Author Topic: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful  (Read 2132 times)

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Offline GRAYWOLF

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The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« on: February 08, 2010, 12:38:20 PM »
The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
By Tom Mullen

I must admit that as soon as I heard that The Who would be the halftime entertainment at the Super Bowl, the timeliness of what would likely be their last song immediately crossed my mind. However, that didn't lessen the impact of seeing the aging rockers belt out their classic, "Won't Get Fooled Again," although this time with more significance for America than at any time since the song was written. The enthusiastic crowd -- thousands of whom undoubtedly sport Obama/Biden bumper stickers on their vehicles -- joined Townshend and Daltrey in thunderous unison each time the line "We don't get fooled again" was sung. Ironically, the extent to which the song indicts Obama was probably lost on all, save the venerable old Englishmen themselves, who hail from a bygone era when the left was actually anti-establishment.

Certainly, there has not (yet) been "fighting in the street" here in America, but most of the Obama faithful do believe that the "change" he has promised represents a "new revolution," whilst opponents certainly object to the "new constitution." I'm not sure why, since as Jay Leno quipped a few years back, we're not using the old one anyway. In any case, as Townshend says to begin the second verse, "the change it had to come." What we are changing from and what we are changing into are questions that Townshend leaves to us to answer.

Fittingly, the word "change" is used five times during the song. However, the real message of the song is summed up in the last verse.

"There's nothing in the street

Looks any different to me

And the slogans are replaced, bye the bye.

And the parting on the left

Is now parting on the right,

And the beards have all grown longer overnight."

It is hard to believe that these words were written in the early 1970's, as well as they describe the Obama campaign and presidency. Certainly, the slogans have been replaced. Obama started his presidential campaign as an anti-war candidate. Upon receiving the Democratic nomination for president, he subtly changed his stance from being anti-war to arguing that America was merely "in the wrong war." Now, as he escalates the war in Afghanistan, expands that war into Pakistan, and revives his predecessor's antagonism towards Iran, we find that even Iraq is not such a wrong war that we will not be leaving thirty to fifty thousand troops there after our combat mission officially ends. Haven't we heard this strategy before?

Regarding "parting on the left now parting on the right," the neo-conservatives that Obama was supposedly the antithesis of during his campaign couldn't be cheering his war-mongering any more enthusiastically. While there is obligatory criticism by Republicans towards some of his tactical decisions or supposed hesitation in making them, they do not fail to dutifully commend the emperor for his overall strategic plan: more war, more debt, and — just as in every year of the Bush administration — the largest total DOD budget in American history (counting the actual on-budget Defense budget, the appropriations for the active wars, and the Homeland Security expenditures on the war formerly known as "The War on Terror").

Domestically, those who hoped that "Change" meant an end or at least a decrease in corporate welfare have been disappointed as well. In a classic bait-and-switch, it turns out that his signature health care "reform" plan is nothing more than a gift-wrapped half trillion dollars per year presented to corporate health insurance giants, courtesy of American taxpayers who will now have no choice but to buy their insurance. It is hard to imagine how any self-respecting progressive can "smile and grin" at this change, but so far they still do. The hypnotized may never lie, but they also seem completely unable to tell when they are being robbed blind.

Of course, President Obama did at least do something about the Bush administration's practices of spying on its own citizens, tapping their phones, and reading their e-mails (to keep them safe). He sent a team of lawyers to court to defend all of these abominable practices, hoping to solidify his legal sanction to do exactly the same thing. This shouldn't have surprised anyone, since while still in the U.S. Senate, Obama voted to grant immunity to telephone companies who complied with the Bush administrations invasions. Perhaps they were expecting Obama himself to "change" on this issue once he became president.

Finally, Obama had promised to go through every one of President Bush's executive orders and overturn any that "trampled upon liberty." Having completed his review, the only executive orders overturned or considered relate to stem cell research, oil drilling on federal land, and Bush's "gag order" on international aid organizations regarding abortion. Conspicuously absent from the list are the infamous orders wherein Bush granted his office vast new powers during a state of emergency, which the hysterical Keith Olbermann quite justifiably wet himself over during several of his anti-Bush diatribes.

To summarize, let us review what liberals/progressives said they hated about the Bush administration. Unless memory fails, it was his immoral and unfunded wars, his preferential treatment of Wall Street and large corporations at the expense of Main Street, his illegal spying on and wiretapping of American citizens in the name of security, and his assumption of dictatorial powers via executive orders and a rubber-stamp Republican Congress. For all of those who voted for Obama to protest and end these atrocities, the last lines of "Won't Get Fooled Again" couldn't be more appropriate.

"Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss."

Indeed he is. We have been fooled again, and if we simply put the neo-conservative Republicans back into office, it won't be much different the next time, either. Isn't it time we stopped doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result?


Copyright © 2010 Thomas Mullen
"Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you are ruined. The great object is that every man be armed. Everyone who is able may have a gun."-Patrick Henry

Offline Paul Jaray

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Re: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« Reply #1 on: February 08, 2010, 12:49:25 PM »
I'm not really into politics, but if this is what is written about Obama, how was Bush considered?

Offline Ultra

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Re: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« Reply #2 on: February 08, 2010, 01:13:45 PM »
I'm not really into politics, but if this is what is written about Obama, how was Bush considered?

Here comes an unexpected diatribe.

Many of the personalities that populated this board and others that predate it are entirely UNrepresentative of the American populace when it comes to politics.  First off, they actually think about it at all.  Not very American anymore.  Boobus Americanus is the dominant species these days.  Amongst the loons here in the forum there is a decidedly Libertarian bent to the general politics of Otto, Graywolf, myself, MG and a host of others who share or have shared political discussions.  Our posts and ideas are out of step with mainstream American political thought.  It is through these discussions that we became such bonded individuals.   For in them we learned that political differences aside, we are all the same,  We want to have better lives for our children.  We want to live in peace without interference from government.  We want our communities to be healthy, happy places to live and raise a family.

I want to learn more about your cultures.   From you guys.  First hand.  I believe you share the values mentioned in the paragraph above.  By interacting with you on things of interest I get to learn about you and your culture.  Not just cars.  I learn how you live your daily lives and we begin to understand each other on entirely new levels.   I don't ever share just one common interest with my friends.  I feel free to discuss with them whatever I might choose.   I agree that any discussion of US politics does a great job of excluding non-US members.   To have discussions that have no borders first necessitates having topics interesting to many cultures.  Help me to root those topics out and lets all become something more to each other than just another carguy.

 I have never met Otto.  Not once.  One of the reasons we did this site together is because we felt like we had a bond.  That bond was forged across more than just the NTC puzzles we both programmed.  It was about a love of cars.  It was also about a mutual respect of each other and the intellect behind the posts.  I am pleased I got that chance to learn Mr. Francis Peterson and his outlook on life.  I wouldn't exchange it or all the fruits that relationship has brought for anything.  It is how I now get to interact with all of you who are reading this meandering post.   I look forward to meeting him at this years Autorama.  How many of you have forged that good of a relationship here?  I want to make this site a place where things like that continue to happen.  For myself and for all of you.

Paul, to answer your question.  The libertarians tend to be disgusted with anyone who aggregates power to themselves or to government.   With that in mind there was equal opportunity disgust for all of the presidents in recent memory. 
“Honi soit qui mal y pense”


Click the pic....... Name the car

Offline GRAYWOLF

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Re: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« Reply #3 on: February 08, 2010, 02:01:23 PM »
Not only would I like to hear from other coultures about themselves, I would also like to hear outsider perspectives on the US.

In response to Paul's question. A big point of the article is the fact that people who were decrying Bush's policy are conspicuously silent, or sometimes cheering, now that BO is continuing or advancing the same policies. This is typical of voters in this country..."it is OK when my party does it, but it is wrong if the other party does it!"

So the simple answer is, it depends on the political persuasion of the source.
Pro R will talk about how horrible the policy is that BO is implementing and how good the policy was under Bush.
Pro D will talk about how wonderful the policy is that BO is implementing and how horrible the policy was under Bush.
Pro Constitution talks about how horrible any policy is that violates the limits set up in the Constitution.
"Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you are ruined. The great object is that every man be armed. Everyone who is able may have a gun."-Patrick Henry

Offline MG

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Re: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« Reply #4 on: February 08, 2010, 02:06:01 PM »
So, how about those Greeks? Are they going to be able to solve their fiscal problems? Or are they just going to keep printing more drachmas and hope the problem goes away? Will the European Union survive? Should I "short" the Euro?

Believe it or not, I actually am interested in the answers to all those questions, but it is highly unlikely I will learn much from reading the American press reports.

