It
was like the Super Bowl, with one team staying off the field, while the other
raced up and down the field, eating up yardage while nobody scored.
McCain
may have a point. With the President ending two Middle East wars and trying to
avoid new ones, what is there for those like him to get excited about? They
will have to make do with rehashes of Benghazi.
The lobotomized
atmosphere continued into the postgame with the GOP trotting out a tranquilized
Sarah Palin lookalike, complete with her own Downs Syndrome child, but no
zingers, offering instead a sweetly reasonable content-free alternative to the
President’s vision, consisting mostly of a rehash of her life story from humble
beginnings and “offering a prayer” to God three times in her last sentence.
Barack
Obama, for all his eloquent proposals that make sense, will in his last two
years continue to play a game against a team that stays on the sidelines sniping
and waiting for time to run out so they can win the next two elections by
blaming Democrats for not scoring big.
Even
if he achieves some of his goals laid out last night in lame-duck time, Obama’s
legacy is already engraved in stone as a President who couldn’t get the big
things done and had to settle for symbolically small and/or tainted accomplishments
like Obamacare in a time that called for FDR-like transformation.
Perhaps
the most pointed commentary on all this was the final standing, roaring tribute to
Sgt. Cory Remsburg, an Army Ranger nearly killed by a massive roadside bomb in
Afghanistan who was found in a canal, face down, underwater, shrapnel in
his brain.
Both
sides of Congress ended the SOTU with a standing ovation for this young
man in the gallery, his body wrecked in the service of his country, in a war
that the President says is ending but, in the fine print, will go on.
Is
the maiming of our best young people all that politicians can agree on in a
time of urgency for the nation?
Cory
Remsburg’s heart is still alive and beating, but what about the dead hands of
Tea Party naysyayers as they applaud him but obstruct every value that he was
defending?
In
the Super Bowl Sunday, somebody will win. In last night’s Washington, everybody
lost.
1 comment:
We have been losing for decades and neither party will prove up to the challenge of addressing the problems facing humanity. I am a Progressive and will continue to work to get elected fellow Progressives. But while I have campaigned for a candidate for every election cycle of the past 30 years, I feel like we are only trying to slow the long slide towards a disaster of our own making.
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