OK, so against my better wishes I find myself writing a diary. It’s all Strummerson’s fault for getting me going, but I suppose I had a few pages stuck in me somewhere.
The topic is this: “Sell me on being concerned about the Democrats keeping control of Congress.”
I’m exactly the kind of person who was extremely motivated and involved in the Obama election who is today mostly sitting on the sidelines while – in theory – the Dems might get a trouncing in the mid-terms. I will vote in November and it looks like I will vote Democrat mostly, but I’m doing nothing other than my usual talking (here and elsewhere) about it.
Most of you know that I am pretty Centrist on average and hold views on different topics which are in many ways deep parts of both the political right and left. At first glance I put down most of my ennui to an “in power” as opposed to “out of power” situation combined with general up tick in busyness. The more I think about it, however, the more I realize that the answer is more:
“I already got everything I was after.”
So, assuming I am doing more than rambling my fingertips in late-night stupor, I ask my fellow Moose and any passerby who feels like chiming in to convince me that there is some urgency I should feel about November.
Consider this a “Short Attention Span Theater” Open Thread.
The Obama movement was it’s own thing. A this-isn’t-working thing for almost everyone left of Bill O’Reilly (literally). A hope-for-inspiring-leadership thing for everyone including some to the right of Bill.
Now we got what we wanted, myself included. Cranky righthanded friends often ask me if I’m still happy with Obama and I honestly say, “Yes. Completely.” I don’t have any far-left or even deep-left beliefs, and I have no illusion about any president being some perfect creature. He’s doing about as well as I can expect of a President: his hit-miss rate isn’t too bad; he’s at least very thoughtful and also often correct (the two don’t have as high a correlation rate as many expect); the world and the country are on average performing near the upper portion of the expectation scale I had in late 2008 and early 2009.
I’m not trying to achieve some big goal at the moment. Let me list my take on the issues at hand and see what other major leftward move I feel strongly about:
o Healthcare: needs to change and my feelings on that are definitively lefthanded.
– We’ve spent all of the resources (temporal and financial) on this one that is prudent at this point. The only thing to do is wait while the new paradigm plays itself out and assess whether it is working and how/why/…
o Equal rights: Sexual and Religious freedoms need some progress, and my views on that are heavily leftish.
– “Marriage” equality is moving down the pipe about at the best pace reasonably expected. Prop 8 seems to be setup to go for the team by the time it gets done with the Supreme court. A healthy discourse on whether “marriage” is a word the gov’t should get involved in is past the first stages of evolution.
– Discrimination in the military based on sexuality is never going to be stronger and will only get weaker. DODT is definitively now not a permanent stain, and time and tides will wash the shores of it.
– The very same extreme tenor of the rhetoric from the Religious Right that so grates on nerves is in my opinion working wonders to make the reasonable majority in the middle ponder the whole issue. The dialog really has not yet reached the point where the majority feels completely comfortable saying in front of their family and the whole world “this is not a Christian country”, but I can feel that public discourse burbling at the edges and think that we are advancing the topic. Abrahamic extremists of all three branches acting out in front of all of us (well, at least a few billion) in our information-soup world are achieving my goal by working on their own (which will fail miserably, and you can hold me to that). During WWII there was literally nothing said about Churchill or any other Western leader talking about “Christendom”, and a scant few decades later the very idea is reserved to only the weirdest guests on 700 Club shows. Nice. Obama being Obama is all one could hope for a president to do to contribute to the effort at this stage.
o Education: Honestly, don’t care. My view of public ed is very much dead-center politically: I believe we absolutely must have it and should consider expanding it in some way into higher ed; I do not believe that more money is necessarily the way to go about addressing current issues. I am interested in seeing what Obama and the pols can accomplish on this during this period but my expectation for changing this (freaking enormous) structure over periods measured in less than half-decades is extremely low.
– I don’t think paying teachers more is going to save the world on this issue. Good teachers do imho deserve better pay in some places and situations but at the same time I also think there as sweetheart deals for people working in public ed (and public service, period) all over the place that no-one in the private sector get – whether in job security, compensation or retirement.
Only a few months before I met you folks out here (Jan, 2008, Obama Rapid Response, MyDD…) I had moved from Ontario, Canada where many of my in-laws and friends are teachers. They are paid very well, have absolutely no risk of ever being unemployed again, have a pension plan worth $100B that owns most of the most expensive real estate in Canada (the fact that they own the Toronto Maple Leafs barely registers). For all that and the endless whining I heard from many of those folks, I have had to face the reality that these same schools had educated all three of my children about a year behind their new peers in US public schools. We have since made up the difference, but while that hangs in my mind I have a hard time pushing for any expensive “progressive” solution to demonstrably improve this extremely complicated issue and, again, will be interested to see how Obama’s impact works out over the next decade or two.
o International: Couldn’t be much more pleased if I were twins.
– Iraq draw-down going as planned and stated. Odds of it working out as well as possible are as high as could be responsibly prayed for. If it all works out as it seems it might, the very best possible outcome may in the very long term to some extent justify going in there in the first place. As a Chinese leader once said when asked his opinion on how the French Revolution worked out: “It’s too early to tell”.
– Afghanistan is all-in-all working towards a resolution. I have no doubt that under this administration we will do what we have stated, and like Iraq we will be marking the beginning of the Big Goodbye in not too long. The fact of that and the general way things are being handled gives me as much reason to believe the country will pursue as positive a path as reasonable to expect, and has potential to thrive during my lifetime even more than it did in my childhood.
– International affairs I am in general pleased as punch with the handling. I like Powell and Albright personally more than Clinton in that role, but I have no real measure of who is actually more effective (which is a good sign that Clinton is doing the job well). Obama’s view towards international relations and mine jibe to as much of a T as I could wish for: fully grasp the nature and scale of this country; understand at depth the situation of all nations (much more than mine, and I would argue likely more than most anyone’s); understand the complex implications of America’s gravity-well. Always be willing to talk to anyone about anything with complete confidence in your ability to do so and in your ability to deal with them if they insist on resorting to violence (preferably with such massively disproportionate capacity for violence that you only have to worry about that with the real lunatics).
….
I dunno, name an issue that really requires a Democratic majority in Congress to push right now? I have no reasonable doubt Obama will be re-elected, so any madness a GOP majority Congress could foist on us will end up in the dead-letter pile at 1600 Pennsylvania. I think there is zero (none, zip) chance of a Palin being elected and that the very worst case would be a very moderate and modern Republican winning in 2012 (and immediately being dumped by the Tea Party afterwards, much like the far left deserted Obama).
My main concern in the nation and the world today is that the Chinese economy continue to grow along the current curve for the next few decades. That the US, EMEA, APAC and LATAM economies all grow on average beyond the rate of inflation for decades. That economic activity translates into jobs and wages and food and clothes and medicine and education and and and…
More than almost anything I am concerned that Western and Eastern technology developers have the opportunity and resources to create the science that will be absolutely critical to solving current global problems and continuing the curve of improvement in the human condition that we have all been living on for all of our lives. If we are to save ourselves much less the Spotted Owl we need to know way way more about everything than we do now, and for that reason alone we need to get peace and stability as many places as possible. We absolutely must have more folks in more places able to focus on writing the User’s Manual that wasn’t included with this damn planet, or the Spotted Owls will have it all to themselves one day.
Now, tell me again why I need to peel off hundreds (or even dozens) of hours making sure the Dems hold on to the House?
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