Dave Lindorff: Obama's Moment is Passing Quickly
The actions of Obama's chief financial adviser Larry Summers and his Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner in permitting the payment of $165 million in bonuses to AIG executives (Summers, according to The Wall Street Journal, actually pressed Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) to secretly remove a bar to the payment of such bonuses from the bailout bill) and storm of public outrage that has followed public disclosure of those payments, provides President Obama, whose administration is stumbling badly on many fronts, to turn things around and avoid political disaster.
He should promptly demand Geithner's and Summers' resignations, and should also fire the CEO of AIG, Edward Liddy (as 80% owner of AIG, the U.S. has the power to do that anytime). It would also be a good idea at the same time to fire the CEOs of all the leading banks that are at this point surviving on government bailouts.
This would allow Obama to correct the fundamental mistake he made during the transition period following the November election in installing a bunch of Clinton-era economic advisors and Bush holdovers to be his economic team.
The U.S. economy is in disastrous shape, and it is going to take new ideas, and people untarnished by the last 30 years of deregulatory excess and unsavory links to Wall Street, to rescue it. Obama has no shortage of good people to turn to: Nobel economist and NY Times columnist Paul Krugman, former World Bank Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz, and economist James Galbraith all spring immediately to mind as people who could offer new and better approaches to addressing both the immediate crisis and the longer-term challenge of restoring the health of the nation's economy, and of making it work for everyone, instead of just the wealthy few.
Of course, it could be that Obama is really not interested in radically changing the U.S. economy and its financial system. He has certainly accepted the tarnished coin of the Wall Street establishment during his campaign, and could simply be doing their bidding, but one has to operate on the hope that this is not the case. After all, the Obama campaign also raised an unprecedented amount of cash from ordinary folks, and if money is influence, he owes those little people big time.
In any event, it seems clear that if this president who spoke during his campaign of "hope and change" continues to cater to the bankers and the corporate interests that want to see no major revamping of the economic system and the regulatory apparatus, he is headed for a one-term presidency -- and a sad and failed one at that.
The voters who sent Obama to Washington have been willing to extend him the benefit of the doubt, even when he made his almost uniformly lousy cabinet picks. They were willing to grant that he had been handed a disastrous situation by the last administration.
But as each week passes, the disaster becomes less Bush's and Cheney's, and more Obama's.
The same can be said of Obama's other big crisis: the two endless wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Again, Obama has largely retained and accepted the advice of the same people who helped run these huge policy disasters during the Bush/Cheney years, and is buying the basic assumptions of those two wars. He is most certainly not ending the Iraq conflict, and is now talking about leaving as many as 50,000 U.S. troops in Iraq for years -- as many as were in Vietnam in the fall of 1965. He is reportedly talking about doubling the number of troops in Afghanistan to over 60,000, and about expanding the war into Pakistan, and not just the tribal areas, but in Baluchistan province, a heavily populated part of that country. This latter decision, which could lead to an explosion in Pakistan, and the collapse of the central government, could lead to an huge demand for more U.S. troops in the area -- perhaps hundreds of thousands more -- and even to India's entry into the conflict.
This is as outrageous and doomed a strategy as is his economic program of trying to salvage the nation's zombie banks while nickel-and-diming a "stimulus" program for ordinary people.
He should seize the moment of s**tcanning his corrupt and inept economic team to also sack his military advisers, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates and his Centcom commander David Petraeus, and bring in people who will tell him how to get the U.S. out of both conflicts pronto.
If he fires and replaces his economic and military teams, and announces both a quick end to the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and the immediate breakup of the country's big failed national banks and financial institutions, he has a chance to become a great president. If he does not, it is as predictable as the rising of the seas that his presidency will be a failure. We are nearing a point where the American public is going to lose patience with the half measures, the continuing pouring of national treasure down the twin sinkholes of the failed financial institutions and the two endless wars in the Middle East, and the tone-deaf behavior of cabinet secretaries and advisors who don't have a clue about how average Americans are living these days.
