In his
remarks at a Congressional Black Caucus gala on Saturday night,
President Obama tried to reconnect with his black supporters; after
all, he can’t lose the black vote and the Jewish vote and
have any chance at winning re-election in 2012.
I encourage you to read the transcript yourself, but just a few
quick points:
After talking about the Depression-like levels of unemployment
among American blacks, Obama talked about what he has done for
blacks: “(W)e fought to extend unemployment insurance, and we
fought to expand the Earned Income Tax Credit, and we fought to
expand the Child Tax Credit — which benefited nearly half of all
African American children in this country.”
Of course, he got applause for this line, but even the CBC
members and gala attendees must understand deep in their hearts how
this is precisely
what Newt Gingrich means when he talks about Obama as “most
successful food stamp president in American history.”
Do Americans, even CBC members, truly believe that income
redistribution amidst an utter absence of jobs for their
constituents constitutes a shred of success? Sadly, some CBC
members might.
To excuse his performance, Obama offered the “Clinton Defense,”
namely, the argument that the economy did fine when tax rates were
higher. Of course, this is a lie-in-part too: The surplus we
remember under Clinton occurred only after Clinton slashed the
capital gains tax rate. During the first years of the Clinton
presidency, after he raised marginal income tax rates, the economy
underperformed and deficits were larger than had been
predicted.
The president reminisced about his and his wife’s deprived
childhoods: “When Michelle and I think about where we came from —
a little girl on the South Side of Chicago, son of a single mom in
Hawaii — mother had to go to school on scholarships, sometimes got
food stamps. Michelle’s parents never owned their own home until
she had already graduated — living upstairs above the aunt who
actually owned the house.” I suppose nobody in the room cares that
Michelle is sure making up for lost time now, having spent a
reported
$10 million of taxpayer money on vacations in just 2 1/2 years
as the First Lady. Michelle has nothing on Clinton when it comes to
“I feel your pain.”
Obama told the assembled that they should have expected the
current situation: “It’s never easy. And I never promised easy.
Easy has never been promised to us.” And while that’s basically
true — it’s more that his followers assumed that he’d make their
lives oh so easy — one has to remember Obama’s words at his June,
2008 speech in Minneapolis, shortly after wrapping up the
nomination: “I am absolutely certain that generations from now, we
will be able to look back and tell our children that this was the
moment when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to
the jobless; this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began
to slow and our planet began to heal; this was the moment when we
ended a war and secured our nation and restored our image as the
last, best hope on earth. This was the moment-this was the
time-when we came together to remake this great nation so that it
may always reflect our very best selves and our highest ideals”
If that doesn’t sound like someone suggesting that things will
get better and easier, I don’t know what does. Actually, it sounds
like the ramblings of a narcissistic megalomaniac, but let’s put
that aside for a moment and notice, again, Obama’s promise to
“remake this great nation.” Think about that for a minute. It’s a
great nation…so he wants to remake it? And people are
surprised when things get harder rather than easier?
Finally, Obama aggressively played the race card with his
audience: “Even when folks are hitting you over the head, you can’t
stop marching. Even when they’re turning the hoses on you, you
can’t stop.” There was more like this, but you get the idea. It’s
not Obama versus the Tea Party; it’s Obama and the CBC versus
white Republicans. The post-racial president is
intentionally stirring up racial tension in the most race
tension-filled administration since the 1960s.
In short, whether it’s pandering too late for the Jewish vote
(which he will probably still get a majority of, but a historically
small majority for a Democrat) or pandering to regain the
enthusiasm of blacks (which he probably did temporarily by his
speech, but only temporarily because the Earned Income Tax Credit
is no long-term salve for the indignity of long-term unemployment),
there is no political gutter too low for Obama to step into.
As far as “I never promised easy,” at least we can say that in
this case the president did not break his word.
LarryK| 9.26.11 @ 1:31PM
Yes but you promised Hope and Change.
You delivered!
I Hope the country votes you out of office,
while I still have some Change left in my pocket.
Trinacria| 9.26.11 @ 4:39PM
"...the earned income tax credit is no salvo for the indignity Of long-term unemployment."
With all due respect, when has dignity or long term employment been goals of the CBC? All available evidence suggests precisely the opposite; namely, that the primary goal is to be taken care of. When this is your aim, dignity has already been willingly abandoned as a meaningful goal.
Ross Kaminsky | 9.26.11 @ 5:28PM
You are right, but I believe that there are many or most American blacks who either don't fall into that mindset right now or could experience the dignity of employment and learn not to buy into the CBC's socialist views. My statement there was about blacks generally, not about the CBC.
Trinacria| 9.26.11 @ 6:24PM
Point well taken; upon rereading that paragraph, it's clear that you were referring to blacks voters in general (rather than the CBC).
I do, however, think it's another poignant example of the discordance between the aims of the CBC and those of it's constituents, as well as the degree to which the policies pursued by the CBC have ill served the very individuals they claim to serve.
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