MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Administrations are invariably criticized for things they do right, for things they do wrong, and for things they fail to do at all. They are invariably criticized for doing too much and criticized for doing too little. Conservative critics of the current Administration tend to do the former. Liberal, by contrast, would do well to focus on the latter. For thus far, this Administration’s failures – in domestic policy at least – are more the product of doing too little too late, than of doing too much too soon. Nowhere is that failure clearer than in the Administration’s inept handling of the home foreclosure crisis.[1]
The Obama Administration did not invent or create the foreclosure crisis. It inherited it, just as it inherited a major financial crisis and a looming recession. But unlike the financial meltdown, the home foreclosure problem inherited by the Obama Administration was in its infancy as the new president took office. The housing crisis then played itself out predominantly on Obama’s own watch; with the numbers of foreclosures soaring as they did only because the Administration failed to act with a speed and an effectiveness appropriate to the occasion. It is a failure that may yet bring a heavy electoral price.
Hampered initially by moral hazard concerns – reluctant, that is, to do more than marginally bail-out homeowners who had foolishly borrowed more than they could ever hope to repay – the incoming Obama Administration failed to reset and rescale its help to struggling homeowners when the causes of the foreclosure crisis changed. But they did change – and change rapidly.[2] The foreclosure crisis was initially fueled by a fusion of reckless borrowing and reckless lending practices – a recklessness on the lending side of the equation, it should be said, that went largely unpunished, and which did not prevent a massive bail-out of the reckless in the financial community. But the crisis was then prolonged by the overall economic legacy of that financial recklessness: namely generalized recession and the involuntary unemployment of millions of Americans. People began to lose their homes not because they had over-committed themselves. They began to lose their homes because they began to lose their jobs.
Instead of then disciplining the major lenders into ending the foreclosure crisis they had both directly and indirectly triggered – instead, that is, of having major financial institutions absorb mortgage losses and allow struggling homeowners to remain (at least as renters) in their homes – the Administration focused instead on bailing-out the banks, allowing them in the process to both tighten their lending requirements on new borrowers and purge their existing portfolios of mortgages whose payments were in default. All that the Administration then offered to those on the bitter receiving end of all this new financial rigor were a series of modest initiatives to help home-owners restructure their mortgage debt, initiatives whose complexity slowed their implementation and whose modesty left millions of mortgage payers without adequate support.[3] The Banks were saved. Homeowners were not. The banking crisis is behind us. Foreclosures are still very much the order of the day.
Indeed, the number of foreclosures in 2012 is projected to be higher than it was in 2011, higher even than it was in 2010, higher than in 2009. 2010 was the terrible year, with 3.8 million “foreclosure filings – default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions – reported on a record 2.8 million U.S. properties …an increase of nearly 2 percent from 2009 and an increase of 23 percent from 2008.”[4] 2011 was better. The robo-signing scandal slowed down the rate of bank foreclosures, so that overall foreclosure filings that year were 34 percent down: 2.7 million foreclosure filings on 1.9 million properties.[5] But 2012 will be worse, and possibly much worse, as banks empowered by their settlement with the states’ attornies-general clear their backlog of mortgages in default.[6] “The damn will not burst in the next 30 to 45 days,” the RealtyTrac CEO said in April, “but it will eventually burst:”[7] and when it does, we can expect an additional 5 million foreclosures by 2015, to add to the 3.8 million homes foreclosed since the financial crisis began in September 2008.[8]
These will be foreclosures that are both geographically and socially concentrated, hitting states and groups vital to Obama’s re-election chances in November. The roll-call of states in foreclosure crisis reads like an election map of battleground states: California, Nevada, Arizona, Florida, New Jersey and Illinois.[9] The roll-call of victims is equally electorally significant. The majority of people affected by foreclosure have been white, but borrowers of color are still “more than twice as likely to lose their home as white households.”[10] The wealth gap between whites, blacks and Hispanics is currently at record highs – currently “the median wealth of white households is 20 times that of black households and 18 times that of Hispanic households, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of newly available government data from 2009”[11] – and central to that gap has been the destruction of Black and Hispanic personal wealth in the housing collapse of the foreclosure crisis.[12] Right now, “approximately one quarter of all Latino and African-American borrowers have lost their home to foreclosure or are seriously delinquent, compared to just under 12 percent for white borrowers.”[13] The President will need every Latino and African-American vote he can get in November, and he will need the electoral votes of the majority of the states most adversely affected by foreclosures. Time is running out for a policy shift to bring those votes home.
