Posted by
satyr on Saturday, September 02, 2006 12:35:57 PM
Even beginners in the game of chess learn early on that a first
elementary strategy is to control the center. In elective process that
center would coincide with the positions the majority of the electorate
holds on what it perceives to be the most important issues. At least
one would think so. Somehow that just doesn't happen to be the case in
this country.
Though it is true that if a political party is to represent or stand
for something with any consistency, it cannot or should not mirror the
fluctuating and sometimes volatile center as reflected in public
opinion polls at any given moment, even if they were 99% accurate. The
public tends to be moody and one of the main virtues associated with
effective political, as well as other leadership since ancient times,
is the ability to be persuasive. This means being able to affect or
alter the perception and maybe even the priorities of the masses. One
of the problems with the American system is that its main political
parties have a tendency to be in a constant process of creating
Presidential champions, and if they lose, grinding them up and then
spitting them out. Even the winners are usually relegated to
irrelevancy soon after they have served. This may be to the credit of
the republican principle but it is also to the detriment of any kind of
continuity in declaring an established national purpose.
Participation in either the Legislative and Judicial branches of
government offers a potential lifetime usually far exceeding that of
any President or Presidential standard-bearer. Almost invariably, the
candidate for the highest office in the land has to cajole, negotiate
and compromise with the more permanent elements that constitute his
party. Bluntly, he often has to convince them not so much that he can
win, but rather that he will remain more or less harmless to their
interests, win or lose. Unfortunately, those interests only too often
do not represent the center. Viable and variable though it may be, the
center is something our political parties have become accustomed to
"lean toward" if, as, and when it is convenient, and often only for the
duration of the Presidential campaigns. The rest of the time they are
busy selling the public on their differences, sometimes in priority
areas that are relatively marginal.
The resulting phenomenon is that the main parties often end up being
defined by their extremes, which in turn are of secondary importance to
the national interest. They constanty fuel the fires of polarization
and perpetuate litmus tests to accentuate the distinction, to make
people feel they have a real choice. But do they? The people that is.
Maybe not in what really matters to them.
For decades the Republican party has been equated with the party of big
business, small government, and the rich and famous. The Democrats on
the other hand have hung on to their assumed role as champions of the
unions, of big, generous (sometimes intrusive) government, and of the
poor working and non-working classes in general. In the 30's FDR
managed to ride the support of an ethnic coalition (Jews, Italians,
other non-Wasps, Blacks) that his party hoped would last forever. It
thereby also became the champion party of the minorities.
Unfortunately, it has been writing checks on that account without
making sufficient deposits for too many years and may soon have this
account closed.
Back to the Republicans. Their financial elitist position is rather
faded and worn. There are probably more rich and richer Democrats in
Congress then there are Republicans. The rich and famous tend to be
fashionable liberals and more often than not, far-left Democrats. The
most effective Republican presidential leadership in recent times has
come from populists (Nixon and Reagan), who if they did not outright
distrust and despise the privileged Republican Old Guard, at the very
least managed to do without them. Most Republican voters will not make
the $39 an hour wage my step-son started on as a unionized iron worker
at the age of 22, in their lifetime. They will also be less likely to
land middle class jobs based solely on patronage and identification
with minority status. The account they still attempt to write checks on
as been more or less closed for some time now.
The political parties have both fallen into the tragic trap of defining
themselves by litmus tests, and insisting further that the electorate
accept these tests in making their own choices as well. They seem to
ignore the fact that this division and polarization may result in
mandate only when this mandate is either one resulting in the
oppression of one group by another, or a mandate of rejection leading
to possibly unforeseen results. The Abortion, Guns, Prayers in School,
Gay Marriages, Black, and other so called "litmus tests" cannot be the
primary basis determining one's vote for the Executive leader of the
most powerful country in the world, even though his relevancy may be
relatively short.
1. Abortion. Is there agreement as to what constitutes life, viable
life, constitutionally protected life? Is this not at present a matter
left to the discretion of the individual states? Is this not also
primarily a religious issue? Why should the Federal Government have a
policy on this when many of the citizens having the strongest feelings
on the subject are often also the strongest advocates of separation of
Church and State and States' Rights?
