Anyone not hear about the Reverend Wright this week? I don’t see any hands (except my own, on the keyboard, of
course). This campaign is beyond inane – too insipid to even qualify as absurd. Does anyone really, really, really care about what Barack Obama’s former preacher thinks? Is Wright running for president? Is anyone taking a microscope to the sermons and unrelated public statements of any other politician’s spiritual mentors, friends, associates, neighbors, etc.? Has anyone, for instance, taken a close look at Franklin Graham, who offered prayer at Bush’s inauguration and lectured us all on being squeamish about the use of nuclear weapons? No controversy there. And if Obama’s time on a board with Bill Ayers is fair game, why not Hillary’s time on the board of Wal-Mart? After all, Bill Ayers just talked about demolishing things – Wal-Mart has demolished hundreds of small town shopping districts and driven virtual slave labor in the countries that produce the garbage they sell. Is that all good?
Sure enough, the reason you hear about Obama’s associations so much is because the Clintons want to return to the presidency, and they want it very badly. So badly, in fact, that they’re willing to throw the rest of us under the bus to get themselves there. If they really cared about the relative well-being of working people, they would stop investing so much energy in attacks against their fellow party members. (Not that Democrats are huge champions of the proletariat – just better, generally speaking, than the Republicans.) The Clintons claim that they are only confronting Obama with the kinds of salvos that the Republicans will proffer in the fall, but that is a pretty hollow contention. If their aim – like that of the party as a whole, it appears – is to shut the G.O.P. out of the White House this time around, they shouldn’t be ripping other Dems a third corn chute. Campaigning vigorously doesn’t mean making Democratic victory impossible, should things fail to go precisely your way… but the tactics they’re using threaten to damage both candidates and polarize the party in a way that will discourage turnout no matter who wins the primaries.
Then there’s just plain garden-variety demagoguery, like Clinton’s adoption of McCain’s harebrained gas tax holiday scheme. I expect this kind of idiocy from someone
like McCain (pictured here in front of an American flag, by pure coincidence). Clinton’s take on it is a bit more ludicrous, because she is playing it as a working man vs. Big Oil issue – i.e. we’re going to make the oil companies pay the tax all summer, via a windfall profits tax. My ass. Anyone who thinks that that piece of legislation would pass through congress and be signed into law by Mr. 28 Percent before the annual weekend at Myrtle Beach is seriously on crack. Far more likely is that the tax would be dropped and then never added back again (lest Congress members, facing election, be accused of “raising taxes”). I haven’t heard this mentioned more than maybe once since this issue was raised, but the gas tax is a feeble attempt at addressing the actual cost of our car-based economy, with the revenue going to maintaining and repairing highways and bridges. This infrastructure is falling apart now, even with the revenue – without it, the neglect will be considerably worse. And with oil prices steadily climbing, the slight price reduction at the pump will disappear in a matter of weeks, particularly with the summer driving season kicking in.
Long story short, this is all about getting people elected, not making things better. No surprises there.
luv u,
jp
There’s the old lumber storage shed. Then there’s that ancient grain silo – hasn’t been used for years. Oh, yeah… and that little room in the north corner of the foundry – forgot about that.
problem with a few extra guests, right? We’ve got a whole abandoned mill to work with – surely we can find the room. Okay – first of all, we’re not talking about conventional two-legged humans, the kind that can crash on a couch or sleep in the bathtub. (As long as they don’t bathe on the couch, I’m okay.) No, no… our guests are relatives of the man-sized tuber. In an attempt to coax him out of his funk (and out from under the tool shed), we made the somewhat ill-advised promise to invite all of his living relatives over for a week or two. Now, I admit, I did not fully consider the implications of this when it left my lips. (New experience for me.)
working on the problem right now, though each has been busy with his own personal obsessions. (Yes, Marvin is still whirring and clicking about that Canadian space robot named Dextre… so much so that I can’t even get a shovel into his lazy hands.) Mitch has designed an irrigation system for the courtyard that could help get us through the next few days, but with more heat in the forecast, we can’t leave those suckers out in the sun for too long. Don’t want to think of what might become of them. (Some kind of casserole, no doubt.)
was well worth it. Or sort of, anyway… since it’s still hard to see how Hillary can walk away with this nomination short of spontaneous combustion on Obama’s part. No matter – the race continues. In a year when a Democrat should certainly walk to victory in November, the party is inventing a way to lose against a pretty lame candidate on the G.O.P. side. Start with two parts ambition – the kind the Clintons pursue at the cost of all they claim to believe in. Certainly, I’ve never been a fan of theirs, but I would dislike them a whole lot less if they simply stuck to articulating their positions, outlining policy differences with their opponent in a civil fashion, and refrain from all the exaggerated accusations about sixties radicals, anti-American (Marine veteran) preachers, and out of context remarks worthy of Sean Hannity or Matt Drudge.
This is a principle as old as organized society. The beast must be kept in its cage. That is why the political culture minimizes or excoriates the mass movements of the 1960s and ’70s – because people were participating in our democracy and involving themselves in policy matters to a degree elites found distressing, prompting them to fret over a growing “crisis of democracy” – the crisis being that the “d” word had any meaning to it at all. It’s the reason why anytime pop culture looks at the civil rights movement, for instance, they focus on Martin King and his “I have a dream” speech, not the thousands and thousands of people who risked their lives alongside him to bring about change. No, the wealthy have no desire to see a return to that level of participatory democracy. Perhaps they understand better than we do how much they rely upon a supine working class to create value in the businesses they own, to purchase the products and services they profit from, to serve their needs in every imaginable way, and so on.