Which U.S. President Was Worse: Obama, Or Trump?
Eric Zuesse, originally posted at Strategic
Culture
On December 17th, Gallup headlined “Biden
Inherits a Battered U.S. Image Abroad”.
The Pew
surveys have
found the same thing: In almost all countries surveyed, other than Poland,
public approval of America’s leadership plunged when Trump replaced Obama, and
that low approval stayed down throughout Trump’s Presidency.
However, also on December 17th, the great
investigative journalist David Sirota headlined at his “The Daily Poster”
blog, “End The Austerity Loop”, and he documented that President Obama’s response to
George W. Bush’s policies that had crashed the U.S. economy (and actually the
entire world’s economy) had actually been to institute a bailout of the
megabanks (“broker-dealers”), and — as soon as it was passed by Congress —
Obama’s Administration refused to
help the people who had been evicted from their homes as a result of what Wall
Street had done.
Obama said instead that all of the
federal money had already been spent and he wouldn’t authorize increasing the
federal debt even more than he already had authorized in order to bail out Wall Street.
Of course, Congress was also culpable in all of these
Robin-Hood-in-reverse policies (protecting Wall Street while abandoning
Main Street),
but the ultimate leadership was at the top, and it was a policy of sheer
hypocrisy. Trump has merely been hypocritical in a different way, and espousing
a different set of excuses for his failures.
On 18 February 2011, National Public Radio
headlined “TARP Watchdog
Says Foreclosure Plan Is Failing” and reported that
Neil Barofsky, the special inspector general for the
massive federal bank bailout program, or TARP, is stepping down from his post
in March. He says the Obama administration's program to prevent foreclosures is
broken, and that many of the people it's supposed to be helping are now
"in a far worse place than they would have been had this program not
existed."
The article in the Spring 2011 Review of Banking & Financial
Law, by Tae Yeon
Kim, “Pay It Back
(TARP Developments)”,
described the situation as follows:
The purpose of Title XIII (“Pay it Back Act”) of the
DoddFrank Act, according to Senator Michael Bennett, was to “rebuild the
credibility of our financial system, save taxpayers billions of dollars, and
finally move to end the TARP”12 by “prevent[ing] further government spending,
recaptur[ing] taxpayers’ investment in financial institutions, and ensur[ing]
that repaid funds are used for deficit reduction.”13 Under Title XIII, TARP
funding authorized under the EESA was reduced from $700 billion to $475
billion.14 Also, no additional TARP funds can be spent on any program initiated
after June 25, 2010; any money repaid to the TARP fund must be used for deficit
reduction only.15 Title XIII amends the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of
2008. The Treasury must allocate the sale of obligations and securities, as
well as fees paid by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Federal Home Loan Banks to
the General Fund of the Treasury (“General Fund”).16 The funds must be
“dedicated for the sole purpose of deficit reduction” and “prohibited from use
as an offset for other spending increases or revenue reductions.”17 Similarly,
TARP funds provided to a state under ARRA and rejected by the Governor or by
the State legislature, or funds withdrawn or recaptured by the head of an
executive agency not obligated by a State or local government, will be
rescinded and deposited in the General Fund.18 Once in the General Fund, the
money will be “dedicated for the sole purpose of deficit reduction” and
“prohibited from use as an offset for other spending increases or revenue
reductions.”19 Section 1306 further provides that discretionary ARRA
appropriations that have not been obligated as of December 31, 2010 shall also
be rescinded and deposited in the General Fund for the sole purpose of deficit
reduction.
The megabanks had gotten their federal help, but
foreclosures and boarded-up windows and storefronts were appearing everywhere
and were lowering the surrounding property-values, so that both lower and
middle-class real estate were getting increasingly worse and more run-down.
The TARP Bailout Program saved the megabanks but not their victims; and
here is why, as explained even by a conservative, pro-corporate, source:
The Problem With the TARP Program for Homeowners
Why didn't more people take advantage of the HAMP and
HARP programs? This would have pumped billions into the economy and helped
millions of homeowners avoid foreclosure.
