Wednesday, January 21, 2015

meaningless babble

Yesterday's State of the Union speech is the one Obama should have
presented as his first address to the nation, back in January 2010.
And then, with some prospects of passage, Democrats in the House and
Senate should have proposed supportive legislation. Flooded the
Congress with bill after bill, chopping away at the long standing
Reaganomics. But forgive me if I am just a whee cynical regarding
Obama's call for social reforms. For the next two years nothing will
change....unless it is for the worst. Obama's speech attempts to
reaffirm all that the Democratic Party stands for. But that same
Democratic Party has been absent from Washington D.C. for the past 14
years. Indeed, it could be argued that the Democratic Party has not
been around town since prior to Ronald Reagan, himself.
Slowly but surely the Working Class is being morphed into a Consumer
Class and the Lower Class is turning into a Peasant Class.
It is becoming more and more difficult for members of these two lower
classes to break through the Green Ceiling and become Citizens of the
Empire. But we all seem to believe that with just a bit of luck and
lots of hard work, it could happen to us. Sure, and a flying pink
elephant will bring you the winning lotto ticket.

Carl Jarvis



On 1/21/15, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@optonline.net> wrote:
>
> Published on Alternet (http://www.alternet.org)
> SOTU: Is Obama's New Progressive Agenda Too Little, Too Late?
> ________________________________________
> SOTU: Is Obama's New Progressive Agenda Too Little, Too Late?
> By Steven Rosenfeld [1] / AlterNet [2]
> January 20, 2015
> Higher taxes on the wealthy, banks and stock traders. Free community
> college. Speedier internet service. Paid sick leave. Investing in science,
> schools and infrastructure.
> These were some of the initiatives President Barack Obama proposed in his
> latest State of The Union address [3].
> "Will we accept an economy where only a few of us do spectacularly well? Or
> will we commit ourselves to an economy that generates rising incomes and
> chances for everyone who makes the effort?" he said, opening the speech.
> "So
> tonight, I want to focus less on a checklist of proposals, and focus more
> on
> the values at stake in the choices before us. It begins with our economy."
> But is Obama's better-late-than-never wish list of progressive policies
> really better? Or is it little more than political theatre coming as
> Republicans have their firmest grip on Congress in years?
> Yes, it is pleasing when unruly Republicans have to sit through a
> nationwide
> presidential address and hear a string of articulate liberal analyses and
> remedies. Obama, as every recent president, spoke of what America needs to
> thrive and put forth his to-do list, pointing to Americans seated in the
> House gallery to illustrate the stakes and real-life impacts.
> "The verdict is clear. Middle-class economics works. Expanding opportunity
> works. And these policies will continue to work, as long as politics don't
> get in the way," the president said, after talking about the struggles
> faced
> by Rebekah and Ben Erler of Minneapolis.
> "So what does middle-class economics require in our time?" he continued.
> "First - middle-class economics means helping working families feel more
> secure in a world of constant change. That means helping folks afford
> childcare, college, health care, a home, retirement - and my budget will
> address each of these issues, lowering the taxes of working families and
> putting thousands of dollars back into their pockets each year."
> But if history is a guide, almost all of Obama's initiatives will falter.
> History is filled with presidents proposing and Congresses disposing. In
> last year's speech, Obama called for, among other things, reforming the
> federal tax code, raising taxes on fossil fuel industries, cutting student
> loan costs, making pre-kindergarten available to all four-year-olds,
> raising
> the federal minimum wage, and creating automatic IRAs for employees. All of
> these proposals died [4] in Congress, and that was when Democrats still
> held
> the Senate.
> This pattern highlights a persistant problem with Democrats. Too many wave
> populist flags when they are politically weak, not when they have the power
> to pass strong laws and implement them. And they do not press progressive
> demands-which typically poll well nationally-no matter who holds
> congressional majorities.
> To be fair, when Obama took office in 2009 his top challenge was staunching
> a global financial crisis. He and the Democratic-controlled Congress had
> little bandwidth for wider good government initiatives. As a candidate,
> Obama also pledged to bring a post-partisan attitude to the Capital, which
> put compromise with the GOP ahead of implementing a progressive agenda.
> But Obama learned the hard way that nice guys finish last in Washington.
> His
> new executive orders or his agencies' newest rules-sidestepping GOP
> stonewalling on immigration, opening a new diplomatic chapter with Cuba,
> imposing tough carbon-reducing air pollution standards, ending police asset
> seizures-are one result of learning there's little compromising with
> today's
> GOP. And that Republican opposition continues, with the House once again
> leading the charge to block virtually every White House effort.
> It's easy to note the obvious about State of the Union speeches: that they
> are more about pomp than about lifting the circumstances of Americans. But
> this spectacle underscores a serious question about top Democrats. Why is
> it
> that politicians like Obama-who started as liberals, put those values in a
> drawer once in higher office, and resurrected them at their career's
> twilight-don't stand by those values all along? Why do they see the light
> when their window of opportunity is quickly closing?
> There are lots of theories about what Obama is doing. The most salient
> reflect a political truism: By seizing the initiative in any debate, or
> raising issues that frame the agenda, one can rally one's base and build
> resistance to opponents' reactions. Nate Cohn, The New York Times'
> pollster,
> said [5] this is happening now-saying that Obama's actions are to cement
> his
> legacy, hold the line on the GOP rolling back his achievements, and frame
> the debate for the 2016 presidential race.
> "There is not much evidence that liberal voters over all have become
> notably
> more supportive or energized as a result of a more active or more
> progressive administration," he wrote. But "Mr. Obama's surge among
> Hispanic
> voters might be particularly telling. It is a sign that Democratic-leaning
> voters dissatisfied with Mr. Obama's performance might not be so
> disillusioned that they can't be lured back to the Democrats by the issues
> and messages that brought them to the party in the first place."
> The problem with this kind of analysis-which surely is partly correct-is it
> bodes well for whoever is the Democratic candidate in 2016, but what about
> between then and now?
> Gas prices are down. The stock market is up. Consumers have more spending
> money. That is mostly why Obama's approval ratings are edging upward and
> are
> now 46 percent. It also gives the White House some power, because it
> underscores that Obama has helped to revive some corners of the economy.
> But does anyone really think that this Congress [6] is going to agree to a
> higher capital gains taxes and taxes on banks, or impose a transaction tax
> to curb Wall Street speculators? Or find $60 billion to pay for free
> community college tuition? Or they will not try to deport the dreamers-the
> American-raised children of undocumented immigrants? Or take real steps to
> help the middle-class?
> Addressing inequality may be a theme in Obama's highest-profile speech of
> the year, but the richest Americans keep getting richer and their defenders
> in Congress astoundingly accuse Obama of inciting class warfare.
> "I see this as the president returning to the the theme of class warfare,"
> Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-IL, told the Times this week. "It may have been
> effective in 2012, but I don't find it to be effective anymore. I think,
> frankly, he's out of ideas if he is unwilling to work with Republicans, and
> I think he is unwilling to work with Republicans."
> Obama isn't out of ideas. He's out of luck given the GOP's intransigence
> and
> congressional majority. Despite his upbeat language, the state of the union
> is not great. It's politically stalemated. It's economically fractured. Too
> many problems keep growing. Obvious solutions get ignored. And talking like
> a born-again progressive doesn't make real change happen, even if it puts
> the GOP on the defensive and rallies the base until Hillary makes her
> entrance.
>
>
> Share on Facebook Share
> Share on Twitter Tweet
> Report typos and corrections to 'corrections@alternet.org'. [7]
> [8]
> ________________________________________
> Source URL:
> http://www.alternet.org/sotu-obamas-new-progressive-agenda-too-little-too-la
> te
> Links:
> [1] http://www.alternet.org/authors/steven-rosenfeld
> [2] http://alternet.org
> [3] http://go.wh.gov/SOTUMedium
> [4]
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/wp/2015/01/20/obamas-2014-s
> tate-of-the-union-proposals-what-flopped-and-what-succeeded/
> [5]
> http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/20/upshot/what-a-rise-in-obamas-approval-rati
> ng-means-for-2016.html?ref=politics&amp;_r=0&amp;abt=0002&amp;abg=1
> [6]
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/obama-will-give-state-of-union-addres
> s-against-backdrop-of-deep-partisan-divide/2015/01/19/6d29fe00-9fe9-11e4-9f8
> 9-561284a573f8_story.html?wpisrc=nl_headlines&amp;wpmm=1
> [7] mailto:corrections@alternet.org?Subject=Typo on SOTU: Is Obama&#039;s
> New Progressive Agenda Too Little, Too Late?
