Just a few cynics doubted the magnificent procession of then
Senator Barack Obama to the highest office in the land. He was the redemption
of our past sins, the proof that we were a better nation than we had been.
After all, race has been at the center of American politics since Bacon�s Rebellion was crushed in 1667 but we were moving
beyond that. And we did. Race was set aside for most of those who voted.
As it turned out, the campaign wasn�t about redeeming
anything other than the bill that Wall Street presented to the citizens of the
United States in October 2008. The financial system was grinding its gears,
about to flame out in a series of big investment bank failures. The secretary
of the Treasury, Henry Paulson, told a private session of Congress that
absent immediate aid, the financial calamity would be so devastating that
Congress should prepare for riots
by outraged citizens.
The people spoke in unison as they hadn�t in decades. No
bailout! Congressional staffers were swamped with a flood of telephone calls,
emails, and faxes. The peoples� will and wisdom was honored and the first bailout proposal was defeated 228 to 205 in the House
of Representatives.
Undeterred, The
Money Party swung into action.
They hit the offices of reluctant supporters and plied them with �contributions� (also known as legalized bribes). More
importantly, they put on a show of political unity, something they like
to call bipartisanship. Both presidential
candidates showed up in Washington and spoke to their party caucuses. They
worked their magic and the bailout was complete. Wall Street was saved to wage
class war against the citizens once again, at will, with few if any restraints.
The prize: the biggest wealth transfer in history, the looting of the Treasury
for private firms, and a free hand to pay their bonuses as they saw fit. It was
and is all about them.
Capitalist tool
President Obama won the election amidst a great hope
for change that he�d promised.
What did we get?
Right away, the new president turned the Treasury and
economic policy over to consummate, long-term Wall Street insiders, Tim
Geithner, secretary of the Treasury, and Larry Summers as economic guru.
Geithner �was one of our nation�s top regulators� for Wall Street during the great rip-off of the
Bush years and Summers had helped repeal those pesky laws that restrained
big banks from dangerous investments. The foxes were in charge of the hen
house. There were more bailouts and the Federal Reserve extended a $23.7
trillion line of credit for the big banks.
Then, there were the attempts to help citizens with epidemic
foreclosures and usurious credit interest rates. We did get a Credit
Cardholders Bill of Rights but the president and Congress forgot to cap those huge credit card interest rates.
Unfortunately for the millions of victims of mortgage fraud, the president and Congress couldn�t quite
figure out how to pass a modest foreclosure relief bill. The sponsor of that
legislation threw up his hands, as the president sat it out, and said, the banks �frankly own the place!� No kidding.
It didn�t stop there. A few months into the era of hope and
change, we found out that the administration was heavily staffed with CitiBank insiders who were doing their best to keep that
tottering zombie walking as though it were alive.
All the while, the jobless rate rose month after month until
real world unemployment reached 17 percent. Those official unemployment
figures we get do not include workers who simply give up looking for jobs after
months of finding nothing. They�re unemployed, nonetheless.
Instead of focusing on jobs, the administration became
obsessed with passing a health reform bill. It was reform, but not for citizen
health. It seems that the health of the insurance companies was a bit off after
years of bad investments and acquisitions. They needed 40 million new customers and a central role in the new plan. They got both.
Citizens are now about to get a Frankenstein health bill that they can�t
afford. Hard to pay those premiums if you�re out of work, earning flat wages for the past 10 years.
Now we�re told that domestic programs will be frozen
for three years while foreign aid and military expenditures for Obama�s new
war in Afghanistan won�t be touched.
And, to add insult to injury, the president just announced
that a big part of NASA will be privatized with the corporations �too big to fail�
launching our astronauts into space.
We are nothing to them
It doesn�t take much to figure that out.
We lose our jobs. The insiders have theirs forever.
Our wages are flat while Wall Street fat cats get ever
increasing bonuses.
We lose our health coverage while Congress, the judiciary,
and the executive branches enjoy the best insurance around.
Commercial credit for most is tight but the big banks have
trillions in credit.
Organized crime would never have been this insensitive. At
least, they realized that they needed customers with a few bucks to place a
bet.
We are in the great decline of the ruling elite, addled by
nepotistic inbreeding and cronyism beyond imagination; coddled by the
government that they bought and paid for; and ready to take everything that isn�t
nailed down, only to blame the people for having nothing.
Welcome to the new klelptocracy where insiders make
the rules then claim the high ground of intelligence and morality after winning
a game they rigged in the first place.
Once we had a real hope that endured despite the challenges.
It helped produce major changes when we demanded them. Now, we�re left
with scraps from the movable feast that is devouring the nation and we�re
expected to say, �Thank you sir, may I have another?�
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