I saw someone say recently that Americans “suffered for eight years under Barack Obama.”
That word stuck with me… suffered.
So I stopped for a minute and actually looked back at those years.
When Obama took office in 2009, the country was in the middle of a financial crisis. The stock market had crashed and the Dow was sitting around 7,900. By the time he left office eight years later, it had nearly tripled.
The auto industry was also on the edge of collapse. GM and Chrysler were heading toward bankruptcy and Ford wasn’t far behind. Millions of jobs were tied to that industry. The bailout to save it was controversial at the time, but the industry survived… and the money ended up being paid back.
During those years, the U.S. also carried out the operation that killed Osama bin Laden. At the same time, troop levels in Iraq and Afghanistan were drastically reduced from the huge numbers we had earlier in the wars.
Veterans programs were expanded, and a major initiative helped reduce homelessness among veterans significantly.
Economically, there was a long stretch of private-sector job growth. The federal deficit dropped sharply compared to where it was during the recession.
Healthcare was another big fight during that era. The Affordable Care Act had plenty of debate around it, but it did change things people often forget about now like insurance companies denying coverage for pre-existing conditions or young adults being forced off their parents’ plans at 18.
There were also environmental policies that pushed renewable energy growth and reduced dependence on foreign oil.
And some smaller but meaningful changes happened too consumer protections against hidden credit card fees, equal pay protections through the Lilly Ledbetter Act, preservation of millions of acres of public lands, and rebuilding the levee system in New Orleans after Katrina.
Obama wasn’t a perfect president. No president ever is.
You can disagree with his policies.
You can dislike his ideology.
That’s part of democracy.
But when people say Americans “suffered” during those eight years, I think it’s fair to pause and ask what that word really means.
Because when I look back, I see a country recovering from one of the worst economic crises in modern history, a major terrorist threat eliminated, and a lot of policies that whether you agreed with them or not were attempts to move the country forward.
History is always more complicated than political slogans.
And sometimes it’s worth stepping back and looking at the full picture instead of just the narrative we’ve been handed.
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