21. THE TROUBLED 21st CENTURY
OBAMA BRINGS DEEP "CHANGE" TO AMERICA
CONTENTS
Obama and the Democrats take charge
Homosexuality and the marriage issue
The Supreme Court takes the lead in the matter
The pro-homosexual forces go on the attack
Black-White relations turn ugly
The Judiciary removes restrictions against big-money involvement
The textual material on page below is drawn directly from my work
A Moral History of Western Society © 2024, Volume Two, pages 395-403.
OBAMA AND THE DEMOCRATS TAKE CHARGE |
There
was little likelihood that the Republican presidential candidate, John
McCain had any chance at all in the November elections that year (2008)
– despite Senator McCain's personal greatness as an American patriot
(refused to betray his America during his 6-year captivity as a North
Vietnamese prisoner of war) of a long line of American servicemen (his
father and grandfather were U.S. Admirals) and years of service in both
the Navy (since 1958) and in Congress (since 1982). The Democrats thus
played not on his service record but instead on his age (he was 72 at
the time) and his Vice President, the "beauty-king bimbo" Sarah Palin,
Alaska governor … and though very pretty, hardly a bimbo. But they
didn't need to go that low. The Republicans were destined anyway to a
lashing from an American electorate – angry at the Republican White
House that got them engaged in Iraq … and – fairly or not – blaming it
for the country's near economic collapse … right at the very time of
the elections.
Thus, most unsurprisingly, eight years of Bush-conceived military
disaster and economic nonsense produced a huge anti-Republican Party
reaction in the national elections of 2008, one that brought to power
the first of America's next generation, the Gen-Xer Barack Obama.
In so many ways, Obama was the typical Gen-Xer – in that his Boomer
upbringing had left him deeply confused about his own personal identity
… what exactly that identity was and what he was to do with it in
finally finding it. Nothing certain was laid out for him – in
accordance with the Boomer view of his parental generation, that their
Gen-X offspring were "free" to explore their personal identities on
their own. With Obama being bi-racial with a White Hippie Mother and an
absentee African father, Obama had a lot of hunting to do. Ultimately,
in this process he finally decided that he was Black … despite the fact
that it was a White mother and White grandparents most responsible for
his upbringing.
And without any doubt, it was his "Blackness" that inspired Black TV
celebrity Oprah Winfrey to push Obama to take up the personal goal of
the American presidency ... and then to help considerably in pushing
Obama past Hillary Clinton's highly-developed political machine to gain
the Democratic Party's presidential nomination.
And he was able to do this despite his lack of much political
experience or deep political rootedness in Washington politics. This
was because in this new age of constant (24/7) barrage of entertaining
news and media social hype – complements of not only the TV, but also
the computer and the smartphone – the media (such as Winfrey's
widely-viewed daytime show) would be the platform from which American
leaders would now be selected. All the media needed to do was to shape
and ultimately control the political narrative. And that is exactly
what the media now lived for.
But such public image-making did not answer deeply the question as to
where Obama's personal loyalties actually were located. He was known in
his very brief service in the U.S. Senate (less than two years) to be
on the far Left politically in his legislative action. Now as an
ideologically Leftist national leader, what part of America would he
support ... and what part would he find himself opposing? Obama would
be the president of what people exactly? Would his self-defined
"Blackness" shape deeply the "Change" he promised that he was devoted
to bringing to America? Where would he leave Middle America in all this
"Change"?
Thus with little national political experience behind him other than
his not quite three years of service in the U.S. Senate, Obama was
soundly victorious over McCain – Obama with 52.9 percent of the popular
vote to McCain's 45.7 percent ... and with an Obama 365 electoral vote
to McCain's 173 votes. And along with that, the Democrats increased
their majority in the House to 257 seats versus the Republicans' 178
seats. And they now held a majority in the Senate, 57 seats to the
Republicans' 41 seats. America was now headed down a very
Leftist-Liberal road (Obama was considered to be on the very far Left
of even the Democratic Party) – particularly since during his campaign
he had made so much of the word "change" as his key theme (though the
details remained vague).
The world also knew what was in store for America, with the very
Liberal Norwegian Nobel Committee nominating Obama in February for the
2009 Peace Prize (which he would in fact receive later that year) –
when Obama had been in the White House less than two weeks … and had
done nothing notable to bring such important attention. But it wasn't
what he had done that got him that position. It was what, at that
point, he represented socially and culturally.
