We All Lose:
Obama’s Legacy and What It Means for a Trump Presidency
By John W.
Whitehead
“This light of history is pitiless; it has a strange
and divine quality that, luminous as it is, and
precisely because it is luminous, often casts a
shadow just where we saw a radiance; out of the same
man it makes two different phantoms, and the one
attacks and punishes the other, the darkness of the
despot struggles with the splendor of the captain.
Hence a truer measure in the final judgment of the
nations. Babylon violated diminishes Alexander; Rome
enslaved diminishes Caesar; massacred Jerusalem
diminishes Titus. Tyranny follows the tyrant. Woe to
the man who leaves behind a shadow that bears his
form.” ― Victor Hugo,
Les Misérables
January 12,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Let’s talk about President Obama’s legacy, shall we?
This was a
candidate who was ushered into office promising hope and
change, pledging to put an end to the endless wars that
were bankrupting the country (he was actually
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in anticipation of his
efforts to bring about world peace), and vowing to put
an end of the corporate revolving door that had turned
our republic into an oligarchy.
After eight
years in office, Barack Obama leaves our nation with a
weakened Constitution that has been dealt one crippling
blow after another by court rulings and government
overreach, with more militarized police empowered to
shoot first and ask questions later, with more SWAT team
raids, with more government corruption, with more debt
than ever before ($19 trillion and rising), with more
racial tensions bubbling over into confrontations, with
even greater surveillance intruding into the privacy of
the citizenry, with less tolerance for free speech and
thought, with taxpayers groaning under the weight of
even more taxes disguised as fines and fees, with a more
“imperial” president empowered to act unilaterally
through the use of signing statements and executive
orders, with a greater risk of blowback from military
occupations, drone strikes and endless wars abroad, and
with a citizenry more broken and oppressed than ever.
In other words,
Obama leaves our nation worse off than when he took
office.
You won’t hear
any of this from Obama, who believes he would have been
re-elected had he been permitted to run for a third
term. Nor will you hear it from the celebrities who are
quick to sing Obama’s praises, while
likening Donald Trump to Hitler. And you certainly
won’t hear it from those who are
staging sit-ins, marches and acts of civil disobedience
to protest Trump’s election, while having failed to
voice even a whisper of protest over Obama’s long list
of civil liberties abuses.
Yet the reality
we must contend with is that the world is a far more
dangerous place today than it was eight years ago, and
Obama must shoulder some of the blame for that. As
President Harry S. Truman recognized, “The buck stops
here.”
How did we come
to this?
How did a
politician who showed such potential and managed to
ignite such positive feelings among the citizenry, young
and old alike, go from being a poster child for hope and
change to being the smiling face of a government that is
blind, deaf and dumb to the needs of its citizens?
Let me answer
my own question in a roundabout way by quoting something
Meryl Streep said recently in her recent
Golden Globe acceptance speech.
Ostensibly
taking aim at Trump for imitating a disabled reporter,
Streep declared: “This instinct to humiliate, when
it’s modeled by someone in the public platform, by
someone powerful, it filters down into everybody’s life,
because it kind of gives permission for other people to
do the same thing. Disrespect invites disrespect.
Violence incites violence. And
when the powerful use their position to bully others, we
all lose.”
Streep is right
in one sense.
We all lose
when the powerful inflict violence, humiliation,
disrespect on others.
However, where
Streep goes wrong is in failing to recognize that “we
the people” have been on the losing end of this
relationship long before Trump’s name was even being
batted about as a possible candidate for the White
House.
Indeed, the
agents of the Obama administration—many of whom belong
to that permanent government bureaucracy that is
unaltered by elections and flows in a continuous line
from one president to another—have been consistently and
persistently inflicting violence, humiliation and
disrespect on the citizenry for the past eight years.
Every time a
SWAT team funded by government grants crashes through a
door, that’s an infliction of violence. Every drone
strike that kills innocent civilians is inflicting
violence on the less powerful. Every roadside stop that
ends with an unwarranted strip search is inflicting
humiliation on the less powerful. Every law that
criminalizes the speech or activities of those whose
views may not jibe with the mainstream is tantamount to
government-sanctioned bullying.
