Are
we there yet? Have we rebounded from the downed economy
of two years ago? Our dear President tells us that we’ve
made leaps and bounds from where we were. We gained 100,000
new jobs last month, we had the foreclosure rate go down - down 26% from the year before. Driven by investigations by the
Fed, the FDIC and states banks' robo-signer foreclosure
process, Obama appears to be on the right track.
Now,
Obama has the answer: hire in two (or more) corporate heads
to help him jump start the economy—people who helped drive
our country’s economy into the ground, while their corporations
made out like bandits. President Obama has done a 180-degree
turn…into a conservative.
Last week, Obama named Jeffrey Immelt, President and Chief Executive
Officer of Fairfield, Connecticut-based General Electric,
to head a new White House Council on Jobs and Competitiveness.
"We think GE has something to teach businesses all
across America," said Obama.
What? Is that because GE is about
to open an advanced battery manufacturing plant that will
employ 350 people? Is it because GE located its renewable
energy headquarters at the GE campus, which employs more
than 650 people? I surely hope not. These facts don’t
outweigh the fact that GE has laid off over 21,000 workers
last year, closed 20 U.S. plants and currently has 53% of
its workforce outside the United States! How does
that help us here at home?
We don’t need Immelt or those of
his ilk in advisory, policy-making or legislation-creating
positions! That old adage of “running government like a
business is bull! That doesn’t help us here at home…Government
is for people—real, live people—not for getting rich; that’s
the role of corporations.
Obama thinks that being
corporation-friendly will win over the Right. He’s sadly
mistaken. It’s been proven that whenever corporation heads
flood government, the economy (the people) get raped. Revolving-door
politics rarely leaves the country in a stronger position,
just a more bent over one.
Obama
has also replaced Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel with William
Daley. Daley is a senior executive VP with JP Morgan. He was
Emanuel’s mentor, and President Clinton’s
Secretary
of Commerce. And yes, he is a scion of the Daley
family—the famed family of Chicago politics.
Then there’s Sperling…Obama is replacing
his Chief Economic Adviser – Larry Summers – with Gene Sperling.
Sperling is currently a counselor to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner,
and is now being appointed as Obama’s chief economic adviser.
He served as a consultant to Goldman Sachs, and in 2008
harvested sums reaching seven-figures for his work there
and in delivering speeches to the highest ranks of the financial
services realm.
Economist Dean Baker and the liberal
pundit Robert Kuttner wrote that a key item on Sperling’s
resume is the nearly $900,000 he earned as a consultant
for Goldman Sachs—at the very time the bank was playing
a leading role in the worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression.
A
group of House Republicans, last Thursday, introduced a
proposal to cut spending from more than 100 federal programs
and cut back spending levels by $2.5 trillion over the next
decade. The bill would hold 2011. non-security discretionary
spending to 2008 levels, freeze non-defense discretionary
spending to 2006 levels for 10 years and cut the federal
workforce by 15 percent, according to the Republican Study
Committee, a group made up of conservative lawmakers.
While
Republican leaders like House Speaker John Boehner and Majority
Leader Eric Cantor offered kind words for the Study Committee’s
recommendations, they stopped short of endorsing them. That’s
like ethanol: It was supposed to make gas cheaper, but
we ended up paying double the price!
In
his State of the Union Address, President Obama told us
that it’s all good. The pep talk will get his ratings up
for a quick second. But no matter what he says, the Republicans
are going to say otherwise. Who do you trust? What I know
is, as a black person, it never mattered what the economy
was doing! I’ve always struggled…
The
economy is not doing well, and hiring corporate raiders
and cutting essential services to poor people won’t make
it better. What I know is, the president’s policies are
looking more and more Republican. It might get his poll
numbers up, but it won’t bode well come re-election time.
I can’t see a reason to vote for someone who allows mechanisms
to stay in place that keep me poor. We’re losing at home
and our options are few. What are you going to do?
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator Perry Redd is the former Executive Director
of the workers rights advocacy, Sincere Seven, and author
of the on-line commentary, “The
Other Side of the Tracks”. He is host of the internet-based
talk radio show, Socially Speaking in Washington, DC.
Click here
to contact Mr. Redd.
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