The Liberal world loved him. The Conservative world watched in
wonderment to see what would be unfolding under Obama's presidency
dedicated to "change" – backed up by a solid Democratic Party majority
in Congress.
|
Oprah promoting Obama in
the Iowa primaries – December 2007
Barack Obama speaking at
a campaign rally in Abington, PA

The results of the 2008 presidential
election
Barack Obama taking the oath
of office – January 20, 2009

Obama receiving the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize
HOMOSEXUALITY AND THE MARRIAGE ISSUE |
One
of the first matters to undergo deep change was the long-lingering
matter of who or what exactly qualified as "marriage" in America. That
would be a matter not of Congress to decide – it had already done so in
1996 – but of the Supreme Court to decide ... Obama, and by now
everyone else, realizing that it was the Supreme Court, not Congress,
that was America's supreme legislative authority.
When in 2008 California voters narrowly passed Proposition 8 banning
same-sex marriages, both the homosexual community and the California
courts (which had previously declared such a ban unconstitutional)
swung into action. Back and forth went the case of Kristin M. Perry v. Arnold Schwarzenegger
in the California courts – then joined by the Federal Ninth Circuit
Court … in which Proposition 8 was declared unconstitutional on both a
California and a Federal basis.
Coming to office in 2009, Obama was quick in his move to take action on
the homosexual issue – with his 2009 Hate Crimes Prevention Act ...
categorizing as a hate crime any act motivated by a person's hatred of
homosexuality. Thus according to the law, homophobia (a dislike for the
homosexual lifestyle) was the moral problem, not sodomy. Indeed,
intense punishment under the law against homophobia was put in place to
make absolutely sure that everyone understood the shift in the moral
picture. And with this legislation, the definition of a hate crime
would soon move beyond action, now to even just comments made by anyone
still intent on vocally demonstrating opposition to homosexuality. An
unkind comment about the practice of sodomy could now cost a person his
or her job, and probably worse if a plaintiff wanted to pursue the
issue even further. Thus it was that homosexuality now enjoyed full
legal support, and harsh punishment for anyone not in agreement with
this new position.
Also, Obama, through his Attorney General Eric Holder, made it very
clear in a letter to Congress (February 2011) that his Administration
would no longer enforce the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) – despite
Obama's inauguration vows promising to see that the laws of Congress
were faithfully executed. Being deeply dedicated to bringing "change"
to America, Obama felt that he had the right to be politically
(ideologically) selective in this matter.
|
October
2009 – Obama signing the Hate Crimes Prevention Act ... quite cleverly tacked onto
the legislation (National Defense Authorization Act)
providing funding
for the U.S. military!
U.S. Attorney General Eric
Holder, in a letter to Congress (Feb 23, 2011), announced that the Department of Justice
(DOJ) would no longer defend the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA)
Increasingly the Liberals have "seen the light" and started to come out strongly against DOMA
THE SUPREME COURT TAKES THE LEAD IN THE MATTER |
But
Obama's biggest impact on America's moral foundations would take place
because of his two Supreme Court appointments ... giving the Supreme
Court a much more Leftist orientation. In his May 2009 appointment of
the childless and unmarried Sonia Sotomayor, of Puerto Rican origins,
he was actually merely replacing one Progressivist or Liberal justice
with another … although Sotomayor's Liberalism was even further to the
Left than that of the David Souter she was replacing.1
Then the following May (2010), Obama made yet another Supreme Court
appointment, a strongly Liberal Elena Kagan, replacing the somewhat
Liberal John Paul Stevens. It is important to note that Kagan was
actually another childless and unmarried female, was Dean of Harvard's
Law School … and well-known for her strongly Liberal views on matters.
At Harvard, she had forcefully opposed the military's appearing on
Harvard campus for recruiting purposes because of its "don't ask; don't
tell" policy concerning homosexuals and their behavior in the military.
And she was Jewish, the third such individual at that point making up
the nine-member Supreme Court.
But ultimately the decision came as a matter of where the "swing"
justice Anthony Kennedy stood on the matter. And with respect to the
issue of homosexuality, he was a strong supporter of full homosexual
equality in American society.
And thus it was that the Supreme Court took on DOMA, Congress's key
legislative piece concerning this matter of marriage. First was the
2013 decision in the United States v. Windsor case, ending one of the DOMA provisions … soon followed by the 2015 decision in the Obergefell v. Hodges case, simply striking down all of DOMA.
And there was virtually nothing that the people's representatives in
Congress, supposedly America's supreme legislative body, could do about
these Supreme Court decisions. The reality was increasingly clear
that the Supreme Court, even by the slimmest of margins (the decision
of only five justices needed), was America's Supreme Legislature as
well as Supreme Court … deciding for America what exactly its
foundational laws were to be.
1Previously,
as a 2nd Circuit Court justice, she became well-known for her rather
colorful political comments … such as the one in 2001 in which she
stated: "I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her
experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a
white male who hasn't lived that life."

