For all you political junkies who think actual principles are more important than "calling yourself" a Republican or Democrat, a conservative or a liberal, this is an interesting read.
Really, instead of making a past-time out of one-sided attacks on either Republicans or Democrats, recognize that both parties are relatively similar with little loyalty to the conservative and/or liberal principles they supposedly espouse.
Barack Obama - Salon.com
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/31234647/obamas_big_sellout
Really, instead of making a past-time out of one-sided attacks on either Republicans or Democrats, recognize that both parties are relatively similar with little loyalty to the conservative and/or liberal principles they supposedly espouse.
Barack Obama - Salon.com
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/31234647/obamas_big_sellout
Yesterday's speech and the odd, extremely bipartisan reaction to it underscored one of the real dangers of the Obama presidency: taking what had been ideas previously discredited as Republican or right-wing dogma and transforming them into bipartisan consensus. It's not just Republicans but Democrats that are now vested in -- and eager to justify -- the virtues of war, claims of Grave Danger posed by Islamic radicals and the need to use massive military force to combat them, indefinite detention, military commissions, extreme secrecy, full-scale immunity for government lawbreaking, and so many other doctrines once purportedly despised by Democrats but now defended by them because their leader has embraced them.
That's exactly the process that led former Bush DOJ official Jack Goldsmith to giddily explain that Obama has actually done more to legitimize Bush/Cheney "counter-terrorism" policies than Bush and Cheney themselves -- because he made them bipartisan -- and Yale Law Professor Jack Balkin made the same point to The New York Times' Charlie Savage back in July:
In any case, Jack Balkin, a Yale Law School professor, said Mr. Obama’s ratification of the basic outlines of the surveillance and detention policies he inherited would reverberate for generations. By bestowing bipartisan acceptance on them, Mr. Balkin said, Mr. Obama is consolidating them as entrenched features of government.Most of the neocons celebrating Obama's speech yesterday made exactly that point in one way or another: if even this Democratic President, beloved by liberals, announces to the world that we have the unilateral right to wage war and that doing so creates Peace and crushes Evil, and does so at a Nobel Peace Prize ceremony of all places, doesn't that end the argument for good?
"What we are watching," Mr. Balkin said, "is a liberal, centrist, Democratic version of the construction of these same governing practices."
http://www.salon.com/news/politics/barack_obama/index.html?story=/opinion/greenwald/2009/12/11/obama
