What we got instead was a president who backed down in advance at almost every challenge, telegraphing his fall-back position, whether it was pulling troops out of Iraq or defending Social Security and Medicare, or even his supposed signal "achievement," the passage of the so-called "Affordable Care Act," now known as Obamacare.
Had the president barnstormed the country promoting what his supporters (myself included) had elected him to do -- a massive jobs program, breaking up of the big banks and a restoration of the Glass-Steagall Act, passage of a new stronger labor law to make union organizing and bargaining more fair, establishment of a single-payer system for health care akin to what they have in Canada, ending the chain of endless wars, and restoring the Bill of Rights, this election next week wouldn't even be close...
TCBH! Election Issue, Part II:
Why I'm Voting for Barack Obama
By John Grant
For an ordinary American these days, there isn't much one can do to affect the direction of the federal government of the United States. Much of what our leaders do with that government -- especially the more and more secret military and surveillance activities symbolized by the Pentagon -- exists beyond the realm of real change.
One very small power a citizen retains in his or her public life is the vote. The problem, of course, is that critical issues are not discussed in the mainstream media where the national political dialogue occurs. For instance, you can't use the term "class," you can't use the phrase "global warming" and you certainly can't use the term "imperialism." They are embargoed terms. And anything you cannot talk about and discuss in an effective manner is difficult or impossible to change.
As one soon learns in the journalism business, a national issue has to become a Democratic-Republican "pissing contest" before the mainstream will even touch it. Then it becomes a circus of who's up and who's down. So our imperial military-industrial complex -- absurdly lumped under the euphemism "defense" -- is discussed only by out-of-the-mainstream publications like This Can't Be Happening and by third party candidates.
My more revolutionary friends, thus, see voting for President Obama as tantamount to selling out to the beast. I understand how they feel. While I'm as much a red-blooded American citizen as anyone and while I feel many Americans are good people, I'm thoroughly disgusted with the leadership in this country and the steady rightward drift over the past 30 plus years.
This feeling began for me when I came home from doing my service as part of the international war crime called the Vietnam War. I went to college and then started a career in journalism. Along came Ronald Reagan and his Shining City On a Hill. He preached the line that there was no "malaise" in America, and too many Americans ate it up like a herd of hungry cattle.
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