Booman Tribune

Late Night Thoughts

by BooMan
Fri Dec 4th, 2009 at 11:22:36 PM EST

I've been an incurable political junkie for about ten years now, maybe twelve. For the past five years I've spent six-to-twelve hours a day reading or writing about politics, almost every single day. If you haven't done that, you can't imagine what the experience is like. It's total immersion. I should have more than one Ph.D in political science by now. I have learned a tremendous amount about how politics works in this country. And the media. The number one lesson I've taken away from it all is that you should hate the vast majority of elected officials and members of the media in this country. I know that is depressing to hear, but it's the truth. But I have a second lesson.

Once you learn to give up on almost all your heroes and all the people you think might change things for the better, you'll overcome your cynicism. You'll realize that you were wrong to think so highly of most of these people but that your instincts were right about who you should be pulling for. Total immersion in American politics will ween you of your idealism, but if you've watched what happens to politicians once they've been in Washington DC for a while this should come as no surprise to you. Yet, once you've lost that youthful and innocent burst of enthusiasm and you've digested your disappointment, you'll get to another level where you begin to understand how progress actually occurs within this system (and how it can be thwarted).

And heroes will begin to emerge again. Heroes like Henry Waxman who fought valiantly for decades against Big Tobacco, or John Dingell who has introduced a universal health care bill every year for over half a century. If you look at them too closely you'll see some unsightly warts. Waxman voted to authorize the war in Iraq and Dingell has been an opponent of environmental regulations. But the real heroes in Washington are the ones that keep up the fight, year after year, until they finally begin to deliver. They learn to be patient and take their progress piecemeal. They cut deals that infuriate their biggest supporters. But they keep moving the ball down the field.

If you think about it, this is how all the great reformers have accomplished their goals. It was true of Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., and it's true of the people that have won rights for women and gays. If you live in the moment, you'll find good reason to hate these people. But if you take the long view, things are much less hopeless than they seem.

"The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends towards justice."



Display:
Not your point here, but this is why I tend to make only a few snarky comments in these threads.  I haven't the knowledge to make more intelligent ones.    

But I can always read informed and intelligent posts here.

Oh, there you are, Perry. -Phineas -SLB-

by boran2 (blogistan@yahoo.com) on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 12:24:36 AM EST
"And heroes will begin to emerge again. Heroes like Henry Waxman who fought valiantly for decades against Big Tobacco, or John Dingell who has introduced a universal health care bill every year for over half a century. If you look at them too closely you'll see some unsightly warts. Waxman voted to authorize the war in Iraq and Dingell has been an opponent of environmental regulations. But the real heroes in Washington are the ones that keep up the fight, year after year, until they finally begin to deliver. They learn to be patient and take their progress piecemeal. They cut deals that infuriate their biggest supporters. But they keep moving the ball down the field."

do you think you could apply your feelings to kucinich whom i think really deserves it?

by anna in philly (flymetothemoon@yahoo.com) on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 01:18:47 AM EST
"But the real heroes in Washington are the ones that keep up the fight, year after year, until they finally begin to deliver.  They learn to be patient and take their progress piecemeal.  They cut deals that infuriate their biggest supporters.  But they keep moving the ball down the field."  

I don't think that Kucinich fits this mold.  My frustration with him has always been that he sees the good as the enemy of the perfect.  He seems to have no interest in moving that ball down the field.

by Mum on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 06:10:02 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I've been a political junkie for something like 30 years (blush), and I would echo these sentiments, and offer a corollary. There's a similar arc over time of idealism, cynicism, and cautious hope around ordinary citizens' ability to effect change in this country. It's often (though not always) the force that winds up moving the goalposts in the right direction.

"The People" don't always win, and we may not be a sufficient force to save humanity from the multiple crises facing us. But if we don't try, we rarely win.

by Geov Parrish on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 01:42:22 AM EST
Thanks for these thoughts. I don't have your knowledge of politics but I had the good fortune to be raised by people who managed to rise above the genuine cesspools into which they were born to accomplish some good in this world, and who surrounded themselves with like people. a concept of what is possible, from studying what others have accomplished and how they did it, and what they were up against helps.

Viva Obama
by Errol on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 02:28:57 AM EST
Your post is helpful, or at least encouraging.  In a very small way, I worked to help elect Obama.  I am very disappointed.

Whether it was Rick Warren at the inauguration to the appointment of Geithner to DoJ continuing to argue the Bush line in Federal court houses, to the handling of the bailout, it seems as if the USA is still going backwards on every front.

Meaningful health insurance reform and global warming both appear to be history.

by Chief on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 08:51:42 AM EST
Random rules for observing politics:
  1. Warts have a tendency to appear on issues closest to home; e.g. Connecticut politicians are too close to the insurance industry, Michigan politicians to the auto industry, New York politicians to the finance industry etc. This is not a lovable trait, but it is understandable.
  2. There are two permanent sets of standards in the corporate media, a very high one for liberals, Democrats and do-gooders, and a very low one for right-wingers, Republicans and money-grubbing slugs. Stop being surprised and outraged by it, accept it and stop responding to it so frequently.
  3. Congress is middle school with consequences, complete with cliques, kewl kids, Goths who hate everything, smooth operators, out-of-control sexual urges, huge but easily deflated egos, and adolescents who think they have power.
  4. American political coalitions come and go, but the Union vs. the Confederacy exists and persists as the model on which all coalitions are built or must work around.
  5. Charisma in a politician is much more important than ideology. Reagan and Obama are both good examples of this. I never personally experienced the charisma either one was said to possess, but I observed their effects, and they are real and important.
  6. Media stories, polling, decorum, legislation, and inside baseball are given much too much importance by politicians, especially Democrats. Republican operators know this. Combined with item 2., it is why David Vitter is in the Senate and Elliot Spitzer is in Siberia. The vast preponderance of voters begin to pay attention to politics after Labor Day of election years.
  7. To paraphrase George Carlin: the average person is not smart, and half of them are dumber than that. Politicians are people. Draw your own conclusions.
  8. Evil exists, but you should never ascribe to evil that which can be reasonably explained by ignorance, stupidity and random chance.
by CrapIsKing (CrapIsKing) on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 09:41:04 AM EST
.
The $700 billion man