This is President Obama's moment for action. Firing Geithner and Summers would be a good start.
Americans should make an effort to let President Obama know that they want more than token stimulus programs. (Just consider this: official unemployment is now 8.1 percent, but only 4.5% of American workers are able to collect unemployment benefits, and meanwhile, real unemployment is closer to 18 percent. That's a lot of hurt, and not a lot of help.)
A good idea would be to join a march on the Pentagon set for this Saturday, March 21, and a two-day program of demonstrations against Wall Street set for April 3-4 in New York City.
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist. His latest book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006 and now available in collector's edition from ThisCantBeHappening.net). Lindorff's work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
He should promptly demand Geithner's and Summers' resignations, and should also fire the CEO of AIG, Edward Liddy (as 80% owner of AIG, the U.S. has the power to do that anytime). It would also be a good idea at the same time to fire the CEOs of all the leading banks that are at this point surviving on government bailouts.
This would allow Obama to correct the fundamental mistake he made during the transition period following the November election in installing a bunch of Clinton-era economic advisors and Bush holdovers to be his economic team.
The U.S. economy is in disastrous shape, and it is going to take new ideas, and people untarnished by the last 30 years of deregulatory excess and unsavory links to Wall Street, to rescue it. Obama has no shortage of good people to turn to: Nobel economist and NY Times columnist Paul Krugman, former World Bank Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz, and economist James Galbraith all spring immediately to mind as people who could offer new and better approaches to addressing both the immediate crisis and the longer-term challenge of restoring the health of the nation's economy, and of making it work for everyone, instead of just the wealthy few.
Of course, it could be that Obama is really not interested in radically changing the U.S. economy and its financial system. He has certainly accepted the tarnished coin of the Wall Street establishment during his campaign, and could simply be doing their bidding, but one has to operate on the hope that this is not the case. After all, the Obama campaign also raised an unprecedented amount of cash from ordinary folks, and if money is influence, he owes those little people big time.
In any event, it seems clear that if this president who spoke during his campaign of "hope and change" continues to cater to the bankers and the corporate interests that want to see no major revamping of the economic system and the regulatory apparatus, he is headed for a one-term presidency -- and a sad and failed one at that.
The voters who sent Obama to Washington have been willing to extend him the benefit of the doubt, even when he made his almost uniformly lousy cabinet picks. They were willing to grant that he had been handed a disastrous situation by the last administration.
But as each week passes, the disaster becomes less Bush's and Cheney's, and more Obama's.
The same can be said of Obama's other big crisis: the two endless wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Again, Obama has largely retained and accepted the advice of the same people who helped run these huge policy disasters during the Bush/Cheney years, and is buying the basic assumptions of those two wars. He is most certainly not ending the Iraq conflict, and is now talking about leaving as many as 50,000 U.S. troops in Iraq for years -- as many as were in Vietnam in the fall of 1965. He is reportedly talking about doubling the number of troops in Afghanistan to over 60,000, and about expanding the war into Pakistan, and not just the tribal areas, but in Baluchistan province, a heavily populated part of that country. This latter decision, which could lead to an explosion in Pakistan, and the collapse of the central government, could lead to an huge demand for more U.S. troops in the area -- perhaps hundreds of thousands more -- and even to India's entry into the conflict.
This is as outrageous and doomed a strategy as is his economic program of trying to salvage the nation's zombie banks while nickel-and-diming a "stimulus" program for ordinary people.
He should seize the moment of s**tcanning his corrupt and inept economic team to also sack his military advisers, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates and his Centcom commander David Petraeus, and bring in people who will tell him how to get the U.S. out of both conflicts pronto.
