This article was originally published on the People’s Blog for the Constitution and is the first in a forthcoming series articulating specific civil liberties recommendations for the second Obama administration.
President Obama’s reelection has sparked an onslaught of analysis attempting to define the agenda for his second term. Will it reflect the vision of restoring liberty and security on which the president ran in 2008, or the disappointing passivity towards the national security state that characterized his first term?
More to the point, will President Obama’s legacy include emerging American authoritarianism, or instead the recovery of constitutional freedoms lost over the past decade? While machinations in Washington will of course influence the answer, We the People will play a crucial role, well beyond the 2012 election, in determining the outcome.
Obama’s legacy of constitutional violations
With the broad strokes that history affords the past, any president’s legacy usually shrinks within a decade to two or three elements. For instance, Clinton is remembered for presiding over the tech boom and resulting federal surplus, dismantling welfare and escalating mass incarceration, and surviving a partisan impeachment effort prompted by sophomoric sexual indiscretion.
George H. W. Bush’s legacy includes the first Iraq war, failing to energize the economy, and a premature pledge not to raise taxes. We remember Ronald Reagan for overcoming the Soviet Union and its satellites (even if his methods ensured the contemporary budget crisis, created al-Qaeda, and emboldened Iran), heralding “morning in America” to end a recession, and after surviving an assassination attempt, conveniently growing unable to recall more or less anything about compounding scandals that stained his second term.
In these broad strokes, President Obama’s legacy will likely include memories of the historic debate over healthcare policy in 2009, and the recurring budget crises that, combined with GOP intransigence, have periodically brought Washington to a standstill under his administration. The most enduring part of his legacy, however, will be the entrenchment of the national security state on his watch.
Beyond merely failing to reverse the trajectory of the Bush-Cheney administration, Obama’s first term extended it, pioneering new abuses while entrenching old ones.
Unlike Obama, Bush & Cheney never asserted the authority to kill US citizens based on their speech.
Unlike Obama, Bush & Cheney never signed into a law a statute granting the military the power to detain any American without evidence or proof of crime.
While Bush & Cheney violated international law by authorizing torture, it took the Obama administration to decide that such criminal acts would go unpunished (or even investigated), ensuring their recurrence and nailing the coffin of international human rights.
The Obama administration’s prosecution of whistleblowers who sacrifice their jobs to defend the public interest has reached unprecedented levels, as have deportations of undocumented workers, their families, and occasionally, even US citizens. Rather than repudiate the Bush & Cheney paradigm, Obama has unfortunately perpetuated it.
A former President’s warning
50 years ago, a president with the deepest military roots among any who has held office since then–no mere General, but the Supreme Allied Commander during World War II, Dwight “Ike” Eisenhower — issued a disturbing warning about a threat to our democracy posed by “an immense military establishment and a large arms industry” that, together, he described as “the military-industrial complex.” President Eisenhower said, in no uncertain terms, that:
“[W]e must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence…by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.
We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.”
Ike observed the larval stages of a dynamic that has grown only more pernicious since he left office. In the decade since 9/11, under Presidents Bush and Obama alike, our military-industrial complex has initiated not only various military conflicts abroad, but also a domestic war on the constitutional rights of the American people.
Secret and increasingly immune to public accountability, if not above the law altogether, and insulated from accountability by elected leaders from each of the major political parties, an alphabet soup of federal agencies has emerged to pursue a duplicative, wasteful, and constitutionally abusive national security agenda.
Eisenhower proved prescient. True to his prediction, the contemporary national security racket offends all Americans, regardless of ideology.
Casualties of the national security state: transparency, accountability, and legitimacy
First, it has erected such pervasive secrecy that it threatens the basis for democratic accountability, subverting the consent of the governed on which democratic legitimacy depends. For years, the NSA operated its dragnet warrantless wiretapping scheme in total secrecy, not only unauthorized by statute, but in direct violation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) enacted by Congress in the 1970s to stop domestic spying.
Every federal court ever to review the program on the merits has struck it down as unconstitutional, yet it persists unabated. Congress bent over backward to rewrite the FISA law in 2008, and appellate courts have thrown out numerous lawsuits challenging it based on the perverse reasoning that, because the NSA’s program is secret, no plaintiffs can prove that they, in particular, have been monitored.
Officials have admitted to violating even the permissive new law. Members of Congress have asked tough questions and received only silence in response. Yet, reflecting a disturbing pattern of bipartisan abdication repeated over the past decade, the House recently voted to reauthorize the 2008 FISA amendments for another five years, even beyond the next administration.
