Obama's Royal Retinue
Daily Bell
Vacationing
Obama can't shed White House entourage ... President Barack Obama
had a simple task for his first morning on vacation: shoot over
to a Martha's Vineyard bookstore to fill out his daughters' summer
reading list and grab himself a novel. Easier said than done. His
SUV, part of a 20-vehicle motorcade, passed through a cordon of
Massachusetts State Police motorcycle officers, in a protective
cocoon of Secret Service agents. Tagging along for the quick trip
Friday were White House communications trucks, an ambulance and
two vans full of reporters and photographers. It was the same drill
Saturday when he went to the beach for a picnic lunch with his family.
This may be down time for Obama, but like all modern presidents,
celebrities and some wannabes, he must move about with a not insignificant
entourage. It includes security officers and their array of arms,
as well as advisers, friends in and out of politics, and a cook
who doubles as a golfing buddy.
AP
Dominant
Social Theme: It is all necessary.
Free-Market
Analysis: It is not a novel observation, but it probably bears
repeating. The vacations that President Obama takes are like some
sort of royal procession. It wasn't so obvious under George Bush
because he had his own "ranch" to go to. But like Bill
Clinton, Obama is a wanderer when it comes to vacation destinations
and thus much is made of his travels. Is there a kind of sub-dominant
social theme here? We think so. "This is the most important
man in the world and he travels in style that befits his position."
Of course,
we don't think that Obama is the most important man in the world.
We believe he is a kind of manufactured individual who carries the
water for a shadowy power
elite that evidently and obviously stands behind him. It turns
out that, as with George Bush, many of his vague campaign promises
degraded into business as usual when it came time for governance.
George Bush,
as a titular, small-government republican, did almost everything
seemingly in his power to expand government and make use of big-government
levers. He went to war on two and even three fronts and maintained
the wars for his entire presidency. He attempted (or succeeded)
in expanding the federal government's reach in public education,
in religious affairs and most importantly when it came to US domestic
spying. His efforts at removing habeas corpus, at combining a dozen
or more intelligence agencies under one Homeland Security roof and
his determination to rip down walls between agencies to create a
unified KGB-type architecture ran counter to the small government,
free-market principals he espoused on the campaign trail.
But Barack
Obama's stay in the White House has produced similar disappointments
for his followers. Obama abandoned universal health care when the
political costs became difficult to bear, and he has not moved aggressively
on either immigration or cap-and-trade, "green" issues
as his leftist base once hoped he would. He has proven an even larger
disappointment as regards foreign policy, removing troops from Iraq
but still keeping some 50,000 stationed there. In Afghanistan, he
has actually expanded the war in hopes of "winning" it
or at least making it difficult for the Taliban to impose their
version of victory.
What is clear,
when one examines the two most recent presidential regimes, is the
remarkable amount of continuity between them. In fact, George Bush
had confused Republicans everywhere by attempting to "solve"
the immigration problem by in a sense legalizing South American
immigrants already in the United States and then by suggesting some
sort of guest worker program. His proposals, in fact, can be seen
as more radical than what Obama has thus far suggested on the subject.
When it comes
to overseas wars, there is almost no difference between the two
presidents. Nor is there when it comes to the more shadowy "war
against terror." American intel agencies are still vastly funded;
Homeland Security remains an ever larger bureaucratic bungle, sucking
in resources like a black hole. Congress, generally, appropriates
vast sums for the intel-industrial and military-industrial complex,
and this sort of funding remains even as presidents come and go.
If one agrees
therefore, at this point, that it makes little difference who is
in office as the state apparatus functions regardless
then we would suggest the outward pomp and ceremony is in a sense
compensating for the president's larger lack of power. The American
president's actual ability to forge a new a course may be limited,
but the show surrounding him continually gets bigger. The idea,
perhaps, is to create a sense of significance that he actually doesn't
have. He is to be presented as the Great and Powerful Oz so that
no one notices the men behind the curtain.
Obama certainly
does travel in style. He doesn't drive himself anywhere. He has
a helicopter that he uses even for very short trips within Washington
DC. For longer trips there is Air Force One. The retinue he travels
with his is extravagant and the press coverage that he receives
on his trips, especially the vacations, is downright foolish. One
is treated, in the mainstream media, to recitations of menus, golf
scores and reading material. It is as if no detail is too minute
to cover and no luxury too large to provide.
Conclusion:
Like a titular head-of-state, Obama rushes from vacation to
vacation with breathless coverage throughout. And while people may
speculate as to why he is taking so many vacations, we think we
know: There's just not very much he can do on the job, and his power
is actually fairly circumscribed, not by the office but by circumstance
and sociopolitical evolution. Picking a vacation destination may
be the clearest and most unencumbered decision he gets to make.
But then again, perhaps Michelle and the children do the choosing.
Reprinted
with permission from the Daily
Bell.
August
26, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 Daily
Bell
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