(Washington Post) - Congress savaged him. Wall Street Journal editorials doubted him. His home-town buddies urged him to use the money to buy the Cleveland Browns and fire the coaches. His wife spoke to him so rarely, she described them as "dead to each other." He lost sleep, gained weight and saw a close adviser, Don Hammond, suffer a heart attack at his Treasury desk. On May 1, after serving seven months under Presidents Bush and Obama, he resigned.

Within a week, Kashkari and his wife put their belongings into "indefinite storage." They moved to a cabin near the Truckee River in Northern California. "Off the map," he told his friends. He threw away his business cards, and made a list of the things he wanted to do ...


BooMan seeks path in opposite direction from Cabin to Washington?  

"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."

by Oui on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 03:23:40 PM EST
Nice pics, Oui.  Booman would enjoy those Newfie photos.

I had a friend that went that route.  He ended up in Sacramento.

by Alice on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 05:00:23 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I was raised to believe that heroes emerged and that the masses along with great leaders could and would succeed.  The problem is that now the masses really don't see beyond themselves and they seek no information beyond that which they are fed.

All of the movements you mentioned included huge numbers of "regular" people standing side by side with the heroes of the day and marching, protesting and in all ways making thier prescence known.

by Billsdaughter on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 03:41:13 PM EST
 Thank god for CSPAN and the Intertubes.
  - ML

Thank god for Brian Lamb and Tim Berners-Lee.  Heroes will emerge when they are needed, not necessarily in Congress.  The creation of  "a progressive community" is a needed heroic act, and I'm grateful for it.

I still think Obama is a hero.  I get impatient with him a lot, but that's my problem.  The man did say "I can't do it alone!"

by Alice on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 05:17:29 PM EST
So...that means health care will pass, and it will be shitty now, but better later? :)

mbr + dv + woyg
by keirdubois (keir@mybandrocks.com) on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 12:06:56 AM EST
Could be.
by BooMan on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 12:11:44 AM EST
[ Parent ]
"The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice."  I don't know, BooMan, if the people of Vietnam, Guatemala, Honduras, Iraq, Afghanistan would agree with you.  They might regard the United States of America as a nation which,  for sake of riches and power, threatens their well being  and safety.  Many native americans might also share these views.

The final chapter on the story of America has not been written.  Perhaps, we shall have a better view if and when the dollar crumbles and the crazies on the right decide to follow or not the man or woman on the horse using our ABC weapons to maintain our hegemony by thermonuclear and biological blackmail. If that sorry scenario plays out, our nation will rank among the worst the world has ever seen, not the best as our current and past mythology would have it.

Be bold, for boldness conquers everything.

by Dongi 2 on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 12:30:13 AM EST
The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice.

Martin Luther King Jr. said that.

It is a sign of real intelligence to see that kind of truth, and as "downtrodden" as was MLK Jr....I mean, how much more downtrodden does it get than a bullet in the head?...if he could speak directly to us now I am sure that he would say the same thing.

The word "justice" in this sense is a synonym for evolution, and it is an undeniable fact that we are evolving. Life is evolving, as it has always evolved in this universe. Not in a straight line, but ever forward.

Believe it.

Or not, as you must.

If God could tell the story of the Universe,
the Universe would become fictitious.-E. M Forster

Yup.

AG


Goodness had nothing to do with it, dearie.-Mae West

by Arthur Gilroy (arthurgilroy<at>earthlink.net) on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 02:22:56 PM EST
[ Parent ]
by Oui on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 02:57:58 PM EST
[ Parent ]
DINGELL? I'm sorry. Health care is as dust before the continued existence of sentient life in this universe. Those are the stakes with climate change.

I am sympathetic to your views in general. I am, but the problem this time is that we are just about if not already, out of time to fix these issues so incrementalism will only make things worse or be ineffectual. It's no good if you reach the other guys' 10 if you've run out of clock time.

________
The Raptor of Spain: A Webserial
From Muslim Prince to Christian King (Updated Nov. 24)

by MNPundit on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 12:23:29 PM EST
Too True. Our greed has screwed us up big time.  If only the middle-of-the-road climate scenarios actually come to pass, half-a-century from now Earth will have a carrying capacity of 2 billion people.  The difference between that and the currently projected 9 billion people by that time is a whopping 7 BILLION PEOPLE - who will need to not be. Oh sure, lots of them will be in the under 5yo age group (and most of those dark-skinned), and they're rarely well armed - but their parents are another matter.

The Polar bears will die quietly (except for eating other Polar bears), but humans have a nasty habit of going all Dr. Strangelove when faced with the prospect of their individual and tribal extinction.  Starvation, privation, and (nuclear) armed conflict.  I'm so looking forward to it. But hey, how about that new tech gadget? Spiffy, huh.

p.s. I don't see "justice" as an arc tending either way.  Lets face it, after 5000 years of patriarchy you'd thinks women wouldn't still be "OTHER" if incremental change was inevitable.

by keres on Sat Dec 5th, 2009 at 03:55:34 PM EST
[ Parent ]


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