Obama’s
final State of the Union: Lies, evasions and threats
By Patrick
Martin
January 14,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"WSWS"
- The final
State of the Union speech delivered Tuesday night by
President Barack Obama was a demonstration of the
incapacity of the American political system to deal
honestly or seriously with a single social question.
Obama
evaded the real issues that affect tens of millions
of working people in America every day of their
lives. He painted a ludicrous picture of economic
recovery and social progress that insulted the
intelligence of his television audience—and went
unchallenged by the millionaire politicians
assembled in the chamber of the House of
Representatives.
Summing up
what he called “the progress of these past seven
years,” Obama gave first place to “how we recovered
from the worst economic crisis in generations.” The
so-called “recovery” has been a bonanza for
corporate profits, stock prices, and the wealth and
income of the super-rich. For the working people who
are the vast majority of the population, it has been
a disaster.
By most
social indices, the American people are worse off in
January 2016 than when Obama took office seven years
ago. The real wages of working people have fallen,
social services have deteriorated, pension benefits
have been gutted, and cities such as Detroit and San
Bernardino have been forced into bankruptcy.
According
to a report by the National Association of Counties
issued on the eve of the State of the Union address,
of the 3,069 counties in the United States, 93
percent are worse off than before the 2008 financial
crash according to at least one of four economic
indicators: total employment, the unemployment rate,
the size of the economy and home values.
In 27
states, not a single county has recovered fully from
the 2008 crash and the deep economic slump that
followed. These include such major states as
Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Massachusetts, Missouri,
New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania.
Obama,
however, painted a picture of nearly unblemished
economic advance, declaring, “The United States of
America, right now, has the strongest, most durable
economy in the world.” He boasted, “We’re in the
middle of the longest streak of private-sector job
creation in history. More than 14 million new jobs;
the strongest two years of job growth since the
‘90s; an unemployment rate cut in half.”
The
president did not acknowledge that the post-2008
“recovery” is the weakest on record, that the vast
majority of the new jobs created have been low-wage
and many of them part-time, or that the drop in the
unemployment rate is primarily due to the withdrawal
of millions of people from the work force because
they lost all hope of getting a decent-paying job.
He went on,
tellingly, to cite the auto industry as a symbol of
success, declaring that it “just had its best year
ever.” This perfectly expresses the utter blindness,
not just of Obama, but of the entire political
establishment. The “best year ever” was for General
Motors, Ford and Fiat-Chrysler, which enjoyed record
profits, not for the auto workers who produced those
profits.
Real wages
for auto workers have dropped sharply since the
Obama White House forced through a 50 percent cut in
wages for all new hires as part of the bankruptcy
reorganization of the industry in 2009. Mass
discontent among auto workers was expressed at the
end of 2015 in the rejection of contracts at
Fiat-Chrysler and Nexteer, a major supplier, and in
widespread demands for strike action, smothered by
Obama’s stooges in the United Auto Workers union.
“Anyone
claiming that America’s economy is in decline is
peddling fiction,” Obama concluded. The social
position of the American working class has, in fact,
suffered a dramatic decline, through the combined
efforts of the corporate bosses, the unions and the
two capitalist parties, the Democrats and
Republicans.
The
president conceded that economic inequality has
grown in the United States, but he described it as
the outcome of long-term trends such as
globalization and automation, as though the policies
of his administration—bailouts for Wall Street,
budget cuts and wage cuts for workers—had nothing to
do with it.
In the
seven years since the financial crash, brought on,
as he admitted, by “recklessness on Wall Street,”
not a single banker or speculator has been
prosecuted or jailed. On the contrary, the
billionaires have greatly increased their wealth,
gobbling up 95 percent of all new income since Obama
entered the White House.
Obama
listed a few other policy “successes,” claiming that
“we reformed our health care system, and reinvented
our energy sector… we delivered more care and
benefits to our troops and veterans.” He was
referring, however, to a series of social disasters:
the reactionary attack on health benefits for
workers and their families known as Obamacare; the
devastation of Appalachia and other energy-producing
regions; and the abuse of ex-soldiers, wounded in
body and mind, by the Veterans Administration.
Obama
sought to defend the foreign policy record of his
administration from criticism, mainly from the
Republican right, where demands are being raised for
military escalation in the Middle East and
stepped-up attacks on democratic rights at home in
the name of fighting “terrorism.”
While he
claimed to reject an American role as the world’s
policeman, he nonetheless boasted, “The United
States of America is the most powerful nation on
Earth. Period. It’s not even close. We spend more on
our military than the next eight nations combined.”
He
continued, “Our troops are the finest fighting force
in the history of the world,” winning the bipartisan
standing ovation that always accompanies any mention
of American soldiers engaged in combat overseas.
Obama
indulged in the glorification of killing that has
become an essential part of the degraded spectacle
that passes for political discourse in America.
Describing the US war against the Islamic State in
Iraq and Syria, he claimed, “With nearly 10,000 air
strikes, we are taking out their leadership, their
oil, their training camps, and their weapons.”
He called
on Congress to pass an Authorization for the Use of
Military Force against ISIS, but vowed to wage war
with or without legislative approval. The leaders of
ISIS, he proclaimed, “will learn the same lessons as
terrorists before them. If you doubt America’s
commitment—or mine—to see that justice is done, ask
Osama bin Laden. Ask the leader of al Qaeda in
Yemen, who was taken out last year…”
Then he
declared, in language that will be noted by nations
all over the world, that when it comes to waging war
against potential adversaries, “our reach has no
limit.”
Obama
concluded his speech with an appeal to his
Republican opponents to work with his administration
and pull back from the extreme anti-immigrant and
anti-Muslim rhetoric that has characterized the
contest for the Republican presidential nomination.
In a clear
reference to Donald Trump, he argued that “we need
to reject any politics that targets people because
of race or religion. This is not a matter of
political correctness, but understanding what makes
us strong.”
Obama was
making an argument, not so much that racism and
bigotry are intrinsically wrong, but that they make
it more difficult for American imperialism to
maintain its dominant world role. “When a politician
insults Muslims,” he said, “it makes it harder to
achieve our goals.”
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