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Aquarian
Weekly 8/26/09
REALITY CHECK
LAST
TEMPTATION OF OBAMA
Joe Cool Must Rally To Save Progressive Movement
It
is pointless to argue that George W. Bush all-but destroyed the
conservative movement, while ironically, in more ways than a little,
failed to resemble or embody any of the true aspects of conservatism.
His lunatic federal spending, ill-conceived and badly executed
nation building, and most strikingly, an almost hippie-fueled
freedom-around-the-world meddling was distinctly progressive and
at times downright liberal; the final straw being his $400 billion
Medicare Prescription
Drug Modernization Act, which will doubtless bankrupt the system,
not to mention simultaneously signing into law the recently dubbed
"Death Panel" quotient. His government's behavior in the controversial
but wholly private Terry Shivo case sealed the deal. Under Bush,
the federal government became a massive, invasive, insufficient
mess; all the fears of the original and less religiously baked
and corporate lapping conservatives of yore. Yet so-called conservatives
defended Captain Shoo-In all the way through, trading in their
fragile ideologies for a slice of the power pie.
Now
it is the progressives turn. Handed the entirety of the government
and the majority of the public's trust in two consecutive ass-stomping
elections, and the hiring of the first African-American as chief
executive, they are faced with choosing between the purity of
their ideological faith or staying in charge. This faith was squarely
laid on the shoulders of a Democratic Party, which handed over
the reigns to the party's liberal wing last November just as Republicans
handed a powerful voice to the right wing in the autumn of 1980,
when their holy patriarch, Ronald Reagan landed the final blow
of a century-old conservative push.
Barack
Obama is, as stated more than once in this space for over a year,
the yin to Reagan's yang. He understands this better than most,
having put his liberal-cred on the line during the primary campaign
by quoting Reagan copiously at rallies and giving network interviews
that conspicuously skipped the impact of the Clinton era while
heaping praise on the totality of Reagan's political reach.
Thus,
the president went into this thing with eyes wide open, and should
now realize that the man he sold the progressive liberals and
the majority of the nation's Independents with chants of Change
and Yes We Can is now on trial -- in the halls of governance and
the Main Street he loved courting so.
It
is Go Time for Joe Cool, the man who did not listen to crazed
pundits when they prodded him to go ugly on the Clinton Machine
or get tough on the weak McCain/ Palin rhetoric over months of
campaigning. The vaunted Obama Syndicate, which bested all comers
and stayed above the fray during racial nastiness and mud-slinging
hoo-hah has to emerge soon, or not only will his legacy be in
jeopardy, but the significance of his entire presidency and the
last stand of true progressive politics in America.
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It
is an enviable quest, whether agreed upon or feared, for
it is the determinate of what leadership means. And isn't
that the deal you run on, raise all that money and have
every fiber of your being vetted 'til Tuesday to achieve.
It comes with the gig, and the gig has suddenly challenged
what Obamamania stood for, not some political ploy, but
a very real and inspiring movement.
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The
August stand-off on National Healthcare, the continued struggle
for energy reform and the pogrom on the rich and all-things corporate
has turned the new president's first significant challenge into
his Gettysburg; notwithstanding the moronic notion that this is
his Waterloo as recently proffered by sub-mentals whose laughable
grasp of history is on display every time some nitwit minimizes
the horrors of Adolf Hitler by portraying or referring to the
president of the United States to humanity's most celebrated monster.
It was imbecilic when the anti-war movement did it to the last
guy, and it is equally so now.
This
space offers Gettysburg as the perfect wartime analogy, seeing
how Napoleon's last stand at Waterloo implies a lengthy run of
victories and unquestioned power coming to an ignominious end
over a seminal moment when what appeared to be an unstoppable
Union force had to prove on the battlefield and not on the statistical
sheet it was to either crush the rebellion or slowly be bled dry.
But
a shameful lack of historic perspective aside, the next few weeks
will likely render a verdict on liberalism and its always-entertaining
off-shoot, progressivism. And this is not merely because Barack
Obama is the most progressive president perhaps ever, but because
not since The New Deal or The Great Society has this country been
faced with such a severe legislative shift in the role of the
federal government over the private sector. And like the previous
two massive shifts, this one has been at the very least agreed
upon by both major parties: There is a problem with our healthcare
system and it is time for some type of energy reform. The debate
rages on as to the length and breadth of the government's, and
let that read the taxpayers' level of responsibility therein.
For
his part and to his credit, the president has taken to the streets
like none other in my lifetime; engaging direct dialogue with
the citizenry on the healthcare issue specifically. And although
this has helped frame his enthusiasm, it has met with mixed results,
merely because no one pushing the legislation can clearly define
its more detailed pratfalls, sacrifices, or benefits, as laid
out in perfect bureaucratic banality over 1,000 pages. Generalities
and axioms have not taken hold, nor should they, for generations
have understood that once the toothpaste is out of the tube in
large government programs there is no putting it back.
Due
to the occasional ferocious public pushback and more importantly
a Republican contingent in the senate that is emboldened by the
groundswell, the president is already beginning to sway from ideology
to politics, miffing those on the far left like Howard Dean, who
from the periphery try and hold Obama's feet to the fire. Then
comes more rumblings from the House that there could be two bills,
following in the public relations, "Insurance Reform vs. Public
Option" the president has leaned on in weaker moments.
There
is already a sense on the Right that the white flags are beginning
to be unfurled, and to a certain extent, they are, as long as
this progressive president tries to both govern and chase the
two-party unity tag, at best a pipedream worthy of a man banging
his head on the unyielding healthcare wall.
It
is an enviable quest, whether agreed upon or feared, for it is
the determinate of what leadership means. And isn't that the deal
you run on, raise all that money and have every fiber of your
being vetted 'til Tuesday to achieve. It comes with the gig, and
the gig has suddenly challenged what Obamamania stood for, not
some political ploy, but a very real and inspiring movement.
And
that is as much at stake now for progressivism as the supply-side,
less-government, Shining City On The Hill rallying cry was for
conservatism in 1981, not long after the Reagan Victory became
the Reagan Myth as the 40th president of the United States, faced
with a crippling recession and an alarming spike in the national
deficit, unilaterally rolled back his famous tax cuts one by one,
until he was forced to repeatedly raise taxes across two terms.
But the myth lives, like the myth that The New Deal without an
ensuing world conflict was a rousing success in saving a nation
plunged into a Depression by the same drunken spasms of greed
we too paid dearly for these past months.
A
presidency and his ideology on the line.
Go
time.
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