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Category: Elections

Obama’s Blunder

Posted on December 7, 2010 in Accountability Campaign 2010 Class

My only question is “Jerry Brown? Won’t you run?

Return of the Wimpocrats

Posted on November 3, 2010 in Campaign 2010

square681I think Rachel Maddow said it best: Democrats, if you don’t campaign on your accomplishments, the Republicans will. Once again, however, the Wimpocrats appeared and acted as if all they had done was something to be ashamed of. And that lost them the House.

Here are the elements that did the Democrats in this time:

  • They pissed on the progressives. Get it through your head, Democrats, you don’t win elections without the progressives. If they don’t like you, you lose the people who will go door to door for you and make calls. Register the case of Blanche Lincoln who would not give an inch on health care. Even when progressive leaders made up, she still would not give ground and she lost. Those who had the love of progressives won.
  • Rahm Emmanuel. Good riddance. Obama and Congress LOWERED taxes, but somehow this information wasn’t getting out. Instead, everyone just wonked into the Oval Office and said nothing in their own defense. When you say nothing, the word doesn’t get out.
  • Tim Kaine. We need another Howard Dean in this role.
  • Harry Reid. He couldn’t keep his party in line and badly misread Joe Lieberman. Harry, please step down.
  • As suggested by the first paragraph, the Democrats utterly failed to take credit for the good they had done.
  • They ran scared of corporate America. They figured that there was nothing to be done about scare ads and big money. Yet here in California, Jerry Brown shellacked Meg Whitman by running a campaign that promised to put corporations in line. Maybe we understand these things better than they do elsewhere having endured the disaster that was AHnold, but the rest were utterly silent on the matter. Brown’s campaign needs to be studied and emulated elsewhere.

The Democrats got to stop being the Chicago Cubs.

Progressives, we will be back. I just hope to live to see it.

Excellent Net Resource for Evaluating Political Claims

Posted on September 19, 2010 in Campaign 2010 Pointers

If you want to know whether you can trust what you see on television, check out FactCheck.org. It is nonpartisan and lets you know who the big liars are.

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Tea-Bullies

Posted on September 15, 2010 in Campaign 2010 Scoundrels

They, too, are part of America, but the problem is that they want to be the only definition of America.

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Flaming Fog and a Red Sports Car

Posted on June 25, 2010 in Anxiety Campaign 2006 Encounters Hiking Loneliness Weather

square677 Yesterday was as momentous as being wedged against a smooth, unshatterable pane of glass: forever in the sight of the world but engaging with none of it. Went out to find the stars using Google Sky Map. For the second night in a row, however, a crazy, burning thatch-roof of orange-tinted fog prevented me from seeing Vega.

The mist had cleared by late afternoon when I took Drake hiking. On our way back from the Point, I saw two men standing in the fire road. They walked down the hill as soon as they saw me, leading me by a couple of hundred yards. They could not get to their red sports car and drive away fast enough. I took stock of a meadow strewm with pale cream Weed’s Mariposa tulips and stop counting the hurts.

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In Need of Adventure

Posted on November 8, 2008 in Campaign 2008 Routine

The electricity that was in the air wherever you went online is gone.

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They Should Have Seen Obama Win

Posted on November 5, 2008 in Campaign 2008 Milestones

I’m sorry that my father did not live to see Obama’s victory.
I’m sorry that my aunt (mother’s sister) did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Lynn’s father did not live to see this.
I’m sorry Dreaming Mage did not live to see this.
I’m sorry Kathy did not live to see this.
I’m sorry Mileah did not live to see this.

I’m sorry that Obama’s grandmother did not live to see this.
I’m sorry his mother did not live to see this.
I’m sorry his father did not live to see this.

I’m sorry that John F. Kennedy did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Robert F. Kennedy did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Martin Luther King did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Malcolm X did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Bobby Darin did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Marvin Gaye did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Studs Terkel did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Arthur C. Clarke did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Isaac Asimov did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Douglas Adams did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Paul Newman did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Benazir Bhutto did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Pope John Paul II did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Mother Theresa did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Thomas Merton did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Christopher Reeve did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that John Lennon did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that George Harrison did not live to see this.
I’m sorry Gerald R. Ford did not live to see this.
I’m sorry Molly Ivins did not live to see this.

I’m sorry that Richard Nixon did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Ronald Reagan did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Strom Thurman did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Jerry Farwell did not live to see this.
I’m sorry that Jessie Helms did not live to see this.

But I’m damn glad that George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, John McCain, and Sarah Palin all lived to see it!

Want to play? Just make a list of people who you wish could have seen Obama’s election and either append it as a comment or link it as a blog post. As a rule, keep to people who would have been 95 years old or younger this year if they had lived or who died within the last year.

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One Day More

Posted on November 4, 2008 in Campaign 2008

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Missing Political Stuff

Posted on October 31, 2008 in Campaign 2008

square497If you have been missing my links to political videos and articles, please ring me up at my Facebook Account –> gazissax at spamarrest dot com. Be sure to tell me who you are….

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Not A Terrible Beauty, but A Transient One

Posted on October 28, 2008 in Campaign 2008 Reflections

Too long a sacrifice
Can make a stone of the heart.
O when may it suffice?

Easter 1916, W.B. Yeats

square496It’s getting towards the end of the campaign and frankly I am getting tired of all the necessary posturing that comes with getting your candidate elected, your side of an initiative adopted. There is a terrible beauty that comes out of all of it as we slash through to the real issues that the baiting attempts to cover, but afterwards what? If McCain, I think I can go pretty much onwards as I have except for certain hardships if his health care proposal becomes law. If Obama, I may be pressed to know what kind of different personality to adopt to conform with Change.

