Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Farewell until September

For the past few weeks, I’ve been busy with remodeling projects in and around my house, and those will be ongoing through the summer. That’s one reason I’ve decided to take a sabbatical from this blog for the next three months.

The other is this: There just doesn’t seem to me to be much to discuss right now on the political front. With Donald Trump’s ridiculous little attention-getting stunt over and done with, and Newt in trouble with conservatives for telling the truth, the focus for Republicans for the next few weeks will be on trying to identify a feasible candidate to run against Barack Obama in 2012. With Tea Party extremists ready to “primary” any candidate who fails their “litmus test” for fanaticism, that’s likely to be a painful process for the Party of No. For my part, I’ll leave them to go at it.

In a recent interview, Bill Moyers remarked that among subjects considered inappropriate for discussion in polite company in America is the fact that this country has become an oligarchy—a land in which a minority of the very rich and powerful make many of the decisions for the vast majority of us. With the help of fundamentalist churches, Fox News, and Citizens United, the Republican Party has become their party—of the rich, by the rich, and for the rich.

For anyone who has closely observed the behavior of Republican governors and legislatures since the last election—from union busting in Wisconsin to takeover of local governments in Michigan to mandatory drug testing of state employees in Florida—it must be obvious what greater consolidation of power in the hands of the GOP would mean at the Federal level. We got a taste of it under George Bush—to the continuing detriment of the U.S. and world economies, among other things. But now—with a Republican Party confident enough in its own power to talk openly about demolishing every social support program in America, from minimum wage to Medicare, I can no longer tolerate the tendency of even well-informed and well-meaning political observers to treat the two parties as equivalent.

The two parties are not equivalent.

One wants to consolidate the power of and influence of the already richest and most powerful—an elite group that includes oil barons, bank presidents, Wall Street CEOs, and owners of insurance companies (like Governor Rick Scott, whose company will be paid handsomely for all those unnecessary drug tests in Florida).

The other, the Democratic Party, works for the well-being and prosperity of everyone—for values like equal and universal education, the right to bargain collectively, freedom to vote, and—yes—access to quality health care for everyone.

Between these two world views, operating from very different value systems, there is little room for compromise (as even the president must know by now) and no moral equivalency at all.

So call me partisan—as I most assuredly am. But I no longer have any patience with batting around Democratic values and Republican lies as though the two are the same. Clearly there is no longer any sense in trying to pretend that the differences between, for example, a John Boehner and a Nancy Pelosi are just a difference of opinion about how things should be done. The differences are between what is right—morally right—and who matters.

Over the next three months, I will decide how to move forward in terms of my new, deeper understanding of the real political dynamics at work in America.

Have a great summer everyone!

1 comment:

Six said...

Enjoy your summer CJ!

Once again I think you are about 1/2 right. What I see is a president who has started an illegal war under false pretenses without Congressional Approval, expanded the number of US troops overseas in combat operations of choice where no threat to the US exists, expanded off-shore drilling, promoted & continues to detain persons without charge (and extremely poor record of winning a conviction) at GITMO, openly promised convictions while simultaneously claiming 'fair trials will take place', set a record for number of days on the golf course, openly called for the assisination of US citizens, expanded the war on drugs including raiding a record number of medical marijuana dispensaries that comply with local laws on an annual basis, accepted more in corporate donations than any president in history, circumvented campaign finance laws in order to raise record levels of campaign funds, gave billions of dollars to bail out some of the largest campaign contributors - mega corporations, grown national debt and deficit to record levels, alienated our closest allies, stands in opposition to the majority of Americans who support gay marriage, operated the least-transparent presidency in recent history, openly violated the sovergnty of foriegn nations,... and that is just off the top of my head.

And his name is not George W. Bush.

But you're tooootally right - the differences are clear.