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The personal suffering involved in this foreclosure crisis is enormous, and should be our prime concern. But so too should be our sense of political frustration at the persistence and depth of the crisis itself.
Just compare the largesse with which financial institutions were bailed out in 2009 with the parsimony of the assistance then extended to their victims.[14] Compare too the alacrity with which financial institutions accepted and absorbed tax-payer assistance in their moment of need, with their subsequent slowness to extend financial help to the home-owners they finance.
· There are countless reports still available to us in the quality press of bureaucratic inertia by the banks, even after the financial settlement they made to avoid criminal liability for robo-signing errors.[15]
· There are reports of banks now setting so tough a set of mortgage requirements that entirely legitimate first-time buyers cannot enter the housing market.[16]
· There are reports of bank charges on mortgages being so high that even hard-working Americans making regular payments are seeing their mortgage debt shrink only by a fraction, with the banks swallowing the bulk of that payment in interest charges.[17]
· There are reports of a new emerging drag on the U.S. housing market – REO’s, real-estate-owned properties – houses held by banks and other lenders often standing vacant and neglected while the number of the homeless continues to grow.[18]
· There are reports of appalling slow and (in percentage terms) small distributions of promised aid by government agencies themselves,[19] and of state governments swallowing into their general revenue streams funds deliberately set aside for mortgage relief.[20]
· There are even reports of major financial wrongdoers like AIG refusing to implement their part of government programs aimed at helping mortgage owners in distress,[21] and of banks directly benefiting, on their bottom line, from programs designed to move mortgage assistance through them to home-owners under water.[22]
Given the scale of the problem, the numbers cited for success are truly depressing: probably only 800,000 families out of a potential three million helped by the flagship HAMP program,[23] or 31,000 out of a possible 458,000 for the far more modest “Hardest Hit Fund.”[24] This cannot be enough.[25]
It is true that modest proposals for further mortgage relief are slowly working their way through Congress,[26] and that there are signs of the national housing market bottoming out, perhaps even beginning a very slow return to rising prices again.[27] But that can be no comfort to the millions of Americans who have, or will, lose their homes while that housing market sputters back into life. Home-ownership became central to the American Dream for the majority of the middle class in the half-century that followed World War II. That dream is now a hollow one for more and more members of that class. The rate of home-ownership is currently at a 15 year low.[28] The cost of renting property in areas heavily hit by home foreclosures is on the rise.[29] The number of Americans getting by and sharing accommodation is now increasing.[30] The federal funds for social housing are being slashed by a Republican-dominated Congress.[31] Obama the candidate has now tilted left on his immigration policy, promising things he has so far failed to deliver. It is surely time to tilt left on housing policy also – offering real and tangible relief to a key potential electoral constituency. Eleventh hour conversions invariably come late, and have credibility problems; but better an eleventh hour conversion to radicalism than no conversion at all.
Come on, Mr. President. Give us something to campaign on. Abraham Lincoln won in 1860 on the slogan “vote yourself a farm, vote yourself a tariff.” How about this time “vote yourself a home, vote yourself a job”? After all, we desperately need them both.
First posted at www.davidcoates.net
[1] For an earlier report, see http://www.davidcoates.net/2012/03/26/the-white-house-and-your-house-policy-inertia-and-organizational-resistance-in-the-on-going-crisis-of-american-housing/
[2] For details, see David Coates, Answering Back: Liberal Responses to Conservative Arguments, New York: Continuum Books, 2010, pp. 230-72; and David Coates, Making the Progressive Case: Towards a Stronger U.S. Economy, New York: Continuum Books, 2011, pp. 160-78
[3] For details of the latest Administration initiatives, see Zachary A. Goldfarb and David Nakamura, “Obama announces new housing finance plan,” The Washington Post, February 1, 2012: available at http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/obama-to-announce-new-housing-refinance-plan/2012/02/01/gIQAw8YghQ_story.html
[4] RealtyTrac, Record 2.9 Million U.S. Properties Receive Foreclosure Failings in 2010 Despite 30-Month Low in December, posted January 12, 2011: available at http://www.realtytrac.com/content/press-releases/record-29-million-us-properties-receive-foreclosure-filings-in-2010-despite-30-month-low-in-december-6309
[5] RealtyTrac, 2011 Year-End Foreclosure Report: Foreclosures on the Retreat, posted January 9, 2012: available at http://www.realtytrac.com/content/foreclosure-market-report/2011-year-end-foreclosure-market-report-6984
[6] See Nick Carey, Americans brace for next foreclosure wave, posted April 4, 2012: available at http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/04/us-foreclosure-idUSBRE83319E20120404
[7] Quoted in Brady Dennis, “Foreclosures reach lowest quarterly level since late 2007, RealtyTrac data show,” The Washington Post, April 12, 2012: available at http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/foreclosures-reach-lowest-quarterly-level-since-late-2007-realtytrac-data-show/2012/04/11/gIQAjTqoBT_story.html
[8] Editorial, “Still Depressed, After All These Years,” The New York Times, June 23, 2012: available at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/24/opinion/sunday/housing-still-depressed-after-all-these-years.html
[9] See Nick Timiraos, “Foreclosures Show No Sign of Decline,” The Wall Street Journal, May 16, 2012: available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303448404577407982615943616.html
[10] Center for Responsible Lending, Lost Ground 2011: Disparities in Mortgage Lending, and Foreclosures, North Carolina, UNC Chapel Hill, 2011, p. 3: available at http://www.responsiblelending.org/media-center/press-releases/archives/Lost-Ground-CRL-Research-Shows-Foreclosure-Crisis-Not-Halfway.html
[11] Paul Taylor et al, Twenty-to-One: Wealth Gap Rise to Record Highs Between Whites, Blacks and Hispanics, Washington DC, Pew Research Center, July 2011, p.1: available at http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2011/07/26/wealth-gaps-rise-to-record-highs-between-whites-blacks-hispanics/
[12] Ylan Q. Mui, “For black Americans, financial damage from subprime implosion is likely to last,” The Washington Post, July 8, 2012: available at http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/for-black-americans-financial-damage-from-subprime-implosion-is-likely-to-last/2012/07/08/gJQAwNmzWW_story.html
[13] Center for Responsible Lending, op.cit,, p. 4. 11 percent of African-American home-owners were in or facing foreclosure in 2011, as against 7 percent of white home-owners. Data available at http://www.responsiblelending.org/media-center/press-releases/archives/Lost-Ground-CRL-Research-Shows-Foreclosure-Crisis-Not-Halfway.html
[14] On the double standard, see Bruce Judson, Why Inequality Matters: The Housing Crisis, Our System of Justice and Capitalism, posted on The Huffington Post, February 20, 2012: available at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bruce-judson/why-inequality-matters-th_b_1288132.html
[15] See for example Nick Timiraos and Ruth Simon, “Borrowers Face Big Delays in Refinancing Mortgages,” The Wall Street Journal, May 9, 2012: available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303459004577364102737025584.html
[16] Shahien Nasiripour and Tom Braithwaite, ‘Low rates not reaching many US homeowners,” The Financial Times, June 21, 2012: available at http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/78eb14f2-baf6-11e1-81e0-00144feabdc0.html#a
[17] See Van Jones, Hope for Homeowners, posted on The Huffington Post, July 2, 2012: available at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/van-jones/hope-for-homeowners_b_1643277.html
[18] Anne O’Shaughnessy, Battling the Next Stage of the Housing Crisis, posted on Forefront, October 6, 2010: available at http://www.clevelandfed.org/forefront/2010/09/ff_2010_fall_04.cfm
[19] Annie Lowrey, ‘Treasury Faulted in Effort to Relieve Homeowners,” The New York Times, April 12, 2012: available at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/12/business/economy/treasury-department-faulted-in-effort-to-relieve-homeowners.html
[20] Shaila Dewan, “Needy States Use Housing Aid Cash to Plug Budgets,” The New York Times, May 15, 2012: available at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/16/business/states-diverting-mortgage-settlement-money-to-other-uses.html?pagewanted=all
[21] Ajay Makan and Shahien Nasiripour, “AIG frustrates mortgage refinancing plan,” The Financial Times, July 5, 2012: available at http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/0f6bffe4-c5f7-11e1-b57e-00144feabdc0.html#axzz203ukGfkr
