Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Thanks, But No Thanks

So much for the meritocracy. Despite an elite education, effusive charm and brilliant wit, Barack Obama, like Bill Clinton before him, has ended up betraying his humble origins by abjectly serving the most rapacious variant of Wall Street greed. They both talk a good progressive game, but when push comes to shove — meaning when the banking lobby weighs in — big money talks and the best and the brightest fold.

The defining moment of Clinton’s capitulation was his destruction of Brooksley Born, the one member of his administration with the courage and prescience to warn him about the unregulated derivatives trading that ultimately led to the housing collapse. For Obama, it is his decision not to nominate Elizabeth Warren to run the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which she fought so hard to create.

Obama’s refusal to take the fight to Senate Republicans by nominating Warren should be taken as the vital measure of the man. This gutless decision comes after the president populated his administration with the very people who created the financial meltdown.
~ from Sorry Elizabeth, Wall Street Said No by Robert Scheer ~
I would like to report that I am shocked, surprised and dismayed, but I'm not any of those things. Owing to Obama's woeful record of appointments and nominations, this is par for the course.

If he had decided to nominate the deserving Warren, now that would be shocking!

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