Secret programs violating contrived statutes, especially with the blessing of (supposedly) independent courts, make a mockery of our claim to live in “a land of the free.”
Further installments in this series will examine the ideologically diverse social movements abused by misguided and constitutionally offensive domestic spying activities, as well as the contribution of those programs to the federal budget crisis. The series will conclude by suggesting not one, but two alternative national security agendas for President Obama’s second term.
Photo by leighblackall under Creative Commons license.




60 Comments

Recommended! Most do not recognize Obama the “constitutional lawyer” has a substantially worse record on civil rights than Bush. For more verification see Civil Rights – http://newprogs.org/blog/2011/11/09/civil-rights-under-democraticrepublican-uni-party
But-but-but Obama is a Constitutional scholar! Yeah, like Reagan was a union president.
Highly recommended! There no indication that the Fatherland Security State is going to do anything other than continue to grow exponentially in BO’s second term.
Recommended.
Not his promises to the populace at any rate. The promises he made to the American economic elite are in my opinion another matter entirely. Obama has continued and deepened his predecessor’s policies, both at home and abroad.
mfi
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No.
No.
I wonder how the cheerleaders for Obama will spin his fulfilling his promises to the elites while ignoring the rest of us?
“We remember Ronald Reagan for overcoming the Soviet Union and its satellites.” Huh? Reagan “overcame” the Soviet Union? Really? How so? Reagan happened to be president when the Soviet Union began to implode. That is all. He didn’t “overcome” a damn thing.
Thank you.
Shoot, I already deleted OBomba’s new email. It was all about jobs, energy security (oh, yes! XL pipeline approval hint?) and consensus, consensus, consensus!
One area that’s chilled the socks off me is the intertwining of JSOC, the paramilitarized CIA, mercenaries, and hidden military sites (Afrikom), etc., and the unitary executive.
Rec’d, and I do agree with jimbowski on the USSR.
Meet the new liar, same as the old liar!
Brevity is surely the soul of truth, at least in this case.
He cannot fulfill the promises of 2008. Four terrible years have ensued since then. People have died who should not have died.
Four terrible years.
Recommended.
If Obama’s recent history is any indicator, Obama will continue to feed his corporate masters. We, who had the bravery to vote 3d party (Jill Stein), are paying rapt attention to Obama’s words and actions as he nears the betrayal of older people by undermining Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security.
I will have no compunction about saying “I told you so” to all those bots who bought Obama’s flow of bs.
That depends on if his failure during the first 4 years was due to cowardice, corruption or incompetence. There is a strong argument to be made for any of these explanations so really, who knows. (for simplicity, we’ll just consider professing to support a policy while, in fact, supporting the exact opposite as corruption)
We’re undoubtedly best off if his problem is cowardice. Now that he can’t face election any longer, the paralyzing fear of negative political impact should be lifted. Ultimately, such cowardice is borne of insecurity. In this case, he’ll become desperate to leave office as something better than “well, at least he’s not the hordes of teabaggers behind Romney.” That is a dynamic under which he might actually pull some stuff off.
By the same token if his problem is primarily corruption, he’s no longer constrained by fear of losing. Now he can *really* open the coffers to his friends from every entrenched interest on the planet – and ram through the policy he’s had to hold back on for fear of leftern retards screwing up his election. If this is the case, no – he’s not going to fulfill crap.
If his problem is incompetence, I think we’ll get a mixed bag.
In the case of incompetence, the factor which would have allowed the incompetence to turn into terrible policy is that those within the party who would typically be expected to step up and shove the rudder were instead sitting in a corner drooling with fear of the Tea Party (or, alternatively, collecting cash hand-over fist from the same interests that finance the Tea Party).
Any way it goes, the same relief that would wash over a coward-Obama is undoubtedly washing over the entire spineless Democratic family at this very moment. So, all and all, I think that we’ll be more likely to see a few Democrat types actually snap out of it to provide a bit more of a firm corrective now that they aren’t distracted with pissing themselves. On the downside, unlike coward-Obama who would be worried about his legacy – coward-Democrats will undoubtedly be more motivated to cling the the hogshit they’ve been slinging of late simply because to do otherwise would represent a major loss of face. Having sold one’s soul to sell a mistake as something awesome isn’t exactly the best position from which to help guide recovering from these mistakes. So, if indeed Obama is incompetent, we can’t really expect too much.
How especially sweet it is for Mr Clinton that he gets remembered for the dot com bubble and the “prosperity” that the bubble brought.
He somehow manages to escape the scandal of how he was so very bought and paid for. And I guess, if you are a President without a conscience, maybe it didn’t matter that much to him, knowing that all he had to do was place one of his signatures on Gramm/Leach/Bliley Act, and by doing that help the One Percent.
