Second Inaugural Address: Obama Declares War on Liberty As We Know It
Sounding the same themes of class warfare that propelled his re-election campaign, President Barack Obama devoted his second inaugural address to
laying out his second term agenda: a struggle to undo the seeming
injustices of America's past, and to overcome the army of straw men that
stand in opposition to progress.
In the process, President Obama attempted nothing less than an assault on the timeless notion of liberty itself:
Through it all, we have never relinquished our skepticism of central
authority, nor have we succumbed to the fiction that all society's ills
can be cured through government alone.
But we have always understood that when times change, so must we;
that fidelity to our founding principles requires new responses to new
challenges; that preserving our individual freedoms ultimately requires
collective action.
After praising the "collective" and mocking the notion that America
is a "nation of takers," President Obama targeted the political
opposition. He targeted those who "deny" climate change, attacked those
who allegedly refused to reward the elderly for their contributions, and
defied critics whom he said wanted "perpetual war." He attacked the
rich--as he has done so often over the past four years--and painted a
caricature of an unjust nation: "...our country cannot succeed when a
shrinking few do very well and a growing many barely make it....We do
not believe that in this country, freedom is reserved for the lucky, or
happiness for the few."
President Obama's address failed to deliver on promises earlier in
the day by senior political adviser David Axelrod that the speech would
sound themes of national unity on a day of national "consecration."
Instead, the president sounded combative themes familiar from his
divisive first term, albeit wrapped occasionally in the lofty rhetoric
of "hope" and "tolerance," and punctuated by the repeated refrain: "We,
the People."
He acknowledged Americans have diverse concepts of liberty, but
insisted that these could all fit together under the collective mission
of the government to achieve its redistributive aims. Days after
describing Republicans as determined to hurt the poor and elderly, he
accused his opposition of intolerance: "We cannot mistake absolutism for
principle, or substitute spectacle for politics, or treat name-calling
as reasoned debate."
The president cited Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., whose birthday is
celebrated today, citing his "I Have a Dream" speech, implying that when
Dr. King told America that "our individual freedom is inextricably
bound to the freedom of every soul on earth," he was referring not to
civil rights but to the mighty will of the state.
President Obama also spoke out in favor of gay rights and immigration
reform, acknowledging groups of voters that were central to his
re-election effort--yet for whom he did not fulfill many of his
first-term pledges. He touched on three historic locations--"Seneca
Falls, and Selma, and Stonewall"--critical to the history of the women's
rights movement, the civil rights movement, and the gay rights
movement, respectively.
Throughout his address, the President maintained his voice in a
near-shout. This was not an historic address, a reflection on a moment
in history; it was an exhortation to political action, in contrast to
the political reality of a divided Washington, in defiance of the
profound economic challenges still facing the American people.
It was a declaration of political war on individual liberty. It was a wasted opportunity--and a warning.
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