A simple twist of fate has set President Obama’s second Inaugural Address for January 21, the same day as the Martin Luther King Jr. national holiday.
Obama made no mention of King during the Inauguration four years ago — but since then, in word and deed, the president has done much to distinguish himself from the man who said “I have a dream.”
After his speech at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in August 1963, King went on to take great risks as a passionate advocate for peace.
After his Inaugural speech in January 2009, Obama has pursued policies that epitomize King’s grim warning in 1967: “When scientific power outruns moral power, we end up with guided missiles and misguided men.”
But Obama has not ignored King’s anti-war legacy. On the contrary, the president has gone out of his way to distort and belittle it.
In his eleventh month as president — while escalating the U.S. war effort in Afghanistan, a process that tripled the American troop levels there — Obama traveled to Oslo to accept the Nobel Peace Prize. In his speech, he cast aspersions on the peace advocacy of another Nobel Peace laureate: Martin Luther King Jr.
The president struck a respectful tone as he whetted the rhetorical knife before twisting. “I know there’s nothing weak — nothing passive — nothing naive — in the creed and lives of Gandhi and King,” he said, just before swiftly implying that those two advocates of nonviolent direct action were, in fact, passive and naive. “I face the world as it is, and cannot stand idle in the face of threats to the American people,” Obama added.
Moments later, he was straining to justify American warfare: past, present, future. “To say that force may sometimes be necessary is not a call to cynicism — it is a recognition of history; the imperfections of man and the limits of reason,” Obama said. “I raise this point, I begin with this point because in many countries there is a deep ambivalence about military action today, no matter what the cause. And at times, this is joined by a reflexive suspicion of America, the world’s sole military superpower.”
Then came the jingo pitch: “Whatever mistakes we have made, the plain fact is this: The United States of America has helped underwrite global security for more than six decades with the blood of our citizens and the strength of our arms.”
Crowing about the moral virtues of making war while accepting a peace prize might seem a bit odd, but Obama’s rhetoric was in sync with a key dictum from Orwell: “Who controls the past controls the future; who controls the present controls the past.”
Laboring to denigrate King’s anti-war past while boasting about Uncle Sam’s past (albeit acknowledging “mistakes,” a classic retrospective euphemism for carnage from the vantage point of perpetrators), Obama marshaled his oratory to foreshadow and justify the killing yet to come under his authority.
Two weeks before the start of Obama’s second term, the British daily The Guardian noted that “U.S. use of drones has soared during Obama’s time in office, with the White House authorizing attacks in at least four countries: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. It is estimated that the CIA and the U.S. military have undertaken more than 300 drone strikes and killed about 2,500 people.”
The newspaper reported that a former member of Obama’s “counter-terrorism group” during the 2008 campaign, Michael Boyle, says the White House is now understating the number of civilian deaths due to the drone strikes, with loosened standards for when and where to attack: “The consequences can be seen in the targeting of mosques or funeral processions that kill non-combatants and tear at the social fabric of the regions where they occur. No one really knows the number of deaths caused by drones in these distant, sometimes ungoverned, lands.”
Although Obama criticized the Bush-era “war on terror” several years ago, Boyle points out, President Obama “has been just as ruthless and indifferent to the rule of law as his predecessor.”
Boyle’s assessment — consistent with the conclusions of many other policy analysts — found the Obama administration’s use of drones is “encouraging a new arms race that will empower current and future rivals and lay the foundations for an international system that is increasingly violent.”
In recent weeks, more than 50,000 Americans have signed a petition to Ban Weaponized Drones from the World. The petition says that “weaponized drones are no more acceptable than land mines, cluster bombs or chemical weapons.” It calls for President Obama “to abandon the use of weaponized drones, and to abandon his ‘kill list’ program regardless of the technology employed.”
Count on lofty rhetoric from the Inaugural podium. The spirit of Dr. King will be elsewhere.




33 Comments

It doesn’t matter who’s president– The two parties only differ on matters that don’t matter to the banks, corporations, the MIC, the super-wealthy, etc.. Thanks to the new, big-money-lobbyist politics, every president from now on will be a war criminal. Count on it.
