Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Ode to Barry ‘Bama

You came to us from the Windy City
Where you organized the community
They sent you off to Washington
Where you did nothing with impugnity

You’ve been eyeing the job of president
Since you wrote those two bio books
Your experience may be nano-thin
But you beat Hillary with just your looks

My name is Barry ‘Bama
I’m the man of hope and change
I’m gonna, um, ah – My colon’s perking!
My word thingey – the tele-thingey
It ain’t fucking working!

He’s going to reform the world
With tough talk and dark magic
He’s got a diplomacy wand he’ll wave
And for our enemies it’ll be tragic

The seas will part and the moon will bow
As he strides proudly through the masses
With common folk he’ll go a-fishing
And try to catch some, ah, um, basses

My name is Barry ‘Bama
I’m the man of hope and change
I’m gonna, um, ah – My colon’s perking!
My word thingey – the tele-thingey
It ain’t fucking working!

If you disagree with his evolving positions
It will be because he’s black
Republicans are all racist bastards
Go vote for pasty-white J-Mac

My name is Barry ‘Bama
I’m the man of hope and change
I’m gonna, um, ah – My colon’s perking!
My word thingey – the tele-thingey
It ain’t fucking working!

Friday, September 5, 2008

Clarifying History

The Republicans state that they are the party of the “hand up” and speak pejoratively of the Democrats as the party of the “hand out.” It doesn’t matter if you agree or disagree with their view of the role of government. What happens is if they have been true to their stated purpose.

If their characterization of themselves is to be honest, then the record should be replete with efforts to level the playing the field, for surely our country’s earliest days repressed minorities and women. Once the playing field is level, then the “hand up” label can be effective.

Let’s highlight a few milestones along the way of establishing “equality” in American society.

Slavery. In 1865, President Lincoln (a republican) “freed” the slaves by presidential proclamation. Freedom grounded in the Constitution came when the 13th Amendment was passed in 1867. President Johnson (a democrat) assured southern governors (all democrats) that it wouldn’t be enforced, so their Black Codes could stand.

Equal Pay. Although many people look to the Equal Pay Act of 1963 as the milestone legislation in this area, that legislation merely extended to all sectors of the economy the rule that was already in place inside the federal government. In 1872, Congress passed a law to give women federal employees equal pay for equal work.

The make-up of Congress at the time?

The 42d Congress (1871-1873) had 74 Senate seats comprised of 56 Republicans, 17 Democrats, and 1 Liberal Republican. The House had 292 seats comprised of 199 Republicans, 88 Democrats, and 5 independents.

Suffrage. In 1920, women received the right to vote through passage of the 19th Amendment. The path to ratification included its first introduction in the federal (65th) Congress in 1918, when it passed the House (Republican majority) but was tabled in the Senate (Democrat majority) for eight months. When the Senate finally acted (still a Democrat majority), it failed to pass. It eventually was passed the following June (the Republicans now held the Senate majority), and was sent to the states.

The state action included resounding defeats in southern states (Democrat strongholds), and came to the Tennessee House. The United States Constitution would be amended if this body passed the measure. Although the House Speaker Seth Walker (Democrat) had pulled every parliamentary trick trying to defeat the measure (after originally saying he was for it), it came to an amazing 48-48 tie with one House member yet to cast. Representative Harry Burn (Republican) had previously voted to table the measure, but since Walker (certain of a victory) had forced a vote, Republican Representative Burn cast his for passage. The 19th Amendment was ratified.

Segregation. In 1954, the Supreme Court of the United States dumped the “separate but equal” doctrine through Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka. The ruling in favor of Brown was a 9-0 vote, led by Chief Justice Earl Warren (Republican). Brown, of course, overturned Plessey v. Ferguson which held that “separate but equal” segregation was constitutional. Plessey was a 7-1 vote within the Melville Fuller (Democrat) court.

The Pill. The birth control pill was approved by the FDA on June 23, 1960, during the Eisenhower (Republican) Administration.

