Wednesday, December 24, 2008

THE FIRST ORDER OF BUSINESS FOR BARACK

The first order of business facing President Barack Obama is to request the written resignation of all those working for him. While this may be customary in most cases, it is particularly urgent in the case of Obama because he has cast a wide net of appointments - including people who have expressed political, philosophical, and religious differences with him on important social and political issues.

Without the authority to accept these (admittedly forced) resignations Barack runs the risk of permitting open wounds to fester and a recurrence of lingering diseases, long thought dormant in the American body politic, to raise their ugly heads once again.

From Barack's point of view, he must have this power if he is to be held responsible for the actions of so many other people acting and/or speaking on his behalf. He needs this insurance policy not only to protect himself from misguided sycophants, but also from mischief-makers -- foreign and domestic - who seek to insure that he is a one-term President.

The problem is two-fold: (1) Will Barack seek this power of forced early resignation and (2) Will the American public (sometimes expressed through the corporate media) grant him this power unconditionally?

It is possible for Barack "to have his cake and eat it too", since he ran his campaign on a promise of "change" and, presumably, such a promise would excuse diversion from past customs concerning this issue of "letters of resignation." In other words, whichever way he acts, Barack could justify as continuing (good) traditions or as terminating (bad) traditions.

This is what vexes some of Obama's political opponents and it is not clear how they will respond to the current state of affairs. But they (his opponents) will soon reveal themselves after the (traditional) "honeymoon period" is over for the current President-elect.

The American media will have a lot to say about the interpretation of all of this, but so too will the internet and the international media -- perhaps for the first time in American history. Are Americans ready for this less-than-courtside-seat in their own stadium starring their own home team?

Such a state of affairs - adhering to rules of international law and expectations --constitutes "the end of the world" for many erstwhile powerful Americans. Not only have such Americans grown to expect courtside seats, they are surprised when they are not appointed as referees and time-keepers.

American resistance to majority world rule is rooted in two realities: (1) a numerical disadvantage which gives America less than 15% of the world's population - far from sufficient to champion any kind of "majority rule" ethos and (2) a spiritual disadvantage as a result of ill-conceived foreign wars in Palestine, Vietnam, Korea, Panama, Iraq and Afghanistan. This spiritual defect prevents America from having the moral standing necessary to pass judgment on the behavior of other nations. History has shown an eagerness in American foreign policy to continue an empire mentality, particularly with regard to Africa.

There is not much Barack can do about the first disadvantage -- although he would be well-advised to put an immediate halt to genocide-disguised-as-AIDS health projects operating in Africa. While there may be a degree of unanimity concerning the evil of genocide, its definition remains a source of discomfort as long as the American Indian and other representative groups do not have a fair hearing. In any case, there remain legitimate international differences on the estent to which American foreign has infiltrated the world health organization and other health-related institutions.

This issue spills over to affect the second major disadvantage Barack inherits: the fact that America's word can no longer be taken at face value. Barack's background in terms of race, ethnicity and religion may place him in a much better position than any other conceivable candidate for "making the America case" in internationally controversial areas, but Barack is facing no slam dunk. The Sudan (not Dafur) issue may be an acid test of Obama's intelligence, courage, and trustworthiness.

Whatever case, the fact remains that Barack is inheriting an America which will no longer be given Carte Blanche to run the affairs of other countries. This, for some, represents a chance for good to prevail over evil.

For that, many of us are indeed grateful.

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