Sometimes,
messes are so big that you just can�t fix them.� The best thing
to do is to leave it alone, and walk away, before you make things
worse.�
Afghanistan is one of those big messes.� President
Obama�s decision to claim ownership of the war in Afghanistan�by
sending 30,000 more troops to fight the unwinnable war�is an example
of misplaced priorities and misguided advice.� As the White House
parrots the Bush administration by launching a surge in Afghanistan,
there is a domestic crisis that requires our attention.� And this
crisis is a far greater threat to national security than any foreign
terrorists, real or imagined. A surge is needed, to be sure, but
it is needed here at home.
Of course, the domestic crisis of which I speak is
the nation itself.� Simply put, America is a mess.� Unemployment
is over 10 percent, while the effective unemployment rate�which
also includes the underemployed�is more like 19.2 percent.� In the first three quarters of 2009, there were
more than 2.6 million foreclosure filings,
with a projected total of 3.2-3.4 million property foreclosures for the year.� In the "land
of plenty", 40 percent of the food supply is wasted,
one in eight people uses food stamps, as does one in four children.�
About half of American children,
and 90 percent of black children, will live in a household that
depends on food stamps at some point before they turn 20. And 63 percent of teachers buy food for hungry students with their own money.�
Is this the most we can expect from the world�s greatest superpower?
Meanwhile,
we are told the economy is recovering because Wall Street has recovered.�
Wall Street never had it so good, as the banks bask in the glow
of their TARP-bailout, corporate-welfare recipient status.� As the
titans of finance are rewarded for their greed, failure, and demolition
of the U.S. economy, the upward redistribution of wealth continues
in this country.� Those who have the most are getting more and more.�
A consumer-based economy ceases to function as such when the consumers
are jobless, penniless, homeless, and hungry.� It doesn�t take an
expert or professional commentator to realize that something is
fundamentally wrong with this nation�s economic system, and that
the public will not sustain more of this suffering without some
repercussions.� For further information on the nature of the repercussions
we can expect, you only need to consult history.
Surely, the Obama team is smart enough to know this.�
After all, they have fancy degrees and extensive book learning.�
But it would seem that the advisors who are misguiding the President
on the economy are as useless�or perhaps as harmful�as his advisors
on Afghanistan.� Just look at his economic team.�
Larry Summers is Director of the White House's National Economic
Council.� In his old job as president of Harvard, Summers ignored
warnings not to put so much of the university�s money into the stock
market.� As a result, the world�s largest university endowment lost
$1.8 billion. And this man is the President�s economic czar?��
Or take a look at Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner,
who failed to pay Medicare and Social Security payroll taxes for four years.�
Geithner, according to one observer,
�should never have been appointed to anything.� He's been wrong
about just about everything for 15 years.�� As head of the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York, Geithner oversaw the bailout of AIG.� Further, he has been criticized for giving away tens of billions of taxpayer dollars to counterparties that contracted with AIG�a cash
transfer amounting to one hundred cents on the dollar,
to be exact.� Geithner was a part of the problem in helping create
the financial crisis and failing to protect the taxpayers from vultures.�
Now, calls for his resignation are coming from both sides of the
aisle.
This is what happens when the so-called �best and
brightest��corporate pinheads with no real-world sensibilities,
no moral compass, and no connection to the lives of everyday people�
are given more power in government than they deserve.� President
Lyndon Johnson relied on Robert McNamara, a number-crunching technocrat
from Ford Motor Company, to run the Vietnam War like a business.�
That war was unwinnable, if anyone really wins in war, and McNamara
came to know it.� But he continued to crunch the numbers to please
his President, like any good technocrat.� Who cares if in the end,
58,000 Americans and 2 million Vietnamese lost their lives, in addition
to hundreds of thousands of casualties, right?
Waging a senseless, immoral and unwinnable war, Johnson
cost himself a great presidency. Dr. Martin Luther King called out
Johnson on the Vietnam War and was derided by many for doing so,
but history proved King right.� History has judged McNamara a sorry
excuse for a person.� And Johnson was unable to accomplish his Great
Society anti-poverty programs because the war sucked up all of the
resources.� And that was when the American empire was far ahead
of the competition.
Today,
we have a basket case of a nation, and a president who was elected
as an agent of change.� Yet, the Democrats have become the party
of Wall Street.� The administration prefers to manage its predecessor�s
messes abroad rather than walk away from them.� But most importantly,
the people don�t have an appetite for war.� The only war that concerns
them now is the war that has been waged against working people for
years, by a predatory economic regime of wage suppression, deregulation
and corporate plunder.� Today, we see the fiercest battles in this
war since the Great Depression.�
Obama needs a surge of resources here in the U.S.
to help everyday people.� He should take a page from F.D.R., or
several chapters if he must, and adapt it to twenty-first century
sensibilities.� F.D.R. saved the people from capitalism, if he didn�t
save capitalism from itself.� Now is the time to save the people
once again.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board
member, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate
based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to
The Huffington
Post, theGrio,
The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times
and Philadelphia
Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com,
NewsOne,
Daily Kos,
and Open Salon.
Click here
to contact Mr. Love. |