But
ultimately it takes the Supreme Court (with a mere 5-against-4
decision) to re-legislate America’s long-standing view on the sanctity
of male-female marriage.
THE PRO-HOMOSEXUAL FORCES GO ON THE ATTACK |
Even before the final 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges
Supreme Court decision, the homosexual community was on a crusade to
bring down any who dared to oppose, even object to, the idea of
homosexual marriage … when in 2013 owners of an Oregon bakery told one
of their regular customers that when it came to baking her and her
partner a wedding cake, they could not do so on the grounds of their
own religious principles, and invited the two to go elsewhere to have
that cake made. But the lesbian couple were not ones to have
their rights violated … and brought a lawsuit against the bakery.
Then when the story hit Facebook and the internet, protesters began to
gather outside the bakers' shop … forcing the couple to have to close
their bakery and try to work out of their home. But that was not
enough to satisfy the crusaders … who were thrilled to hear that an
Oregon administrative court had imposed a $135,000 fine on the
bakers. And efforts of the bakers to appeal their case, Klein v. Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries,
in Oregon's higher courts led them nowhere. The ruin of both the
bakery and the personal finances of the bakers themselves was
considered to be just punishment on behalf of a couple "deeply hurt" by
the failure of the bakers to be willing to make them that wedding cake.
The message was thus loud and clear. Those who still (after centuries
of such a standard) wanted to stay with those standards – insisting
that marriage was/is intended to be between a man and a woman,
principally to provide the care and nurture of a rising generation –
that if they did so, they could expect severe punishment to come their
way.
This marked a huge shift in the American social-moral scene … one,
since its founding, the nation had built its power upon – not on
high-ranking and very select, and thus small, group of ruling
officials, but on the grass roots foundations of millions of strong
American families. But now the courts (and the president) made it quite
clear that marriage was no longer about such social service. It
was about meeting the sexual desires of individuals, whatever direction
those might go. After all, wasn't this what "freedom" was all
about … not having to answer to any higher authority than your own
personal inclinations?
As it turned out (and Obama himself commented in 2008 on how the
breakdown of the American family had hurt deeply the Black community),2
this action on behalf of personal "freedom" and personal "rights" would
do enormous damage to all sorts of areas of American society.
2In
one of his less ideological moments – Obama commented (on Father's Day
of 2008, when first running for the presidency), "Children who grow up
without a father are five times more likely to live in poverty and
commit crime; nine times more likely to drop out of schools, and 20
times more likely to end up in prison. They are more likely to have
behavioral problems, or run away from home or become teenage parents
themselves. And the foundations of our community are weaker because of
it."

Refusal to bake a wedding cake for two lesbians brings a fine of $135,000 ... and closure of the Klein's bakery ... plus continuing harrassment by the pro-homosexual community in Oregon
BLACK-WHITE RELATIONS TURN UGLY |
Obama
knew this problem personally, his African father and his White mother
having separated soon after Obama was born in Hawaii in 1961. He would
see his father only once after that – a half-hour visit with his father
when Obama was 10. He would grow up having difficulty deciding whether
he was Black or White … although he finally found while a student at
Columbia University in New York City that he more easily identified
himself as Black – finding the Black churches he attended in nearby
Harlem to be a much better fit for him than the surrounding White
world. That identity would then grow as it led him this way and that in
his early professional years … first as a Harvard Law student and then
as a summer intern (1989) at a Chicago law firm – where he met Michelle
Robinson … and married her in 1992 in a ceremony led by the Black
preacher, Jeremiah Wright, who became to Obama something like the
father he had never known growing up.3
As eventually a Chicago lawyer himself, he became involved in a number
of various community service organizations … and taught constitutional
law as a lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School. In 1995, he
took the time to publish an autobiography, Dreams of My Father,
about the challenge of growing up bi-racial. The next year (1996) he
was elected to finish out a term as Illinois State Senator, then
reelected in 1998 and 2002. And in 2004 he became a national
figure, delivering a keynote address at the Democratic Party National
Convention … at the same time running for the U.S. Senate … against a
Republican who had to step down over a sex scandal that summer just
before the election – giving Obama an easy ride into Congress in
January of 2005 as Illinois' new senator.
It did not take long for Oprah Winfrey – at the very top of both CNN's
and Time's list of the world's most powerful women – to find deep
interest in Obama … and suggest at several interviews with him that he
should run as U.S. President. Why not? It was about time America had a
Black president.
And thus it was decided that he would indeed run … on the platform of
bringing deep "change" to America. And obviously that had deep racial
implications.