Did anyone see it coming?
Once upon a time, the citizens of this nation were encouraged to “believe” in the American Dream, while now, they are daily urgently urged to fearfully “believe” in the American Drone.
It’s all bipartisan … this Age of the Divine Right of Money. When money is all that matters HOW it is “gotten” … does not, that is what the “Racket”, as General Smedley Butler called it, is all about …
Full drones ahead. Invest in US $aving Bombs.
Recommended.
Perhaps I have, somehow, misread your posts, Norman Solomon? Yet it appears, to me, that you are becoming somewhat disenchanted with President Barack Obama’s leadership and policies. More, each time, it seems.
DW
Is Barack Obama passive and naive in regard to the Wall Street commodity market manipulation that’s causing so much suffering. Is Barack Obama passive and naive in regard to the fact that no group of citizens in this country is suffering more than African Americans as a result of that “commodity market manipulation”.
African Americans are the most betrayed group of citizens in this entire country. Since Kunta Kente disembarked in chains from a slave ship, African Americans have dreamed of a Black President, and now they got “Barack Obama”, their dream has come true. Although this shouldn’t conflict with “Kings Dream”, I beg to differ, and that’s all I’m going to say about that.
Hey Mr Smartypants, why don’t you tell The People about Dr King’s other speech? You know, the “I Have a Lesser of Two Evils” speech that I heard so much about last year? Huh? Why not? Dr King’s vision has verily come to pass due to the tireless efforts of his gentle children, black, white, and every other hue of humanity.
Or there’s always his ‘Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution’ 1968 speech four days before his assassination.
But DW seems to be right that Norman is becoming more disenchanted with O; hope that it extends to the D brand.
Yes DW but praise Gawd that Romney didn’t get elected or we would have extended wars, the killing of innocent women and children, destruction of the rule of law, bankers not sent to jail, and the destruction of SS, Medicare, and Medicaid. I count my blessings everyday. Yup I am so glad O got re-elected. /s
The paradox between Dr. King and Obama is painfully obvious. What’s even more distressing, on some levels, is what would Ike, a white, male, GOP, 5 star general think of where we are now?
We’ll find out come midterms.
Obama pretty much spit on everything MLK fought for in his first term. Definitely won’t do anything to redeem himself in the second.
Big O’s inaugural speechifying can be abridged to the following:
Drone, baby, Drone!
Does anyone believe for a minute that Obama isn’t cynical and duplicitous enough to invoke MLK this time around — forehanded or backhanded — to burnish his current pack of lies?
At those points you quoted in the President’s Peace Prize speech, they should have walked up to the stage and snatched the medal away. Peace Prizes should not go to those who espouse the self-proclaimed “pragmatic” vision that war is inevitable a little bit, sometimes, and when we really need it.
His prize still isn’t as revolting as Kissinger’s.
SHUDDER. Much as I hate to admit it, I agree, albeit it gets closer to being neck and neck as time goes by.
>>
brilliant
& he actually has a whole fleet of those illegal imperial flying death dealers..
& you only need one dream…
“A true revolution of values will soon cause us to question the fairness and justice of many of our past and present policies.
On the one hand we are called to play the good Samaritan on life’s roadside; but that will be only an initial act.
One day we must come to see that the whole Jericho road must be transformed so that men and women will not be constantly beaten and robbed as they make their journey on life’s highway.
True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it is not haphazard and superficial. It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring.
A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the countries, and say: ‘This is not just.’
It will look at our alliance with the landed gentry of Latin America and say: ‘This is not just.’ The Western arrogance of feeling that it has everything to teach others and nothing to learn from them is not just,” – mlking
One prominent trait of a true narcissist is the ability to receive pleasure from other peoples pain. Mitt or Barack; same difference
While billions were wasted and lives taken in that useless war in Afghanistan, millions here at home were being thrown into poverty by the “commodity market manipulators”. It’s estimated those manipulated prices of food and gasoline cost the average family an additional $400. dollars a month over a period of years. Where did all that money go? The effect of it’s loss to the lower middle class can be seen where they live in dilapidated houses they no longer have the money to repair.