If he fires and replaces his economic and military teams, and announces both a quick end to the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and the immediate breakup of the country's big failed national banks and financial institutions, he has a chance to become a great president. If he does not, it is as predictable as the rising of the seas that his presidency will be a failure. We are nearing a point where the American public is going to lose patience with the half measures, the continuing pouring of national treasure down the twin sinkholes of the failed financial institutions and the two endless wars in the Middle East, and the tone-deaf behavior of cabinet secretaries and advisors who don't have a clue about how average Americans are living these days.
This is President Obama's moment for action. Firing Geithner and Summers would be a good start.
Americans should make an effort to let President Obama know that they want more than token stimulus programs. (Just consider this: official unemployment is now 8.1 percent, but only 4.5% of American workers are able to collect unemployment benefits, and meanwhile, real unemployment is closer to 18 percent. That's a lot of hurt, and not a lot of help.)
A good idea would be to join a march on the Pentagon set for this Saturday, March 21, and a two-day program of demonstrations against Wall Street set for April 3-4 in New York City.
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist. His latest book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006 and now available in collector's edition from ThisCantBeHappening.net). Lindorff's work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
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Oh, please
Losing Your Focus
Dave, I share your concerns about Obama's actions - or lack thereof, as appropriate - and also believe that Geithner was a terrible choice and must be replaced as you suggest. But your tone indicates that you are succumbing to panic. Little that requires reversal has been done to date, so repairing the damage Geithner has caused isn't as big a deal as you are making it. The AIG bonuses pale in comparison to the amount being spent in Iraq.
What is necessary to reclaim the political momentum in this nation is to get the people back into the game. They are tired. They got Obama elected despite all the expected Republican dirty tricks, and they want to see the economy improve and turn us back to prosperity. They think that they completed the task and can now sit back and wait for it to arrive. They don't yet see that the war has only begun, and that it can only escalate.
A panicked commentator cannot accomplish restoring public interest and participation. So stop for a moment, take a deep breath, and get your focus back. You need to gather verifiable facts and them present them in a manner which doesn't turn people off. That is the method by which we defeat GOP efforts to reclaim control and complete the destruction of the nation we both want to defend.
I have to profoundly disagree with your premise
Trillions blown on billionaire bailouts
Geithner and friends have handed out trillions to Wall Street and corporate America. The exact figure is open to debate but probably around $13 trillion. A substantial fraction of that will never be returned.
> The AIG bonuses pale in comparison to the amount being spent in Iraq
Iraq spending pales in comparison to the amounts handed out by the Treasury and the Fed in the last several months. In fact, Obama's handouts to Wall Street insiders dwarf the entire Pentagon budget.
> That is the method by which we defeat GOP efforts to reclaim control and complete the destruction of the nation we both want to defend.
At least Cheney had the common sense to wait until the last couple of months of his Presidency before giving a few trillion to Wall Street. Obama started on day one and he's shoveling money out the door faster than Cheney and he's still got four years to go. Obama is doing a much better job of destroying the USofA than all previous GOP wingnuts combined.
First do no harm
(1) Obama is making the economy much much worse - by following the advice of Wall Street insiders that he should give trillions of dollars to Wall Street insiders. Taxpayer dollars should be used for stimulus - not tax cuts and not for billionaire bonuses. Well over 95% of Obama's payouts have been criminal waste. Wall Street gamblers played the lottery - they kept the winnings and taxpayers are being forced to make good their lossess. AIG bonuses are just a fraction of one percent of that criminal waste.
(2) On most economic and liberty issues, Obama has brought NO CHANGE. He plans to increase the size of the military beyond even Cheney's levels, he uses signing statements, he uses bogus claims of national security to block investigations into administration wrongdoing, he refuses to discuss single-payer and instead wants to compel families to pay thousands to the health-care mafia, he voted to allow corporations to spy on Americans without warrants, ... and on and on and on.
Obama is better than Bush on a couple of issues - the standard hot-button issues that are used by both Dims and Repugs and that were carefully chosen to distract attention from the Plutocrats who have been stealing America since at least Reagan's time.
Americans trust Barack Obama
Well......
A fare assessment is what you get when you get on a bus