Category Archives: Obama

The tragic tale of oppressed billionaires

Glenn Greenwald has a must-read piece on Continetti’s apologia thingy to the Koch brothers in the Weekly Standard regarding how influential billionaires are being cruelly victimized by bloggers and the like. It’s a tragic tale. http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/03/27/koch/index.html

And Benen quotes Charles Koch and comments…

“”His father was a hard core economic socialist in Kenya… So he had sort of antibusiness, anti-free enterprise influences affecting him almost all his life. It just shows you what a person with a silver tongue can achieve.” 

Now, Koch’s vast wealth proves that one need not be intelligent to get rich, but remarks like these are still just embarrassing.” http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2011_03/028649.php

Not merely embarrassing in getting details wrong, I’d point out. Consider the stunning lack of self-awareness here. Obama is profoundly influenced by a father who was absent and played almost zero part in Obama’s life. On the other hand, the Koch boys who were raised by and gained their millionaire to billionaire fortunes from a co-founder of the John Birch Society, that’s invisible to the dork.

A year or so on

I cranked up this creature a bit over a year ago.  How’s the year gone?  Not terribly well, I’m afraid.  First up is the overall political situation here in the US.

A reality becoming increasingly obvious to  many is that the political system down here has become profoundly dis-functional.  Obama’s attempt to reform medical insurance and medical delivery has set the problems in high relief.  But we need to immediately stipulate that it isn’t this particular issue which has caused the dis-function but rather that it merely reveals it.  The obstacles to getting this project done either already do or will come into play where any large or significant legislation might be advanced.

An immediate problem is structural – the party out of power, if they demonstrate an unyielding discipline and hold to a policy of obstruction-at-any-cost, can thwart any legislative proposals.  James Fallows at the Atlantic lays out the exact problem here.

One can think of that problem as something like an emerged loophole.  It had not been a problem anywhere near the present magnitude previously but is now because other conditions have arisen which have facilitated or encouraged its use.

The most fundamental condition which has arisen to facilitate this situation is the nature of the modern American conservative movement.  That movement is both much further right than the versions of conservatism we have known previously and it is much more ideologically rigid and self-certain.  This rigidity and (pathological) certainty that it alone represents “real” Americanness has led it to a set of beliefs and strategies which justify, even demand, maximal obstruction of any other set of political ideas and policies.  No other ideology is considered valid.  These are rather sweeping claims, I understand, but they are accurate and reflect the real states of affairs here presently.

Thus it becomes not merely possible (conceptually or “morally”) to invest nearly all of the movement’s energies, activities and money towards bringing down any Democratic government but it also becomes a matter of patriotic duty to do so.

So that is the ideological condition which is now in place.  We can chart out an evolution (growth) of this extremism along with the attendant strategies through the Carter administration and the Clinton administration and up to today.

A second and necessary condition now in place is the propaganda mechanisms and institutions which have been purposefully established beginning in the early 70′s and which are now both broad and very effective encompassing talk radio, FOX, the Wall Street Journal and rightwing papers, internet sites and well-established information-dissemination organizations which have as their primary function the insertion of conservative voices into cable tv shows and major news outlets.  For one example, the regular presence in the Washington Post of  George Will, Charles Krauthammer, Bill Kristol,  Karl Rove, Bush speechwriters Michael Gerson and, as of last week, Marc Theissen.

Another necessary condition in this mix is the enormous amount of monies flooding into this entire arrangement to enhance media control and to affect the outcomes of primary contests and elections.  Lobbyists and front groups are the middlemen here and their numbers and their influence have increased far above what we’ve seen previously.  The source of those monies (and the healthcare issue is a perfect case in point though entirely usual) are either corporate or from a group of rightwing families with corporate ties and extremist ideologies.

The very real question before us now is whether or not the US will be able to pull itself out of this mire.  Unfortunately, the recent Supreme Court decision (5-4 along ideological grounds) might make the damn difficult the damn near impossible.   If we just consider the make-up of the present Supreme Court and it’s consistent drift to an extremist right we get a good picture of how the conservative movement has reset the gears of governance in the US.  For the consequences of this new court and this particular decision, see  here

I am not, I confess, optimistic.  Tendencies towards extremism and towards pervasive propagandist influences on significant sectors of the population down here (take a look at Sarah Palin’s Facebook comments or at the polling on whether torture is just find and dandy) will only be heightened in a period of economic hardship such as people here are now facing.