So this is how the nation’s top elected officials eliminated the Glass Steagal protections, with only one Senator, Dorgan from Nebraska, objecting. Less than nine years after Glass Steagall went the way of the Dodo bird, the middle class was made extinct as well. I often wonder if Billy Boy thought about any of that 15 million households’ pain and misery that his signature caused whenever he accepted the $ 125,000 per speech – the reward for his part of the deal with the Devil.
I almost stopped reading after this sentence;
This is characteristic writing of the Obama apologists–downplay the fact that Obama has aggressively augmented the national security state by flat out lying. In no way, shape, or form was Obama passive and the word passive brings up that old argument that it was all the fault of the mean Republicans. Nonsense.
Thankfully, the post became much better after that. I have to laugh when I hear people say to me that Obama just said this or that and it signifies a change in attitude. I have had several friends alert me to the fact that Harry Reid said they won’t be touching Soc. Sec. Ha!
Are we so desperate for a better world that we consciously delude ourselves … attempting to hold onto our beliefs that the Democrats are really on our side because the alternative is too horrifying to even contemplate? I have some very smart friends who continue to believe in what they hear from Obama instead of what they see and it is disconcerting. I won’t say they have drunk the kool-aid because I think that is an unhelpful position to take but I don’t understand the willful ignorance by intelligent, rational people.
Reality is a beautiful thing. If you want change, you need to first embrace the reality of the thing that needs changing. I think that is something the GOP might finally be learning. But I won’t hold my breath … and I won’t hold my breath that Obama will do anything different than he did his first term. Why would he? He just got a huge national mandate to keep up the good work.
That photo is really creeping me out! Scary good compilation of the two men.
No.
The next four years should be ‘fun’.
Cogent analysis.
I think he be corrupt. Obama is easily as intelligent as I am. He lies often and easily. He has demonstrated that he is politically calculative. This indicates a cunning, intelligent and thoughtful sociopathy. He is simply a lying, crooked sleezebag whore.
Could you be more specific?
In response to the headline, yes, Obama will once again fulfill his corporate fascist sponsors who got him elected once, twice.
Why, given all the evidence and history we’ve witnessed ANY one thinks different is beyond me.
I can only assume they get paid to spout this centrist nonsense.
It’s one thing coming from FDL regulars we all know, quite another when new id’s pop up suddenly on the forums and ‘raise questions’ that have already been answered time, after time, after time ad nauseum.
But but but Freedom Fighters! He helped finance them, took out Soviets by the helicopter load with our Sams! Brought the Soviet economy to its KNEES and bankrupted it single handledly while busting unions and keeping ‘Merica SAFE from them commie unionists!
Ronald Reagan! Ich bin ein Afghani! Uber Hollywood Alles!
More like: Obama’s second term will realize our worst nightmares.
Yeah, the lengthy analysis is wasted white space on those of us proggies who have detailed every phreacking inch of his march to totalatarianism, not to mention Krugman and dozen’s of others in and out of USA have been following this stuff and informing us since BushCo ran off with it all early in HIS first term.
Tell me something I DON’T know, writers and analysts. SOMEthing, anything.
In the meantime, Dayen et al got our backs. Perhaps this is a newbie auditioning . . . the last one, that Gosztola kid, worked out rather nicely, I gotta admit.
Big shoes to fill, methinks if this was an audition. lol
“Coward” is short for habitual compromiser – which is part of his character. If he had a harder inner core, he would have never been allowed to run for the office. The elite financiers who supported him knew they could use him as he was no threat and they just picked him to get rid of the Republicans for a while because they had messed things up too much.
“The government consists of a gang of men exactly like you and me. They have, taking one with another, no special talent for the business of government; they have only a talent for getting and holding office. Their principal device to that end is to search out groups who pant and pine for something they can’t get and to promise to give it to them. Nine times out of ten that promise is worth nothing. The tenth time is made good by looting A to satisfy B. In other words, government is a broker in pillage, and every election is sort of an advance auction sale of stolen goods.”
–H. L. Mencken
Oilbomber hasn’t any qualms about Tuesday Morning Drone Kill Calls. Wedding Parties, Funerals, Women and Children – collateral damage in the never-ending GWOT.
“I wonder how the cheerleaders for Obama will spin his fulfilling his promises to the elites while ignoring the rest of us?”
Much the same way they have for the last four years, and much the same way that monotheists rationalize evil in the face of their omnipotent deity.
Excellent – thanks
While some here are facing the bleak tortured reality of our future many are celebrating this Historic Mandate for our Bastion of Democracy to move Forward.
