Friends,
I sure don't like to wake up and read all this sniping about President Obama. As Jackie22, Quicksilver, Josiah9 and others have written, the President deserves respect because of his office, as well as the calm, nondramatic way that he handles crises. I have studied presidential speeches for 35 years, and my assessment of last night's SOTU address was that it was well-organized, clear, and well-documented with examples.
Many people seem to have forgotten that President Reagan's deregulation of banking, legislation approved by Congress, greed, corruption by many banks and investment brokerages, and overreaching by people buying homes they could not afford, all led to the giant Great Recession we have just come out of. And they have forgotten how President Obama's stimulus package and the Federal Reserve's policy of "quantitative easing" (printing more money) avoided inflation and saved the auto industry. I disagree with the loans made to the investment banking houses, but those loans have been repaid.
I, along with many of you, lost 1/3 of my retirement funds after 9/11 led to a stock market crash, and then again the housing crisis led to another stock market crash, where I lost almost all that I had gained back after 9/11. But today, the stock market is twice as high as it was in 2008, and some have been able to build up their funds again.
In the SOTU, President Obama reminded us of the values that most people hold dear: fairness, equality of opportunity, caring for veterans, education. These values have been promoted by most presidents beginning with FDR. Mr. Obama restated his belief that military force is not the first response that should be used when there is conflict among nations. He emphasized that without a strong middle class, our country is not going to be able to maintain its status as a world power. To have a strong middle class, there must be opportunity to succeed.
It doesn't matter what label is put on these beliefs and policies, whether Republican, Democratic, Independent, Libertarian, Conservative, Liberal, or Progressive. What matters, I think, is that Americans work toward achieving the shared values of fairness, equality of opportunity, etc.