[22] Christian Berthelsen and Alan Zibel, “Homeowner Aid Boosts Big Banks,” The Wall Street Journal, June 17, 2012: available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303410404577469050569661724.html
[23] Alan Zibel, “Obama Loan Mods Still Growing, But at Snail’s Pace,” The Wall Street Journal, May 4, 2012: available at http://blogs.wsj.com/developments/2012/05/04/obama-loan-mods-still-growing-but-at-snails-pace/
[24] Shahien Nasiripour, ‘’White House criticized for home loan failings,” The Financial Times, April 12, 2012: available at http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/e479a314-841e-11e1-9d54-00144feab49a.html#axzz203ukGfkr
[25] And it isn’t. See Mike Lux, Homes, Banks and Politics: Round 2 of Settlement Talks, posted on The Huffington Post, April 7, 2012: available at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-lux/obama-housing-_b_1408851.html
[26] Vicki Needham, “Push intensifies to pass home-loan refinancing bill,” The Hill, May 24, 2012: available at http://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/1091-housing/229451-push-intensifies-on-home-loan-refinancing-bill
[27] Binyamin Appelbaum, ‘After Years of False Hopes, Signs of a Turn in Housing,” The New York Times, June 27, 2012: available at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/28/business/economy/new-indications-housing-recovery-is-under-way.html
[28] Alan Zibel and Nick Timiraos, ‘Homeownership Rate Declines to 15-Year Low,” The Wall Street Journal, April 30, 2012: available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303916904577376030212625796.html
[29] Shannon Bond and Anjli Raval, ‘Rental demand fuels US property market,” The Financial Times, May 21, 2012: available at http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/ae4c8274-a35a-11e1-ab98-00144feabdc0.html#axzz203ukGfkr
[30] Michael A. Fletcher, “Census bureau: Millions more Americans shared homes in face of recession,” The Washington Post, June 20, 2012: available at http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/census-bureau-millions-more-americans-shared-households-in-face-of-recession/2012/06/20/gJQAaj3HrV_story.html
[31] Paul Boden, Fed Up With Housing Policy, posted on The Huffington Post, April 13, 2012: available at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-boden/fed-up-with-housing-polic_b_1421394.html
Comments
Just skimmed, but nicely done - still think the illegal bank repossessions and the aid the administration gave to keep banks out of scandal should get more bold print. Besides the weak HAMP effort, it made the crash worse and was why we could be sure banks wouldn't work with consumers when they could just grab the property and wait for the dip to end to cash in again.
(at this point they've become landlords again with all the repossessed property they've held onto - a good racket since it pays better than mortgages, and so few can afford to buy another house this early)
by Anonymous PP (not verified) on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 10:43am
Well done and well written, as usual.
I will say, however, your last statement brings up a key problem with dealing with this issue.
To put it simply, the Obama campaign team would never put "vote yourself a home" out there as a slogan. First off, as a renter all my life, I believe one can have a home without owning a house, and it does make me bias on this topic. From a quality of life point of view, owning property is not a necessity in my book. Such a perspective tends to lead me to cringe when people start talking about ownership as one of our rights as citizens.
And this is where such a slogan gets messy. If one just considers the "independent" voters, aka moderate swing voters, the last thing you want to do is come across like you're promising everyone the ability to own a house regardless of their income. Rightly or wrongly, many folks still believe it was the people trying to own a home when their income didn't allow it, is what got us in this housing mess in the first place.
Moreover, it is not a given with these folks that if life circumstances, such as losing one's job, leads to foreclosure, that the government should step in to ensure the person is able to keep the house. This is especially true when it comes to a simple financial bail out. But it is also true when it comes to the government stepping in to tell the owner of the mortgage that they have to suffer the financial pain because people don't have a job to pay the bill.
In short, "vote yourself a home" smack of the socialist system so many of independent voters and even a lot of Democrats want to avoid. For them, the answer to the problem is not about eliminating all of the suffering on the foreclosure front. It is about some level of intervention of the government that supports both those who are trying to own their own homes and maintains the free market system in which the ownership exists.
by Elusive Trope on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 12:05pm
A quibble: I suspect that the percentage of swing voters who feel that the opportunity for everyone to own property isn't an important part of this country's ethos is probably quite miniscule. Ain't got no proof, that's just my guess, but it seems like those who don't think that way would always vote the most liberal choice possible, that they are not swing voters (unless swinging also means voting for some left alternative to the Dem party.)
