From Katrina Vanden Heuvel, ed at The Nation:
‘Whatever one thinks of Obama’s policy on any specific issue, he is clearly a reform president committed to the improvement of people’s lives and to the renewal and reconstruction of America.’
Is that so? Are you sure about that? Here’s more from the same piece:
‘However, the military-industrial complex Eisenhower warned against grows ever stronger. And so far Obama has been unwilling to rethink skewed priorities in this arena; he just approved a bloated military budget despite his rare cancellation of several costly weapons programs.
Obama is wisely taking his time to make a decision about Afghanistan, but he appears to have excluded the one option that makes the most sense–a responsible exit strategy–and seems poised to escalate this unnecessary war. If he does so, he will endanger his reform presidency and squander funds needed to rebuild and renew our country.’
The Exploited Times has a slightly different take: It is that Obama has shown us jackshit so far, and like the hope campaign it feels like a lot of talk-talk. Moreover we get the feeling that Obama’s work was done the day the election results hit the floor. Any fool knows those results don’t have shit to do with hope and everything to do with multi-billion fully corrupted campaign finance. Campaign finance that offers zero transparency.
Hope is a great concept for a self-help book. But anyone who believes hope can put a ding in the military-industrial complex is a good friend of the military-industrial complex. This is the type of thinking that weakens any progressive movement to the point of paralysis. Armed only with hope, one may prevail in the battle over a bad mood, but precious little else.
Is real reform for the country and planet about party lines and trivial, naive distractions producing illegible thousand-page reports?
More from Katrina:
‘ Like all presidents, Obama is constrained by powerful opponents and deep structural impediments.’
Well these so-called opponents and structural impediments certainly did not constrain Obama from becoming president, so are they really opponents after all? Are we to simply hope that Obama is the good guy and there is no collusion with the military-industrial complex that really runs the world?
Yes, hope. Those who prefer to live in reality are aware that hope is nothing more than a distraction. If your car doesn’t start today, you can hope it will tomorrow.
And that’s exactly the type of inaction that has got this country where it is today. Hope presents no obstacle to the adversary, and Obama knows this. He also knows just who to make friends with, and all we can do is hope it’s not the military-industrial complex. Dream on.
Pardon the cherry-picking, here is full story: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20091123/kvh
Then check the link at left, Report Card for a Revolution, for a still-relevent take 6 weeks old.
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