Dissents Of The Day

A reader writes:

You said that you "don't see this as surrender. I see this as Obama's cold-blooded pragmatism. Why is this still news?"

My biggest problem with Obama not doing more to use the tax-cut debate as an issue against Republicans (and essentially capitulating to all of their demands on this issue) isn't that it's not somehow ideologically pure – that it doesn't, say, line up with what he promised in 2008, or with Democratic principles more generally.  My complaint (and Rich's complaint as I understood it) is that Obama's not being as cold-blooded as he could be in this case.  What better way to highlight Republican hypocrisy and to gain the high-ground on a whole host of issues than to refuse to extend tax cuts for those making over $250,000? 

– After two years of Republicans tut-tutting about deficits, why wouldn't Obama want to spend as much time as possible pointing out how hypocritical Republicans are being on this issue?  What better way to put the lie to their political rhetoric from the last two years?

– After two years of Republican carping that the President has failed to do enough on jobs, why wouldn't Obama want to propose that a specified amount of the money saved by raising taxes on those over $250,000 will go toward creating an infrastructure bank and a whole host of tax cuts for small businesses (and then stand by and let the Republicans vote against it)?  What better way to create a contrast going forward, ('my priority is creating jobs; their priority is tax-cuts for millionaires) when inevitably the unemployment rate in 2012 will be greater than 8 percent?

By allowing all tax-cuts to continue, Obama is missing both of these opportunities and he's weakening his position going forward (on deficits, on jobs, on his perceived ability to lead).  Will there be other possibilities to draw these contrasts in the future?  Quite likely.  Will they provide Obama with the opportunity to create as clear of a contrast with Republicans?  Not likely.  A real clear-blooded pragmatist would leap at this opportunity.

Another writes:

If Obama agrees to these tax cuts that will benefit primarily the wealthy, and then shifts focus on our long-term debt reduction (i.e. Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security), he will lose a lot of support from his base. The long-term debt reduction will mostly mean to the president's base a reduction of the social safety net, at the expense of the middle class to benefit the wealthy. I don't know how he will get re-elected.

Another:

Just out of curiosity, have you ever seen anything the president has done as surrender?  Because every time something happens, I seem to remember reading "This is just him playing 3D chess in the dark, with Jedi mind tricks and thinking ahead to the next game of backgammon where he will show us his inarguable genius…"  And then we get rolled. 

I'm on the team, man.  I didn't expect super-magical black Jesus to come in and save us from ourselves; I just wanted a functioning president who stood up for what was right every now and then. I'm having a hard time keeping even that little bit of faith now.

One last doozy of a dissent:

Despite everything, and despite all the evidence to the contrary, you continue to defend Barack Obama as some sort of great strategic thinker.

To begin from quoting from your response to David Weigel: "He's saying that he'd prefer to raise taxes on those earning more than $250,000 a year, but cannot in this political climate at this particular time." So, when he has 70% of Americans behind him, when he has more Democrats in Congress than he is ever likely to have again, he cannot raise taxes on the richest 1% of America? If not now, then pray tell when?

That said, Weigel is wrong when he says that Obama is affirming that tax cuts stimulate the economy. (They don't. In fact, tax hikes in living memory – post-WW2, Reagan's 1982-86 corrections, and the tax hikes under GHW Bush and Clinton – led to long periods of prosperity, while tax cuts under Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Reagan and GW Bush led to stagnation at best. But I digress.) What Obama is truly affirming is that not only will he not take a firm stand on anything whatever, no matter how popular, but that he will actively handicap any group of his fellow Democrats or supporters who tries to take such a stand.

To quote from the Frank Rich op-ed which started this discussion:

The cliché criticisms of Obama are (from the left) that he is a naïve centrist, not the audacious liberal that Democrats thought they were getting, and (from the right) that he is a socialist out to impose government on every corner of American life. But the real problem is that he’s so indistinct no one across the entire political spectrum knows who he is. A chief executive who repeatedly presents himself as a conciliator, forever searching for the “good side” of all adversaries and convening summits, in the end comes across as weightless, if not AWOL. A Rorschach test may make for a fine presidential candidate  when everyone projects their hopes on the guy. But it doesn’t work in the Oval Office: These days everyone is projecting their fears on Obama instead.

What Obama has exercised for the past two years is ANTI-leadership. When his followers have overwhelmingly supported a particular option, he has compromised it away to conservatives in exchange for nothing. When his followers try to take action on their own, he pulls the rug out from under them. When they try to hold him accountable, he brushes them off as "the professional left." Thanks to this "leadership", liberals have gone from loud and united to discouraged and silent, while Republicans have rallied, united, and energized their own base into the only functional political force in America.

But then you claim, "'Non-argumentative reasonableness' so far has prevented a second great depression, rescued Detroit, bailed out the banks, pitlessly isolated Tehran's regime, exposed Netanyahu, decimated al Qaeda's mid-level leadership in Pakistan and Afghanistan, withdrawn troops from Iraq on schedule, gotten two Justices on the Supreme Court, cut a point or two off the unemployment rate with the stimulus, seen real wages for those employed grow, presided over a stock market boom and record corporate profits, and maneuvered a GOP still intoxicated with failed ideology to become more and more wedded to white, old evangelicals led by Sarah Palin. And did I mention universal health insurance – the holy grail for Democrats for decades?" Well, let's take these point by point:

* Second Great Depression – still too early to tell if it has been averted or merely postponed. A gridlocked Congress might still bring it about – gridlock thanks to a mid-term election which Obama quite clearly lost for his party.