That said, I also suspect your emphasis on federal bailouts, whether it's for too-big-to-fail OR little-guy-making-bad-choices is correct as far as swing voters are concerned.
by artappraiser on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 12:22pm
i would say in terms of campaign language, and how those swing voters perceive what is being said or promised, there is a big difference between the opportunity for everyone to own property and the guarantee for everyone to own property. This is similar to believing everyone should have the opportunity to become financially wealthy, but acknowledging even in the best of times that not everyone does become wealthy. Moreover, for those who are poor, this crowd believes there is a need for private (for-profit/non-profit) and public partnership in providing support, but there is a limit to that support. It is this kind of perception that allows the story of the person or household on assistance buying what is considered luxury items to have such an impact on government policies and the stances of politicians on the issue of government involvement in poverty.
by Elusive Trope on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 1:15pm
Home ownership was the American dream. Ownership was the reason, to brave the harsh realities of migration. Many died seeking a place, they could call their own.
If renting was so appealing, our pilgrims would have stayed put
Westward migration, Manifest Destiny wasn't based upon individuals renting.
The Oklahoma Land grab, wasn't about renting.
The Homestead Act wasn't about renting.
This Administration, played their Social engineering game and helped destroy the American Dream, .....I hope they lose.
Maybe BIG BROTHER Obama is reminiscing of the rows upon rows, of tenement buildings of 60's Chicago.
Maybe it's all a part of the scheme, to make the people appreciate the Democratic Party, to make the people beholden to government assistance, or something more sinister.
You want government assistance; then you must give up rights.
http://articles.latimes.com/1994-04-07/news/mn-43317_1_chicago-police
So why would Obama, do anything to help fulfill the American dream of homeownership?
It does appear his plan is to have more migrant shacks though.
No jobs; with a constant migration, with upheaval and Big Brother keeping tabs.
Disrupt community and quash gathering yourselves together.
Obama's policies allowed the destruction of community.
We are no longer a United States; we have become more calloused; united only in the sense;
the law confines the peasants in rental pens, while the elites are exempt.
Social Engineering: Go ahead, smoke an unauthorized substance and be evicted and never again be able to get government assitance. (ed note. I've seen it happen)
The whole financial crisis engineered, for the sake of Social engineering?
Why should anyone else care, if their neighbors lose their homes along with the tax base, to support the schools and parks, that make a community a vibrant part of the social fabric; this Administration doesn't really care about that warm and fuzzy stuff, until it finds, it needs the votes.
Lost jobs, lost homes, lost retirement security, lost 401 ks,
Fool didn't he know, he was complicit in destroying our dreams?
YES he
canDid.Too little, too late, and he wants credit? Screw Obama, just as he screwed us, with his Social engineering.
by Resistance on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 2:26pm
And many died because they were living in the path of that migration. But who cares about those who came first (they didn't really believing someone could own the land - so they were just renters). We had Destiny manifesting before our very eyes.
by Elusive Trope on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 3:07pm
There is a big difference between owning a home and owing a mortgage which is just like rent only without a property manager to call when there are problems.
Even so, not having to come up with monthly rent or mortgage payment is very liberating. It definitely quenches a lot of anxiety. We should figure out how to free more people from both.
by EmmaZahn on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 1:31pm
No argument from me on this front.
by Elusive Trope on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 2:08pm
Looks like someone has come up with at least one plan that scares the bejeezus out of some powerful financial interest groups even though it has flaws that the blogger points out. Still, it plus a couple of other of today's reads point to a way local jurisdictions can help themselves and their constituents as well.
by EmmaZahn on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 3:12pm
Just a notion: maybe some day the pathologically controlled and fearful Obama should try an approach that does not consist in smearing the stink of his depressing fear over the entire American body politic.
by Dan Kervick on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 10:18pm
Come on, Mr. President. Give us something to campaign on.
Obama has nothing to campaign on other than "Better than Romney, and I killed Bin Laden."
He can't run on the recovery he has engineered because he hasn't engineered a recovery.
He can't run on the good things he is going to do in the next term, because everyone can see that if he has a Republican Congress again he is not going to accomplish any good things in the next term.
He can't run on his inspiring vision of the future, because he has no inspiring vision of the future.
He can't run on morning in America, because it is not morning in America.