Senator Bernie Sanders, of Vermont, said “Forget what you may have read about the laws of supply and demand. Oil and gas prices have almost nothing to do with economic fundamentals. According to the Energy Information Administration, the supply of oil and gasoline is higher today than it was three years ago, when the national average for a gallon of gasoline was just $1.90. Meanwhile, the demand for oil in the U.S. is at its lowest level since April of 1997.
Is Big Oil to blame? Sure. Partly. Big oil companies have been gouging consumers for years. They have made almost $1 trillion in profits over the past decade, in part thanks to ridiculous federal subsidies and tax loopholes. I have proposed legislation to end those pointless giveaways to some of the biggest and most profitable corporations in the history of the world.
But there’s another reason for the wild rise in gas prices. The culprit is Wall Street. Speculators are raking in profits by gambling in the loosely regulated commodity markets for gas and oil.
Answer: Commodity traders are responsible for oil prices by bidding on oil futures contracts. These contracts are basically agreements to buy or sell oil at a specific date in the future for an agreed-upon price. These futures contracts are executed on the floor of a commodity exchange by traders who are registered with the Commodities Futures Trading Commission. Commodities have been traded for more than 100 years, and have been regulated by the CFTC since the 1920s.
Commodities traders fall into two categories. Most representatives of companies who actually use oil. They buy oil for delivery at a future date at the fixed price. That way, they know the price of the oil, can plan for it financially, and therefore reduce (or hedge) the risk to their corporations. Traders in the second category are actual speculators. Their only motive is to make money from changes in the price of oil.
A decade ago, speculators controlled only about 30% of the oil futures market. Today, Wall Street speculators control nearly 80% of this market. Many of those people buying and selling oil in the commodity markets will never use a drop of this oil. They are not airlines or trucking companies who will use the fuel in the future. The only function of the speculators in this process is to make as much money as they can, as quickly as they can.
I’ve seen the raw documents that prove the role of speculators. Commodity Futures Trading Commission records showed that in the summer of 2008, when gas prices spiked to more than $4 a gallon, speculators overwhelmingly controlled the crude oil futures market. The commission, which supposedly represents the interests of the American people, had kept the information hidden from the public for nearly three years. That alone is an outrage. The American people had a right to know exactly who caused gas prices to skyrocket in 2008 and who is causing them to spike today.
Even those inside the oil industry have admitted that speculation is driving up the price of gasoline. The CEO of Exxon-Mobil, Rex Tillerson, told a Senate hearing last year that speculation was driving up the price of a barrel of oil by as much as 40%. The general counsel of Delta Airlines, Ben Hirst, and the experts at Goldman Sachs also said excessive speculation is causing oil prices to spike by up to 40%. Even Saudi Arabia, the largest exporter of oil in the world, told the Bush administration back in 2008, during the last major spike in oil prices, that speculation was responsible for about $40 of a barrel of oil.
Just last week, Commissioner Bart Chilton, one of the only Commodity Futures Trading Commission members looking out for consumers, calculated how much extra drivers are being charged as a result of Wall Street speculation. If you drive a relatively fuel-efficient vehicle such as a Honda Civic, you pay an extra $7.30 every time you fill your tank. For larger vehicles, such as a Ford F150, drivers pay an extra $14.56 for each fill-up. That works out to more than $750 a year going directly from your wallet or pocketbook to the Wall Street speculators.
So as speculators gamble, millions of Americans are paying what amounts to a “speculators tax” to feed Wall Street’s greed. People who live in rural areas like my home state of Vermont are hit harder than most because they buy gas to drive long distances to their jobs.
It doesn’t have to work this way. The current spike in oil and gasoline prices was avoidable. Under the Wall Street reform act that Congress passed in 2010, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission was ordered to impose strict limits on the amount of oil that Wall Street speculators could trade in the energy futures market. The regulators dragged their feet.
