Published on Saturday, June 12, 2010 by CommonDreams.org                         
by David Michael Green
What do nine dead Gaza  activists in the Mediterranean, nine-plus percent unemployment, and  ninety years of oil catastrophe clean-up have in common?   
How about one astonishingly  tepid president?  
How about one guy in  the White House who squirms in his chair anytime someone uses the word  "bold" and actually means it?  
How about one dude in  the Oval Office who seems much more interested in making deals to  determine  who should be the Democratic candidates for various state offices than  in actually solving national problems?  
We could hardly have  a president more ill-suited to our time if we were to dig up Herbert  Hoover and prop his weary bones up on the presidential throne.   
Barack Obama has five  major problems as president.  The first is that he doesn't understand  priorities.  
The second is that he seems to have little strong  conviction on any given issue.  
The third is that to the extent  he stands for anything, it is for maintenance of a status quo that  continues  to wreck the country in order to service the greed of a few oligarchs.  
 The fourth is that he fundamentally does not understand the powers and  the role of the modern presidency. 
 And the fifth is that he maintains  the worst communications apparatus in the White House since Jimmy Carter   prowled its corridors.  
In fairness to his communications team,  though, he has given them almost nothing to sell.  You try singing  the praises of bailing out Goldman Sachs one hundred cents on the  dollar,  or of a health care plan that forces people to buy plans they don't  want from hated insurance vultures.  It ain't easy, pal.  
Yet, on the other hand, Bush and Cheney had far less than nothing to  sell when it came to the Iraq war - indeed, they had nothing but lies  - and their team handled that masterfully.  
The fundamental characteristic  of the Obama presidency is that the president is a reactive object,  essentially the victim of events and other political forces, rather  than the single greatest center of power in the country, and arguably  on the planet.  He is the Mr. Bill of politicians.  People  sometimes excuse the Obama torpor by making reference to all the  problems  on his plate, and all the enemies at his gate.  
But what they fail  to understand - and, most crucially, what he fails to understand -  is the nature of the modern presidency.  Successful presidents  today (by which I mean those who get what they want) not only drive  outcomes in their preferred direction, but shape the very character  of the debate itself.  And they not only shape the character of  the debate, but they determine which items are on the docket.   
Moreover, there is a  continuously evolving and reciprocal relationship between presidential  boldness and achievement.  In the same way that nothing breeds  success like success, nothing sets the president up for achieving his  or her next goal better than succeeding dramatically on the last go  around.  
This is absolutely a  matter of perception, and you can see it best in the way that Congress  and especially the Washington press corps fawn over bold and  intimidating  presidents like Reagan and George W. Bush.  The political teams  surrounding these presidents understood the psychology of power all  too well.  They knew that by simultaneously  creating a steamroller  effect and feigning a clubby atmosphere for Congress and the press,  they could leave such hapless hangers-on with only one remaining way  to pretend to preserve their dignities.  By jumping on board the  freight train, they could be given the illusion of being next to power,  of being part of the winning team.  And so, with virtually the  sole exception of the now retired Helen Thomas, this is precisely what  they did.  
But the game of successfully  governing is substantive as well as psychological.  More often  than not, timidity turns out not to yield the safe course anticipated  by those with weak knees, but rather their subsequent undoing.   The three cases mentioned at the top of this essay are paradigmatic.   
By far and away the most  crucial problem on the minds of most Americans today is the economy,  as is often the case, but now more than ever.  It's hard to quite  figure where Barack Obama is on this issue.  
What is always most  puzzling with this guy is reconciling the fundamentally irrational  behavior  of his presidency with the obvious intellectual abilities of the  president  and the administrative masterfulness of the campaign he ran to obtain  that office.  It seems to me that there are four options for  understanding  Obama's self-defeating tendency when it comes to the economic disaster  he inherited.  One is that he simply isn't so smart, and doesn't  get the ramifications of continued unemployment at the level it's  currently running.  The second option is that he's just a policy  bungler, who has the right intentions but makes lousy choices for trying   to get there.  
The third possibility is that Obama recognizes this  latest recession as the capstone (we hope) of a three decade long  process  by the economic oligarchy seeking nothing less than the downsizing of  the American middle class, and he simply lacks the courage to attempt  any reversal of this tsunami of wealth redistribution.  The final,  and scariest - but by no means least probable - explanation for  Obama's behavior is that he is ultimately no less a tool in that very  piracy project than was George W. Bush or Bill Clinton.   
Whatever the explanation,  Obama's timidity early in his presidency not only failed to solve  the problem, but more crucially, now precludes him from introducing  any meaningful subsequent attempt at solving the problem.  
Obama's  management of the economic stimulus bill in the first weeks of his  presidency  was the very model of how a president should govern - provided, that  is, that the nineteenth century hadn't actually ended over a hundred  years ago.  This president, who has turned deference to others  - including to his sworn enemies - into an art form, told Congress  that he wanted a stimulus bill and let them fill in the details.   What he got, accordingly, was a giant monstrosity filled with pet  projects  for each congressional district in America, with about one-third of  it constituted by tax cuts in order to buy Republican votes which never  came anyhow.  Nor has there been, to this day, any urgency about  the spending of those funds.  
The upshot of all of  this is threefold, all of it hugely negative.  First, the government  spent an enormous amount of money on the stimulus without solving the  problem of the recession and unemployment.  
Second, it therefore  massively exacerbated the national debt problem, with little gain to  show for it.  And, third, the combination of the first two factors  effectively precludes any subsequent stimulus package from emerging  out of Congress for the foreseeable future, the politics of spending  in general and the stimulus in particular having become altogether  radioactive.   