Income inequality trend – what matches it?

Paul Krugman (and others) have noted recent income inequality figures from  Emmanuel Saez at Berkeley.    Here is the historical perspective graphed…

Two major trends are immediately evident – downwards from the 20s and then upwards from the the mid-70s.  We know what brought the trend down from “the guilded age” but what brought it back up?

I’ve previously noted here Lewis Lapham’s essay “The Tentacles of Rage”. What Lapham describes in this essay matches yjod rise and does so far better than any particular individual or party holding the Presidency or the inititation of any particular policy or the establishment of or dismantling of any particular institution related to governance in the US.

Further, one can see quite clearly how what Lapham describes is presently in full bloom in the broad campaign underway to kill healthcare reform in the US and to bring down a President who likely will, if he is able, move the country back towards the sorts of regulations and perspectives which caused or facilitated the downward trend mentioned above.

I encourage everyone to read the essay with care and with attention to the correspondences between the timeline demonstrated in the graph and the correspondences between the thesis Lapham advances with what we have all experienced since the mid 70s and are still experiencing now.

The principles, the authority and the reality of the Catholic Church

Prior to last week, as part of an organized effort to to derogate the present Obama administration and its policies, the Cardinal Newman Society,  an extremist corner of the American Catholic community with  ties to the Republican party and the conservative movement mounted an aggressive media campaign against Notre Dame’s invitation to Obama to give the commencement speech.

Nearly 65,000 people have signed an online petition protesting President Obama’s scheduled May 17 commencement address at the University of Notre Dame, saying the president’s views on abortion and stem cell research “directly contradict” Roman Catholic teachings.

“It is an outrage and a scandal that ‘Our Lady’s University,’ one of the premier Catholic universities in the United States, would bestow such an honor on President Obama given his clear support for policies and laws that directly contradict fundamental Catholic teachings on life and marriage,” the petition at notredamescandal.com reads.

One might fairly ask, given yesterday’s publication of an investigation of the Catholic Church in Ireland, just how those “fundamental Catholic teachings on life and marriage” are actually instantiated within the Church itself.  One might also fairly ask for comment on this matter from the Cardinal Newman Society and from conservative movement luminary, Brent Bozell III, who sits on the board as director.

Catholic Church shamed by Irish abuse report

By SHAWN POGATCHNIK
The Associated Press
Thursday, May 21, 2009 2:24 AM

DUBLIN — After a nine-year investigation, a commission published a damning report Wednesday on decades of rapes, humiliation and beatings at Catholic Church-run reform schools for Ireland’s castaway children.

The 2,600-page report painted the most detailed and damning portrait yet of church-administered abuse in a country grown weary of revelations about child molestation by priests.

The investigation of the tax-supported schools uncovered previously secret Vatican records that demonstrated church knowledge of pedophiles in their ranks all the way back to the 1930s.

Wednesday’s five-volume report on the probe _ which was resisted by Catholic religious orders _ concluded that church officials shielded their orders’ pedophiles from arrest amid a culture of self-serving secrecy.

“A climate of fear, created by pervasive, excessive and arbitrary punishment, permeated most of the institutions and all those run for boys. Children lived with the daily terror of not knowing where the next beating was coming from,” Ireland’s Commission to Inquire Into Child Abuse concluded.

Victims of the abuse, who are now in their 50s to 80s, lobbied long and hard for an official investigation. They say that for all its incredible detail, the report doesn’t nail down what really matters _ the names of their abusers.

“I do genuinely believe that it would have been a further step towards our healing if our abusers had been named and shamed,” said Christine Buckley, 62, who spent the first 18 years of her life in a Dublin orphanage where children were forced to manufacture rosaries _ and were humiliated, beaten and raped whether they achieved their quota or not.

The Catholic religious orders that ran more than 50 workhouse-style reform schools from the late 19th century until the mid-1990s offered public words of apology, shame and regret Wednesday. But when questioned, their leaders indicated they would continue to protect the identities of clergy accused of abuse _ men and women who were never reported to police, and were instead permitted to change jobs and keep harming children.

The full ugly story here

Reihan Salam

I’m going to paste in this very bright piece by Salam from a collection of commentaries on Obama’s first 100 days to be found in Daily Beast. I also recommend Matt Yglesias’ contribution and h/t to him for steering me to Salam.