> [8] http://www.alternet.org/
> [9] http://www.alternet.org/%2Bnew_src%2B
>
> Published on Alternet (http://www.alternet.org)
> Home > SOTU: Is Obama's New Progressive Agenda Too Little, Too Late?
>
> SOTU: Is Obama's New Progressive Agenda Too Little, Too Late?
> By Steven Rosenfeld [1] / AlterNet [2]
> January 20, 2015
> Higher taxes on the wealthy, banks and stock traders. Free community
> college. Speedier internet service. Paid sick leave. Investing in science,
> schools and infrastructure.
> These were some of the initiatives President Barack Obama proposed in his
> latest State of The Union address [3].
> "Will we accept an economy where only a few of us do spectacularly well? Or
> will we commit ourselves to an economy that generates rising incomes and
> chances for everyone who makes the effort?" he said, opening the speech.
> "So
> tonight, I want to focus less on a checklist of proposals, and focus more
> on
> the values at stake in the choices before us. It begins with our economy."
> But is Obama's better-late-than-never wish list of progressive policies
> really better? Or is it little more than political theatre coming as
> Republicans have their firmest grip on Congress in years?
> Yes, it is pleasing when unruly Republicans have to sit through a
> nationwide
> presidential address and hear a string of articulate liberal analyses and
> remedies. Obama, as every recent president, spoke of what America needs to
> thrive and put forth his to-do list, pointing to Americans seated in the
> House gallery to illustrate the stakes and real-life impacts.
> "The verdict is clear. Middle-class economics works. Expanding opportunity
> works. And these policies will continue to work, as long as politics don't
> get in the way," the president said, after talking about the struggles
> faced
> by Rebekah and Ben Erler of Minneapolis.
> "So what does middle-class economics require in our time?" he continued.
> "First - middle-class economics means helping working families feel more
> secure in a world of constant change. That means helping folks afford
> childcare, college, health care, a home, retirement - and my budget will
> address each of these issues, lowering the taxes of working families and
> putting thousands of dollars back into their pockets each year."
> But if history is a guide, almost all of Obama's initiatives will falter.
> History is filled with presidents proposing and Congresses disposing. In
> last year's speech, Obama called for, among other things, reforming the
> federal tax code, raising taxes on fossil fuel industries, cutting student
> loan costs, making pre-kindergarten available to all four-year-olds,
> raising
> the federal minimum wage, and creating automatic IRAs for employees. All of
> these proposals died [4] in Congress, and that was when Democrats still
> held
> the Senate.
> This pattern highlights a persistant problem with Democrats. Too many wave
> populist flags when they are politically weak, not when they have the power
> to pass strong laws and implement them. And they do not press progressive
> demands-which typically poll well nationally-no matter who holds
> congressional majorities.
> To be fair, when Obama took office in 2009 his top challenge was staunching
> a global financial crisis. He and the Democratic-controlled Congress had
> little bandwidth for wider good government initiatives. As a candidate,
> Obama also pledged to bring a post-partisan attitude to the Capital, which
> put compromise with the GOP ahead of implementing a progressive agenda.
> But Obama learned the hard way that nice guys finish last in Washington.
> His
> new executive orders or his agencies' newest rules-sidestepping GOP
> stonewalling on immigration, opening a new diplomatic chapter with Cuba,
> imposing tough carbon-reducing air pollution standards, ending police asset
> seizures-are one result of learning there's little compromising with
> today's
> GOP. And that Republican opposition continues, with the House once again
> leading the charge to block virtually every White House effort.
> It's easy to note the obvious about State of the Union speeches: that they
> are more about pomp than about lifting the circumstances of Americans. But
> this spectacle underscores a serious question about top Democrats. Why is
> it
> that politicians like Obama-who started as liberals, put those values in a
> drawer once in higher office, and resurrected them at their career's
> twilight-don't stand by those values all along? Why do they see the light
> when their window of opportunity is quickly closing?