Finally, after months and months of law-breaking delays, the commission in October adopted a rule. It was a weak version of a proposal that might have put meaningful limits on the number of futures and swaps contracts a single trader could hold. Even the watered-down regulation adopted by the industry-friendly commission was challenged in court. The Financial Markets Association and the International Swaps and Derivatives Association wanted free rein to continue unregulated gambling in the oil markets.
So today, Wall Street once again is laughing all the way to the bank. Once again, federal regulators should move aggressively to end excessive oil speculation. We must do everything we can to lower gas prices so that they reflect the fundamentals of supply and demand and bring needed relief to the American people.
A federal judge today threw out the Dodd-Frank provision that empowered the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to set position limits on commodity trading. Judge Robert Wilkins said in his ruling that the CFTC did not prove the necessity of position limits to curb runaway speculation, and that the law itself did not “constitute a clear and unambiguous mandate to set position limits, as the Commission argues.” Judge Wilkins was appointed by President Obama in 2010.
CFTC already set the position limits, and they were weeks from going into effect in the oil, grain, coffee, gold and other markets, 28 in all. At the time, Sens. Bernie Sanders, Maria Cantwell and others called it weak. Under CFTC’s rule, a single speculator could still hold as much as 25% of all deliverable oil supply in any given month. But now there will be no rule at all, unless CFTC can come up with a better rationale. Judge Wilkins sent the rule back to the CFTC for “further consideration.” But this, of course, is how Wall Street rules get watered down. The initial rule wasn’t all that effective, and yet the industry managed to litigate that away. Any substitute would have to be even more compromised to avoid the ire of the judge. And at that point it becomes close to meaningless.
We know about Martin Luther Kings dream, but we don’t know about Barack Obama’s dream, what’s Barack Obama’s dream?
I confess I recorded the first inauguration and didn’t erase it til big pharma deal came out. This one I won’t go near.
You mean the guy who authorized the overthrow of the duly elected Presidents Mossadegh of Iran and Arbenz in Guatemala. The guy who backed Bao Dai and got us into Vietnam when the French had been beaten by a nationalist movement? The guy who presided over the building of the military-industrial complex for eight years and then warned us of its power right before leaving office? That Ike?
There is morality and there is idle moralism that casts judgments for free.
The President of the United States takes an oath to defend the Constitution. Part of the purpose of that Constitution is for the “common defense”. The President is given the role of commander-in-chief. Martin Luther King’s commitment was not circumscribed by such an oath, nor did he choose to pursue that path. The comparison is specious.
But even within the role of commander-in-chief of the military, the President is tasked and circumscribed by the Congress. And depends on the advice of the diplomatic corps and the military as to the means available for fulfilling his responsibilities for national defense. That same bunch of advisors also are the primary ones who inform the President of what is happening and what the consequences of his decisions are. For the most part, the President makes decisions within a bubble of information. And that bubble of information doesn’t necessarily include Russia Today, Press TV, and Pepe Escobar.
That is a limitation on the Presidency that the rest of us mortals don’t face. Nor do we face the prospect of a mutiny within the armed forces or impeachment proceedings if the public could be convinced that they were in danger. Or if large segments of the public considered his Presidency to be illegitimate.
The President’s speech occurred in December 2009, not yet a year into his Presidency, two months after he ordered a surge and before he exerted any real control over the armed forces, such as he did by cashiering Stanley McChrystal. The parts of his speech that you contrast to Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech are an assertion of national sovereignty and his Constitutional responsibility and intended to contrast his situation with that of King and Gandhi.
IMO, the charge of his denigrating Martin Luther King’s anti-war past is false.
Now let’s criticize the drone policy on practical grounds. It does not make us safer. It concentrates too much power in the hands of a single person. And regardless of the prudence and morality and all of those great things, concentrating power in the Presidency has proved to be a mistake with nuclear weapons because it depends on the judgement of one man as to whether we go to war. Concentrating the power to use drone strikes is a greater mistake because it depends on the judgement of one man as to who is a target and why. And there are 435 men and women who have collaborated with the decision to use drones in this way, not to mention the advisors in the National Security Council and the military itself.
This is the criticism that is warranted.