100 Days of Paranoia

It seems that no matter what Obama does  as president, wild-eyed conspiracy theorists will generate their own reality.

Americans love conspiracy theories. One of America’s favorites at the moment maintains that Barack Obama is a secret Muslim. I don’t believe it, of course. But there’s something so forehead-slappingly strange about the notion that you can’t help but wonder how, even after 100 days in office, Obama retains this air of mystery. In October, before the election, the Pew Research Center found that only 51 percent of Americans believed that Obama was a Christian, while 12 percent were convinced that he was a Muslim. The good people at Pew asked the question again in March, and they found that the numbers had barely changed: 48 percent think Obama is a Christian and 11 percent think he’s a Muslim. The rest are unsure.

It gets better. One of my favorite numbers from that Pew poll is that of voters who approve of Obama’s job performance, 7 percent believe that he’s a Muslim. They seem to be saying, “Hey man, as long as I get my stimulus, you can worship Allah all day,” which is pretty admirable. But does the persistence of the Muslim Obama theory have a more dangerous edge to it? It just might.

After 9/11, a small cottage industry sprung up around the celebration of George W. Bush’s greatness, complete with bronze busts and package tours of Crawford, Texas. At the same time, 9/11 Truthers claimed that a secret Zionist cabal was behind the 2001 terror attacks. If anything, Barack Obama has proved an even more electrifying—and even more polarizing—figure than President Bush, despite the fact that he mostly comes across as a sober, professorial executive. We can’t even decide if he’s telling the truth about his religion, let alone the NAFTA superhighway or a secret plan for one world government.

When the Department of Homeland Security issued its clumsy report on right-wing domestic extremists, conservatives were furious. Some even argued that dissent was being criminalized. But the truth is that extremists of the right and left really have gone bananas in our history. I worry that we’ve entered a dark and paranoid moment in our history, and that these first 100 days—for all the craziness and tumult of the economic apocalypse—will be remembered as pleasingly calm.

Reihan Salam is a fellow at the New America Foundation and the co-author of Grand New Party.

And let me take this opportunity to once again point interested readers to the seminal essay on this tendency in American history/culture… Richard Hofstadter’s The Paranoid Style in American Politics

Torture

Anyone following the news last week will be aware that the subject of torture became dominant. This followed the release of further “torture memos” written by Bush legal staff, Cheney’s appearance on Hannity, and the recent Red Cross report leak. Further, individuals such as Army General Anthony Taguba have been raising their voices in support of investigations on the matter.

Something of a storm is brewing.  Few conservatives or Republicans wish to see such an investigation begun because it has become apparent that the near certain revelations will work further serious damage on their electoral chances.

Some, I’m sure, actually believe that public revelation is a bad idea because it will only further anger members of the militant Islamic community.  But it’s a bit of a conundrum as to whether continued suppression of the truth with no legal consequences for perpetrators (and the undeniable hypocrisy that would demonstrate) might be even more angering (justifiable anger in this case) to them.

Some (like Cheney) also clearly believe that it is the proper business of the US government to suppress such information because it would have the probable consequence of leading American citizens to think poorly of this period of American history and behavior.  Citizens, and thus the country, this notion goes, will be better off when happily romanticizing their nation.  Only a select elite (tough of mind) ought to be appraised of the realities.  Citizens and the national psyche couldn’t handle an honest accounting.

Given the statements that have come from Obama earlier and from him and his administration currently, it is unclear as to how they are weighing the complex consequences of a fully transparent investigation/release of this history.  And it’s unclear to me just what sort of pressures are being brought to bear upon the administration (from the intelligence community, the Pentagon and lobbyists for the military-industrial sector) to keeep things in the dark.  But I’ll wager it is substantial and unceasing.

Further, there is the predictable all-out war that Republicans will wage and the damage that might do to civic civility and future policy changes that Obama wishes to implement.  That the prospects here will be dire is precisely the notion the Republicans are trying desparately to forward but it is not clear at all to me that this accurately predicts final consequences even if the moral questions are left out of the equation.

And those moral questions are becoming increasingly pressing.  How can America not procede transparently and honestly now without undercutting the most compelling arguments for its identity – to self and others – as a force for good in the world?