Civil Rights Legislation. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 won approval after a long battle.

In the House, the bill went from the Judiciary Committee to the Rules Committee. Chairman Howard W. Smith (Democrat) said that he would keep the bill indefinitely. It took a few months, a presidential statement, and the potential humiliation of a successful discharge petition for Smith to release the bill to the floor.

More procedural maneuvers ensued in the Senate, including a 54-day filibuster led by the “Southern Bloc” senators (Democrats). Senator Russell (D-GA) stated, "We will resist to the bitter end any measure or any movement which would have a tendency to bring about social equality and intermingling and amalgamation of the races in our (Southern) states.” The filibuster included a speech by Senator Byrd (D-WV) that lasted over 14 hours. Sen. Byrd opposed the bill.

In the audience for the Senate debacle was Martin Luther King, Jr., (Republican).

The voting by party:

The original House version: Democratic Party: 152-96 (61%-39%); Republican Party: 138-34 (80%-20%)

The Senate version: Democratic Party: 46-21 (69%-31%); Republican Party: 27-6 (82%-18%)

The Senate version, voted on by the House: Democratic Party: 153-91 (63%-37%); Republican Party: 136-35 (80%-20%)

Republicans were instrumental in freeing the slaves, establishing equal pay, getting women the right to vote, ending segregation, and establishing civil rights for all. Hell, they were even in charge when The Pill was approved.

So how are Republicans viewed by women and minorities? I don’t need to explore voting patterns – they are common knowledge.

Let’s visit one organization.

The National Organization for Women (note “for” not “of”) states on the website, “Our purpose is to take action to bring women into full participation in society — sharing equal rights, responsibilities and opportunities with men, while living free from discrimination.”

What more participation would NOW want beyond a woman nominated to be the Vice President of the United States? NOW’s position: “Gov. Palin may be the second woman vice-presidential candidate on a major party ticket, but she is not the right woman.”

Oh. They must mean Republican. Gov. Palin is not the right kind of woman because she’s a Republican.

In my best Obama voice: "But, ah, um, that, um, makes no, oh, oh, oh - sense. Makes no sense. I've been saying that for months."

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

JYDs & Wastebaskets

I’m enjoying the press (traditional and blog) coverage of Palin. It reminds me of one of only two pieces of direct advice that my father gave to me about business.

My dad was very reserved with his words of advice within the nuclear family. I always suspected – and I could be wrong – that he was more open with other blood and friends. He was a very intelligent man, but very sparse in his words of advice. He lived by example (not always good), but that was his way. His “style” of parenting, if that is the proper word, has become clearer to me as I see it reflected in my own parenting: Change the kid’s course only if he or she is headed for a cliff with a deep ravine; otherwise, just stay out of the way and let them learn life with all the cuts and bruises.

So, that precious bit of advice? I came home from college for Thanksgiving my freshman year. He said, “There’s a meeting and the boss is asking for everyone’s opinion. Do you speak first and command the table, setting the tone for all that follow, or do you wait until later? When would you want to speak?”

What I said was wrong, so I won’t share it. That’s my privilege as the writer here. He relayed, “You speak last. Others have viewpoints different than yours. Listen. You can learn to see through others’ eyes, gather in their perspective – how their mind works. Then you speak. You’d probably say something different – and better – than if you spoke first.”

So I am reading the liberal buzz about Palin: Her thin experience, her most-recent baby with Down’s Syndrome, her teenage daughter’s pregnancy. The libs are going at it like a bunch of junkyard dogs, shouting at every snapped twig or change of wind direction. It isn’t just the vermin at Daily Kos or HuffPo. The NYTs is frothing, too. Just a remarkable wall of cacophony, like Phil Spector building The Long and Winding Road from a pleasant acoustic piece to the Hollywood symphony garbage released as the “A” side to For You Blue (always loved the reference to Elmore James).

