Saturday, November 13, 2010

Europeans are flabbergasted

While the rightwingers are laughing at President Obama and Democrats for their losses in the mid term elections, the Europeans are laughing at THEM!  Well maybe not laughing, more like scared, puzzled, in disbelief Americans are so STUPID as to put Republicans back in power, no matter how slight, but to give those disastrous Republicans a majority after just 2 short years of trying to get past the horrific actions of the Bush administration.....after those destructive policies... it's just too much for the Europeans to grasp...


From Alter Net
  Like the rest of the world, Europe cheered the election of Barack Obama as a change from the economic and foreign policy disasters of his predecessor.  Yet just two years later the US government is returning to Bush-lite.  How could this be, Europeans are wondering? The American electorate is looking like a coyote with its leg caught in a trap, chewing its own leg off to get out of the trap.

Europeans are puzzled by the success of the populist Tea Party movement, which seemingly wants to roll back the last two years and return to how things were at the end of the Bush-Cheney years. Even conservatives in Europe are scratching their heads over their transatlantic allies -- “Americans don’t want health care??? How can these Tea Party people say ‘Get government out of my Medicare -- don’t they know Medicare IS a government program???”

Christian Stoffaes who is chairman of the Center for International Prospective Studies based in Paris, stated the United States is in disarray, extremely polarized. It is practically a civil war there and you can't count on it.
THIS statement by Stoffaes is because of the rightwing extremists takeover,

 There is a widespread view that the US is being consumed by the severity of the Great Recession, brought on by a broken Wall Street capitalism, as well as by the quagmires of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, and an inability to change course. Brought on by the Bush administration and because of republican obstructionism, increasingly difficult for President Obama to move forward his agenda. I do take into account this administrations problems when it comes to the wars and the policies the left wants Obama to stand firm on. I don't give the president a free pass, he can change course if he so chooses....

Previously, Obama’s failure at the Copenhagen summit on climate change to deliver a serious commitment to that agenda, and instead to strike a deal with the Chinese to do next to nothing, was a real wakeup call to the Europeans. It was as if they suddenly “got” it, that it wasn't George W. Bush who was the problem, but something more profound about America’s broken political system that prevents any leader, even one as talented as Obama, from delivering.  That political system is marinated in money, is paralyzed by a “filibuster-gone-wild” Senate that has allowed a minority of Senators to obstruct all legislation, and is hamstrung by a sclerotic, winner-take-all, two-party electoral system that has left voters poorly represented and deeply frustrated.
This is what the conservatives of Europe are saying about us! The world is afraid of what America is turning into....


Now, in the aftermath of the recent election, the European media landscape is screaming with headlines like:  “Is the American Dream Over?”, “A Superpower in Decline,” “Deep divisions across political map,” “Power gridlock looms between parties,” “Washington turns into a battleground,” and “Elections tarnish Obama's world image.” The recent move by the Federal Reserve to jumpstart the U.S. economy by taking steps that will result in the devaluing of the dollar has been met with great skepticism in Europe. Germany’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble has said the Fed's action shows U.S. policy makers are "at a loss about what to do."  The American growth model, he said, is stuck in a deep crisis. "The USA lived off credit for too long, inflated its financial sector massively and neglected its industrial base.”

We the people elected Barack Obama  because this country needed desperate change.  And what do we do, we get impatient and wham, the thugs are back in the majority in the House. Not only are the democrats in this country shaking their heads in disbelief but the rest of the world is too. I know some of you will say President Obama is no different than Bush-Cheney, but Obama is no dummy, he knows what needs to be done to change course. The question is, will he do it?

The predictable American reaction has been, "Europe is one to talk. Have they gotten their PIIGS back in the pen yet?” Certainly Europe has its own challenges. But to the extent that the election of Barack Obama represented an American rejuvenation in the eyes of the world, this recent election represents a further loss of American mojo.  Americans may shrug their shoulders and say, "We don't care what the rest of the world thinks"--  but that will only reinforce what the rest of the world thinks.

This "we don't care about the rest of the worlds perception of us" is rightwinger talk. We better start caring about our reputation, and we better start caring about our country and her people before we let the wingnuts take us to a place we will never recover from....
I don't believe the mid term losses for the Democratic Party mean a loss of American mojo either. The voters were not voting out of a love for the republicans, they were voting out of a frustration the democrats were not fighters for the progressive agenda this country wants. You can go right ahead and deceive yourselves into believing otherwise righties. This country wants Obama to be more progressive, to be a fighter against the destructive republicans and what they are gonna try and do in the next 2 years. The world will be watching in disbelief.....