And here we see how Obama's  failure to lead in the first instance has succeeded above all in digging   him into a hole subsequently.  We are likely looking at nine or  ten percent unemployment for years to come, and Obama's legislative  cowardice has created a situation in which the only remaining meaningful   tool by which to transcend this deep recession has been taken off the  table.  The public looks around and asks, "Why should we spend  more money on economic stimulus, when all it does is fail to produce  results, while simultaneously increasing the national debt?"   It's a legitimate question, except that it omits consideration of  a third alternative, which is to actually do a stimulus correctly,  pumping  money into infrastructure, alternative energy projects, unemployment  compensation, retraining programs and the like, all of which would  positively  impact the economy in both the short, medium and long terms.   
You see the same phenomenon  in virtually everything Obama touches.  Lots of spiffy rhetoric.   But then lots of deference to every other actor in the play (except,  of course, for the interests of the American public or for his base  of progressive voters), including those who are overtly trying to  destroy  the president.  "You say that Republicans want to remove the  public option from the health care bill?  Okay, let's give that  to them.  It's bound to buy, golly, what? ... zero whole votes  from their caucus!"  "You say they demand yet more tax cuts  be included in the stimulus bill?  Let's do that!  And watch  them vote against it almost without exception."  Brilliant.   
In the Middle East, Obama  has spent his first year-and-a-half in office getting bitch-slapped  by Noxious Netanyahu, with nothing to show for it but total  embarrassment.   It's gotten so bad that you can no longer tell which country is the  client state of the other.  Is it the one with the economy, military,  territory, population and political power that dwarfs the other, or  is it the one that continually receives financial, military and  political  support from the other, no matter what it does?  Including, for  example, regularly invading its neighbors, strangling a population of  over a million people, pissing off the whole world, and humiliating  both the president and vice-president of its benefactor country by  continuing  to build more illegal, peace-preventing settlements, in direct,  intentional  and arrogant contravention of their expressed preference to the  contrary.   If Obama could possibly be more passive in this situation, it's  difficult  to know how.  Perhaps he could strap on a construction belt and  assist the Israelis himself in building some apartment complexes in  East Jerusalem.  While he was at it, maybe he'd take his shirt  off in the hot Mediterranean sun, and get in another one of those hunky  president photos he seems so fond of.  
The story is the same  back in the Gulf of Mexico, where Obama recently had his very own  Michael  Dukakis moment.  Trying to look tough, like Dukakis did haplessly  riding around on that tank in the picture that spoke a million words  (and sank a presidential campaign), Obama decided to use a four-letter  word to show how serious he is about those mean fellows at BP and their  errant flow of oil.  
Except that this president is so inept that  he could only manage three of the requisite four letters.  He told  NBC's Matt Lauer that he has been visiting the oil spill region "so  I know whose ass to kick".  I mean, raise your hand if you think  that that little display of anger for the cameras was about as authentic   as Cheese Whiz.  And simultaneously both far less and far more  cheesy. 
 But it gets worse.  It then turns out that during  all of the last 45 or so days, the president hasn't yet had a phone  conversation with the CEO of British Petroleum.  Turns out Obama  traveled all that way to New Orleans and still couldn't get a postal  code for the limey arse to which to fax over his presidential boot.   
Like he would use it  if he had it, anyhow.  Can you imagine the conversation he might  have with Tony Hayward?  
Obama:  "Hey,  Tony, your oil spill is really causing me problems, so I thought I'd  call to kick your ass a little."  
Hayward:  "Screw  you, punk.  You do what I tell you."  
Obama:  "Oh god,  you're right.  Christ!  Sorry.  I forgot myself.   For a minute there I thought I was talking to my daughter about her  homework."  
Hayward:  "Get  your facts straight, pal.  Starting with who here works for whom."   
Obama:  "Yes,  sir.  Right away, sir.  What can we do for you?"   
Hayward:  "Nothing  at all would be perfect, just like you have been doing.  Just let  us drill where we want, spill where want, thrill as is our wont to the  sheer brazenness of our lies, and bill your account for the damages.   We're not greedy we won't ask for more than that."   
Obama:  "You got  it, Mr. Hayward.  We'll get right on it.  Raaaahhm!!!"   
The only thing more grim  than the visage of the pathetic Obama administration in non-action is  a consideration of the opportunity lost here.  
Obama had all the  cards stacked in his favor, ranging from a destroyed opposition party,  to a series of crises, to a public demanding change, to massive  majorities  in Congress, to global good will.  He's pissed it all away in  his unrelenting dedication to mediocrity and inoffensiveness.   
And the only thing more  grim than that is to consider where this all leads.  
Every day  I shudder a little more as yet another two-by-four is crow-barred out  from the edifice of America's experiment in liberal democracy.   Every time the Supreme Court hands down a decision, it means more power  for the state, more power for the imperial president (whom they also  select when they feel like it), and especially, more power for the  rich.   Every day more people are dying in the stupid and endless wars of the  twilight empire, for which nobody can even articulate a purpose.   Every election cycle more lethally vicious regressives are victorious,  crushing common sense and human rights in tandem, moving the country  further in the direction of mindless fascism.  
There's no other word  for it.  This country is just plain rotting from within.   
And, thus, perhaps the  most tragic aspect of the Obama regime will not be the embarrassingly  hapless conduct of this baseball of a president, getting smacked around  by big steroid-sculpted biceps swinging fat slabs of menacing lumber  at the velocity of their choice.  Nor will it be the blown opportunities   of epic proportion, not likely to be seen again for a long time.   
It is likely to be, instead,  the door that was opened for far worse to be inflicted upon the American   public and the world.  
By failing to stand for  anything while the country crumbles, Obama has virtually begged those  who would make the trains run on time to seize power.   
And why shouldn't they  "take their country back" from this president, anyhow?   
I mean, the guy wasn't  even born in America, right?   
 

 
 
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