. from any responsiblity. He's on the republican dick. Fuck him, hes worthless. Another 2 yrs of Obama, will be the same, compromising twat.

Noinu
1st November 2010, 18:27
One question; how did Obama in your opinion 'fuck' the health care reform?

As far as I understood it, his reform was actually very good, it wasn't perfect but hey, baby steps. It was a definite run to a better direction. Not his fault the reform was voted 'no' on after his proposal. If he wants to be a president that doesn't do anything criminal then he really had no other choice but to stop the reform, it was wanted by the voters.
So basically, shouldn't one blame all those who voted 'no' on the reform and not just Obama?

And compromises in a situation that could be much much worse is far from worthless. Would you have rather had McCain?

Sosa
1st November 2010, 18:55
I blame all the damn democrats in congress for being spineless when they clearly had a majority and could've passed a more robust bill. They all need to grow a pair (except for a handful who were fighting for universal health care)

Noinu
1st November 2010, 19:10
Now that sounds more like it :D

Sosa
1st November 2010, 19:37
Tracking Obama's campaign promises:

http://politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/

syndicat
1st November 2010, 19:44
Obama was always a neo-liberal. He's really a conservative. So there was no objective reason to expect him to behave differently than he has. The expectations were the product of smoke & mirrors.


One question; how did Obama in your opinion 'fuck' the health care reform?


It was a massive sellout to the capitalist insurance companies. Everyone is required to buy health insurance from the private companies. There are no assurances it will be affordable. There are no real controls on ballooning costs, which are based on the relative monopolies held by providers (phyician networks, drug companies, hospital chains), and the extreme duplication of all the plans of the insurance companies, with their duplicate claims bureaucracies.

Obama and the Dems refused to consider the extension of Medicare (government as single payer for everyone) to people under 65.

Robocommie
1st November 2010, 19:45
One question; how did Obama in your opinion 'fuck' the health care reform?


It's instituting an individual mandate requiring us all to buy health insurance without any real price controls. In other words, rather than beginning to move towards a possible public alternative to the private health care industry (which is a fucking monster that needs to be put to the sword) it's only locking it in, and literally giving it federal sanction to keep screwing people out of their money.


Would you have rather had McCain?

McCain probably would have been worse, but that doesn't mean you don't get angry at Obama when he ignores the left wing.

Fulanito de Tal
1st November 2010, 22:07
http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/2010/10/2010103175555761506.html


US: myth of the two party system

Would America look much different if Republican John McCain had beaten Democrat Barack Obama to become president?

Cindy Sheehan Last Modified: 31 Oct 2010 20:14 GMT
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Throughout his political career, Seantor Joe Lieberman of Connecticut has constantly hurdled the "partisan divide" which is a true symbol of the narrow nature of America's institutional political spectrum [EPA]
"The two-party system has given this country the war of Lyndon Johnson, the Watergate of Nixon and the incompetence of Carter. Saying we should keep the two-party system simply because it is working is like saying the Titanic voyage was a success because a few people survived on life rafts."
—Eugene J. McCarthy, 1978

If John McCain were president, we can never be exactly sure what would be happening, but I think we can make some educated speculations.

First of all, the "banksters" would be receiving their carte blanche bailouts and Ben Bernanke would have been re-appointed as Chairman of the Federal Reserve.

Robert Gates would probably still be the secretary of defence and Sarah Palin would be offering late night comedians endless fodder for their monologues.

If John McCain happened to be the one infesting the Oval Office at this time, single-payer health care would surely be "off the table". I am confident that a health care "reform" bill probably would have contained massive giveaways to the insurance and big pharmaceutical industries, with no "robust" public option.

We citizens would, I’m sure, have been forced to purchase insurance from the very same insurance companies that spread out a largess of nearly $170m lobbying dollars to Congress in 2009. If we are one of the "lucky ones" that happen to already have coverage, we would have been taxed for the benefit.

McCain and 'justice'

Without a doubt, McCain’s Justice Department would be protecting war criminals - like John Yoo - of the preceding administration and the McCain Department of Justice (DOJ) would probably be vigorously defending the discriminatory practise of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell for the military.

More than likely, under this nightmarish scenario, McCain’s Federal Bureau of Investigation would be committing home invasion break-ins (designated as "legal raids") to intimidate activists.

McCain probably would have given himself the power to be judge and jury over any American citizen that didn’t approve of his foreign policy.

There is not even a shadow of doubt that McCain would be feigning strictness with Israel, while turning a blind eye to the continued expansions of Israeli settlements in the West Bank and the completely immoral and destructive blockade of Gaza.

If the unthinkable occurred and McCain beat Obama in 2008, official unemployment would be hovering around 10 per cent (unofficial around 20 per cent). And one in every five homes would be in danger of being foreclosed upon. We might even be experiencing the widest income disparity between the rich and poor that we have seen since before the stock market crash of 1929!

