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FOCUS | A Conspiracy of Stupidity Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6396"><span class="small">Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Wednesday, 13 February 2013 12:20

Engelhardt writes: "You could, of course, sit there, slack-jawed, thinking about how mindlessly repetitive American foreign and military policy is these days. Or you could wield all sorts of fancy analytic words to explain it."

President Obama returning to the Oval Office, 07/20/12. (photo: Getty Images)
President Obama returning to the Oval Office, 07/20/12. (photo: Getty Images)



A Conspiracy of Stupidity

By Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch

13 February 13

 

ou could, of course, sit there, slack-jawed, thinking about how mindlessly repetitive American foreign and military policy is these days. Or you could wield all sorts of fancy analytic words to explain it. Or you could just settle for a few simple, all-American ones. Like dumb. Stupid. Dimwitted. Thick-headed. Or you could speak about the second administration in a row that wanted to leave no child behind, but was itself incapable of learning, or reasonably assessing its situation in the world.

Or you could simply wonder what's in Washington's water supply. Last week, after all, there was a perfect drone storm of a story, only a year or so late - and no, it wasn't that leaked "white paper" justifying the White House-directed assassination of an American citizen; and no, it wasn't the two secret Justice Department "legal" memos on the same subject that members of the Senate Intelligence Committee were allowed to "view," but in such secrecy that they couldn't even ask John O. Brennan, the president's counterterrorism tsar and choice for CIA director, questions about them at his public nomination hearings; and no, it wasn't anything that Brennan, the man who oversaw the White House "kill list" and those presidentially chosen drone strikes, said at the hearings. And here's the most striking thing: it should have set everyone's teeth on edge, yet next to nobody even noticed.

Last Tuesday, the Washington Post published a piece by Greg Miller and Karen DeYoung about a reportorial discovery which that paper, along with other news outlets (including the New York Times), had by "an informal arrangement" agreed to suppress (and not even very well) at the request of the Obama administration. More than a year later, and only because the Times was breaking the story on the same day (buried in a long investigative piece on drone strikes), the Post finally put the news on record. It was half-buried in a piece about the then-upcoming Brennan hearings. Until that moment, its editors had done their patriotic duty, urged on by the CIA and the White House, and kept the news from the public. Never mind, that the project was so outright loony, given our history, that they should have felt the obligation to publish it instantly with screaming front-page headlines and a lead editorial demanding an explanation.

On the other hand, you can understand just why the Obama administration and the CIA preferred that the story not come out. Among other things, it had the possibility of making them look like so many horses' asses and, again based on a historical record that any numbskull or government bureaucrat or intelligence analyst should recall, it couldn't have been a more dangerous thing to do. It's just the sort of Washington project that brings the word "blowback" instantly and chillingly to mind. It's just the sort of story that should make Americans wonder why we pay billions of dollars to the CIA to think up ideas so lame that you have to wonder what the last two CIA directors, Leon Panetta and David Petraeus, were thinking. (Or if anyone was thinking at all.)

"Agitated Muslims" and the "100 Hour War"

In case you hadn't noticed, I have yet to mention what that suppressed story was, and given the way it disappeared from sight, the odds are that you don't know, so here goes. The somewhat less than riveting headline on the Post piece was: "Brennan Nomination Exposes Criticism on Targeted Killings and Secret Saudi Base." The base story was obviously tacked on at the last second. (There had actually been no "criticism" of that base, since next to nothing was known about it.) It, too, was buried, making its first real appearance only in the 10th paragraph of the piece.

According to the Post, approximately two years ago, the CIA got permission from the Saudi government to build one of its growing empire of drone bases in a distant desert region of that kingdom. The purpose was to pursue an already ongoing air war in neighboring Yemen against al-Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula.

The first drone mission from that base seems to have taken off on September 30, 2011, and killed American citizen and al-Qaeda supporter Anwar al-Awlaki. Many more lethal missions have evidently been flown from it since, most or all directed at Yemen in a campaign that notoriously seems to be creating more angry Yemenis and terror recruits than it's killing. So that's the story you waited an extra year to hear from our watchdog press (though for news jockeys, the existence of the base was indeed mentioned in the interim by numerous media outlets).