21 comments:

Jerry Critter said...

"This country wants Obama to be more progressive..."

But does he want to be?

His actions, so far, say no.

Lisa G. said...

The Europeans are not the only ones that are concerned - and rightly so. Most of us us are collectively shaking our heads to. Obama needs to to grow some balls and quickly. This 'reaching across the aisle thing' backfired badly in his face. Did the Repubs do the same thin when they were in power - Fuck no! Time to get them some of their own medicine.

magpie said...

When I was a kid my father went on a prolonged work trip to the USA.... Back in those days (the early 70s), and certainly to a kid, America seemed a far off wonderland full of confident-sounding beautiful people doing great things. When he came back my sister and I, awed, asked him "what was it like...?"

He shook his head and said "extreme...". Surreal juxtapositions of have and have-not.

That's not an uncommon perception.

What may become Obama's burden is that he could be saddled with the "history" (in the negative sense) of that moment - now - when America was finally forced to deal with its demons:
A currency that has been treated as a sacred cow by financial markets for decades. The economic and political weight of a global military presence. The dissection and sell off of its industrial heart. A media bought by corporatist interests. A political process wherein anyone can be president - but first you need millions of dollars. Ultra-nationalism absolutely convinced that America alone of all countries that have come before is God's own empire.

Obama can get legislation passed and make decisions of moment, but he can't do a national heart transplant.

As much as the plutocracy of American politics might need to give way to some more rational representation of ordinary citizens over hyper-rich interest groups, so might the idea that the president should be some epic hero who can lead all out of the wilderness. He's not Moses. The entrenchments of vested interests will have to be broken down by ordinary people working over very long time frames. Not in two years by one man.

Infidel753 said...

To be fair, the America-is-in-decline delusion has long been a popular one in certain circles in Europe which don't really "get" the US, and those elements have always tried to interpret whatever was going on here at any given time as support for the meme.

Nevertheless, teabaggerdom is the latest manifestation of a form of truculent and armor-plated ignorance and anti-intellectualism which shows up from time to time in American politics. Similar mentalities do exist in Europe, but they generally don't intrude into national politics in the same way -- not since the fall of fascism.

Remember that moderate conservatives are in power right now in the most important countries over there -- Germany, Britain, France -- and there is none of this nonsense about gay-bashing, global-warming denialism, religious fundamentalism, etc. (they are actually cracking down more on the excesses of their own religious hard-liners, the Muslims). Conservatism in Europe is quite a different thing from what it has become here.

Meanwhile, according to the latest figures I can remember, economic growth is running at an annual rate of about 2% in the US, 4% in Britain, and 9% in Germany. This contrasts with most of the last half-century, when growth in the US was faster than in Europe. It's an indicator of how badly the Bush recession damaged the US economy -- and why Europe takes any sign of the US turning back to the Republicans as a bad sign for the future.

Sue said...

Maybe Jerry. We'll see these next 2 years which way he shifts, but I hope he listens more to our side.

Lisa the rethugs when in power do everything in their power to push their agenda, but let a democrat do it and all hell breaks lose! They believe it's their way or the highway, they want a conservative America which governs from the right, not the middle like they pretend. Anything less than that is evil liberalism.

Sue said...

For those who don't know, Magpie lives in Australia. Thanks for your insight Magpie. I love hearing from others around the globe their perceptions of America. You're right about needing an army to even begin to tackle our problems. Americans need to educate themselves on our political history and stop electing those who cause so much of our grief back into power. Ordinary people working together, I don't know that we have the guts to do that hard work. I was reading last night, the USA is a huge country and maybe it is time to cut it up into manageable pieces. Should one man, our president be responsible for all the terrible decisions coming out of our congress? Picture this scenario, the wealthy who invest abroad for profit, ordinary citizens working in their communities, our elected leaders, ALL coming together here in America concentrating their efforts HERE to make America great once more. We are falling behind at a rapid pace and those causing it are blind to that fact but still demand we say our nation is the greatest on earth. Where we are headed, no it is not. Those with the most concentrated wealth are turning their backs on their own country. But what do they care, they don't have to live here if we crumble because of them, they can afford to live anywhere in the world.

Sue said...

in the AlterNet article Infidel, it says the European conservatives are farther left than our lefties! I guess this is why they are flabbergasted when they read about our wingnut party. God forbid we take away anyones right to be extreme :-), Our extremists are allowed to exist here, even flourish without retribution. Well, their punishment comes at the polls on election day.