Let’s note as well here while we are at it that the propaganda push mounted last week by the Bush administration members and Republican partisans has four components.  Everything we are hearing and reading from them is contained in the following:

1) it wasn’t torture
2) it wasn’t illegal
3) and even if either of the above are ‘legally’ true, it was actually more morally correct to have acted as was done because it kept America safe through providing information which saved lives
4) it would be unwise and immoral to investigate and reveal facts because of damage that will be done to future intelligence operations and to American self-identity and civic equanimity.

But voices, an increasing number of them from all points of the compass other than those with deep allegiances to Bush or the GOP, are now making the case that each of these arguments is erroneous or less compelling than the arguments to procede with investigation and revelation.

A final factor here, and a critical one, relates to the media.  The recent past (particularly) suggests that the individuals and the corporations who make up the major portion of the media which people attend to have a set of interests which might be put in jeopardy (perceived or actual) by any serious look at the last eight years.  Not only has the news media been complicit in what has gone on, they are likely hesitant to support what they might imagine as too much shaking of the status quo.

There’s perhaps no better example of such institutional complacency than the modern Washington Post and David Broder who famously told Sally Quinn that “He (Bill Clinton) came in here and trashed the place and it wasn’t his place.”  Being not of the Washington circle/elite and guilty of an extra-marital blowjob is to trash the place that isn’t his but beginning an uncessary war and implementing torture policies (aside from all else that the Bush administration has done) ought, in Broder’s sick mental universe, to be now  simply forgotten.

Polling

Reporting from Washington — Approaching his 100th day in the White House at a time of economic turmoil, President Obama holds the approval of nearly two-thirds of Americans surveyed for the job that he is performing – and seven in 10 say they like Obama, the man.

Most say they approve of the president’s overall handling of the economy, while the effects of his policies remain uncertain.

Obama’s job approval as president stands at 63% in a poll released this morning by the Washington-based Pew Research Center – with just 26% saying they disapprove of the way he is handling his job.

The president draws a similar rating, 64%, in a new poll conducted by the Associated Press and GfK Roper Public Affairs and Media. That survey also finds, for the first time in five years, more Americans saying the nation is headed in the right direction than those who say it is not.

The president’s job approval also stands at 64% in the latest Gallup Poll daily tracking survey.

In a reversal of the way that voters traditionally view leaders of the two major political parties, the Democratic president draws better ratings in the Pew survey for his handling of foreign policy and terrorism than for his handling of domestic issues, such as health care, taxes or the budget deficit.

Nevertheless, 60% of those surveyed by Pew say they approve of Obama’s overall handling of the economy.

LA Times story here

Photo from Obama’s trip to Britain

G20/

How fucking cool is this?  One presumes violation of protocol here which makes it all the better.  This ranks as one of my all time favorite photographs.

h/t Myron

How far right have the Republicans moved? America?

Here’s a measure.  It’s a quote from Ike.

“Every gun that is fired, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed….”

This is not a sentiment a modern Republican politician would be able to publicly offer without being drummed out of any significant position of power.  It is even difficult to imagine a Democratic politician speaking in this manner where citizen poverty and suffering is weighted against noble war.

Between that point in time and this, there has clearly been a successful derogation of the poor and disadvantaged.  They are, in this formulation, deserving of their status and condition (as are those at the under end of the scale, axiomatically).  As well, there has been a successful fetishization of war and soldiering and vengeance (how have Christian communities become so enamored of war and killing?  how is it the capture by Somali pirates of an American ship captain spurs the murderous rhetoric we now see from the right?)  Finally, there’s been a successful dissemination of the notion that external enemies abound, whose eager intention is to destroy America.

As the NY Times piece linked below notes, at the end of Eisenhower’s term, seven years had passed  without a single American serviceman’s death.  No President since can claim the same.  I truly don’t know whether America can get itself out of the grip of the enormous national dynamic which facilitates and promotes militarism.

continue reading here

Sanity

Barack Obama launches doctrine for nuclear-free world

The circular firing squad – Christian division

Kathleen Parker has an interesting column in the Washington Post this morning.  If we’re to grant her perspective and argument some credence (sometimes dicey…she pretty much epitomizes the Washington-bubble person) then what she points to may well be significant for the future of politics in the US and for the Republican Party and future elections.

Her thesis is that the Christian may be “finished as a political entity”.  She notes Dobson’s recent admission that “the big cultural battles have all been lost”.  And she suggests there is a growing disaffection on the religious right with the prior close ties to the Republican Party and the watering-down of principles to facilitate Repubican electoral goals:

Put another way, Christians may have no place in the political fray of dealmaking. That doesn’t mean one disengages from political life, but it might mean that the church shouldn’t be a branch of the Republican Party. It might mean trading fame and fortune (green rooms and fundraisers) for humility and charity.