One more bit of information: Brennan, the president's right-hand counterterrorism guy, who oversaw Obama's drone assassination program from an office in the White House basement (you can't take anything away from Washington when it comes to symbolism) and who is clearly going to be approved by the Senate as our the new CIA director, was himself a former CIA station chief in Riyadh. The Post reports that he worked closely with the Saudis to "gain approval" for the base. So spread the credit around for this one. And note as well that there hasn't been a CIA director with such close ties to a president since William Casey ran the outfit for President Ronald Reagan, and he was the man who got this whole ball of wax rolling by supporting, funding, and arming any Islamic fundamentalist in sight - the more extreme the better - to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

Chalmers Johnson used to refer to the CIA as "the president's private army." Now, run by this president's most trusted aide, it once again truly will be so.

Okay, maybe it's time to put this secret drone base in a bit of historical context. (Think of this as my contribution to a leave-no-administration-behind policy.) In fact, that Afghan War Casey funded might be a good place to start. Keep in mind that I'm not talking about the present Afghan War, still ongoing after a mere 11-plus years, but our long forgotten First Afghan War. That was the one where we referred to those Muslim extremists we were arming as "freedom fighters" and our president spoke of them as "the moral equivalent of our Founding Fathers."

It was launched to give the Soviets a bloody nose and meant as payback for our bitter defeat in Vietnam less than a decade earlier. And what a bloody nose it would be! Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev would dub the Soviet disaster there "the bleeding wound," and two years after it ended, the Soviet Union would be gone. I'm talking about the war that, years later, President Jimmy Carter's former national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski summed up this way: "What is more important in world history? The Taliban or the collapse of the Soviet empire? Some agitated Muslims or the liberation of Central Europe and the end of the Cold War?"

That's all ancient history and painful to recall now that "agitated Muslims" are a dime a dozen and we are (as Washington loves to say) in a perpetual global "war" with a "metastasizing" al-Qaeda, an organization that emerged from among our allies in the First Afghan War, as did so many of the extremists now fighting us in Afghanistan.

So how about moving on to a shining moment a decade later: our triumph in the "100 Hour War" in which Washington ignominiously ejected its former ally (and later Hitler-substitute) Saddam Hussein and his invading Iraqi army from oil-rich Kuwait? Those first 100 hours were, in every sense, a blast. The problems only began to multiply with all the 100-hour periods that followed for the next decade, the 80,000th, all of which were ever less fun, what with eternal no-fly zones to patrol and an Iraqi dictator who wouldn't leave the scene.

The Worldwide Attack Matrix and a Global War on Terror

Maybe, like Washington, we do best to skip that episode, too. Let's focus instead on the moment when, in preparation for that war, U.S. troops first landed in Saudi Arabia, that fabulously fundamentalist giant oil reserve; when those 100 hours were over (and Saddam wasn't), they never left. Instead, they moved into bases and hunkered down for the long haul.

By now, I'm sure some of this is coming back to you: how disturbed, for instance, the rich young Saudi royal and Afghan war veteran Osama bin Laden and his young organization al-Qaeda were on seeing those "infidels" based in (or, as they saw it, occupying) the country that held Islam's holiest shrines and pilgrimage sites. I'm sure you can trace al-Qaeda's brief grim history from there: its major operations every couple of years against U.S. targets to back up its demand that those troops depart the kingdom, including the Khobar Towers attack in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 U.S. airmen in 1996, the destruction of two U.S. embassies in Africa in 1998, and the blowing up of the USS Cole in the Yemeni port of Aden in 2000. Finally, of course, there was al-Qaeda's extraordinary stroke of dumb luck (and good planning), those attacks of September 11, 2001, which managed - to the reported shock of at least one al-Qaeda figure - to create an apocalyptic-looking landscape of destruction in downtown New York City.