As the news cycles mature, the initial wall of sound comes into focus. They had to hit hard and fast against Palin because she was such an excellent choice: She’s normal, with normal problems, with normal interests, and with a normal marriage. Perhaps the only abnormal thing about her is something only viewed as such by libs: She is open about her principles and lives by them. Case in point? Her teenage daughter gets pregnant. Her response? They’re getting married (I wonder but would not be troubled if a shotgun to the boy’s head helped that decision along), and she said that children are a gift from God (as opposed to the “burden” Obama said a child would be to his own daughters if they got pregnant at a young age).

The thin-experience blowgun dart was most humorous. The JY Dogs said, “Well, this neutralizes any claim of a lack of experience in Obama. McCain just lost that card.” Really? I think it underscores it. I think it makes it very clear just what a shill The Dalibama is. A governor does something a senator does not: Govern. The governor of Alaska does something a senator does not: Govern a state with two international borders. I would prefer the international-relations experience of a governor of Alaska any day compared to the field trip The Dalibama took to Europe. C’mon, isn’t it just laughable that the libs say his trip “beefed up his international creditials”? Hunh? It was a series of photo ops and elbow rubs. The depth of his paper-thin thinking became clear when Vladimir the Terrible marched into Georgia like Germany into France: “OK, everyone. Calm down. Let’s talk about this. We need to sit back and relax. Breathe deeply. Exhale. That’s good.” (Paraphrasing, of course.) What he should have said, in so many New York words (as opposed to the Chicago gentile-to-your-face-but-shive-you-when-you-turn-your-back-in-trust way) was this: “Hey, Vlad, smarten the fuck up! Turn your skinny ass around, get the fuck out, and go back to your little red house. I ain’t asking you, son.”

But, no, The Dalibama’s knee-jerk was to seek the United Nations to speak out. Hey, son, the only body in the UN worth anything is not the General Assembly – it’s the Security Council. Russia holds a veto there. Vetoes in the SC cannot be overridden. Russia vetoes, issue closed. You gonna embarrass them into submission? Whew. What a loser. Remember Star Trek – The Next Generation when Data had a card game with Einstein and a few other acknowledged geniuses from history? The Dalibama could have tea and biscuits with Neville Chamberlain, the Scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz, Dr. Zachary Smith from Lost in Space, and Barney Fife.

What about the crack the JYDs had saying that the Down’s kid was really her daughter’s baby? I actually read that someone claimed that her water broke in Texas as a part of an elaborate cover-up, borne out by her flying home instead of “rushing to the hospital.” I laughed my ass off at that one. The problem with socialized medicine and libs is that we would have to pay for all their “Ow! This sliver hurts really bad!” as they soak up the ER resources like John Kerry at the medic with rice poking out of his ass. So when the alleged birth mother turned out to be pregnant now (pretty much obviating any possibility of birthing a few months ago) and pics showed up with Palin pregnant, the libs dropped the faux-pregnancy allegation and went after the premarital sex angle.

That’s pretty funny coming from the God-less, I-am-woman-hear-me-roar crowd. Now they got morals? Oh yeah, The Dalibama supports abortion; Palin says babies are a gift from God. Sorry. Forgot.

Look, I’ve known liberals. I’ve been friends with liberals. They whine. They intellectualize shit like the placement of furniture and call it Feng Shui. They argue about what cheese goes with what wine. They say that pubs that win the White House term after term are stupid. It isn’t just W. Remember how they railed against Reagan? The same words as they use now with W. And after the decades pass, all of a sudden Reagan was great.

Libs are JYDs. It is that simple. I really wish it wasn’t. I wish there was something other than Spector’s Wall of Sound. I enjoy a principled argument. Just can’t find one.

The other piece of advice my dad gave to me concerning business? “Who’s the most important in a company?” he asked. Deep in the midst of my Management by Objectives course, I rattled off shareholders, Board members, President, and Vice Presidents with all their job descriptions and how their actions affected the course of the company. “No. None of them,” he said. “It is the person that empties your wastebasket each night. Without them, the company clogs up and closes down. Don’t ever forget it. They have earned your respect more than a dozen executives.”