Such an alteration in the political landscape will not be welcomed by the Republican Party because the Christian right has provided them with a dependable pool of voters and organized activists.  Diminishment in either case will have electoral consequences.  And if (Parker stays away from this possibility) the Christian right moves towards forming or supporting a third party, that clearly would be disastrous for Republicans.  It’s hard to imagine that happening but if there might be any point in time when forces could push things that way, this could be it.

Regardless of the noise-level the right continues to produce, demographics and societal shift is working against them.  The smarter ones understand and acknowledge this.  But remedies are not apparent.  They are without compelling leadership and without a coherent or promising political vision and, increasingly, without hope of any political deliverance on the horizon – thus the drift towards the reactionary and paranoid of Limbaugh, Beck, the Cardinal Newman Society, the NRA, Palin, Bachmann, etc, and the drift in the House into the defensive and knee-jerk obstructionism.

All the above is made even more problematic for the conservative movement by the arrival of an extrodinary political opponent and an extremly smart and effective organization around him.  The future will tell us the tale but my intuition is that Obama is a once-in-a-lifetime political talent (and I mean that in the best sense).

Read Parker here

And then, there’s this smear in the works

I’d begun to write a post on Michael Gerson’s column in the Washington Post yesterday but had a headache and put it on hold.  Once again, Gerson was doing what he always does…forwarding talking points and following the old Republican strategy of trying to set one group of americans against some other group for electoral gain.  He’s a dependable boy.  But I don’t have to complete it now because Joan Walsh did it.  But I’ll add a couple of points here, first, on the founding of the Cardinal Neuman Society (from wikipedia)

It was founded in 1993 byFordham University alumnus Patrick Reilly, who first became active in supporting what he regarded as orthodoxy in response to the university’s consideration of permitting gay and lesbian students to form student associations on campus — a development he opposed in his role as editor of the campus newspaper. The society’s leadership includes prominent conservative commentator L. Brent Bozell III. It was Bozzell, founder and president of the conservative media-watchdog group Media Research Center, who suggested use of direct mail marketing to invigorate the organization at a time when it existed “primarily as letterhead.

So, we know where these guys are ideologically and how they link up in the rightwing propaganda world.

But it’s important to understand as well an on-going strategy the right has used to peel away traditional Dem voters.  The “culture war” isn’t merely a ‘risen from circumstance’ conflict.  It has been very purposefully promoted, particularly as regards abortion and homosexuality for Republican electoral advantage, or at least hoped for advantage.  There was, of course, a function here of motivating their base of evangelicals.  But that’s not the whole story.

Traditionally, blacks and Catholics have voted Dem.  Using the homosexuality issue as a wedge, Republicans hoped to gain some greater percentage of the black Christian vote.  With homosexuality and abortion, they were going after the Catholic vote (guess which other traditional Dem vote they were/are going after with the anti-Muslim thing).  When elections are commonly settled within a few points, such inititatives can have real consequences and have had over the last few decades.  That’s changed greatly now but the Republicans keep trying to get the old tools to work again.  It’s really all they know now having divested themselves of moderates and of the attitudes and means by which reflection and serious introspection might be facilitated.

Here’s Joan’s piece…it’s very good:

Right-wing Catholics vs Obama

Sanity is refreshing

Blame for Downturn Not Fixed on Obama

The number of Americans who believe that the nation is headed in the right direction has roughly tripled since Barack Obama’s election, and the public overwhelmingly blames the excesses of the financial industry, rather than the new president, for turmoil in the economy, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.

Polling analysis here (and it’s encouraging)

Cheney’s motives

Why has Cheney, on two occasions following the election, publicly derogated Obama and his administration’s policies?  It is, so far as I can discover, an unprecedented violation of protocol for him to have done so immediately upon leaving office as VP.

Andrew Sullivan has a good piece on this here. He correctly observes that Cheney is trying to counter the emerging narrative (which has been emerging for several years…no WMD found, photos from Abu Ghraib, snippets from the torture memos, revelations from Britain).  But as Andrew points out, the internal information held so closely by the Bush/Cheney administration, and which looks likely to be seriously damaging to Cheney’s (and others’) reputations but which also may quite possibly result in criminal proceedings against them, are now slowly emerging into the light with a real possibility that subsequent information will be utterly damaging.