He can't run on his plan for saving the global environment and arresting global warming, because he has no plan for saving the global environment and arresting global warming..
He can't run as the scourge of the banksters, because he is a strong friend of the banksters.
He can't run on promises of any kind, because everyone can see that he walks back most of his promises in the face of political resistance.
He can't run on his bold and dramatic plan for change, because he hates drama and is extremely frightened of change and risk.
He can't run on his charismatic relationship with the American people, because he is an aloof man who has had serious trouble forging a relationship with the American people.
by Dan Kervick on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 10:34pm
Holy crap, Dan! Take a pill. Any pill. I've lost my home, my savings, and my self-respect, but I certainly am acutely aware of why, and the reason is hardly the Democrats or President Obama.
by Bwakkie (not verified) on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 10:58pm
Sure, Obama didn't break our broken world. But he's also not a man with the ambition to fix it either, or even with the ability to face and describe what's broken.
You tell me. What is Obama running on that doesn't fall into the "at least I'm not Romney" category?
by Dan Kervick on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 11:10pm
Well, in fact, being better than the other guy is reason enough to vote for anyone. Do you really want the guy who is less good? Why would anyone want that?
Beyond that, I think he can run on:
• Ending the War in Iraq
• Saving the economy from destruction (stimulus)
• Saving the auto industry and millions of jobs so that it could thrive again
• Promote green energy
• Passing financial regulation
• Passing health care reform
And these are just the big, obvious points.
One can reasonably argue about how good these achievements really were. How much was really accomplished. And one argue reasonably that he could have done better or gotten more.
One can even argue that he's too timid and lacks sufficient ambition to take us further.
But I think it's unreasonable to argue that these accomplishments haven't "moved the ball forward" and improved things pretty markedly.
Moreover, if you focus on the things he should have done, it's unreasonable (I think) to suppose Romney will get those things done. Or even try. Or even, not move the ball backwards.
by Peter Schwartz on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 12:18pm
Well, it's still the same - TARP was Bush's program, ending the war in Iraq was Bush's timeline, health care reform was based on Romney's program, the auto bailout was kicked downfield by Bush, financial regulation has been as effective as regulating Savings & Loans under Bush Sr. So I guess we're left with green energy (along with an oil blowout in the Gulf from expanded drilling & lax controls)
And "saving the economy" starts to get old after 3 1/2 years of this:
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 12:28pm
Even if I accepted all of your points, which I don't, they don't matter.
First of all, all those things are doing good. People are benefiting, and they didn't have to get done. There was CONSIDERABLE opposition to their getting done.
Second, you'd have a better argument if the choice were between Obama and a BETTER candidate. But that isn't the choice we have.
We don't know what Romney would do, in fact, but we have his words, which is all we ever have. And from what I can see, he would be worse. That matters.
This is a simple choice for a liberal to make.
by Peter Schwartz on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 1:13pm
by jollyroger on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 1:27pm
Except Wall Street is abandoning Obama.
Didn't find the article persuasive.
Also, no mention of Romney that I saw, which is our choice NOW.
by Peter Schwartz on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 2:00pm
If DD hadn't gone mute [hope he's ok] he would, I think, award that first sentence an award. That first sentence makes the second sentence obviously correct.
by LULU (not verified) on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 2:38pm
But it doesn't mean fighting for Romney to become president.
I fail to see how that is fighting for the rule of law.
And if you aren't voting for Obama at this point, you are voting for Romney, either fully or part way.
by Peter Schwartz on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 3:23pm
If DD hadn't gone mute [hope he's ok]
He posted over at Once Upon a Paradigm on Monday and put comments on the same thread yesterday and also commented on this other thread by trkingmomoe last night
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 3:49pm
Bueno.
by LULU (not verified) on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 5:43pm
Anyone can "pass blabbity-blah" as long as they are willing to demand extremely little. Even J.P. Morgan would have seen seen some kind of face-saving financial reform bill through Congress following the debacle of 2008. The one we have isn't going to shrink our massively bloated financial sector. It didn't keep the bank of Obama's friend Jamie Dimon out of financial trouble. It's not going to prevent another financial crackup. The financial sector is still a den of vampires, draining the life force from the US economy.
When history drops a bomb on you, you don't get points for "moving the ball forward". You're supposed to fight back hard. Obama is the President - not some third down utility back who's done his job if he picks up a yard.
