notyou2 wrote:Dukasaur wrote:notyou2 wrote:Dukasaur wrote:notyou2 wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Have the political prisoners at Guantanamo received a fair trial yet?
Has the U.S. stopped bombing and destabilizing nations in the Middle East?
Has the right of habeas corpus been restored in the U.S.?
Has the militarization of American police and their increasingly blatant violence toward their own citizens been curbed?
Has the Patriot Act been repealed?
Has anyone been brought to trial for the fraudulent loan schemes which almost destroyed the American dollar?
Have sweetheart deals with Wall Street stopped?
Have the banks been forced to repay the money they looted from the treasury?
Has industrial-scale wiretapping and snooping by the government been curtailed?
Have any rights previously suppressed been restored?
Deficit reduced any?
Oh, any sign of that "peace dividend" that was supposed to happen when the size of the military was reduced after the collapse of the Soviet Union?
Tell me who's blind.
Valid points and Obama promised to address many of them. He also promised a far more comprehensive public medicare system. We all know what happened there.
So you think
it's Obama's fault none of the planned changes happened? Your a smart guy, could there be other factors and influences?
Do I think it's all Obama's fault? No, of course not. Could there be other factors and influences? Yes, of course.
I didn't come here to criticize Obama. He has been a big disappointment to me, but that is
not the point here. The point is that the people who don't bother voting are making a rational decision not to participate in the charade. The Tweedledum and Tweedledee system is that the two big parties have wildly different rhetoric, and make people think they are on opposite sides of every issue, but in fact they mostly agree, and their actions
while in office, unlike their rhetoric, are mostly indistinguishable.
Entirely dodged the question. You are quite agile for a 50 something year old.
Maybe we speak different languages. Looking at the exchange above, it looks to me like I answered your questions unequivocally and without hesitation.
Maybe in your part of the country that's called dodging. Don't know that dialect.
You said Obama has done nothing as the status quo from your examples remain. I asked if you felt that was Obama's fault and left the door open for you to contemplate and elaborate, but you didn't what-so ever. That's a dodge.
No, you asked if I thought it was ALL Obama's fault, and I answered quite forthrightly that no, it is not. That doesn't mean that NONE of it is his fault, it only means that it's not ALL his fault.
I understand that dealing with a hostile Congress has made it difficult, but not impossible, to put his own stamp on things. He didn't even
try to repeal the Patriot Act, or curtail the industrial-scale domestic surveillance that goes on. He didn't even
try to bring any bankers to trial for their role in the 2008 farce. He didn't even
try to roll back the militarization of American police and their predation on their own citizens. He rushed in to destabilizing the governments of Libya and Syria with poor comprehension of the consequences. He expanded the program of extralegal execution of suspected enemies by drone strike, including in some cases his own citizens who were guaranteed a right to trial by jury and were robbed of that right. He did try, briefly, to shut down Guantanamo, and gave up at the first roadblock.
I understand your point, that with a very hostile and partisan Republican caucus controlling one or both Houses for much of his term, he would have had a tough time effecting change. But the point is, that he didn't even really try. Not on the things that mattered. I actually expected much better of him. I was quietly optimistic when Obama was first elected, and he has been a big disappointment. I didn't expect him to wave a magic wand and fix everything, but I did expect some small, marginal improvements in civil liberties and America's warmongering posture abroad, and he didn't even try.
You're missing the bigger picture, and Obama is just a distraction from that. The overall point is that the actual behaviour of Democrats and Republicans while in office is virtually identical. Only their rhetoric on the campaign trail makes them seem like diametric opposites. It's just smoke and mirrors.