God only knows what Cheney et al are doing out of sight (likely their greatest area of expertise) but Cheney is clearly, as Andrew suggests, also trying to wage preventive propaganda right now.  But why?  Who does he expect to influence?  Is he counting on the conservative movement base to cause such a loud ruckus that Obama, with all on his plate, might go easy on Cheney and crowd?  It seems unlikely he’s worried about his his legacy (less so about Bush’s legacy) but perhaps it’s a consideration.  He’s been deeply committed for some years now (since Nixon) to an ideology which seeks expanded powers for the Presidency and may fear that, just as post-Watergate, this ideology is in serious jeopardy of being again discredited.

It’s a bit of a puzzle.  But motivations are often difficult to comprehend or ascertain and certainty most particularly so when the person who’s motives are subject to the inquiry borders on the pathological, which I believe Cheney does.

Update: An entirely relevant matter…the ongoing legal proceedings in Spain

Spanish human rights attorney: ‘I would recommend that Mr. Feith…get a very good lawyer.’

Last week, a Spanish court agreed to consider “opening a criminal case against six former Bush administration officials…over allegations they gave legal cover for torture at Guantanamo Bay.” Former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Doug Feith said the charges “make no sense,” adding, “they criticize me for promoting a controversial position that I never advocated.” Gonzalo Boye, one of the lawyers filing the complaint, responded to Feith, saying, “If they [Bush officials] are innocent,they shouldn’t be afraid” to come to court:

“I would recommend that Mr. Feith first of all read the complaint, and secondly that he get a very good lawyer,” Boye said. “If he is so sure of what he is saying — then the address of the national court is #22 Genova Street, second floor.”

Feith often expresses amnesia about his central role in approving torture. “I strongly championed a policy of respect” for the Geneva Conventions, he told Congress last year. In reality, British international lawyer Philippe Sands reported that Feith “took the steps to ensure thatnone of these detainees could rely on Geneva.”

From Think Progress

And now, the problem of Wall Street socialists

Let us sympathize.

The right has an interesting set of propaganda problems with Obama.  The ‘family values’ cliches can’t be rolled out in any convincing manner because of the nature of Obama’s family and life.  Being tall, handsome, confident in bearing and african american whose favorite athletic pastime is basketball, he can’t be painted as an effete European sort of man (eg Kerry on windsurfer, skiing at Gdansk).  As a compelling and engaging and confident speaker, he’s difficult to portray as stodgy, cold, awkward and rehearsed (eg Gore).  Coming from Chicago and with the particularly unique circumstances of his upbringing, he doesn’t fit the mold of Washington insider (think how hard they had to work to try and paint Bush as something other than what he was…buy a ranch, lots of workshirts with sleeves pre-rolled up, etc).  And he has no real history of saying outlandish things that might embarrass him now.  One reason the right’s propaganda dealt so much with Ayers and Wright was that was about all they had to work with and most folks (as the election demonstrated) understood those matters and/or Obama’s relationship to them, peripheral and irrelevant.

And now, they’ve got this new propaganda problem.  It’s a tough row to hoe for the poor fellows and fellowesses.

On the one hand, they’re trying to forward the idea that the Obama administration represents radical socialism.  But on the other hand, they are also trying to forward the contradictory notion that the administration is too closely tied to the Wall Street financial elites.  Not much of a surprise that neither notion is getting any traction outside of that “contradictions don’t bother us” base.

Another aspect to each of those propaganda strategies above – by trying to convince people that such unconvincing ideas are true, the propagandists themselves get discredited for their rather blatant and serial dishonesty (an impression not diminished by the last eight years, of course).

As things sit, there’s not much imaginable that they are going to get any traction with.  They’ll keep trying, of course (as with the present attempts to paint Obama’s governance as slipshod, disorganized, confused and overwhelmed) but because it isn’t and that’s obvious any time Obama talks.  He’s popular and he’s trusted by sizable majorities whereas the propagandists on the other side are distrusted and unpopular to sizeable majorities.

No easy problem for the lying bastards.

Petraeus disagrees with Cheney’s “Obama making US less safe”

h/t Think Progress

He uses “necessarily” but his voice and expression strike me as rather less diplomatic.