It seems that many will fawn and cheer their Blessed Leader while stepping over the bloody bodies abroad and the wasted fellow citizens at home.
The only good thing i can see was that another 10 million plus decided that voting in this filthy corrupt system was not the answer.
In the age of corporate personhood, what is the point of discussing political promises to the citizenry?
There is probably no better way to take Republican congressional seats than taxing socially destructive or socially useless means of wealth acquisition. The market is no “decider,” on this of all issues.
We don’t want sponsored busywork lives. We don’t want society for the sake of business; we don’t want production oriented classrooms. We don’t want people like Romney or Cheney or Cantor or Ryan in power. They simply aren’t fit for office or any kind of power. We don’t want any more fraudulent ballot initiatives.
But Reagan really was a union president. Like everything else about Obama, his Constitutional scholarship is flatteringly overstated.
Indeed. How Obama gets referred to as passive on the national security state is not, as you suggest, realistic. In fact, as the Good Cop he was able to push forward security state policies and actions that a Rep President likely could not have been able to accomplish.
The propensity of people to take these politicians at their word, despite what I image to be a lifetime of evidence to the contrary, is stunning.
“Are we so desperate for a better world that we consciously delude ourselves . . .”
I suspect yes. What else could account for believing such egregious political lies election cycle after election cycle? We have to keep deluding ourselves, especially if we look to leaders for solutions and imagine that our political opponents are irredeemably wrong and evil. It is all a very religious, authoritarian perspective on the world.
BORING!
By classifying any promises Obomney doesn’t fulfill as “unattainable sparkle ponies”.
…good comment …Obama has showed what Obama is…now Obama has a “mandate” to be all Obama is/is not…will be/won’t be…the Obots and Dbots wanted Obama back in the WH so bad they saw only what they wanted to see…political simpletons — ok bots — yippee!! — you “won”…now take it with a smile as Obama disappoints again and again …
…Go Obama Go!!
Yours is an excellent comment, figaro. Might I add to it the inherent dangers that will come as OBomba goes ‘legacy shopping’? The number of his supporters who need to be
convincedconned into believing that he’s on the verge of: ameliorating climate change; creating jobs by approving the rest of the TransCanada XL pipeline; shopping for comprehensive immigration reform hoping the R’s will still block it (not saying he’s correct); ‘fixing’ Social Security that needs no fixing, etc.Slightly OT, the saddest post-election commentary I’ve read was Glen Ford’s on ‘Non-Resistance’ having won. At the end, he said that black Americans have probably proven that for decades into the future that they have utterly no political relevance since they demanded absolutely nothing for their votes for OBomba.
I’m interested in seeing if Obama voters will really hold his feet to the fire “this time,” as so many argued they intended to do, the rationale being that they had more leverage with a Democrat.
Or, was that just hogwash and it will be 4 more years of denial and covering for him while this country gets ravaged by his
Save the Oligarchy–Eat Some People CommissionCatfood Commission.I’m not hopeful.
We frequently tell ourselves that we will engage in some unspecified future good in order to justify not having the moral capital or resolve to engage in it in the present. LIke this: “In exchange for approving of the lesser of two evils today, I will hold Obama’s feet to the fire tomorrow.” Not only does this get us off the hook today, but because we have traded away the only power we had by giving Obama our vote, there is no chance we will have the wherewithal to pay the debt tomorrow. Thus we guarantee that tomorrow never comes.
When our close political allies point out the fallacy of this self-inflicted con job, this moral borrowing, this present weakness in ourselves, we respond by calling them “purists.” This reaction allows us to pretend that doing the right thing is an impossible, unreasonable act.
It is all a very convenient cover for, at best, sectarian cheerleading and, at worst, giving in to our fears. There will be no “pressuring Obama from the left.” It is as much a fiction as the “promise” of Hope and Change.
OK, everyone. Please repeat after me: “Obama is NOT a progressive.” Now, let’s move on.
If you will repeat after me, “He’s not a Democrat either.” No real Democrat would put Social Security on the table. He extended the Bush tax cuts which was Republicans’ #1 Legislative priority.
Love the photoshop btw!
You betcha he’ll fulfill all those liberal/progressive/populist promises. If he has any hope of not being primaried & replaced with a REAL Democrat…oh, right. That’s not gonna happen. He’s such a swell dreamy speaker though. Like a battered (but loving) spouse, I know he means it this time, and that he’ll remain someone his sheeple can believe in.
Bada boom, bada bing.
End of story, thanks for the abbreviated version.
He was prez of the Actors Guild, not a real union.
Let’s be clear about these labels.
