I still don't hear anything from this man other than Bush sucks
		
		
	 
This is the only part of your post I don't understand.  Did you hear his speech on race in mid-March?  Have you ever heard a politician speak that way before -- i.e., as though you were a rational adult capable of holding two or more thoughts in your head at the same time?
As to the rest of what you've said, I understand where you're coming from and it'd be presumptuous of me to say you're wrong.  
In the end, I think part of the so-called Obama Phenomenon has to do with how much you're willing to risk.  
I've lived long enough (48 years) to see the United States slide slowly and inexorably into the toilet and I don't think, at this point, that we can afford NOT to take the risk of reversing course in a 
major way.  Working within the system that currently exists (which Hillary says is her strong suit) isn't enough, in my book, to stave off  further devastation; the system itself is rotten -- 
designed to defeat climate change-related reform, campaign finance reform, equity in the criminal justice system, equitable taxation, etc.   As Obama himself said (and I wish I could quote him verbatim), The real risk comes not from taking a chance, but from doing the same old things in the same old way in the hope that things will change.  
I guess I'm talking about a macrocosmic, rather than a microcosmic approach. Yes, if you've just lost your job or can't afford groceries it may be that the macrocosmic approach seems too vague and woolly and  it's very appealing to look to someone who says "I've got a toolbox full of problem solvers."  And it may very well be that if Hillary were to become President with a Democratic congress to support her she'd be effective at implementing a beneficial program here and a change of policy there and I don't underestimate how much those things can affect someone's day-to-day life.  
But in the end, not much will really have changed.  It'll still be a rotten system designed by and run for the benefit of the status quo -- which is the very thing that has led us into the toilet in the first place.  To my mind, the clock is ticking fast and we can't afford the luxury of  more of the same.