Friday, September 17, 2004

Vote

--"If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator" -- President George W. Bush

In this article, David Greenberg discusses the tactics of the Republican Party since the 1992 defeat of George H.W. Bush. It resonates with what I am experiencing here in some private replies to these blogs, and in personal life where if I dare to wear the Kerry button to a local event, I am met with half-joking warnings and some that are not so joking. Even at work, people come up to me and say, "You sure are brave to wear that button here." In a neighboring county, a lady wearing a Kerry campaign button was greeted by her boss with, "You can work for him or me but not both" and that was the end of her job. Kerry heard about that, called her, and hired her.

At the very worst of the Wallace years in Alabama, I never heard of someone being fired for campaigning for a candidate unless they were actually not doing their job. This is outrageous.

I live in America, protected by a citizen government and a Constitution with a Bill of Rights. It seems these are a very thin veneer that can be undone by one administration using the tactics of the prep school bully. Fear and intimidation undo us too easily.

Having lived through the period of infamous Southern demogogues, I do recognize the steel behind G.W. Bush's sneer. It is the sneer of the little man become bully who can work his will with veiled threats to his opponents all the while acting as if he were a common man. He isn't. He isn't even Texan. The drawl, the denim jeans, and the boy howdy come lately personality are an act of a New England aristocrat, Ivy League educated, and wealthy. It's an act polished over many years but not many political successes. The act has kind even conciliatory words in it, but if you listen to the warm up acts, they are filled with vitriol, lies, and hate speech.

Note well: Bush rallies are closed events. Kerry rallies are open to the public. Kerry takes the heckling that Bush avoids facing, although his wife got a dose of it from a woman protesting the death of her son in Iraq. The woman was dragged from the meeting and charged with willful trespass. So, to tell the wife of the President of the United States the truth, one has to become a criminal?

This isn't like any election I've ever seen in America. The Republican behavior and tactics in every way betray a lack of faith in the people who give them their power and in the system they claim hegemony over. This is outrageous.

As Greenberg says, if we elect Bush this time, we have approved the politics of bullying. On the playground of American politics, no one is going to stop him in a second term from more eratic decision making and continuing his pursuit of policies that undo the gains of the middle class and the poor in the last century. The Republicans are well on their way to making this the century of American fascism at home and abroad. We get exactly one chance to stop them before this becomes a violent confrontation on the streets.

Last weekend, the "Dollar Man" as my Dad called him, drove through the neighborhood selling ice cream from his truck. As he handed me the goods (reward your kids for cleaning the house), he looked at the Kerry/Edwards sign in my front yard, and said excitedly and loudly in a Jamaican accent, "What about THIS?!? They are lieing about this man on TV. Is this the way you elect your president??? What can we do??? They ARE LIEING!!!" The Dollar Man typically says nothing but "Which one?" and "Here is your change." To hear him suddenly and without question launch into a tirade on the election was astounding. Immigrants "Get" American values long after the native born cave in to the politics of the bully.

I told him, "This isn't a normal election as I have experienced them and you are right. Turn off the television and get the facts, then whatever you believe, know, or support, come November, Vote. That's all we have to stop bullies."

Vote.

4 comments:

Len Bullard said...

Yep. An election gone deeply bitter. My son's getting hassled at school for my wearing a button to a ballgame. This is outrageous.

This isn't about morals though. This is more fundamental than that. It is about the question of Bush's presidency divided so completely down the middle that the election is once again into statistical noise. So whatever for whoever, vote. If we do that in large numbers, it will come out fine.

Well, at least I'm looking forward to the debates.

len

Tony Fisk said...

Your post is the first I've heard of the level of acronimity in the US election and I can appreciate your concerns. I wondered, a while ago, what would happen to the Union without the USSR to push together against.

It's interesting to compare and contrast US and Oz at the moment, since both have elections due about a month apart.
One big difference is that, here, voting is compulsory. This *might* be why your campaigning is a bit more 'enthusiastic' as the various sides try to drum up support. Body bags are also bound to raise emotions.
In contrast, most people here are pretty disinterested. It may be that people are apathetic. It may be that they don't believe election promises anyway and make their minds up on the basis of previous performance.
I can't comment in depth on your candidates, of course, but Howard and Bush seem to have similar 50's style mindsets (although I think Howard has a bit more native intelligence).
Latham (current opposition leader here), while no fool, is a bit green and has a loutish reputation that doesn't count in his favour. Howard has a strong economic record and a strong (if morally appalling) policy on illegal immigrants.
I found your comment on the closure of Bush rallies interesting. The parties here don't have rallies as such, but we had one televised debate, at 10:30pm on a Sunday. Guess who has more control over timing and scheduling of these things? Guess which party wasn't so keen on the idea?
Sounds like a shoo-in for the libs? Don't be so sure. The Australian electorate has a pretty good record of reading between the lines. We'll see.

Len Bullard said...

What we have is a 50-50 split just as we did in the last election. Bush & Company lost the majority vote in the last election and won by virtue of the Supreme Court. This time they need to win honest but have no record to run on so they ratcheted up the Mean Machine early on. That meant the Democrats had to respond in kind. The outcome is that the real issues, the first presidency to create more jobs overseas than in America itself, to turn a surplus into a deficit, to make a first strike nation out of a superpower thus pushing our allies away, to make a mockery out of the separation of church and state, in short to abdicate the heart of American values, are lost in the noise of fear of events in Iraq. Meanwhile, the terrorists seeing this know they are winning and continue to take hostages, extort money, and execute foreign nationals.

The current administration is a disaster in every place except the polls. That speaks volumes about the fear in the minds of the strongest nation on this planet, and that is not a good thing. Paranoids act paranoid. That is pretty much the Bush presidency from start to today.

We need a change.

Len Bullard said...

Really, Joshua?

http://writ.news.findlaw.com/hamilton/20040923.html

Maybe you can provide a list of why you support Bush?

len

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