The CDM said...

Sue, I've said this before and I'll say it again, traditionally and currently, this country is right of center(moderate). Europe is more left of center. The fringe elements(tea party) that were just elected are going to push those people who hold true to that mindset away and will be ousted by next election because they are trying to force this country to go hard right.

There are more right of center(moderates) than there are hard righties. Voter turnout was significantly lower as opposed to 2 years ago. I think a HUGE number of moderates just got disinterested this time around. We'll probably see those people 2 years from now moving in(yet again) another direction.

But then again, this country does seem to be getting more intellectually challenged than improved.

Sue said...

"But then again, this country does seem to be getting more intellectually challenged than improved."

C you are so right about that! Socially the country may lean slightly right of center, but economically it is killing us. Republicans and corporate America are destroying our country bit by bit and nobody is willing to stop them.

Jolly Roger said...

Given the support for Social Security, affordable healthcare, and initiatives to repair our broken economy and infrastructure, I doubt seriously that the great mass of this country is "right of center." That illusion is perpetrated by the people who will actually VOTE, but it isn't indicative of the population overall.

As far as the President goes, I think I can condense it for you.

We needed FDR. We got Gorbachev. Just like Gorbachev, this President thinks he can find a way to placate everybody. And he who tries to please everyone, pleases who?

Sue said...

well JR, if we look at the map of red states and blue states, the red wins. Is that a good indicator of right or left leaning, or should we look at other measures, like you say. Those policies you name are popular and considered liberal leaning so that would indicate the country does favor our side. I don't know if it's all that simple.

Obama is a people pleaser that's for sure, too much in fact. He needs to try a little partisan politics.

The CDM said...

I respectfully disagree with JR. If we outlawed guns, abolished the death penalty AND had government sponsored healthcare for all, then I would side with JR on this issue.

Example: the U.K. is left of center. Let me tell you, we ain't no U.K. Hope this helps.

ExpressoSelf said...

But then again, this country does seem to be getting more intellectually challenged than improved.

This statement by CDM is the core of our politics. Our school system is falling apart, our kids have no recourse or interest when it comes to our own American history. To get our country back on track, we need a school system that works. The more you know, right? I realize this will be years, but if we can start fixing/using our biggest resource, our kids, then maybe we'll sit in the center.

Sue said...

those are some good examples C.

Expresso if we are a right of center country then that really explains why the righties aren't really interested in public schools and higher education. Our new buffoon gov. promised he wouldn't cut education if he was elected, and is a big fat liar, he cut over 800 billion!

Will "take no prisoners" Hart said...

We don't need a tea party movement. We need another Perot movement (absent Mr. Perot, of course) - a bunch of grown-ups who give it to the people of this straight. This, I'm saying, as opposed to the irresponsible bribery that the 2 main parties have been engaging in for decades now....Oh, and, yeah, a note to Mr. Alterman, the tea party isn't at all "Bush-lite". Obama is (or maybe it's vice-versa, I can't decide).

Hugh Jee From Jersey said...

Europeans shouldn't be flabbergasted at the results of the midterms.

To paraphrase the great Coach Bill Parcells, "You are what you're record says you are".

We are a country where more people know the name of the Three Stooges than the three branches of government, and almost 90% of our young people (ages 18-24) can't find Afghanistan on a map....and about 50% can't find New York State either.

But we sure as hell know who won AMERICAN IDOL or DANCING WITH THE STARS.

Sue said...

Will I do get mad at the president sometimes, but when I come to my senses I believe it's the media who try and portray Obama as Bush lite. I'm not totally convinced they are correct. I'll give him the rest of his first term then decide.

Hugh, sad but true

Jerry Critter said...

Even if he is Bush lite, he is a hell of a lot better than McCain (Bush heavy) and Palin (Bush without a brain -- that's a scary thought).

As you can probably tell from many other comments I have made, I am all over the place when it comes to Obama.

Sue said...

Jerry I think we all can agree Obama is better than any republican at this point LOL!.

You can tell by my posts I am all over the place in my feelings for Obama too. Some probably think I'm a little dimwitted at times! LMAO!

Jerry Critter said...

No no no! The dimwitted ones have teabags hanging from their hats...and other parts of their body.

Sue said...

well okay that's true, they are the dimwits, but I know some think I'm a little confused in my thought processes. How's that?! LOL