So for those
lamenting the perils of a Trump presidency, who have
been quick to blame racism, sexism and even the Russians
for Trump’s electoral victory, you might want to
consider the old Native American proverb that says
“every time you point a finger in scorn—there are three
remaining fingers pointing right back at you.”
As civil rights
activist Cornel West
concluded, “The reign of Obama did not produce the
nightmare of Donald Trump – but it did contribute to it.
And those Obama cheerleaders who refused to make him
accountable bear some responsibility.”
West goes on to
document the many missteps that contributed to
Obama’s failed legacy: his allegiance to Wall
Street, the drone strikes that have killed innocent
civilians, the demonization of whistleblowers, the
killing of U.S. citizens without due process, and his
refusal to hold police accountable for excessive force
and civil rights violations among others.
As West
writes for The Guardian:
“[T]he
mainstream media and academia failed to highlight
these painful truths linked to Obama. Instead, most
well-paid pundits on TV and radio celebrated the
Obama brand. And most black spokespeople shamelessly
defended Obama’s silences and crimes in the name of
racial symbolism and their own careerism. How
hypocritical to see them now speak truth to white
power when most went mute in the face of black
power. Their moral authority is weak and their
newfound militancy is shallow.”
Let me also say
that this is not only an indictment of all that Obama
has failed to do in the past eight years. It is also an
indictment of those administrations prior to Obama,
Democrat and Republican alike, which have contributed to
our present sorry state of affairs. And it is a warning
to Trump as he begins to carve out a path for his own
administration.
Every time I
write one of these diatribes about the government, I’m
always asked “what can I do to push back against the
government?”
My answer,
which I flesh out in greater detail in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
is always the same: When all is said and done,
politicians are only as effective, trustworthy and
accountable as they are made to be. And they are only
made to be effective, trustworthy and accountable when
the citizenry stays engaged, informed and active in the
workings of government.
One of the best
models I know for a citizen who took the duties of
citizenship to heart every moment of the day was my good
friend, mentor and hero Nat Hentoff—one of the nation’s
most respected, controversial and uncompromising writers
and a lifelong champion of the First Amendment—who
passed away on Saturday, January 7, 2017, at the age of
91.
Nat was a
radical in the best sense of the word, a feisty,
fiercely loyal, inveterate freedom fighter and warrior
journalist with a deep-seated intolerance of injustice
and a love of America that weathered the best and worst
this nation has had to offer.
Nat didn’t live
to see the last days of Obama’s reign, but he saw enough
to describe the nation’s 44th president as
“possibly the most dangerous and destructive president
we have ever had.” A few years back, I asked Nat how he
maintains his optimism in the face of the constant
barrage of discouraging news about government
corruption, civil liberties abuses, war, etc.
I’ll end with
Nat’s answer as he inscribed it in the foreword to my
book
A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police
State:
Government
officials like to claim that everything they are
doing is for security, to keep America safe in the
so-called war against terrorism. What they are
really effectuating is a weakening of why we are
Americans. A lot of Americans today have a very
limited idea as to why they are Americans, let alone
why we have a First Amendment or a Bill of Rights.
People are becoming accustomed or conditioned to
what's going on now with the raping of the Fourth
Amendment, for example. Too many Americans appear
unconcerned about the loss of fundamental individual
liberties—such as due process, the right to confront
their government accusers in a courtroom, and the
presumption of innocence—that are vital to being an
American. Yet the reason we are vulnerable to being
manipulated by the government out of fear is that
most of us do not know and understand our liberties
and how difficult it was to obtain them and how hard
it is to keep them.
I have
spent a lot of time studying our Founders and people
like Samuel Adams. What Adams and the Sons of
Liberty did in Boston was spread the word about the
abuses of the British. They had Committees of
Correspondence that got the word out to the
colonies. We need Committees of Correspondence now.
The danger we now face is admittedly greater than
any we have had before. If I were to judge what I do
and write on the basis of optimism, I would probably
go back to writing novels, but I figure you have to
do what you feel you have to do and just keep hoping
and trying to get people to understand why we are
Americans and what we are fighting to preserve.
Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead is
founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute. His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People (SelectBooks,
2015) is available online at www.amazon.com. Whitehead
can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |