
Norman Solomon translates the State of the Union for us.
The words in President Obama’s “State of the Union” speech were often lofty, spinning through the air with the greatest of ease and emitting dog whistles as they flew.
Let’s decode the president’s smooth oratory in the realms of climate change, war and civil liberties.
For the sake of our children and our future, we must do more to combat climate change.
We’ve done so little to combat climate change — we must do more.
I urge this Congress to get together, pursue a bipartisan, market-based solution to climate change…
Climate change is an issue that can be very good for Wall Street. Folks who got the hang of “derivatives” and “credit default swaps” can learn how to handle “cap and trade.” The corporate environmental groups are on board, and maybe we can offer enough goodies to big corporations to make it worth their while to bring enough of Congress along.
The natural gas boom has led to cleaner power and greater energy independence. We need to encourage that.
Dual memo. To T. Boone Pickens: “Love ya.” To environmentalists who won’t suck up to me: “Frack you.” (And save your breath about methane.)
That’s why my administration will keep cutting red tape and speeding up new oil and gas permits.
Blow off steam with your demonstrations, you 350.org types. I’ll provide the platitudes. XL Keystone, here we come.
After a decade of grinding war, our brave men and women in uniform are coming home.
How’s that for an applause line? Don’t pay too much attention to the fine print. I’m planning to have 32,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan a year from now, and they won’t get out of there before the end of 2014. And did you notice the phrase “in uniform”? We’ve got plenty of out-of-uniform military contractors in Afghanistan now, and you can expect that to continue for a long time.
And by the end of next year, our war in Afghanistan will be over.
If you believe that, you’re the kind of sucker I appreciate — unless you think “our war in Afghanistan” doesn’t include killing people with drones and cruise missiles.
Beyond 2014, America’s commitment to a unified and sovereign Afghanistan will endure, but the nature of our commitment will change. We’re negotiating an agreement with the Afghan government that focuses on two missions: training and equipping Afghan forces so that the country does not again slip into chaos, and counterterrorism efforts that allow us to pursue the remnants of al Qaeda and their affiliates.
We’re so pleased to help Afghan people kill other Afghan people! Our government’s expertise in such matters includes superb reconnaissance and some thrilling weaponry, which we’ll keep providing to the Kabul regime. And don’t you love the word “counterterrorism”? It sounds so much better than: “using the latest high-tech weapons to go after people on our ‘kill lists’ and unfortunately take the lives of a lot of other people who happen to be around, including children, thus violating international law, traumatizing large portions of the population and inflicting horrors on people in ways we would never tolerate ourselves.”
We don’t need to send tens of thousands of our sons and daughters abroad, or occupy other nations. Instead, we’ll need to help countries like Yemen, Libya and Somalia provide for their own security, and help allies who take the fight to terrorists, as we have in Mali. And, where necessary, through a range of capabilities, we will continue to take direct action against those terrorists who pose the gravest threat to Americans.
We don’t need flag-draped coffins coming home. We’re so civilized that we’re the planetary leaders at killing people with remote control from halfway around the world.
We must enlist our values in the fight. That’s why my administration has worked tirelessly to forge a durable legal and policy framework to guide our counterterrorism efforts. Throughout, we have kept Congress fully informed of our efforts. And I recognize that, in our democracy, no one should just take my word for it that we’re doing things the right way. So, in the months ahead, I will continue to engage Congress to ensure not only that our targeting, detention and prosecution of terrorists remains consistent with our laws and system of checks and balances, but that our efforts are even more transparent to the American people and to the world.
I’m sick of taking flak just because I pick and choose which civil liberties I want to respect. If I need to give a bit more information to a few other pliant members of Congress, I will. The ones who get huffy about the Bill of Rights aren’t going to get the time of day from this White House. I recognize that some of my base is getting a bit upset about this civil-liberties thing, so I’ll ramp up the soothing words and make use of some prominent Democratic members of Congress who are of course afraid to polarize with me. Don’t underestimate this president; I know how to talk reverentially about our great nation’s “checks and balances” as I undermine them.