And here's where we go from dumb luck to just plain dumb. Lusting for revenge, dreaming of a Middle Eastern (or even global) Pax Americana, and eager to loose a military that they believed could eternally dominate any situation, the Bush administration declared a "global war" on terrorism. Only six days after the World Trade Center towers went down, George W. Bush granted the CIA an unprecedented license to wage planet-wide war. By then, it had already presented a plan with a title worthy of a sci-fi film: the "Worldwide Attack Matrix." According to journalist Ron Suskind in his book The One Percent Doctrine, the plan "detailed operations [to come] against terrorists in 80 countries."

This was, of course, a kind of madness. After all, al-Qaeda wasn't a state or even much of an organization; in real terms, it barely existed. So declaring "war" on its scattered minions globally was little short of a bizarre and fantastical act. And yet any other approach to what had happened was promptly laughed out of the American room. And before you could blink, the U.S. was invading… nuts, you already knew the answer: Afghanistan.

After another dazzlingly brief and triumphant campaign, using tiny numbers of American military personnel and CIA operatives (as well as U.S. air power), the first of Washington's you-can't-go-home-again crew marched into downtown Kabul and began hunkering down, building bases, and preparing to stay. One Afghan war, it turned out, hadn't been faintly enough for Washington. And soon, it would be clear that one Iraq war wasn't either. By now, we were in the express lane in the Möbius loop of history.

"Stuff Happens"

This should be getting more familiar to you. It might also strike you - though it certainly didn't Washington back in 2002-2003 - that there was no reason things should turn out better the second time around. With that new "secret Saudi base" in mind, remember that somewhere in the urge to invade Iraq was the desire to find a place in the heart of the planet's oil lands where the Pentagon would be welcome to create not "enduring camps" (please don't call them "permanent bases"!) - and hang in for enduring decades to come.

So in early April 2003, invading American troops entered a chaotic Baghdad, a city being looted. ("Stuff happens," commented Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in response.) On April 29th, Rumsfeld held a news conference with Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz, broadcast on Saudi TV, announcing that the U.S. would pull all its combat troops out of that country. No more garrisons in Saudi Arabia. Ever. U.S. air operations were to move to al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar. As for the rest, there was no need even to mention Iraq. This was just two days before President Bush landed a jet, Top Gun-style, on an aircraft carrier off San Diego and - under a White House-produced banner reading "Mission Accomplished" - declared "the end of major combat operations in Iraq." And all's well that ends well, no?

You know the rest, the various predictable disasters that followed (as well as the predictably unpredictable ones). But don't think that, as America's leaders repeat their mistakes endlessly - using varying tactics, ranging from surges to counterinsurgency to special operations raids to drones, all to similar purposes - everything remains repetitively the same. Not at all. The repeated invasions, occupations, interventions, drone wars, and the like have played a major role in the unraveling of the Greater Middle East and increasingly of northern Africa as well.

Here, in fact, is a rule of thumb for you: keep your eye on the latest drone bases the CIA and the U.S. military are setting up abroad - in Niger, near its border with Mali, for example - and you have a reasonable set of markers for tracing the further destabilization of the planet. Each eerily familiar tactical course change (always treated as a brilliant strategic coup) each next application of force, and more things "metastasize."

And so we reach this moment and the news of that two-year-old secret Saudi drone base. You might ask yourself, given the previous history of U.S. bases in that country, why the CIA or any administration would entertain the idea of opening a new U.S. outpost there. Evidently, it's the equivalent of catnip for cats; they just couldn't help themselves.

We don't, of course, know whether they blanked out on recent history or simply dismissed it out of hand, but we do know that once again garrisoning Saudi Arabia seemed too alluring to resist. Without a Saudi base, how could they conveniently strike al-Qaeda wannabes in a neighboring land they were already attacking from the air? And if they weren't to concentrate every last bit of drone power on taking out al-Qaeda types (and civilians) in Yemen, one of the more resource-poor and poverty-stricken places on the planet? Why, the next thing you know, al-Qaeda might indeed be ruling a Middle Eastern Caliphate. And after that, who knows? The world?