And let’s be clear what he DID during his time, including the Black Lists which were before him, but which he used to rule and govern for the PTB.
Reagan as Prez of Actors Guild (SAG I think?) destroyed people, careers and lives. He was good at serving his masters, at SAG, as CA Gov for 8 years of horror, and as 8 years as Presidential Horror.
A horrid man, a B actor, whose best performances were saved for his role as an important person.
He destroyed people to move up thru the ranks he rose. A horrid man with no soul or personal conviction, but a master at faking he DID have both.
Mary, it’s to the point, and true.
Factual.
And those of us who went against the great DIM Lies and changed party rep and voted proggy, deserve better.
I thot you were proggy?
Yep.
obama v.2012 is long gone – he got what he wanted and needed from progressives. Look for a return of obama v.2010 and its beautification of all things republican.
Don’t assume I don’t know that about Reagan. I do. He was hand in glove with the then extremely powerful Lew Wasserman of MCA, who made it worth Reagan’s while to tie SAG to MCA. It was Wasserman who put Reagan into the SAG presidency.
You may consider SAG a guild, but it is otherwise always referred to as a union. It has behaved, since it shucked Reagan, as a union.
And from occasional candid comments I’ve read, Obama’s “Constitutional scholarship” is no such thing. I’d love to know how he got an adjunct’s job at U of Chi, which is a damn good school but still has all the politics and politicking of any institution. I’m guessing it was politically wired, but I’ve never seen any reference to it.
He refused to fulfill them when the dems controlled both houses of congress, how is he going to do it with only one?
How many times do you have to be lied to before you stop believing the liar?
That’s really difficult for humans. I guess we’re wired for it and the president is a mythic figure. The Father of the country is more than just a phrase. We cling to the great parent figure in the WH as children do to parents, who can abuse literally to death. As can the president. What galls me is the obsequious deference to any politicians, to the point of referring, for instance, to ex office holders by their former titles: President Clinton, Governor Barbour, etc., as if the offices were medals they wear pinned to their (expensive) suits. Bad enough when Clinton actually was president and Barbour governor.
“How many times do you have to be lied to before you stop believing the liar?”
Typically, when it costs you personally. People tend to persist in following leaders (or father figures as liberal arts articulates above) until and unless those leaders do something personally to their followers that discredits their authority (and for True Believers, not even then). We often talk about Obama abusing liberals, but how many of them have had their families murdered in a drone attack or been tortured and detained without charge? As these sorts of things personally cost US citizens, then a critical mass of them might give up on believing in the liars. As long as the egregious abuses of the leader mainly affect others, don’t expect any scales to fall from the eyes of the leaders’ supporters.
Or to consider the question from a less reactionary, more positive angle, people will stop believing the liars when they decide not to be scared anymore. Liars are fear-mongers. If they weren’t, they would be open and honest. Lying and promoting fear go hand in hand. In allowing ourselves to give in to our fears, we collaborate with the liars. They can’t operate without our fear, which is why they try so hard to get us to give it to them
Also, monotheism contributes heavily to the propensity for folks to defer to a benevolent father figure, whether he is in heaven or the White House. There is a very good reason these religious institutions are subsidized. They are an indispensable aspect of social control.
One of the things that the reelection of Obama indicates is that conservatives and Republicans do not have a lock on authoritarian followers and that Dems can control their supporters through fear just as effectively. Reps learned from Dems the importance of looking good on the TeeVee, while Dems learned from Reps how to manipulate citizens through fear.
Yep.
Yes, very sad. But the Rethugs guaranteed it with their despicable treatment of O and voter suppression. Hard not to act viscerally to defend your historic first-time guy (and your own rights) in the face of that onslaught.
Maybe if the next candidate isn’t black they will find their voice again?
“More to the point, will President Obama’s legacy include emerging American authoritarianism, or instead the recovery of constitutional freedoms lost over the past decade? While machinations in Washington will of course influence the answer, We the People will play a crucial role, well beyond the 2012 election, in determining the outcome.”
I would like to meet these “We the People’ folks, those dynamos who can reverse the ‘emerging American authoritarianism’ (at home and abroad)… This almost sounds like the superlative hyperbole of an Obama speech…. implied actions, allusions… all imaginary rhetoric of a bold-faced, habitual con-artist…
Obama’s legacy will soon be crippling depression, runaw3ay deficit and zero accountability….
On the bright side, his golf game is getting better with the frequent practice…
You may know this information, but lack the citation, so I offer it up to you (regarding how only Five Big Banks control the US economy) :
http://prorevnews.blogspot.nl/2012/11/five-banks-control-over-half-american.html