The leaders of Iran must recognize that now is the time for a diplomatic solution, because a coalition stands united in demanding that they meet their obligations. And we will do what is necessary to prevent them from getting a nuclear weapon.
Maybe it’s just about time for another encore of “preemptive war.”
Public domain photo from Wikimedia Commons.



13 Comments

I am struck by the fact that around this time yesterday FDLers far and wide were claiming that SOTU was a joke and were looking for alternatives to watch last night: thus the comments to attaturk. Today, however, there are several diaries such as this one that seem to take it seriously even while challenging its content.
That may be due to the point that almost every network in sight televised the thing (even al-Jazeera, for pete’s sake). To be sure, there was another dog and pony show over at the USA Network, if without the pony: It turns out that an “affenpinscher,” whatever that is, won Best in Show at the Westminster Kennel Club. (For my part, I finished writing a blog, watched the last half of last week’s “Nashville” episode that I had saved on Comcast On Demand, and went to bed.)
I guess the pony trick part must have been Sen. Rubio taking a drink of water during the Republican response. CNN and MSNBC played a clip of it over and over again this morning, as if it were what was important about last night’s proceedings.
Television. Gotta love it.
Speed up oil and gas permits? Yes, let us cut the “red tape” of requiring a real environmental review!! Course, we already work hard to do that, but more can be done!!!
And all that B.S. about Afghanistan …. too bad he is too smooth to say “WE ARE GOING TO MAKE SURE OUR KILLING OF RAGHEADS and their little children continues and ESCALATES!!! Yay, killing ragheads!!
The President apparently intends to kill all the children with his climate-science-denial lunacy.
His motives are transparent and your translation of the Orwellian “newspeak” is right on. The most transparent Administration in history. True that but not the transparency meaning we were thinking.
Yep.
Bill Moyers wrote a great article yesterday…The Hubris of the Drones…
I’m surprised he just didn’t say “.. and you’re no longer citizens of the United States, you’re highly valued Associates! And we’re proud of every one of you! So get out there and do your best and sell, sell, SELL!”
We’ve totally slipped into never-neverland here. Government by Huckster. Might as well be a carnival barker with a straw hat and a wicker cane gulling the rubes.
There he goes again, with that word “spinning.”
Which is a reminder — if you haven’t read Norman Solomon’s War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death then you can’t understand the full meaning of “spinning.” As they say, Solomon wrote the book on it. You gotta read it, ESPECIALLY to understand Obama because spinning is totally how he got where he is.
The Nielsens are in. Nielsen reported Wednesday that 33.5 million people watched the address live, compared to 38 million last year. It continues a decline through Obama’s terms in office. He had 43 million viewers in 2011 and 48 million in 2010.
Excellent satire. Cynical, dark and real. That’s not a cut.
“A cynic is someone who sees the world as it is, instead of how it should be. Hence the Scythian custom of cutting a cynic’s eyes out so he could see.”
–Robert A. Heinlein
Recommended.
I made the same inferences as Solomon ,without exception .No one opts not to be a cynic if she is tough enough and smart enough to ignore or thrive upon sheepie blowback .
… good link CT … thank you
This likely is all coming back to haunt WashingtonDC,Pentagon,CIA,WH and Capitol Hill.
USA establishing and setting GWOT policy and policies that can and will be tossed back at USA. Does POTUS Obama think about this / is POTUS Obama thinking about this at all? No? Seems so.
Those who let it take place and did not / would not stop it when they could chose to let Bush/Obama GWOT become / be gateway(s) to ongoing blow back consequence(s).
We can do it to them? Then they can do it to us. No? They can’t? How come? Why not? Based on what Bush said and Obama is saying and what Bush did and Obama is doing / does? Good luck with stating and claiming ” No — you can’t — it is illegal when you do it” positions WashingtonDC.
Thank you NS … well stated … goes and gets to the middle. Commended
It’s exceedingly kind of you to take Obama’s words that seriously.
I stopped paying that much attention to his words after ACA passed via reconciliation without a public option.