I give him big credit for saving Detroit. That's the only item on the list that wasn't lame.
The stimulus was too small, and then he gave up on progressive economics and became a budget hawk. Roosevelt would have tried again, and again, until he found something that worked - and he would have attacked his enemies all the while for standing in the way. Obama is terrified by his enemes - unless they are in Afghanistan and he can sucker punch them via remote drone.
The order to end the Iraq War was signed by Bush before leaving office. Obama saw that through but expanded another war, intensified a dirty war, and expanded the regime of secrecy, surveillance and authoritarian control that is spreading from Washington across America.
He abandoned the unemployed - decided that wasn't a very big problem. Making sure Peter Peterson got traction on his government-shrinking budget hysteria routine was more important to him. He betrayed the legacy of Roosevelt. Now I've even got sycophantic Democrats telling me Hoover was right all along, and the New Deal was a mistake.
Presidents impress their own psychological imprint on the country they lead. Where the national economic order is concerned, Obama's chief motives are fear, obsequiousness and risk-aversion, and he has spread the stink of his fear and passivity across America, which is why the "progressive movement" is totally paralyzed and we now live in the most conservative, brutal, Social Darwinism era in my lifetime - and since the gilded age. The depressing cloud of can't-do Obama fear that has settled over the country is also why hardly anyone wants to invest in the future. They need someone to answer the question, "What's the plan?" And Obama ain't got one.
And apparently his vanity is such that he feels the need to surround himself with nothings.
by Dan Kervick on Wed, 07/11/2012 - 6:11pm
More later, perhaps...
But passing much of this stuff clearly wasn't easy and it didn't come without political costs.
by Peter Schwartz on Fri, 07/13/2012 - 11:20pm
Huge missed opportunities. In early 2009, America was ready for major financial system reform. The country was reeling and terrified, and had just seen a massive destruction of household wealth and security. Obama could also have made full employment, retirement security reform, and other pro-social and egalitarian initiatives part of an agenda for change. No dice. We needed a vision of change and all we got from Obama was pining for a return to normalcy. When the Tea Party got active pushing their individualistic and anti-social agenda; there was no competing Obama vision to battle it.
by Dan Kervick on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 1:21am
If you consider the mandate that Obama had with the reluctance he had pushing too hard on anything, vs. the non-mandate that Bush had with the vehemence he crammed everything through Congress. Quite striking.
by PeraclesPlease on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 4:22am
I can't disagree with what you say--particularly, the "vision for change"-- though I tend not to be overly confident about what "could have been, if only...."
I do think that covering 30 million more people, ending pre-existing, caps, etc., will make a big difference to a lot of people. It's actually a big deal.
The Consumer Protection Agency is also doing important work for the little guy.
DADT was important...not prosecuting deportations was, too.
By comparison with the opportunity for BIG change that was there (maybe), these things may not seem very important. But I tend to count the bird in hand more than the five in the bush.
And if the push for big, overarching, game-changing change had flopped or been stopped and he'd ended up with nothing but the good ole college try, there would have been those complaints, too. "Why was he so arrogant to think he could remake the country in his image blah, blah, when he could've had XYZ. Didn't he know that lasting change is incremental? Too bad Teddy died so soon, he knew the art of compromise."
Bush pushed two wars after we'd been attacked on our soil... and he pushed two tax cuts...not nearly as hard as going for the changes needed for full employment. Especially at the beginning before the full measure of the disaster had unfolded, which is the only moment when he had a clear bite at the apple, IMO.
If we had a better candidate...or if progressives, who always claim to know what the right thing to do is in any given moment, had had a way to push Obama to the left...then this dispute might be more important.
Anyway, I don't disagree with the substance of what you say, but still think it's important to ensure Obama is re-elected. If he isn't, we'll be here a year from now wringing our hands about yet another loss. You pocket your gains and keep moving and don't get fooled into thinking that any one election or candidate is going to get it all done. My two cents.
by Peter Schwartz on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 12:31pm
OK, so what to you want to happen after Obama is elected?
by Dan Kervick on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 6:33pm
Progressives should organize and push him--in all the ways available--to do better on a number of fronts that have been discussed here a million times.
It behooves us to elect a progress Congress; otherwise, it will be harder sledding.
by Peter Schwartz on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 8:48pm