General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Why the arguments of Obama's defenders leave many cold. [View all]Overseas
(12,121 posts)Bush and Cheney for their war crimes. (Probably because too many Democrats voted to support the war on Iraq. But they could have impeached the Bush gang for authorizing torture and tossing out the Geneva Conventions and Nuremberg principles so easily.)
They didn't even dare filibuster the nomination of right wing judicial activist Sammy Alito to our supreme court because they were so afraid of the Nuclear Option-- the potential elimination of the filibuster. Had they dared to go ahead and stop judicial activism on the right even if the filibuster was removed, the Republicans would have lost their most valuable tool in opposing our president at every step of the way.
So I did realize early on that a substantial part of my opposition to President Obama's inability to return our country to what worked in healing our economy after the last Great Depression was due to a disunited group of Democratic legislators. Had they all banded together after the Bush Crash to demand financial regulation, Medicare for Everyone and the early rescinding of the Bush tax cuts for the top one percent, that would have given the president more power to heal our economy.
So I guess it really is the power of money in our political system as it now stands that I am most opposed to. That financial power intimidated so many Democratic legislators and still does today. Pretending they wanted to compromise for grand bipartisan reasons was a convenient cover. Because the multinational corporations had become quite bipartisan in their campain spending.
And earlier Democrats had allowed the media consolidation that enabled the right wing takeover of most of our news. So we got a 24/7 anti-Democratic Party news channel that pushed our other media to the right and made it even harder for Democrats to stand up for our principles.