Thus elected President in the 2008 elections, not only was Obama quick
to support the homosexual community, he was just as quick to jump into
matters when race was understood to be at the heart of things.
The Trayvon Martin – George Zimmerman tragedy (2012)
When a young Black, Trayvon Martin was shot and killed in a struggle
with White (Hispanic) neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman in
early 2012, the incident quickly became a national issue, with the
Black community furious over the event and demanding that Zimmerman be
charged for murder … before the details of the event were even known.
And that included Obama, who intervened to demand action – and
commented that if he had a son, he would have looked like Trayvon.
During the trial, it was revealed that Martin was shot only when
Zimmerman found himself on the ground and Martin on top of him,
pounding away at Zimmerman for over 40 seconds. Ultimately Zimmerman,
under the “Stand Your Ground Law” was found innocent of the charges.
Needless to say, this was not the verdict that the Black community
demanded ... and birthed the "Black Lives Matter" movement.
The Ferguson Missouri incident (2014)
But even more explosive was the event in Ferguson Missouri that erupted
in August of 2014 when a local police officer, Darren Wilson, shot and
killed a young Black, Michael Brown. A very false portrayal of the
event was issued by another Black, who was with Brown at the event, and
who claimed that Brown had raised his hands and requested "don't shoot"
when stopped by Wilson – but was shot in the back by Wilson anyway.
This then set the Blacks off over a ten-day period on a rampage of
plunder and torching of American neighborhoods – chanting the
now-famous words "hands up, don't shoot." Even White youth (such as at
the nearby St. Louis University) turned out in huge numbers, demanding
Wilson be brought to justice – and demanding also an end to all
injustice and poverty afflicting America … that this event represented.
And Obama quickly (only several days after the shooting) made it clear
that the Department of Justice was not going to simply let the local
authorities sweep this matter under the rug – Obama indicating that he
was fairly certain this would be how the matter would be handled
locally because of the racism that runs through America – and sent
Attorney General Holder to Missouri to do his own investigation.
Eventually other witnesses at the scene gave a very different account
of the event, describing Brown as having charged Wilson when he was
shot – and he was definitely not shot in the back trying to step back
from the confrontation. Finally, try as he might, after a long
investigation (lasting until March of the following year) Holder had to
admit that the Justice Department could find no basis for bringing
charges against Wilson. But, being Black himself, Holder could not
resist the temptation to spell out how he felt the same agonies that
America's minorities surely felt in such a White America. In short,
instead of supporting the racial reconciliation that the nation needed,
he merely invited American minorities to continue to register their
deep animosities to the way America was structured. Like Obama, he was
indicating that America needed change – deep change.4
Refusing to stand at the playing of the National Anthem
Thus it was also that Obama just had to come out at the beginning of
the 2016 football season to support the mostly Black players who – at
game time – refused to stand in respect during the playing of the
National Anthem … instead kneeling in protest against American racism –
especially against the racial oppression conducted by the police.
Obama expressed his own concern about the racism afflicting America –
and the importance of making a show of our opposition to this evil …
leaving it to the listener to decide whose racist evil he was referring
to … racism on the part of both Whites and Blacks – or just White
racism?
3Despite
Obama and his family having found themselves under the pastoral
leadership of Jeremiah Wright for nearly two decades, when in running
for the presidency in 2008 the media caught parts of a highly racist
sermon preached by Wright (not likely his first … just the first time
it hit the national media), Obama abruptly and completely cut Wright
out of his life.
4All
of this despite statistics put out around that time by a government
report which cited 2011 figures showing that that murder was the No. 1
killer of Black males of the age 15-34, running at 40 percent of the
deaths in that age range (compared to 3.8 percent for White males of
that same age) – nearly all of that Black on Black killings. However,
the report also pointed out that more Whites than Blacks are killed by
police, almost on a 2 to 1 ratio, although Whites make up five times
the number of Blacks, so therefore the percentage figure for Blacks is
higher. Nonetheless this does not conform well to the highly
inflated claim that Blacks are subject to some especially high rate of
killing by cops. Indeed, very tragically, blaming the police for the
chaos that rocks Black neighborhoods is a horrible distraction from the
real causes, which are: little moral training in manhood by missing
fathers, poor educational motivation, high unemployment, and gang
membership as the only option that many young Blacks find as their path
to manhood. All of this serves to create a very violent
environment in which both police and civilians are expected to function
in a civilized fashion.
The Ferguson Missouri disaster

Michael Brown and officer Darren
Wilson
 Brown caught on security video apparently stealing cigars from the Ferguson Market and Liquor
Store& ... shortly before his encounter with officer Wilson
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