> There are lots of theories about what Obama is doing. The most salient
> reflect a political truism: By seizing the initiative in any debate, or
> raising issues that frame the agenda, one can rally one's base and build
> resistance to opponents' reactions. Nate Cohn, The New York Times'
> pollster,
> said [5] this is happening now-saying that Obama's actions are to cement
> his
> legacy, hold the line on the GOP rolling back his achievements, and frame
> the debate for the 2016 presidential race.
> "There is not much evidence that liberal voters over all have become
> notably
> more supportive or energized as a result of a more active or more
> progressive administration," he wrote. But "Mr. Obama's surge among
> Hispanic
> voters might be particularly telling. It is a sign that Democratic-leaning
> voters dissatisfied with Mr. Obama's performance might not be so
> disillusioned that they can't be lured back to the Democrats by the issues
> and messages that brought them to the party in the first place."
> The problem with this kind of analysis-which surely is partly correct-is it
> bodes well for whoever is the Democratic candidate in 2016, but what about
> between then and now?
> Gas prices are down. The stock market is up. Consumers have more spending
> money. That is mostly why Obama's approval ratings are edging upward and
> are
> now 46 percent. It also gives the White House some power, because it
> underscores that Obama has helped to revive some corners of the economy.
> But does anyone really think that this Congress [6] is going to agree to a
> higher capital gains taxes and taxes on banks, or impose a transaction tax
> to curb Wall Street speculators? Or find $60 billion to pay for free
> community college tuition? Or they will not try to deport the dreamers-the
> American-raised children of undocumented immigrants? Or take real steps to
> help the middle-class?
> Addressing inequality may be a theme in Obama's highest-profile speech of
> the year, but the richest Americans keep getting richer and their defenders
> in Congress astoundingly accuse Obama of inciting class warfare.
> "I see this as the president returning to the the theme of class warfare,"
> Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-IL, told the Times this week. "It may have been
> effective in 2012, but I don't find it to be effective anymore. I think,
> frankly, he's out of ideas if he is unwilling to work with Republicans, and
> I think he is unwilling to work with Republicans."
> Obama isn't out of ideas. He's out of luck given the GOP's intransigence
> and
> congressional majority. Despite his upbeat language, the state of the union
> is not great. It's politically stalemated. It's economically fractured. Too
> many problems keep growing. Obvious solutions get ignored. And talking like
> a born-again progressive doesn't make real change happen, even if it puts
> the GOP on the defensive and rallies the base until Hillary makes her
> entrance.
> Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.
> Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.
> Report typos and corrections to 'corrections@alternet.org'. [7]
> Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.[8]
>
> Source URL:
> http://www.alternet.org/sotu-obamas-new-progressive-agenda-too-little-too-la
> te
> Links:
> [1] http://www.alternet.org/authors/steven-rosenfeld
> [2] http://alternet.org
> [3] http://go.wh.gov/SOTUMedium
> [4]
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/wp/2015/01/20/obamas-2014-s
> tate-of-the-union-proposals-what-flopped-and-what-succeeded/
> [5]
> http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/20/upshot/what-a-rise-in-obamas-approval-rati
> ng-means-for-2016.html?ref=politics&amp;_r=0&amp;abt=0002&amp;abg=1
> [6]
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/obama-will-give-state-of-union-addres
> s-against-backdrop-of-deep-partisan-divide/2015/01/19/6d29fe00-9fe9-11e4-9f8
> 9-561284a573f8_story.html?wpisrc=nl_headlines&amp;wpmm=1
> [7] mailto:corrections@alternet.org?Subject=Typo on SOTU: Is Obama&#039;s
> New Progressive Agenda Too Little, Too Late?
> [8] http://www.alternet.org/
> [9] http://www.alternet.org/%2Bnew_src%2B
>
> _______________________________________________
> Blind-Democracy mailing list
> Blind-Democracy@octothorp.org
> https://www.octothorp.org/mailman/listinfo/blind-democracy
>

No comments:

Post a Comment