For a moment here, I find myself in league with the McCain supporters who hear this word and flinch. But I am not filled with rage and fear, but a quiet emptiness. Just how am I supposed to change? Will an Obama-filled world really be that much better or will I just go about being Joel as I have?

This isn’t to say that the campaign hasn’t been inspiring — it’s given me something to work towards in which I am not alone even when the scope of my support cannot cover the social activities of the campaign such as calling or going to debate-watching parties. I’ve made a small place for myself posting links to articles on Twitter and the Orange County for Obama mailing list. I am appreciated, at least on the latter where it isn’t assumed that I am a robot or disruptive of old friendships. But this all ends November 5 regardless of the outcome. Then it’s back to just tutoring adults to read and helping people in my bipolar support group. No great changes for me. I’ll still dedicate myself where I can, encouraging others because I have not been able to rise above the disease and the failures. If you check my mood chart you will see I am not depressed. I do not see an end to the world or dark clouds. I’ll sit down with a dvd of Lost Broadway tonight and enjoy it, laughing where it feels right, crying in other spots because I have been moved. The terrors of the campaign don’t possess me so much as to deny me the pleasant things. There’s just not a sense of afterwards yet, of an afterwards which for me is real change.

I’ve voted, so the game’s nearly up. I won’t repeat the mistake of 2004 when I went to Las Vegas to help Kerry, spun out of control, and ended up two months later in the hospital. But because of who I am, what afflicts me, and what I cannot do, this election won’t affect me much unless John McCain gets in and health insurance becomes a taxable item. All the burst of promise won’t result in a dramatic turnaround here atop the fossil sand dune that is my neighborhood. So what has all this been for? A jolt of activity that has been good for morale, I’d say. Changes for people I know who have been suffering awfully under Bush. Not a terrible beauty like it is for some, but a transient one.

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The World Turned Right Side Up

Posted on October 23, 2008 in Anxiety Campaign 2008 Depression Uncertainty

square495At the British surrender at Yorktown, the band played “The World Turned Upside Down”. Then as now a transfer of power took place. Certainly among the Americans — many of whom had been fighting for years — there must have been a difficult period: how do you go from being a warrior to a citizen? There were issues to be resolved such as the status of those who had supported the British, but nothing was so important and devastating to the morale of those men as the question of how to be in this new world.

The rush of history has my mind put in a blender for reconstitution. For the last several years — dating from before Bush became president — progressives have been staving off hateful attacks from the right. They are at their worst today: we are accused of being unpatriotic, of not loving our country. It’s the whole Bush Adminstration plus the Clinton impeachment concentrated into a bitter slushee that we are forced to swallow.

I have watched as some of the more sensitive of those on the Obama side have devolved into one of three moods: anxiety, depression, and grandiosity. The anxiety is easy to understand: the election is not yet won and the Republicans have been filling our ears and eyes with false information and character assassinations. If they can’t steal the election, they have been engaging in shenanigans designed to narrow the gap so the Democrats can’t claim a mandate for change. We are just not there yet.

Likewise, the grandiosity is easy to understand. We’re about to win, it seems, and win big. Therefore we are the best people in the world, chosen by God or the Universe or common sense. We know everything, can solve everything. So these among us stand on pedestals and lecture our peers on the way it is going to be. Doggoneit, they say, we have the key to convincing the most diehard Republicans to join us. We are unstoppable.

I figure I’ll just have to live with that for a few years. Believe me, it will be as insufferable for a few of we progressives as well as the defeated right, if for different reasons. Reality will click in and these will either come to walk with the rest of us on or fall into the ennui from listening to their own voices without insight.

Which brings us to depression. How can that be afflicting progressives at a time like this? I’ll tell you: first, the anxiety wears us down. Exhaustion claims us. So we lose all pleasure, all sense of accomplishment. There is also, second, the exhaustion of feeling obligated to answer every attack slung out by the McCain/Palin machine.

The third cause of depression stems from uncertainty. Now that we are about to win, what kind of political personality are we going to adopt? Since the late 90s, that has been one that constantly attacks the failed and repulsive premises of the neoconservatives. It’s been fun, but soon, with responsibility, that fun is going to stop. The problem with Republican rule is that it has been so founded on negativism, it failed to create positive institutions or freedoms. The same must not be allowed to happen in a Democratic era — though we may wisely be ready to fend off attacks as we strive to solve the crises that the Bush Administration has left behind. But change in political power is going to mean change in our attitudes. We are going to have to become compromisers, optimists. And some folks are as unready to make that change as Palin is to be vice president.

I am taking the following steps to mind my spiritual transition. First, for the duration of the election, I am keeping my consumption of television news to a minimum, which means I’m not watching it in my home and avoiding it outside. All the bells and whistles of your typical television news screen agitate me. The reporters spout out opinions. Inside their opinions are little assumptions that eat at me like acid.

Second, I am making time to do things that are fun. Walking the dog. Going to the beach. Relaxing with good books. Taking pictures and looking over what I have done previously.

Third, I am sharing every bit of positive news I can find. I am also seeking out news that is not about the election, funny videos, etc.

Fourth, I’ve made myself a promise: when and if Obama wins — yes, I am sticking to the conditional at this moment — I am going out to buy a new American flag and hang it outside to celebrate that I am once again included in this country.

The world will be turned upside down which means right side up for the first time since Ronald Reagan took office in 1980. That is something to cheer for, something to shed the shackles of low moods for. Yet, after the cheering, must come reality. This vote is not about making every man a king, every woman a queen, but about becoming citizens instead of serfs. The notion to come is equality, which is about dignity. That will have to be reforged in the new fires of an unexpected community.

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Moose!

Posted on October 20, 2008 in Campaign 2008

The moose says it all:

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