In the interests of full disclosure, let me state that I voted for Barack Obama for President, and contributed to his campaign. Not because I had anything in particular against John McCain, other than his totally irresponsible choice of a vice-presidential candidate, but because I had come to recognize that Dick Cheney and George Bush had headed one of the worst, if not the worst, administrations in the history of our county. I concluded it was time for a change. Not necessarily the kind of change Mr. Obama was campaigning on, but change in general. You know, like a clean sweep.
I am now beginning to wonder what on earth I was thinking of. Because the last nine months have shown, if nothing else, that politics is politics, no matter what party is in power. Mr. Obama is no beacon of light or breath of fresh air. He is a charming, articulate politician, who did what he had to do to get elected, and is now proceeding to do whatever he believes he must do to get reelected.
And therein lies the problem with government. People elected to public office are generally focused on one thing and one thing only – getting reelected. Some of them are also focused on lining their coffers with corporate interest dollars and/or securing their futures as lobbyists once they leave office. Few of them are particularly focused on doing what they were elected to do – represent the people.
In the past eight years, we have spent an estimated three trillion dollars, and still counting, on two useless wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that we cannot win and will not win, but we can’t find a way to pay for quality, affordable health insurance for every American?
The bills making their way through the House and Senate are jokes, nothing more than page after page of watered down words that translate into giveaways to the health insurance and pharmaceutical industries, engineered by congresspeople bought and paid for by said industries, and a president who campaigned on health care reform and a strong public option and holding said industries accountable, but has more recently spent his time in closed-door sessions with members of said industries, making assurances that the status quo will not be significantly disturbed.
In the past year alone, we have given away some twenty-four trillion dollars to banks who engaged in practices that make Bernie Madoff look like a nobody. With foxes like Timothy Geithner, Larry Summers, and Ben Bernanke in charge of the hen houses, we will never see most of that money again, but we can’t find a way to pay for quality, affordable health care for every American?
Is this what we elected Barack Obama to do — steal from the poor and give to the rich?
Give ma a break!