Cut the moralistic crap and if you have not done so sign the petition. So it doesn’t do anything? So what? It’s only a couple minutes of your time. No doubt there will be more substantial opportunities coming up to apply political pressure.
How dare you compare MLK to Obama? Obama is clearly superior. Obama got himself a Nobel Peace Prize without lifting a finger. And Obama is smart enough to get himself Secret Protection protection for life.
>
obama = sychophant to imperial killers
mlking = targeted for assasination by imperial killers
it ain’t moralisic crap. it is historical fact
“we will have to repent in this generation. Not merely for the vitriolic words and the violent actions of the bad people, but for the appalling silence and indifference of the good people” mlking
Do we “have a dream” or a nightmare?
Great men like Lincoln and King would have, and did, die for their convictions. Obama is neither a King nor a Lincoln.
“It is estimated that the CIA and the U.S. military have undertaken more than 300 drone strikes and killed about 2,500 people.”
We’re not required to have sympathy for the victims of targeted assasinations.
Well, I’ve been around long enough to see that what goes around comes around.
Thanks to wendydavis and others for some very
insightful comments on this fine piece!
Martin Luther King, Jr. set an example of speaking
truth to power, and this is the way we should confront
the reality of the Obama Administration’s drone
policy. Although a pacifist, I would assert that
pacifists and nonpacifists alike should be able to
agree that strengthening rather than undermining the
standards of the Geneva Conventions and other sources
of international law limiting the lethal violence of
armed conflict and affirming elementary human rights
should be a central aspect of our “common defense.”
Unfortunately, the drone policy is an unholy marriage
of two morally intolerable and pragmatically failed
policies, yet more sadly both with broad “bipartisan”
support. The first is bombing civilians, as famously
advanced by the Johnson and Nixon Administrations
alike during the Indochina Wars. Whether delivered by
crewed bombers or by automated vehicles, bombs and
missiles “destroying villages in order to save them”
have not “succeeded,” in Vietnam or Afghanistan. The
report that all military-age males were
considered targets in one recent campaign is all too
reminiscent of the “free-fire zones” in Indochina,
only the technology becoming a bit (or a lot) more
sophisticated. Those of us who recall the “electronic
battlefield” approach followed in Indochina around
1970-1973, during the Nixon Administration’s
“Vietnamization” campaign, may well see the drone
technology as merely a logical development along the
same lethal lines.
However, we must also consider another theme of
“bipartisan” foreign policy since the Carter era:
assassination by missile. The original context for
this concept was the grim specter of a “central war”
– that is, a nuclear war fought between the U.S.A.
and U.S.S.R. as the two superpowers of the time. In
Presidential Directive 59, President Carter approved a
policy of targeting the other side’s leaders and
capabilities for C3I (command, control,
communications, and intelligence) — possibly the same
capabilities which could set some limits on a nuclear
disaster. A favorite fantasy of the time by certain
“defense intellectuals” was to target “the relocation
bunkers of the KGB,” while hopefully maybe killing
“only” a relatively few million Soviet civilians.
In fairness, one should add that the Soviet doctrine
of “political” targeting in the event that “the
imperialists” precipitate nuclear war was more
or less similar, although less publicized.
In a sense, this kind of nuclear war strategizing might
be viewed as academic “thinking about the unthinkable,”
although it did lead to some weapons systems with
destabilizing potentials. But when applied to actual
armed conflicts, the same theme of assassination by
bomb or missile could and did, in good time, kill lots
of actual civilians in real history, as opposed to
scenarios of nuclear war which have (so far) happily
remained hypothetical.
One possible example was the bombing of the al-Amariya
shelter in Baghdad, during the First Imperial
Mesopotamiam War whose 22nd anniversary we mark today.
One explanation for the bombing, which killed hundreds
of innocent civilians, was that “we thought Sadam was
sleeping there.” In the Second Imperial Mesopotamian
War whose 10th anniversary we will be marking in two
months, we learned that an accepted formula was to
kill no more than 30 civilians for each targeted Iraqi
figure. While statistics can vary, that seems a good
summary of the morality of the drone campaign.
Anyone committed to real national security for the
U.S.A. and citizens of all other nations should
consider how the drone policy — and also the policy
of night raids to assassinate people ranging from
Osama bin Laden to any civilian unfortunate enough to
be suspected as a “terrorist” — is really a revival
of the Roman policy of proscription or the old English
policy of outlawry. Defining the whole world as a
“battlefield” where “enemy combatants” may be killed
at any time is a terrorist proposition, whether the
terrorism is state-sponsored or otherwise.
Martin Luther King, Jr., stood for “the beloved
community,” not for “kill lists.” His assassination
should remind us to oppose assassination as a policy
wherever we meet it.
Also, in a spirit of nonviolence, I would add that the
enemy is not President Barack Obama, but the
“bipartisan” policies he seems unable to escape. And I
would conclude by noting that one need not be a
pacifist to endorse the principle of minimum necessary
and proportionate force rather than maximum lethality;
to seek the arrest, humane detention, and trial of
terrorism suspects rather than their preplanned
killing or torture; and to move toward less lethal
military technologies even while closely scrutinizing
their potential for inflicting superfluous pain or
even being abused as deliberate instruments of
torture.
Being President must carry tremendous pressures to
gratify the less auspicious aspects of human nature,
for example by carrying out the assassination of a
famous terrorist and then proclaiming that “justice”
was done. But the example of Martin Luther King, Jr.,
bears witness that we can and must do better, in hope
and struggle.
Thank you. Well put.
Margo, you had me nodding in complete agreement until the apologia in the last two paragraphs.
Here’s exactly how it’s going to play out: by June 2014 Norm will be churning out desperate rants urging everyone everywhere to please please pretty please vote for another Wall St Democrat war criminal because the scary Republican monster from outer space might win and destroy us all.
You heard it here first.
January 21,2013 will be one more opportunity for Barack Obama as current POTUS and newly sworn in again then to be POTUS to present an Inaugural Address that charts a way ahead that perhaps will not be more of what Barack Obama has been doing / not doing as POTUS since Jan.20,2009.
We will see. We will hear. We will know soon enough once again.
It is certain that Barack Obama as POTUS has discarded/wasted/thwarted much potential to be a profile in courage since Jan.20,2009. Those who would suggest otherwise at this point here in January 2013 likely are devout members of the Democratic Party or have decided going with the politics of American Empire or a Barack Obama personality cult suits them good enough or just fine.
Those of us who do not subscribe to the simpleton R vs. D framing(s). Were not happy about what Bill Clinton did as POTUS. What G.W.Bush did as POTUS. Are now not happy about what Barack Obama has done or is doing as POTUS long ago moved pass the R vs. D BS. We want to see some genuine political profiles in courage where doing what needs to be done gets done — what needs to be stopped is stopped — on decent and honorable terms. At least try.
Just not seeing much in way of this trying with Barack Obama. To try and fail is perhaps a likely outcome but to not try/not want to try points to a failure to even envision moving the ball. This is loser conduct. Whether you are POTUS or not. Especially if you are POTUS.
I will give Norman Solomon credit for posting this piece at FDL Diary.
I do think the premise of what Norman Solomon’s expands on is valid.
I understand there are a few or maybe many Ds here at FDL — as one goes from week to week and month to month the tells become pretty obvious. Would these Ds admit it if asked? Maybe/maybe not. Does it matter? It does when the tilt is being played to peddle pro Obama and D Party politics in face of all evidence suggesting doing so is serial denial and/or abusive of fact,truth and record.
Too bad about Barack Obama having aligned himself with what G.W.Bush and R.B.Cheney were advocating and doing/not doing.
One can pair Obama and Bush up into ObamaBush and it does not seem to bring on much in way of willingness to challenge the premise. Is ObamaBush a valid dot connection? Often seems so.
Barack Obama has been elected the President Of The United States now twice. Being I am a US citizen I would like/want/expect POTUS Obama to do what needs to be done to make the USA a better and more equitable nation for ALL its 325 plus million citizens. Its about helping the down trodden and the huddled masses President Obama. Not just Wall St. and those who want more American Militarism,Imperialism and Corporatism. Helping the poor. At home. Abroad. Helping them. Not trying to steal from them or kill them because they don’t/won’t fit into the American Empire Big Smash/Grab Plan.
It is about bringing an end to post WW2 American Militarism that has devoured so much treasure since 1950 in defence of American Empire. It is time to stop this terribly flawed pursuit of American Militarism and Empire. Cut the USG war making/waging budgets by two thirds in $$ and detoured national pursuit capacity. It is needed at home to wage peace.
If anyone is still insane enough to attack the USA where untold numbers of USians have any number or type of weapons let them. They would be/are fools to even try. Until such an attack comes tho give it a rest. If the USA can’t make it without running the planet then this is all about a bigger problem that throwing $633 billion at in 2013 again is not going to solve.
When I see POTUS Barack Obama not bringing ongoing and immune to bribes/money politics legal peril to Wall Streeters and Big $$ Bankers?
But condoning needless and menacing legal threats and perils being applied to someone like Aaron Swartz to the point of causing this young/very gifted human being to despair of any just or scaled to deed(s) done legal outcome?
I am gong to think Barack Obama is not where I need Barack Obama to be.
So who has POTUS Obama fired at DOJ since what took place around Aaron Swartz? Who? Anyone? No one?
How many Wall Streeters or Big $$ Bankers post 2008 have been pushed by this Obama WH and its DOJ which is headed up by the man Obama placed there — AG Eric Holder — since Jan. 2009 — to where they faced multi decade punishments,large multi-million $$ penalties and devastation of their lives and CVs due to having felony conviction(s) placed on those lives and CVs? How many?
How many innocents have met death due to choices/decisions made by POTUS Barack Obama based on what American Empire feels like doing or is able to do because it wants to and no one can stop it?
Cut the moralistic crap? No. Cut the American Empire/Obama serial apologia.
Barack Obama is no profile in courage — if Barack Obama were it is likely Bradley Manning would not be in jail in 2013 for telling/showing facts and truths — several hundred innocent children in lands beyond the coasts of these United States would not be dead at least due to killer drones flying in to kill humans based on who knows what intel guided by someone thousands of miles away.
This is monstrous conduct.
Were and had Barack Obama been a decent human being such decency would have informed Barack Obama as a parent and as POTUS Obama to pull the killer drones out of service and stop using them after the first incident of innocent children being killed by such means.
POTUS Barack Obama did not. Has not.
Cut the moralistic crap? No.
Correction — USA population / Mid January 2013 / 315,125,000
To wayoutwest: Your very honest comment gives me the opportunity to clarify that while I recognize the humanity of Barack Obama, the dangers of his sometimes inhumane policies prevented me from voting for him in either 2008 or 2012. Certainly I did not intend an apologia in the classic Greek sense: a defense of what I regard as impeachable offenses, with a policy of assassination at the top of the list.
I am wondering, Mr. Solomon, in light of previous diaries, would it now be a ‘tactical move for progressives’ to boycott the upcoming inauguration? Just how was the tactic supposed to play out after the re-election of this mockery of everything Martin Luther King stood for?
I for one will not endure listening to another such juxtaposition as the Nobel Prize speech. I will be taking a long walk out in the longsuffering countryside that is still trying to get our attention.
I think now that his dream is to outdo Bill Clinton in the extravagant opulence of wedding display – by the billion, not million, and two instead of one. No more and no less than that.
You cannot be serious, TD. Not a denigration of Martin Luther King? The entire Nobel speech was crafted to that effect. In carefully worded dexterity it was Cheney’s “We have to work on the dark side” spelled out.
What exactly is the common defense? Wasn’t it clear from the entire Bush general, CinC, warmongering that we were becoming less not more safe? And yet Obama as soon as he was in office, continued these highly damaging policies and ramped them up. How many war deaths? Are we safer?
On Inauguration Day, I hope the Reverend will move his mountain to some more remote and peaceful spot where we can all join him in prayer for the country and the world.
There is nothing to lift the heart of Martin Luther King in this administration.
Nothing.
Say what?