Honestly, could there have been a stupider gamble to take (again)? This is the sort of thing that helps you understand why conspiracy theories get started - because people in the everyday world just can't accept that, in Washington, dumb and then dumber is the order of the day.

When it comes to that "secret" Saudi base, if truth be told, it does look like a conspiracy - of stupidity. After all, the CIA pushed for and built that base; the White House clearly accepted it as a fine idea. An informal network of key media sources agreed that it really wasn't worth the bother to tell the American people just how stupidly their government was acting. (The managing editor of the New York Times explained its suppression by labeling the story nothing more than "a footnote.") And last week, at the public part of the Brennan nomination hearings, none of the members of the Senate Intelligence Committee, which is supposed to provide the CIA and the rest of the U.S. Intelligence Community with what little oversight they get, thought it appropriate to ask a single question about the Saudi base, then in the news.

The story was once again buried. Silence reigned. If, in the future, blowback does occur, thanks to the decision to build and use that base, Americans won't make the connection. How could they?

It all sounds so familiar to me. Doesn't it to you? Shouldn't it to Washington?


Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. His latest book, co-authored with Nick Turse, is Terminator Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050. His other most recent book is The United States of Fear (Haymarket Books). Previous books include: The End of Victory Culture: a History of the Cold War and Beyond, The American Way of War: How Bush's Wars Became Obama's, as well as of a novel, The Last Days of Publishing.

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FOCUS | The Biggest Republican Lie Print
Wednesday, 13 February 2013 11:39

Reich writes: "Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) says Senate Republicans will unanimously support a balanced-budget amendment, to be unveiled Wednesday as the core of the GOP's fiscal agenda."

Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)



The Biggest Republican Lie

By Robert Reich,Robert Reich's Blog

13 February 10

 

enate minority leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) says Senate Republicans will unanimously support a balanced-budget amendment, to be unveiled Wednesday as the core of the GOP's fiscal agenda. There's no chance of passage so why are Republicans pushing it now? "Just because something may not pass doesn't mean that the American people don't expect us to stand up and be counted for the things that we believe in," says McConnnell.

The more honest explanation is that a fight over a balanced-budget amendment could get the GOP back on the same page - reuniting Republican government-haters with the Party's fiscal conservatives. And it could change the subject away from  social issues - women's reproductive rights, immigration, gay marriage – that have split the Party and cost it many votes.

It also gives the Party something to be for, in contrast to the upcoming fights in which its members will be voting against compromises to avoid the next fiscal cliff, continue funding the government, and raising the debt ceiling.

Perhaps most importantly, it advances the Republican's biggest economic lie – that the budget deficit is "the transcendent issue of our time," in McConnell's words, and that balancing the budget will solve America's economic problems.

Big lies can do great damage in a democracy. This one could help Republicans in their coming showdowns. But it could keep the economy in first gear for years, right up through the 2014 midterm elections, maybe all the way to the next presidential election.

Perhaps this has occurred to McConnell and other Republicans.

Here's the truth: After the housing bubble burst, American consumers had to pull in their belts so tightly that consumption plummeted – which in turn fueled unemployment. Consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of economic activity in the U.S. No business can keep people employed without enough customers, and none will hire people back until consumers return.

That meant government had to step in as consumer of last resort – which it did, but not enough to make up for the gaping shortfall in consumer demand.

The result has been one of the most anemic recoveries on record. In the three years after the Great Recession ended, economic growth averaged only 2.2 percent per year. In the last quarter of 2012 the economy contracted. Almost no one believes it will grow much more than 2 percent this year.

In the wake of the previous ten recessions the U.S. economy grew twice as fast on average - 4.6 percent per year. It used to be that the deeper the recession, the faster the bounce back. The Great Depression bottomed out in 1933. In 1934, the economy grew more than 8 percent; in 1935, 8.2 percent; in 1936, almost 14 percent.

