Texas Governor Rick Perry's recent remarks that the Obama Administration's--and, in particular, the head of the Federal Reserve's--actions on the economy amount to "almost treason" suggest that we should ask ourselves what else might constitute treason?
For instance, when a Governor of a State suggests that his state may secede from the Union, is that "almost treason?"
When a candidate for political office suggests that a public official be executed, is that "almost treason?"
Treason usually involves a conspiracy, so if the person who committed these "almost treasonous" acts gets chosen by his party to take over the government, what is that?
I do hope, sincerely, that our politicians try their best to ignore the radical fringe at both extremes of the political spectrum and find a middle path that allows them to work together to solve our country's problems. We have never been an "all or nothing" country. We've always governed amid multiple ideologies, multiple strategies, multiple pressures, and multiple ideas about what constitutes service to the people. Today, we desperately need to find the middle. If the politicians, individually, cannot do that, then the electorate--the people that the Constitution was written to protect--needs to select politicians who can work in the messy middle of our political system in order to protect our long-term interests as a nation.
Meanwhile, people like Rick Perry should take care that their rhetoric does not cause others to ask the same questions of them.
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Sunday, August 7, 2011
GOP’s nasty ‘tar baby’ politics - Leonard Pitts Jr. - MiamiHerald.com
GOP’s nasty ‘tar baby’ politics - Leonard Pitts Jr. - MiamiHerald.com
Thanks to Leonard Pitts, Jr., for giving us the straight facts about the political crisis in the United States. The radicalization of American politics is as much--if not more--about our President's race than any other single factor.
Thanks to Leonard Pitts, Jr., for giving us the straight facts about the political crisis in the United States. The radicalization of American politics is as much--if not more--about our President's race than any other single factor.
Saturday, August 6, 2011
A Good Example of Truth-Telling Journalism
Who's to blame for S&P's U.S. credit rating downgrade? - Political Hotsheet - CBS News
This analysis by CBS is a good example of what I called for in my previous posting.
This analysis by CBS is a good example of what I called for in my previous posting.
Truth versus Power
On Friday, August 5, MSNBC had this headline in its Business section: “No double dip, but economy stuck in low gear.” Right next to it was this headline,
“NYT analysis: We’re probably in a
double dip recession.” Directly
under that was another headline: “Why recession fears are overblown.” And, of course, at the very top
of the site was the breaking news:
“US Loses Top Credit Rating.”
So, what did we learn from MSNBC on this particular day? Not much, it appears. Now, I am a big fan of MSNBC. This website is my home page on my web
browser. However, we have to
question the value of their reportage on this issue, this particular day.
In a recent Rolling Stone article, former Vice President Al Gore wrote, "After World War II, a philosopher
studying the impact of organized propaganda on the quality of democratic debate
wrote, 'The conversion of all questions of truth into questions of power has
attacked the very heart of the distinction between true and false'." The task today, is to push our
politicians to move past propaganda--the always evident "talking
points" on each side--and to demand that they tell us what they think is
true.
The 24-hour news channels have given us a “talking-point versus talking-point”
approach to the news, instead of reportage based on fact-finding and analysis. In this radicalized political climate,
it simply is not enough to invite to the table a liberal and a conservative and
elicit their talking points on an issue.
Rather, we should expect the reporter to dig out the facts personally
and present an analysis that they can support as the truth as they see it. That is, we should ask journalists to pursue questions of
truth rather than questions of power. Otherwise, propaganda will win out and, when that happens, a democratic society will always lose.
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Jane Addams and the Tea Party
I am re-reading Jane Addams’ wonderful memoir, Twenty Years at Hull-House. In explaining the spirit with which she
founded her settlement house in 1890s Chicago, she wrote that it was driven, in
part by “the conviction, in the words of Canon Barnett, that the things which
make men alike are finer and better than the things that keep them apart, and
that these basic likenesses, if they are properly accentuated, easily transcend
the less essential differences of race, language, creed, and tradition.” Addams, of course, was speaking about
the importance of integrating into American life the millions of immigrants who
had been attracted to the United States at the height of the Industrial Revolution. However, her words also set an
expectation for us today.
American-style democracy thrives on our ability to find a
workable middle—a place where are “basic likenesses” outweigh the things that
keep us apart enough for us to fulfill the purpose of our federal government as
declared in the opening sentence of the Constitution: “. . . to form a more
perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common
defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to
ourselves and our Posterity . . .” I would like to think that I could identify
some “basic likenesses” with the Tea Party members of Congress. However, it does not come easily.
The Tea Party, which declared its purpose during the last
election as being “to take back our country” (they did not say from whom), can
be expected to become even more radical and less prone to compromise now that
they have won a big victory. These
rightwing extremists have set themselves so arrogantly apart from the
mainstream of our country, that, right now at least, I cannot find common
ground with them. They, in turn,
seek no common ground with anyone who does not share their ideology.
I hope that our politicians are able to find a way to build
a workable middle ground in this environment.
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