McCain, being the "brave" military man, may have tripled troop deployments to Afghanistan and the needless deaths of US troops and Afghan civilians would probably have increased dramatically. I am sure that McCain would have given huge contracts to the US war machine for drones, mercenaries, airplanes and other military hardware.

Being a loyal Bushite, McCain would probably be conscientiously following the Status of Forces Agreement for the slow withdrawal from Iraq that was negotiated between the Bush government, and the puppet regime in Iraq.

At least we aren't bombing Iran!

I get informed all the time, that even though "Obama isn’t so great", at least he hasn’t invaded Iran yet, and McCain surely would have been bombing Iran by now.

Okay so rhetoric towards Iran would be heigtened, but whether McCain would have waged another military campaign during the current political climate would be an assumption too far.

Gosh, if McCain were president right now, the defense budget might be the largest - $741.2bn - since World War II. He might have even asked for billions upon billions of supplemental funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Horrors!

Of course, a McCain education budget would only be about 1/10th of the defense budget at $78bn. And, a McCain education plan would probably contain lots of rigorous testing if the states were to want more desperately needed funds.

If McCain were president, there would be an active "anti-war" movement. However - as during the Bush years - the "movement" wouldn’t be so much antiwar, but anti-war waged by the Republicans. The anti-Republican movement wants no systemic change, it just wants Democrats in office.

Blurring the political divide

However in almost every case, Democrat equals the status quo.

Of course, in all of my above scenarios, Obama and his regime have done all of those things that people were afraid that McCain would do, but there’s an extremely small outcry.

Here we are, once again, careening madly down the path to electoral ruin—where voting for the "lesser of two evils" has become a national pastime.

When the elite class gives the appearance of only two choices on the ballot, we end up voting "against" a candidate far more times than we vote "for" someone.

What’s wrong with us? We are lazy, we are fearful, the establishment beats us down, we are ignorant, and we are defeated. Voting at least gives us the latent feeling that we are doing something, when we are really doing very little.

We righteously march down to our polling place, like good soldiers for the status quo. We vote. We get our little stickers with an American flag that proudly proclaims: I VOTED. But when we vote for a member of the political duopoly, we are only voting for "Dee or Dum".

The Democrats had their chance during the last four years, and instead of passing progressive legislation and ending the wars, they have pandered to the right, which has been emboldened by the power the Democrats gave it.

Now the Republicans are poised to take over at least the House of Representatives. And Democrats will begin to spew progressivism out of their lying mouths and abuse the energy of their newly-angry base to try to regain power - like the Republicans have done effectively for the past two years.

Will progressives ever learn that political pandering and fear-based voting never brings anything but defeat, or are we trapped in a vicious cycle of our own making?

Cindy Sheehan is the mother of Specialist Casey A. Sheehan, who was killed in Iraq on April 4, 2004. Since then, she has been an activist for peace and human rights. She has published five books, has her own Internet radio show, Cindy Sheehan’s Soapbox, and has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Cindy lives in Oakland, CA, and loves to spend time with her three grand-babies. You can learn more about Cindy at Peace of the Action.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

Personal conclusion: 1) Obama = McCain, 2) Democrats are scared, and 3) We, the people, are pawns.

I think it's important to read articles like this one because it's a reminder of why I think the way I do.

Amphictyonis
1st November 2010, 23:12
One question; how did Obama in your opinion 'fuck' the health care reform?

As far as I understood it, his reform was actually very good, it wasn't perfect but hey, baby steps. It was a definite run to a better direction. Not his fault the reform was voted 'no' on after his proposal. If he wants to be a president that doesn't do anything criminal then he really had no other choice but to stop the reform, it was wanted by the voters.
So basically, shouldn't one blame all those who voted 'no' on the reform and not just Obama?

And compromises in a situation that could be much much worse is far from worthless. Would you have rather had McCain?

I haven't negative repped anyone yet but you're coming close ;)

B0LSHEVIK
2nd November 2010, 01:54
Obama's health care reform includes many much needed reforms touted as a 'patients bill of rights.' Im all for this. However, Obama and Dems way of providing universal coverage, was to make a law mandating individuals to purchase health insurance from predatory private insurance companies. This is corportaism as Mussolini put it. Fuck Obama and his sell out to the insurance industry health 'reform.'

9
2nd November 2010, 02:04
Really my only qualm with the OP's article is that it totally pretends like there was no colossal marketing campaign to portray Obama as a "progressive savior", and that the fact that people who voted for him had this image of him is all a matter of their own "wishful thinking" or 'overactive imaginations'.

Other than that, though, its a decent article.

MarxSchmarx
2nd November 2010, 15:16
I for one am "disillusioned" by Obama, in the following sense. He is a mediocre politician.