Not this time. Unemployment is still sky high. The current official rate of 7.9 percent doesn't include 8 million people (5.6 percent of the workforce) working part-time who'd rather be working full time. Nor those too discouraged even to look for work. The ratio of workers to non-workers in the adult population is lower than any time in the last thirty years – and that's hardly explained by boomer retirements.

Wages continue to drop because the only way many Americans can find (or keep) jobs is by settling for lower pay. Most new jobs created since the depth of the Great Recession pay less than the jobs that were lost. That's why the real median wage is now 8 percent below what it was in 2000

Republicans who say the budget deficit is responsible for this are living on another planet. Consumers still don't have the jobs and wages, nor ability to borrow, they had before the recession. So their belts are still tight. To make matters worse, the temporary cut in Social Security taxes ended January 1, subtracting an additional $1,000 from the typical American paycheck. Sales taxes are increasing in many states.

Under these circumstances, government deficits are not a problem. To the contrary, they're now essential. (Yes, we have to bring down the long-term deficit, but that's mostly a matter of reining in rising healthcare costs – which, incidentally, are beginning to slow.)

If Republicans paid attention they'd see how fast the deficit is already shrinking. It was 8.7 percent of the Gross Domestic Product in 2011. The Congressional Budget Office forecasts it will shrivel to 5.3 percent by the end of 2013 if we go over the fiscal cliff on March 1 - and some $85 billion is cut from this year's federal budget. Even if March's fiscal cliff is avoided, the CBO expects the deficit to shrink to 5.5 percent of the GDP, in light of deficit reduction already scheduled to occur.

This is not something to celebrate. It translates into a significant drop in demand, with nothing to pick up the slack.

Look what happened in the fourth quarter of 2012. The economy contracted, largely because of a precipitous drop in defense spending. That may have been an anomaly; no one expects the economy to contract in the first quarter of 2013. But you'd be foolish to rule out a recession later this year.

The budget deficit and cumulative debt are not the "transcendent issue of our time." The transcendent issue is jobs and wages. Cutting the budget deficit now will only result in higher unemployment, lower wages, and more suffering.


Robert B. Reich, Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written thirteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock" and "The Work of Nations." His latest is an e-book, "Beyond Outrage." He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause.

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Guns and Cuts: Hear the Big Dog Bark Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=5494"><span class="small">Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Wednesday, 13 February 2013 09:17

Weissman writes: "Where the Republicans differ is that they do not see cuts to non-military spending having the same negative impact. Why, I wonder, should economic logic apply one way to airplanes and tanks and a different way to Medicare, Social Security, and payments to the unemployed?"

President Barack Obama talks with former President Bill Clinton before an event in McLean, Va. (photo: Getty Images)
President Barack Obama talks with former President Bill Clinton before an event in McLean, Va. (photo: Getty Images)



Guns and Cuts: Hear the Big Dog Bark

By Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News

13 February 10

 

ill Clinton has never been one of my favorites, but when the Big Dog tells the truth, the rest of us better take notice, whether on spending cuts or gun control.

"The debt problem can't be solved right now by conventional austerity measures," he told congressional Democrats at their annual retreat in Virginia. "And that's why Paul Krugman is right when he keeps talking about all these - everybody that's tried austerity in a time of no growth has wound up cutting revenues even more than they cut spending because you just get into the downward spiral and drag the country back into recession."

Many Republican leaders agree, but only in part. They correctly see cuts to the Pentagon budget as a threat to jobs, economic growth, and tax revenues. This is standard economics, going back to the late John Maynard Keynes and now widely accepted by economists across the political spectrum.

Where the Republicans differ is that they do not see cuts to non-military spending having the same negative impact. Why, I wonder, should economic logic apply one way to airplanes and tanks and a different way to Medicare, Social Security, and payments to the unemployed?