2. Guns. Accidental death caused by guns is a reality. So are
accidental deaths caused by falling off ladders. This is a primarily a
matter of being careful. What percentage of crimes are committed by
perps wielding registered guns? Then of course why would a regular
citizen need to own a machine gun? Unless it is a war trophy and has
been rendered inoperative, and for sentimental reasons only. The most
effective weapon in home (your home that is) security is still a
shotgun. Ask people who rob houses for a living. Just allow sawed-off
shotguns for home protection. Chances are firing a machine gun in your
home will probably just tear up the furniture, the plumbing and the
electrical. Gangs using these automatic weapons on each other seem to
be primarily hitting bystanders.
3. Prayers, silence, what's the difference? Allow for one minute of
"reflection." One can reflect on God, the girl or boy sitting next to
you, or what one is going to have for lunch. This is why this is
supposed to be a free country. Stop disrupting our classes and
jockeying around our teachers on this issue. It has nothing to do with
education.
4. Gay Marriages. OK all you wise, credentialed, sociologists,
activists, ministers, and politicians in general, I've got some real
crushing news for all of you! Marriage in not merely a "concept," it is
also a "THING!" In possibly every country in the world, or at least in
every country in the world that has a dictionary, "marriage" is defined
as the intimate union of members of opposite sexes. Even in a culture
that may encourage polygamy or harems, the husband may be married to
many wives, BUT THE WIVES ARE NOT MARRIED TO EACH OTHER! Let me explain
it another way for some of you that just can't grasp this:
If a sandwich is described as something other than bread contained
between slices of bread, one slice of salami between six slices of
bread, or six slices of salami between two slices of bread are
sandwiches. Three slices of bread are not. If you really want to get
technical, one slice of salami on one slice of bread would be an "open
sandwich." Or, ethnically speaking, two tortillas do not make a taco.
You want to grant same sex couples the same rights as mixed sex
couples? It's called a "domestic contract" and doesn't need either a
mainstream maverick minister nor a correspondence fringe-person to make
it work. It is usually up to the individual states to make sure these
contracts get the same civil, financial and other considerations as
marriage certificates. There is also nothing to stop friends from
throwing rice at a same sex couple outside city hall or their lawyer's
office. This is not a Federal issue. Get on to something else.
5. Blacks? They seem to be a political football continuously kicked in
the same direction. I think enough genuinely concerned Blacks are
finally starting to speak out. That is good and I have nothing to add.
Let's get to this center.
1. War, death and sacrifice, where and with what results? What plan?
2. Security, safety. Crime. Now add terrorism.
3. Energy. The economy. Why isn't goverment actually involved? Why is
it starting to look like the UN observers that have been in Lebanon?
Have we no "terms of engagement" to supplant International Oil
interests? If global warming is a reality, then this is tied into
Energy issue more than anything else. Kill one bird with one stone.
Quit talking about it and propose to actually do something.
4. Illegal immigration. It isn't so much the principle, it's the sheer
volume. If we are not Mexicans, do we want our children to be confined
to "gringo ghettos" in a future Los Angeles? Where else? Can we
eventually be denied everyday jobs because we don't speak Spanish?
The first item relies very much on intelligence and the ability to
acquire accurate same. It may not be within the reach of any political
party or individual to convincingly reassure us on that point.
Unfortunately it has become more of a "we capitalist whites are
decimating non-capitalist non-whites" thing. Someone please ask the
Iraqi and Iranians to take a poll as to whether they are white or not.
Maybe we can cut down a bit on the noise while we try to figure things
out. The Palestinians and the Arabs are not Anti-Semitic by the way.
They are Semites and merely anti-Israel. The Nazis were anti-Jewish and
actually kissed up to the Arabs. It was a Mogen David on those
holocaust uniforms.
The last three items, constitute the mandatory center to be addressed
in order for our next President to have a real mandate. If we allow the
candidates to be nominated on any other bases, whoever we may elect may
not really make much difference. It will be business as usual, with
recriminations to follow.