Promoting discussions that attract an international audience is hard. I hear that the PM of The Ukraine is facing political challenges but I don't know why. I have no idea how the Slavs and Croats are getting along in Bosnia these days. The US press says Vladimir Putin is a fraud and a phony, but it's possible they have a hidden agenda!  We LOVE to belittle the Russians.

I for one would be delighted to have some of you who live in countries NOT obsessed with empire tell us what's going on in your homeland. How has the global recession affected your local ecomomy? What sort of political parties and division bedevil your culture? How do you feel about your national government? Is it benevolent and wise, or a pandering pile of pig poo that cares only for its own preservation and the accretion of power to the central authority?  How can people of different nations work together, using the magic of whizzing electrons and digiial protocols, to push back against the constant encroachment of government on the governed? These are discussions I would love to have with any or all of you.

Many of you do not know that my wife and I operated a Bed & Breakfast out of our home for a decade or more. During that time, we hosted people from Portugal and Pretoria, Australia and Austria, Brazil and Barbados, Germany and Israel, Belgium and Scotland. That experience is what taught me that most people are pretty much the same. As Ultra says, we all want our kids to have the promise of a better life, we all want to be free of fear and want, and we ALL want to be left the hell alone by our governments. We want our rulers to stay out of our thoughts, out of our personal life, out of our sexual mores and out of our decisions about what recreational drugs we choose to enjoy.

Paul asks for  some input into what people in the US thought of George W. Bush. Let me answer with this anecdote. About 7 years ago, we took a reservation for a couple from Austin Texas, which is practically the Bush family's home town. My wife implored me not to discuss politics with them so as not to offend paying guests. But by the third morning, it was pretty evident that they felt pretty much as I did politically, so I dared to ask them: "What do people in  Austin think of GWB?"  The man paused, glanced at his wife and then said: "Most of the people I know think he is about the dumbest son of a bitch that ever was".   :lmao:  Hope that helps to clear things up for you, Paul!    ;D
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Offline Otto Puzzell

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Re: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« Reply #5 on: February 08, 2010, 02:25:49 PM »
With that in mind there was equal opportunity disgust for all of the presidents in recent memory. 

Absolutely correct!
You wanna be the man, you gotta Name That Car!

Offline GRAYWOLF

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Re: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« Reply #6 on: February 09, 2010, 01:59:17 PM »
Paul asks for  some input into what people in the US thought of George W. Bush. Let me answer with this anecdote. About 7 years ago, we took a reservation for a couple from Austin Texas, which is practically the Bush family's home town. My wife implored me not to discuss politics with them so as not to offend paying guests. But by the third morning, it was pretty evident that they felt pretty much as I did politically, so I dared to ask them: "What do people in  Austin think of GWB?"  The man paused, glanced at his wife and then said: "Most of the people I know think he is about the dumbest son of a bitch that ever was".   :lmao:  Hope that helps to clear things up for you, Paul!    ;D

I must interject here, Austin is THE "lefty" bastion in Texas. It is not at all representative of the state's general political view. Kind of like asking someone from Mass about the republicans...Not that I disagree with his opinion too vehemently!
"Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you are ruined. The great object is that every man be armed. Everyone who is able may have a gun."-Patrick Henry

Offline MG

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Re: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« Reply #7 on: February 09, 2010, 05:54:07 PM »
Thanks for the clarification, GW. All I know about Texas is it takes 3 days to cross it from east to west. Or west to east, for that matter!   :P  I guess Houston is more the Bush center of gravity, actually. Isn't that where GWB made his first 5 million of taxpayer money?   ???
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Offline GRAYWOLF

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Re: The Who Sing to the Obama Faithful
« Reply #8 on: February 10, 2010, 12:20:18 AM »
Just about anywhere else in TX is pretty tightly republican. The last D governor won because the R was such an idiot that even the R voters were too embarrassed to show up at the polls. His name was Clayton (not sure if it was his first or last name). He lost to a woman that so loved to blow other people's money that one of her biggest legacies was building weigh stations at every border crossing (additional ones if one already existed), but for some reason, she never found the money to staff them so they have sat empty for the last 20 or so years....

Austin is the "live music capital of the world"...That draws all kinds of artsy fartsy types that tend to believe the government (i.e. us taxpayers at the point of the jackboot guns) is responsible for supporting them and anyone else that doesn't believe in taking responsibility for themselves.

Don't get me wrong, I love Austin. It may be the most beautiful city in TX, it is just that the general population is extremely D leaning.
"Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you are ruined. The great object is that every man be armed. Everyone who is able may have a gun."-Patrick Henry