On gun control, Clinton sounded a similar cautionary note, with which Republicans largely agree while many Democrats tend to shut their minds. "Do not patronize the passionate supporters of your opponents by looking down your nose at them," he told a meeting of Obama's National Finance Committee, which several business leaders attended.

"A lot of these people live in a world very different from the world lived in by the people proposing these things," Clinton said. "I know because I come from this world." Clinton is talking political reality. Democrats have lost elections - and will lose more - by insulting law-abiding voters who grew up with guns as a normal part of their households.

Historically, these have been largely Protestants from small towns and rural states, especially in the South and West, but they now include working-class Catholic hunters across the Midwest. Those of us who come from non-gun cultures have disproportionately been big city Catholics and Jews, and we are influenced by our cultural prejudices every bit as much as supporters of the National Rifle Association (NRA) are influenced by theirs. We do, as Clinton says, tend to look down our noses at gun-owners, who do not need the NRA to point out what we're doing.

A prime example of our attitude problem cropped up when presidential candidate Barack Obama was taped at a 2008 fundraiser in San Francisco "explaining" small-town voters in Pennsylvania and the Midwest. He talked of how they "cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren't like them or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations."

In his off-the-cuff remarks, Obama blamed these frustrations on both the Clinton and Bush administrations for promising - and failing to deliver - new jobs. But he clearly showed condescension toward the culture of "God, Guns, and Glory." These elitist attitudes simply hand the National Rifle Association all the ammunition it needs to win support from law-abiding gun-owners and help gun-makers sell more guns.

The cultural divide goes even deeper and becomes inevitably entangled with race. In his widely read "The Second Amendment was Ratified to Preserve Slavery," the indispensable Thom Hartmann recently told how the "Right to Bear Arms" became part of the Bill of Rights because Southern plantation owners wanted a Constitutional guarantee for their use of "well regulated militias" as armed patrols to hold down slave rebellions. Intended or not, Thom's subtext was obvious. Liberal Americans need not respect the Second Amendment because it grew out of such racist thinking.

Thom sadly ignored the other two-thirds of the story. Following the Civil War, recently freed slaves took up guns to defend themselves from groups like the Ku Klux Klan and argued that the Second Amendment gave them the right to do so. The Supreme Court ruled against the blacks in Cruikshank (1875), claiming that the right to bear arms applied only to the state militias, which in time became the National Guard. Liberals have used this essentially racist argument to defend gun control down to the present day.

Those of us politically active in California in the 1960s will also remember that the beginning of modern gun control came when right wing members of the Legislature passed a new law to disarm the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense.

None of this racially charged history should determine whether we are for or against reasonable gun controls. But history is what it is, and we all lose by citing only one side of the story and ignoring the other.

Given all this, we all need to wonder aloud whether the current gun control effort has unintentionally become less about actually saving lives and more about scoring symbolic points in a culture war that neither side can win.

Just think about where we are. If Congress could pass a law banning semi-automatic rifles, the ban would likely exempt existing "assault weapons," as did Clinton's largely ineffective ban in 1994. But the alternative would be worse. Do we really want the federal government attempting to confiscate weapons from otherwise law-abiding gun-owners? And either way, Congress won't touch handguns, which cause most firearm deaths.

Some of Obama's reforms - notably limits on large gun clips and better background checks and gun registration - clearly make sense and do not seriously threaten the rights most gun-owners want. But think how much more we would gain by putting even half of this new-found energy into mobilizing frustrated Americans with and without guns into a unifying fight against austerity and for those jobs that Obama is still promising but not delivering in anywhere near sufficient numbers.


Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he writes on international affairs. In 1981, he produced and reported the Frontline documentary "Gunfight U.S.A."

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Obama Sets Proudly Progressive Agenda in State of the Union Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=22410"><span class="small">Henry Decker, National Memo</span></a>   
Wednesday, 13 February 2013 09:12

Decker writes: "President Barack Obama presented an unabashedly liberal blueprint for his second term in his State of the Union address, repeatedly challenging Congress to enact policies that support a growing middle class - and the agenda that Americans voted for in November."

President Obama delivered a liberal agenda during the State of the Union. (photo: The White House/Facebook)
President Obama delivered a liberal agenda during the State of the Union. (photo: The White House/Facebook)



Obama Sets Proudly Progressive Agenda in State of the Union

By Henry Decker, National Memo

13 February 10

 

 

resident Barack Obama presented an unabashedly liberal blueprint for his second term in his State of the Union address, repeatedly challenging Congress to enact policies that support a growing middle class - and the agenda that Americans voted for in November.

After declaring the state of the union "stronger," the president introduced the key theme of his speech: that "to reignite the true engine of America's economic growth," America needs "a rising, thriving middle class." To that end, Obama proceeded to lay out several economic proposals that brought congressional Democrats to their feet - and left House Speaker John Boehner sitting stonefaced over the president's left shoulder.

"Deficit reduction alone is not an economic plan," Obama declared at one point in his speech; instead he laid out a series of progressive plans to jumpstart the economy. Obama proposed that we could "save hundreds of billions of dollars by getting rid of tax loopholes and deductions for the well off and well connected," and called for "a tax code that ensures billionaires with high-powered accountants can't pay a lower rate than their hard-working secretaries."

The president also suggested raising the federal minimum wage to $9.00 per hour. Although the proposed increase falls far short of the $15 per hour for which liberal entrepreneurs Eric Liu and Nick Hanauer have called, it is still a highly progressive plan - and a defiant repudiation of conservative economics.

"Working folks shouldn't have to wait year after year for the minimum wage to go up while CEO pay has never been higher," Obama explained.

While Obama acknowledged that Medicare must be reformed to reduce health care costs, he flatly rejected the notion of extreme Medicare reforms such as those proposed by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI). "Our government shouldn't make promises we cannot keep," Obama said, "but we must keep the promises we've already made"

The president went on to call on Congress to pass the remaining items in his American Jobs Act, including creating a network of "manufacturing hubs," investing in clean energy, rebuilding the nation's infrastructure, and increasing spending on research and development. Although Obama insisted that none of his proposals would add a single dime to the deficit, spending-averse Republicans are still certain to oppose most of these measures. Perhaps as a prebuttal to this inevitable debate, Obama directly challenged congressional Republicans to abandon their strategy of constant obstruction - which is currently playing out in the form of a standoff over sequestration cuts.

"The greatest nation on Earth cannot keep conducting its business by drifting from one manufactured crisis to the next," Obama warned. "Let's agree, right here, right now, to keep the people's government open, pay our bills on time, and always uphold the full faith and credit of the United States of America. The American people have worked too hard, for too long, rebuilding from one crisis to see their elected officials cause another."

In another direct challenge to his Republican opponents, Obama disputed their continued refusal to act on climate change - giving the crucial issue one of its highest-profile platforms in history.

"We can choose to believe that Superstorm Sandy, and the most severe drought in decades, and the worst wildfires some states have ever seen were all just a freak coincidence," Obama said, "or we can choose to believe in the overwhelming judgment of science - and act before it's too late." The president went on to warn that if Congress continues to ignore the conclusions of 97 percent of scientists, he will take matters into his own hands by issuing executive orders to directly confront the issue.

While much of Obama's speech tacked to the left, the president also made several proposals that are backed by vast majorities of Americans. The president highlighted the work of red states Georgia and Oklahoma to encourage Congress to act to provide high-quality preschool for every child. He announced the formation of a non-partisan commission to improve the voting experience in America, citing the example of Desiline Victor, a 102-year-old woman who waited in line for several hours to cast her ballot. He urged Congress to pass the Violence Against Women Act and the Paycheck Fairness Act to provide equal rights to women. He encouraged the bipartisan efforts to pass a comprehensive immigration reform bill. And in the most memorable moment of the speech, he demanded that Congress vote on his package of gun safety measures.