* Rescued Detroit – he gets credit for this, but how difficult is it to do with a 59-seat majority in the Senate and a massive House majority?

* Bailed out the banks – Leaving aside whether or not it was a good idea the way it was done, this was begun by Dubya, not Obama. No credit where it's not due.

* Isolated Tehran's regime – Which has accomplished what, exactly? Despite the 2009 green rising, the totalitarian regime is stronger than ever and still working towards nuclear weapons capacity, with not a single actual setback.

* Exposed Netanyahu – More like, exposed how Israel exercises veto power over all American foreign policy. Right now Netanyahu looks to the world to be a more powerful man than Obama.

* Decimated al Qaeda's mid-level leadership – Leaving aside the question of whether or not McCain or another Republican would have done the same… has this actually done anything to reduce the threat of terrorism? Based on the TSA grope-scandal, I'd say NOT.

* Withdrawn troops from Iraq on schedule – Bush's schedule, not the one Obama campaigned on, and with 50,000 troops remaining indefinitely. No action, no credit.

* Two Supreme Court justices – Better than the Republicans, but wouldn't any Democrat have done better? And wouldn't any other Democrat have picked people besides Sotomayor and Kagin, both of whom are on record as supporting unlimited executive power? And let's not forget the DOZENS of lower courts still WITHOUT justices because Obama refuses to consider recess appointments to get around Republican obstructionism.

* Cut unemployment – Unemployment today, as I type this, is the same official level to within a percentage point as when Obama took office. And that leaves aside the issue of how little Obama had to do with creating the actual stimulus package- he left that almost entirely to Pelosi and Reid, only acting to mandate tax cuts which have proved ineffective.

* Real wage growth – Bullshit. Wages outside income for the top 2% continue to stagnate or fall.

* Preside over a stock market boom – A boom triggered, in essence, by giving the super-rich huge amounts of bailout money, protecting bank CEOs from the consequences of their actions, and blocking any financial reforms that would actually address the causes of the market crash. In short: recovery for the super-rich, but not for anyone else.

* Palinization of the Republicans – And this is a good thing HOW? Obama has both made the Republicans even more insane and, at the same time, discredited his own party to the point that voters are ready to put the crazy people in power.

* Universal health insurance – Everyone's forced to buy corporate health insurance with no guarantee that it'll actually pay off when it's needed, with no functional brake or restriction on rising insurance premiums, and above all with no curb whatsoever on hospital, pharmaceutical, and healthcare corporations charging all the market will bear for health care. (And when it comes to a person's life, "all the market will bear" equals "every penny you have and then some.") Oh, and not only is there no guarantee that government aid will be enough for the poor to buy insurance, but that aid comes only in tax rebates- so you have to have money to get the aid in the first place.

In all these things, there is little or nothing that any other Democrat, any Democrat at all, could not have done better or more effectively. Several of these things shouldn't have been done at all. In exchange for these "accomplishments," we have protection and endorsement of the prior administration's torture and imprisonment tactics, a totally de-energized liberal base, a united and rabid Republican base, a stagnant economy, and a five-year extension of war in Afghanistan… and, come January 3, divided government and an end to any hope of further advancement of liberal goals.

You praise Obama's "pragmatism", but to the rest of us it seems more like Obama asking the Republicans' permission before doing anything. What should have been a Democratic triumph has turned into a handful of empty victories and a raft of stunning defeats. And the single person most responsible is Barack Obama, for providing the kind of leadership that ends with no followers remaining.

The View From Your Window Contest: An Archive

A reader writes:

After reading you for many years, I have been taken over by the VFYW contest.  I actively search for the photo of the week and the responses from your readers.  Could you install a separate link that archives all of the old contests?

Here to serve:

2010

Contest #1 – June 9

Contest #2 – June 15

Contest #3 – June 22

Contest #4 – June 29

Contest #5 – July 7

Contest #6 – July 13

Contest #7 – July 20

Contest #8 – July 27

Contest #9 – August 3

Contest #10 – August 10

Contest #11 – August 17

Contest #12 – August 24

Contest #13 – August 31

Contest #14 – September 7

Contest #15 – September 14

Contest #16 – September 21

Contest #17 – September 28

Contest #18 – October 5

Contest #19 – October 12

Contest #20 – October 19

Contest #21 – October 26

Contest #22 – November 2

Contest #23 – November 9

Contest #24 – November 16

Contest #25 – November 23

Contest #26 – November 30

Contest #27 – December 7

Contest #28 – December 14

Contest #29 – December 21

Contest #30 – December 28

2011

Contest #31 – January 4

Contest #32 – January 11

Contest #33 – January 18

Contest #34 – January 25

Contest #35 – February 1

Contest #36 – February 8

Contest #37 – February 15

Contest #38 – February 22

Contest #39 – March 1

Contest #40 – March 8

Contest #41 – March 15

Contest #42 – March 22

Contest #43 – March 29

Contest #44 – April 5

Contest #45 – April 12

Contest #46 – April 19

Contest #47 – April 26

Contest #48 – May 3

Contest #49 – May 10

Contest #50 – May 17

Contest #51 – May 24

Contest #52 – May 31

Contest #53 – June 7

Contest #54 – June 14

Contest #55 – June 21

Contest #56 – June 28

Contest #57 – July 5

Contest #58 – July 12

Contest #59 – July 19

Contest #60 – July 26

Contest #61 – August 2

Contest #62 – August 9

Contest #63 – August 16

Contest #64 – August 23

Contest #65 – August 30

Contest #66 – September 6

Contest #67 – September 13

Contest #68 – September 20

Contest #69 – September 27

Contest #70 – October 4

Contest #71 – October 11

Contest #72 – October 18

Contest #73 – October 25

Contest #74 – November 1

Contest #75 – November 8

Contest #76 – November 15

Contest #77 – November 22

Contest #78 – November 29

Contest #79 – December 6

Contest #80 – December 13

Contest #81 – December 20

Contest #82 – December 27

2012

Contest #83 – January 3

Contest #84 – January 10

Contest #85 – January 17

Contest #86 – January 24

Contest #87 – January 31

Contest #88 – February 7

Contest #89 – February 14

Contest #90 – February 21

Contest #91 – February 28

Contest #92 – March 6

Contest #93 – March 13

Contest #94 – March 20

Contest #95 – March 27

Contest #96 – April 3

Contest #97 – April 10

Contest #98 – April 17

Contest #99 – April 24

Contest #100 – May 1

Contest #101 – May 8

Contest #102 – May 15

Contest #103 – May 22

Contest #104 – May 29

Contest #105 – June 5

Contest #106 – June 12

Contest #107 – June 19

Contest #108 – June 26

Contest #109 – July 3

Contest #110 – July 10

Contest #111 – July 17

Contest #112 – July 24

Contest #113 – July 31

Contest #114 – August 7

Contest #115 – August 14

Contest #116 – August 21

Contest #117 – August 28

Contest #118 – September 4

Contest #119 – September 11

Contest #120 – September 18

Contest #121 – September 25

Contest #122 – October 2

Contest #123 – October 9

Contest #124 – October 16

Contest #125 – October 23

Contest #126 – October 30

Contest #127 – November 6

Contest #128 – November 13

Contest #129 – November 20

Contest #130 – November 27

Contest #131 – December 4

Contest #132 – December 11

Contest #133 – December 18

Contest #134 – January 1

Contest #135 – January 8

Updated weekly.

The Left And Obama

I agree with Clive:

I don't suppose I should be surprised by the operatic dismay of liberal Democrats at the agreement Obama has reached with congressional Republicans. But is it really good politics for the party to keep telling the electorate that raising taxes on the rich is the one thing, in the end, it stands for? That nothing else comes close in the party's list of priorities? Because this is the message that comes across…

According to one strand of Democratic thinking, cutting payroll taxes is not a Republican concession, paltry or otherwise, but another tactical victory: Republicans want to cut payroll taxes in order to bankrupt Social Security, so this is all part of their master plan, which Obama is now cravenly implementing. (I listened incredulously as Jane Hamsher of Firedoglake explained this on the PBS Newshour last night.)

So let's review: as well as higher taxes on the rich, by this logic, we also need higher payroll taxes on low- and middle-income households, to defend Social Security. And Democrats wonder why voters don't trust them on taxes. Can't they at least pretend to be reluctant to put them up?

How Wikileaks Debunks The Far Right

Heather Mac Donald, a Wikileaks critic, makes an astute point:

I would love to see Dinesh D’Souza and all the other right-wing hysterics who are hawking the idea of Obama’s scary Otherness explain how these diplomatic cables contribute in any way to their thesis.  I would love to see them nominate their favorite dispatches that demonstrate Obama’s efforts to undermine American power and to elevate socialism, Third World radicalism, and anti-colonialism over traditional American interests.  To the contrary, the cables demonstrate a continuity of American foreign policy and discourse from the Bush to the Obama administrations.  The Obama-era dispatches show the same assumptions about the need to maintain American supremacy as have been harbored by every previous administration.  And I doubt whether Dick Cheney or Donald Rumsfeld would have deplored the idea of gathering biometric or other identity information on fellow diplomats.   If Obama and Holder wanted to destroy American influence, they should be cheering Assange on, not looking for ways to prosecute him.

Malkin Award Nominee

"Some will argue whether the would-be Christmas tree bomber intended to target Christians at the annual Tree Lighting Ceremony in Portland, Oregon last week. What’s beyond dispute is that the ideology that fueled his hatred, radical Islam, is targeting Christianity in a religious war meant to destroy the Judeo-Christian foundation of our country. But the American jihadists are a little late to the war on Christianity. Radical Islam’s secular enablers have been driving Christianity from the public square for decades," – Gary Bauer.