Obama has no ability to sell his reforms. He lacks the salesmanship to hold on even to his tepid and right-wing agenda. Based on his campaign, I thought he had enough of an acumen in dealing with the press and the like. As such I am disappointed in his poor salesmanship - something which truly adept politicians like Chavez, Blair and Koizumi, and to a lesser extent Bush Jr., can do to push their agendas, but Obama clearly doesn't have this ability.


Obama was always a neo-liberal. He's really a conservative. So there was no objective reason to expect him to behave differently than he has. The expectations were the product of smoke & mirrors.


Such characterization of starry-eyed obama supporters is more myth than reality. It seemed in 2008 that his coalition basically single-handedly relegated the GOP to permanent minority. I think a lot of the liberal sentiment wasn't so much that they had a "savior", but rather a sigh of relief that the worst of the worst was behind us. As such I don't really buy into this Obamania myth that the serious left and the right propagate for rather self-serving reasons - the right for obvious reasons, the left probably because it provides consolation for why their candidate/message of change is ignored. Rather, I think that many liberals were glad that a relatively charismatic and personally well-liked man finally arrived who can tip the balance away from Republicans, and had hoped the rest would be history. Sure there were a few idiots who swallowed his slick campaign hook line and sinker, and to some extent the basically unwavering support from many segments of the African American community is understandable. But by and large I think we underestimate (overestimate?) the aspirations and acumen of most lefty/pwogwessive types a

thriller
2nd November 2010, 15:35
And compromises in a situation that could be much much worse is far from worthless. Would you have rather had McCain?

I would, one must hasten the revolution, and Obama has helped to stall it. Although in retrospect, maybe the Tea Party is hastening it, who knows.

I like how the OP's article states that people actually thought one man could change an entire system. I agree with that. As Debs said: "If I could lead you to the promise land, I wouldn't, because someone else could lead you out."

I'm pretty sure Obama will be voted out in 2012. He is spineless, he doesn't give a shit about 'change' and he's so lethargic he won't even refute the claims of being a 'socialist', which I'm sure angers many people on here. To his supporters, he's weak and timid in a time of crises, and to his critics he's a socialist who hates America. Either way, he's FUCKED.

9
2nd November 2010, 16:01
Such characterization of starry-eyed obama supporters is more myth than reality.
I don't think so, man; a lot of otherwise very sensible people I know really went a bit crazy over him. Obviously there are reasons for it; things get really rough with the economy, a lot of people who've worked at a particular job for decades find themselves laid off without any prospects, their home foreclosed on in many cases - a lot of people were very eager to "believe in" some sort of sudden relief, something to feel hopeful about in a desperate situation; Obama's campaign was designed exactly to take advantage of this.


Sure there were a few idiots who swallowed his slick campaign hook line and sinkerTbh, I think this is a really stupid characterization, no offense; plenty of people have illusions in politicians and in bourgeois democracy in general, and most of them aren't "idiots", but they have illusions. A lot of people wholeheartedly bought into Obama's campaign; it seems pretty strange to try to deny it.

Obs
2nd November 2010, 16:06
One question; how did Obama in your opinion 'fuck' the health care reform?

As far as I understood it, his reform was actually very good, it wasn't perfect but hey, baby steps. It was a definite run to a better direction. Not his fault the reform was voted 'no' on after his proposal. If he wants to be a president that doesn't do anything criminal then he really had no other choice but to stop the reform, it was wanted by the voters.
So basically, shouldn't one blame all those who voted 'no' on the reform and not just Obama?

And compromises in a situation that could be much much worse is far from worthless. Would you have rather had McCain?
I'm not sure this is the site for you.

Lucretia
2nd November 2010, 22:31
I don't like people who call Obama spineless. It promotes this fable that Obama really does have the right convictions, really does oppose on a visceral level the wrong-doings attendant to a class-divided society. Only, he is just too much of a wimp to stand by those noble convictions.

In reality Obama is doing exactly what Obama wants to do. He's an advocate of a class-divided market society through and through.

B0LSHEVIK
3rd November 2010, 01:38
Would you have rather had McCain?

I love that argument. Would McCain be better? Worse? The same perhaps?

Let us review;

1) Of Obama's $700 billion 'stimulus,' almost $400 billion were in tax cuts. A very GOP thing to do.

2) We are still at war in 2 countries, and even surged in one. McCain would approve.

3) Health care reform is a mandate to purchase private health plans. McCain would approve.

4) Obama created no jobs program. McCain would approve.

5) Obama did nothing major or game changing to alter Wall St. McCain would approve.

6) Obama didnt raise a finger to help Honduras, and wouldnt have helped Correa in Ecuador. McCain would approve.

I really dont see the same.

Die Neue Zeit
3rd November 2010, 02:12
And I also don't think McCain would have gone to war with Iran, despite the public rhetoric and even the rhetoric here.