Obamotherapy By Jorge Gómez Barata • Visiones Alternativas In the United States they call “change” any adjustment made on a regular basis to recycle necrotized parts or straighten out flawed applications. Such corrections, not always made for the best, take place whenever bells ring to announce something has gone wrong or fallen out of use. If practiced from the top down, this ability allows the system to get updated without the need for institutional alterations or traumatic ruptures. The abolishment of slavery was the only exception, as it gave rise to national division, a Civil War, and Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. It’s not a question of making just a few cosmetic modifications, but neither are these changes excessively radical. Since he’s not a black employed by the white elite in the style of Powell or Rice, who were never elected to do anything, Barack Obama will perhaps make the difference. His accession to the highest echelons of government is somehow connected to a long, intense and singular popular struggle: that of the black people for their rights, the only one that has really remained in effect for more than two hundred years. The new president is not in power thanks to the upper crust’s unanimous wish, but despite what some of its members wanted. To a large extent, the first black occupant of the White House owes his victory to the youth, Latinos and African Americans who voted for him, as did a middle class which in that country includes part of the working class, the farmers and the civil servants, and before he climbed to the top he had to defeat a powerful collection of reactionary ultraconservative forces. Much as it affects the form, the fact that he was backed and funded by another sector of the same elite changes nothing in terms of its content. In a nation where everyone but the Native Americans came from somewhere else, the blacks were the only ones who arrived as something other than emigrants. Hunted down like wild animals and brought from the far corners of Africa to be exploited as beasts of burden, they went through a terrible ordeal that started in 1619 and still goes on, all significant progress notwithstanding. No stratum of the U.S. society has fought as effectively or for so long. No one should expect the next administration to redo the system, undertake a sweeping reform of the American way of life or give up the imperialist rule. Presumably, however, the United States will try to regain the lead it boasted in the postwar period; redesign some foreign policies based on its deeply-rooted fondness for war, aggressiveness and violence; be more considerate toward and consistent with current ecological phenomena –especially climate change– and foster development policies on the Third World similar to the Alliance for Progress in order to turn billions of poor people into more or less solvent consumers. Maybe Obama will be bright enough to deal effectively with the energy crisis and understand that it’s not just a financial problem but the outcome of irrational, outdated and unfair structures, so that he can put into practice a security plan which proves smarter and more efficient than Bush’s and use the proper methods to make many other countries join the effort and not only a small group of acolytes like the Azores troika. Barack Obama is not a fighter à la Rosa Parks or Martin Luther King and has nothing in common with the Black radicals, but neither is he a politician spoiled by decades of practice nor a lobbyist used to hanging around the offices of the powerful in hopes of being granted privileges. He submitted to none of Bush’s flag-waving volleys and has never been known to be partial to any of the many chapels of Washington. In fact, he owes as much to the people who gave him their vote as to the gentry who gave him the money. Given the U.S. political ways, we should not expect the new administration to be self-critical, offer its apologies to its victims or do a U-turn over its policies on behalf of the Establishment, although there are signs that it might take a more moderate stance in the near future. Be that as it may, we’ll have to wait and see how Obama and his team will perform on the hot line and whether he stops talking and starts doing when it comes to the crunch. Let’s hope he won’t make his debut against a crisis which puts his ability and serenity to the test. Unfortunately, while changing tack is typical of the system, so is the violence that at least on two occasions –in Lincoln’s and Kennedy’s time– brought it to a standstill. ORIGINAL: http://www.lajiribilla.cubaweb.cu/noticias/noticia.asp?Id=10375 |
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