Thomas Ricks on FORA – three things Americans don’t know about Iraq

fora show here
You have the choice to watch Ricks talk for four minutes or to watch the entire discussion

“Obama is a poor communicator”

Or, Obama is “Boring”.  That was the Drudge headline immediately following the presser.  Similar notions have echoed through the rightwing media world.  Some more:

Jonah Goldberg- Longwinded and boring!

Andrew Malcolm- I slept through my college classes and last night was bored!

Rove, Hannity, and O’Reilly: The press conference was boring!

Hugh Hewitt- Snorefest!

As Dougj at Balloon Juice5 says:

It’s not an accident that so many righties settled on the “Obama is boring” meme this morning. The idea of attacking what is perceived to be Obama’s greatest strength—his ability as a communicator—has been brewing for a while. It’s what all the yammering about the teleprompter is about. It’s what all the hand-wringing about Obama’s jokes is about.

…”This is a classic Rovean technique – attacking your opponent where he’s strongest.”


Bill Kristol and war

Kristol’s column this morning is typically vapid.  In a nutshell, “Obama is prosaic and unexciting and mechanical and all domesticy and IRAN! NUKES! DANGER!”

Kristol has a war fetish.  It’s a pathological aspect of his character.  But what he’s up to here has another component…as Obama’s domestic competence is rather clear and respectable (and his planned domestic policy moves popular) why not try to suggest that his international affairs bona fides are weak and womanly, like Dems always are.

Throw it against the wall, see if it sticks.  When not in power, I have no compass heading other than to get back into power.  I’m the real philosopher-king, not Obama.  And certainly not the people!  Ugh!

Update: Golly goodness.  Murdoch’s New York Post has an oddly similar opinion piece this morning:

By comparison, the Carter administration is starting to look like a model of manly strength, courage and patriotism.


Obama, the economy, the Republicans and the future

Weekly address first:

This last week we’ve seen a lot of turmoil in Washington and in the media as regards how well or how poorly the administration is handling the various aspects of the economic crisis.  Viewpoints and statements are all over the map from opinionated but non-partisan to opinionated and deeply partisan.

It’s the job of those who are partisan to try and forward in the public’s mind some particular narrative which helps their political goals.  That’s irrelevant except where those narratives take hold and become “the truth” in the noggins of many, thus influencing what people believe and how they will act and who they will support in elections and in activism.

The modern media is big on these narratives because they are simple and easy to communicate in small sound bites (eg “Bush showed himself to be resolute” or “The people love Obama” or “Obama’s popularity appears to be fading”, etc)  These little stories are definitely not necessarily true or accurate.  When constructed or told by highly partisan individuals, they can have no or almost no relationship to the truth of things.  Far too often, the media act as stenographers for these claims, refraining from or refusing to analyize them critically or to sufficiently analyze them.  That’s just the reality of things presently.

Those of us on the left who mostly agree with Obama’s emerging agenda and wish to see it carried through successfully have probably felt a few jolts in the last couple of weeks.  There is confusion on what economic policies ought to be followed now and whether his team is doing this right or not.  In large part, that is because of the immense complexity of the issues and the fact that even the ‘experts’ are not in concurrence on how to proceed.  But another large factor here is that this confusion and uncertainty is being promoted full tilt by the Republicans and conservatives who function as their front men.

Another factor, predicted by all of us before the administration even began, is the pushback and obstruction of Obama’s goals that would arise from the many wealthy and powerful vested interests who benefit from the status quo (Wall Street, the corporate world, the arms industry, the lobbying industry, etc).  Proposed changes to, for example, labor laws, healthcare and the defense budget would, everyone understood, be met with large and dedicated campaigns to bring about the failure of the proposed changes.  And we’ve seen these gearing up and in operation now.

It would be foolish to assume that all of this is or will leave the Obama administration unscathed.  This is a unique period in American history and a critical one.  Frequent analogies are made, very reasonably, to Reagan’s readjustments of the political world, to Johnston’s tenure during the sixties and to FDR earlier.  But if the economy continues to degrade, then possibly only the FDR period will be comparable.

It won’t be easy for the left as time goes on.  But the alternative, America in the hands of Rush Limbaugh, Bill Kristol, religious barbarics, anti-intellectual wolf hunters and plumbers, homophobic bigots, weapons salesmen, global warming deniers, creationists, and a super-wealthy and mainly self-interested financial elite seems rather too dire to even imagine.