Things Are Worse Than I Imagined

Aug 11, 2010 13:09

sophiaserpentia has written an eye-opening (to me, anyway) description of why the political situation in this country is much worse than I imagined it wasIn spite of my surprise at the seriousness of the problem, it is no surprise to me that the Democratic Party is wasting a hard-won opportunity to turn this country around. If they keep it up, we are looking at ( Read more... )

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sandokai August 11 2010, 17:23:51 UTC
I read the blog post you linked to... well, pretty much what s/he's saying is the Democrats haven't really done much the past few years, and don't we kind of already know that?

It would be rather lame if people voted out Democrats who are doing a little good and some damage via inaction... and replaced them again with Republicans who run around doing a bunch of damage.

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wlotus August 11 2010, 17:41:28 UTC
We do, but I hadn't realized the current administration was doing so many of the same things we've complained about in the past. I stepped back from politics after the 2008 Democratic primaries (hence the Atlas Shrugged icon) and didn't realize it was that bad.

It would be a shame, but it's likely the scenario you describe is what will happen.

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sandokai August 11 2010, 17:52:19 UTC

I think Atlas Shrugged is closer to Glenn Beck than stepping back from the administration. In fact, I heard he quotes the book. LOL Well, I'm only on page 400 so maybe I don't know what I'm talking about.

Obama is disappointing, that's for sure. But I do try to remember that's partly because we endow him with such uniquely high hopes way beyond what we expect of anyone else... at least I have.

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wlotus August 11 2010, 18:01:39 UTC
I didn't expect anything from Obama than what he has delivered, which is why I left the party after they handed him the nomination.

I want to re-read Atlas Shrugged. It's been a couple of years, but I am still fascinated by the story!

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sandokai August 11 2010, 18:49:42 UTC

I expected waaaay more. I thought he was a closet radical (or at least progressive). I guess I was way wrong...

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wlotus August 11 2010, 19:17:15 UTC
The reason I didn't expect more was because I had grown up seeing this sort of thing play out in the black Pentecostal church over and over and over again. The minister was skilled at throwing together a bunch of phrases and catchwords that would get the congregation very excited. Before long the people would be shouting, singing, and dancing in the aisles, not to mention giving him their money. There would be no realistic discussions of how anything would or could get done, just vows that God would be there, God would change your situation, you would come out victorious, but all you have to do is wait and put your trust in Him. And the people would get excited by those promises week after week. But when time passed, the wicked still prospered, bills had to be paid, they didn't get that job/raise they needed, they lost their homes, and so on, some folks would start to ask some very tough questions.

That is what Obama did, in the black Pentecostal preacher tradition, and that is what is happening, now.

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sandokai August 11 2010, 19:50:16 UTC
Wow, I never thought of that analogy. Very interesting...

Do you think it's possible though for a politician to make promises and actually get them (mostly) done?

I wonder if the system is somehow set up so that they can't even if they really do want to, or if they really just aren't trying hard/wisely enough.

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wlotus August 11 2010, 20:05:47 UTC
In order for a politician to get anything done, they have to win over their peers, not the people. In Obama's case, that could mean one of two things ( ... )

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mallorys_camera August 12 2010, 11:25:57 UTC
That's a really fascinating analysis.

I was a hard core Hillary Clinton supporter. I loved the Clintons -- warts and all. I finally decided to support Obama after his race speech because it was the first honest appraisal of race I'd ever heard from a politician, and because I think race is the big issue of the 21st century: if humans do succeed in wiping out themselves and the planet, it will be over pseudospeciation. I cried when he was nominated; I allowed myself to get giddy on Election night.

Obama was a disappointment almost from the start. Has there ever been a President who squandered so much good will in so short a time? Well, yes, one -- George W. Bush...

Obama's health care bill is a disaster. After chanting "transparency" like a mantra all throughout his campaign, he turns out to opaque to the point of covertness. And then there's the Afghan War... We're propping up a corrupt puppet regime both in Afghanistan and Pakistan... for what? Is this really making us safe from terrorists? How exactly ( ... )

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wlotus August 12 2010, 20:12:27 UTC
Sarah Palin might not normally be a viable candidate, but you're talking about a presidential election season where a LOT of Democrats are disaffected, a lot of Republicans are likely to show up at the polls just to try to get the White House back, and a fair number of independents would rather vote for a third party than vote for Obama or an anti-choice Republican candidate. That raises her chances of being elected a fair amount, if she wins her party's nomination.

There are some people who are saying Clinton will run in 2012. I don't see that happening. She plays too closely to the party rules (and probably loves her political career far too much, as that would be political suicide) to do something like that. The only way that would happen would be if Obama refused to run or was pressured not to run, and I don't see that happening, either.

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