"Each of these proposals deserves a vote in Congress," Obama said. "If you want to vote no, that's your choice. But these proposals deserve a vote." Citing the more than two dozen Americans in the chamber who had been affected by gun violence, Obama declared:

They deserve a vote. Gabby Giffords deserves a vote. The families of Newtown deserve a vote. The families of Aurora deserve a vote. The families of Oak Creek, and Tucson, and Blacksburg, and the countless other communities ripped open by gun violence – they deserve a simple vote.

As each of these proposals drew standing ovations from both Democrats and several Republicans, House Speaker John Boehner's impassive glare was especially conspicuous. Although congressional Republicans' opposition to measures such as the Violence Against Women Act is well established, Boehner provided a memorable visual reminder of the clear divide between the two major parties.

Making matters worse for Republicans was Florida senator Marco Rubio's official response to the State of the Union. The 2016 contender flopped in the face of high expectations, delivering a boilerplate response issuing stern warnings on the debt, and accusing President Obama of having an "obsession" with raising taxes. If Rubio's address –which was little more than a reprise of Mitt Romney's stump speech - is remembered at all, it will be for the senator's awkward grab for a water bottle.

Love it or hate it, President Obama presented the American people with a clear legislative agenda Tuesday night. If the Republican Party ever wants to return from the political wilderness, it will eventually need to do the same.

See Also: State of the Union 2013: President Obama’s address to Congress (Transcript)

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Marco Rubio, Substitute Teacher Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=5903"><span class="small">Michael Tomasky, The Daily Beast</span></a>   
Wednesday, 13 February 2013 09:03

Tomasky writes: "That was the most ill-advised drink of liquid since Socrates took hemlock. It will dominate commentary and late-night, and it deserves to. Just bush league. And the way he kept nervously looking at the camera..."

Sen. Marco Rubio takes an ill advised drink of water. (photo: AP)
Sen. Marco Rubio takes an ill advised drink of water. (photo: AP)



Marco Rubio, Substitute Teacher

By Michael Tomasky, The Daily Beast

13 February 10

 

et me just put it this way. I follow a number of conservative pundits on my Twitter feed, and while Marco Rubio was talking, I sure didn't notice them lighting up the switchboard, as it were. At point Ramesh Ponnuru tweeted: "Rubio is doing well I think but why does he keep touching his face?"

A bigger question about his physical actions would, of course, present itself in short order. That was the most ill-advised drink of liquid since Socrates took hemlock. It will dominate commentary and late-night, and it deserves to. Just bush league. And the way he kept nervously looking at the camera...

Otherwise he wasn't bad. It wasn't a failure. And I don't think he's a complete lightweight. He gave a good speech at the GOP convention. But he didn't succeed last night at all. Two reasons.

First, Quixote-like, he kept tilting at the right-wing caricature of Obama that only right-wingers buy into. I doubt very strongly at this point that most Americans will just sit there listening to how Barack Obama opposes the free enterprise system and think that it makes sense to them. No. It doesn't. The R's could sell middle Americans on that idea when the memory of the stimulus was fresh, and when the jobless rate was 9 percent. But with things getting better, that's a story that only conservatives believe. They make the error of continuing to believe that others believe it.

Second, and this isn't really his fault but just the way it is, he doesn't have the gravitas yet. His voice doesn't have enough depth to it. He looks sort of young, as many have observed, but he sounds younger, and that's the issue. He comes across like the proverbial substitute teacher. You know you can throw spitballs in his class, and he's not going to have the authority to make you stop.

You either have that weight or you don't. I know conservatives will say that the idea that Obama had it in 2007 is a joke, but they're wrong. Obama tapped into very deep yearnings in the country rhetorically, yearnings that weren't limited to Democrats. That's what gave him gravitas. Rubio did a little of that - he has a nice immigrant's story to tell. But it's too many right-wing talking points.

Backed up, I should note, by right-wing reality. Yesterday afternoon, Rubio was one of just 22 senators to vote against reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act. Nice. Savior? He has a long way to go.

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