I never forgot it.

Monday, August 25, 2008

quick note ...

I am a third done with my book – 300 pages through both revision and final edit. I have two more sections to write – the descent into heroin, and the prison years. Funny thing, I’ve learned that I need to completely clear my life of major sections before I can start the next one. Almost clean, almost ready.

Working on a few other projects to earn income in the meantime. It’s not easy, but seems to squeak by. Very limited focus: keep the electricity on, food in the fridge, and most bills paid. Yeah, most but not all. Oh well – that’s life.

What prompted me to write was all the political buzz with the DNC convention starting. Can you believe that they nominated and appear ready to coronate a child? Obama has no experience. A career defined by seeking the next office. It’s embarrassing.

His connections to Ayers and the Weather Underground may be his biggest issue. Frankly, I think Obama lied, and he will pay dearly for it. He said something to the effect that Ayers was “just a guy in my neighborhood.” Hunh? They worked closely together on $100MM+ charity. Ayers and his wife babysat Obama’s kids. The connections run deep. And the radical hippies that would like those connections just are not a large enough voting block, nor are they new voters to the dem party.

I laugh as I read that Joe Biden will help carry Pennsylvania because he is from Scranton. I’m from Scranton. Never knew the guy. He has no rep in Scranton. Further, Scranton is considered by the true voting centers – Philadelphia and Pittsburgh – to be an armpit and part of New Jersey, respectively. Biden brings nothing to the ticket except a dangerous mouth.

I think the pubs win this election because McCain got the nod. He is not looked upon as a true republican. Reagan had credibility with the dems because he used to be one and had his time in the unions. McCain gets his credibility because he’s a hybrid from both parties. He needs to be careful with his VP pick. Can’t be Romney – too pub. Gotta be a hybrid of sorts. Powell, I read, came out and said he was supporting Obama. Guess those reports could have been wrong, but it would give light to the rumor that he’s on McCain’s short list.

Watching the DNC Convention this week will be interesting for two reasons. First, Herself is probably going to have her name in nomination for the VP slot. Takes 300 delegate signatures to put a name in. Word is they have 500 with no signs of slowing done. That will be a civil war. Could you imagine Biden having to step aside? The ticket will have no credibility. Bubba will get so much press that he’ll overshadow Obama completely. Talk about losing control.

The second issue is how they are dissing Bubba. Teah, he’s got a Wednesday evening talking gig. That’s good. But they told him his topic – national security. He wanted economic policy. I don’t give a damn if he wanted to talk about the best way to sift through the thousand of applications for WH interns – the dude was your president for eight years! No one give Carter any statesman-like respect, nor does he deserve it. He’s as close to a traitor as any previous president has ever ventured – hell, even non-presidents. The boy is trouble (and Teddy is the one with the diagnosed brain tumor – go figure). Before Bubba and Carter, the only dem presidents are all, well, long dead.

So Bubba IS your statesman. Yeah, ok, I know that sucks. But he is! And he can fire up troops. He can get people to drink the Kool-Aid. You have two choices – give him everything or nothing. Trust him to ultimately do what is right or take him behind the woodshed. But do not, Obama, do any half measures like give him a topic like he’s a senior in college. Are you truly that naïve? It is just painful to watch you.

You see those reports about George Obama, resident of Kenya, half brother of Brack, who lives in US$12 a year in a shack? I paid little attention when I first saw the reports. It’s not much different than finding any other obscure and embarrassing fact. Never mind that Obama made US$4MM last year. But today I learned something interesting. Changed my mind. Obama has met his half brother twice. Never helped the dude. A shack. US$1 a month budget. Nothing. What a self-absorbed prick.

I may start blogging more regularly. Not sure. Politics always gets me going.