Independence and Remembrance
On this Fourth of July, Obama’s campaign words of promise
echo in my ears: “breaking the power of the lobbyists, providing affordable
health care for all, cutting middle-class taxes, ending both the Iraqi war and
our dependence on foreign oil, and uniting us.”
Like many, I wanted to believe, and our critical times seemed
to provide more surety. At any rate, I thought that these herculean tasks could
be completed by the man from the planet Krypton – incidentally, that is why unimaginative
neo-cons can’t find his birth record.
But we are finding that Bush policy and Bush words of the
past eight years still bring command and privilege to the business elite.
George Bush’s “us and them” chant, the Bush cowboy embrace
of the corporate elite, and his hardy litany of “fighting for freedom” are big
items in the neo-conservative culture. The money and resource commitment for
these ideals are still embodied in a monolithic corporate plan, and thus a still-not-dead
right-wing ideology continues to guide government decision-making.
Obama has spoken
against the polarity of “us or them” in offshore forums, but evidence shows
that he too embraces at least the Wall Street elite. And we are still fighting
– and dying -- in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Accordingly, I contend that the overwhelming power of huge
corporations and their financial stake in the current economic and political
endeavors still stymies President Obama, and certainly curtails the willingness
of Congress, to move ahead progressively.
In spite of the Obama promise of change, we are still in
Iraq for at least two more years, he has seemingly caved in to Wall Street,
health care reform will probably go down the familiar yellow brick road of heartless,
for-profit health care, and we still have Guantanamo, the symbol of torture.
Obama’s stimulus package (indulged with much pork) did
provide a modicum of economic forward thrust. His budget is greener but it funds
an even fatter military. What does it mean? It means that our children and our
grandchildren will continue to pay for unneeded spending.
There is still the Iraqi war at $9 billion a month, we still
have unneeded military spending -- even some unwanted by the Pentagon. One unneeded,
and still unworkable, program is the missile defense system ($63 billion during
the last 7 years). We still have huge subsidies for business.
When I last looked, tax breaks for the rich (tens of
billions) are still with us. We still continue to hire mercenaries for the
military and government service. And never was KMR held accountable for its
faulty work in Iraq, some of which electrocuted American servicemen – 13 dead
since 2003.
Normally we might say that change doesn’t come overnight and
that we should have patience. But I’m not so sure we have time to be patient, especially
with early indications that Obama actions – or maybe, inactions -- are not
allaying critical needs, and that his stimulus package is not enough.
The wolf is at our doorstep! Unemployment is rising. Americans are starting to lose faith. Furthermore, foreign creditors are worried about the dollar. While compromised Democrats deliberate, Republican mongrels, like neo-con stooges, are nipping at their heels.
The conditions that are with us today began five decades ago.
Fifty years ago in his Farewell Address, President
Eisenhower warned us about the power of the “military-industrial complex,” a dominant
combination of industrial giants and military institutions that benefit from
war.
At the time, the US accounted for 47% of the world’s arms
expenditure. It was after a world war and at the beginning of the cold war with
the Soviet Union. In spite of the end of the cold war in 2009, America still
accounts for almost 50% of global military expenditures, and we can less afford
it today.
After WWII, Americans were saving at an 8-10 % clip. By 1985
it began declining until by 2000 savings was negative. Actually in the 1980s,
Americans started consuming with abandon, discarding age-old values of thrift. By
the 1950s, we had begun to adopt a “continuous war” footing, starting with the
dawn of what we called the cold war with the Soviet Union.
Later, Reagan policies promoted uncontrolled military spending
and at the same time, hypocritically derided big government, this while he used
government for huge deficit spending, deficits augmented by Reagan’s $200
billion tax cut for the rich. It was said that there wasn’t a weapon system he
didn’t like.
He was one of the first Republican presidents to abandon
thrift, hiking military spending till the Soviet Union cried uncle. With a
short respite from Clinton’s balanced budget, our cry for Uncle Sam to stop the
spending was profligately ignored by another Republican, George W. Bush.
We have no time left to placate the members of the
plutocracy that a compromised Congress and misguided administrations helped to build
over the years and to whom George W. Bush gave the keys to the national vault.
We must spend only for investments – capital and human. Only
this type of spending will make us strong again: more productive workers and
more vital industries for a future most of us won’t see under our current
culture.
The unfortunate truth is that President Obama and our
Democrats in Congress don’t have time to balance their political needs against
real national needs. Though many Democrats are thick with self-interest,
Republicans seem to show no glimmer of recognizing a national need.
The world is in deep recession, the dollar is beleaguered,
and our way of life could easily crumble. As President Obama once said, we need
to put away childish things – in essence, get serious about our country.
He could heed his own advice.
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