The problem was the banks. They cherry-picked
applicants and refused to consider those with lower equity. Banks were
too wary of risk to allow the programs to work.
These were the same banks, who just a few years
before, were giving out loans to anyone because they were making money on the
investments that were created from the loans.
There was no risk to the banks, as all these loans
were guaranteed by Fannie Mae
or Freddie Mac.
Banks didn't want to be bothered with the paperwork involved with homeowners
who had mortgage
insurance.
On 25 July 2016, a mortgage-industry website
headlined “Obama
administration presents a look at life after HAMP” and acknowledged “that there’s more work to be
done.” (That was putting it mildly.)
The Obama Administration did nothing whatsoever to
reduce those foreclosures. In
fact, there was even less
prosecution of financial and other white-collar crimes than there had been
under Bush.
The admirers of President Trump are equally deceived —
no less deceived than the admirers of Obama had been. Trump promised to “drain
the swamp” and did none of that.
In foreign policies, Trump continued Obama’s wars
(including aggressive sanctions), such as against Syria, and against Russia,
and against Iraq, and intensified Obama’s war against China and against Iran
and against Venezuela — all of these being against countries that had never
threatened to invade the U.S., and so all of them were (and are)
actually wars of aggression, not of defense.
Americans are profoundly deceived to accept such
people as leaders, instead of to reject them as liars and as traitors.
Most Americans — and many people throughout the world
— prefer one or the other of those two American Presidents on the basis only of
political prejudices, but the actual differences between Obama and Trump
were more stylistic than substantive.
President Trump, at the end of his Presidency, is
polling, among the American public, both as one of
the worst Presidents ever and as one of the best Presidents ever, and this is a reflection of the astoundingly sharp
partisan divide now between Democrats and Republicans. Pathetically few
Americans recognize that both of the
two Parties represent only the billionaires — not the American people. This pervasive miscomprehension, by the public,
results because the billionaires control not only the Government, they also
control the press — they shape the population’s perceptions, so as to make this
aristocracy (America’s billionaires) acceptable to the public, directing the
public’s rage to be against the opposite Party, instead of against the
billionaires themselves, who actually
control the country.
Consequently, Democratic Party voters think that that
Party is their Party, and Republican Party voters think that
that Party is their Party. However, in reality, both Parties
are controlled by America’s hundreds of billionaires — not by
the given Party’s approximately hundred million registered voters. Obama
represented the Democratic Party’s billionaires, and Trump represented the
Republican Party’s billionaires (other than the ones who, in 2020, disliked
Trump so much that they donated instead to the Biden campaign or to one of its
PACs; and Biden’s biggest donor even turned
out to be the Republican Michael Bloomberg, at $56,796,137, who had entered the Democratic Presidential
primaries because he had feared that a progressive, Bernie Sanders, might win
that Party’s nomination; Bloomberg then
quit the contest and endorsed Biden on Super Tuesday, 4 March 2020, and immediately became Biden’s biggest
funder).
This is a Government of the people, by the
billionaires, and for the billionaires. It’s no democracy, whatsoever, and the U.S. Constitution has been
covered-over, by the U.S. aristocracy’s Supreme Court’s rulings, so that it has
become, by now, merely a parchment document, which ‘means’ whatever the (majority
of the) U.S. aristocracy’s Supreme Court say that it means.
Although those jurists are paid by the public to represent America’s Founders,
they don’t represent America’s Founders, and they don’t represent the American
people, either. They represent — and protect the interests of — America’s
billionaires. They were chosen because that is what they had been doing before
they had been chosen. If they hadn’t been doing this, they wouldn’t
have been chosen. That’s the way today’s American Government
functions.
—————
Investigative historian Eric Zuesse is the author,
most recently, of They’re Not
Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, and
of CHRIST’S
VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity.
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