Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Unsettled
1. His statement on public financing. Here it's not so much the principle of private financing that I object to; although, of course, I would like to see it abolished, with the same intensity (and the same hope for success) one might put in hoping to be forever young, smart and rich. Nor do I object quite so much to Obama changing his mind. That continues to be for me the sign of a reasonable person who realizes circumstances change. Flip flopping charges are in most cases just nitpicking when you don't have a stronger case against someone. What I truly object to is the kind of argument Obama made in support of his change of heart; his argument that the public system is broken is specious; his claim that McCain and the republicans are gaming the system is ridiculous given 1) that democrats do the same; 2) the general reluctance of a certain sizable portion of the republican voters to support McCain. In a word, Obama engages in sophistry just like Hillary did when arguing for counting the Florida and Michigan votes, that is, changing the rules in the middle of the game. If Obama had said: "I changed my mind because circumstances are different (that is: I can make a lot more money privately and ensure that I will win)", then I would have been ok with it.
2. FISA vote. This is a big one. Voting to grant immunity to the telecoms who broke the law is not only against his previous statements, it is against the law as it currently stands, and it is against common sense. And I realize the word immunity is not in the law, that instead there is a process and so on. Still, that is not how this should work. I realize Obama's biggest fear is to be branded soft on terrorism come fall. Yet I would venture that the public doesn't really care or doesn't really see the issues as related. Except for a few nuts, who care about principles, what the public knows and cares about telecoms is that they may be able to provide the new IPhone with a 10% discount for a two year contract. Moreover: it is not as if these companies we strive so much to grant immunity from lawsuits to never have had a lawsuit on their hands; it isn't as if they haven't had even one or two class action suits to fight or settle; or as if they don't already have huge legal teams and budgets allocated to fighting or settling such issues; it is not as if their customers wouldn't anyway end up paying in higher costs or fees any penalty a class action suit over breaking the law and spying on us would entail; it is not as if they had an untarnished reputation. So why bother defend them in Congress? Why give up your principles, Mr. Obama?
3. Courting the "evangelical voters". He was quoted somewhere saying that even though he knows he will not win these voters over, he still wants them to know he is a person of faith and that he is listening to them. Well here is the problem: the evangelical voter should not be courted by anyone. The evangelical voter should not exist, and in truth it does not exist: it is simply a category made up by some uninspired republicans so that they may group together voters who have no business voting together, from the country club gentleman to the trailer park population. The Republican Party would be a lot better off without the evangelical voter illusion. Not only that: it is a sign of a maturing democracy to move away from voting on ethnic and religious criteria. Parliamentarian democracies based entirely in ethnic or religious differences will end up arguing the wrong types of arguments, and it is a small distance from debating the wrong argument to arguing with the wrong kinds of tools. That is why, 2500 years ago, Cleisthenes of Athens broke down the ancient Athenian tribes based on family and clan loyalties into geographic and socio-economic units. America on the other hand, with its insistence of cultivating a so called religious vote (in opposition to those other voters who vote non-religiously) seems to move backwards... This is why Obama's courting of the "religious" vote is so disappointing. Here, as in the issue with FISA and the one with the public financing, he simply contributes to preserving a state of fact that is damaging both the American democracy and the American republic.
Monday, June 9, 2008
Les Carabiniers – Jean Luc Godard
"La guerre sera fini quand le Roi vainquerait." (The war will be over when the King will have won it.)
Of all the war's absurdities derided and exposed in Godard's movie, this is perhaps the most striking: the king, who declared the war, gets to declare when the war is over, won or, as the case may serve him, lost (though, in reality, the king rarely admits to losing, he may instead simply say that the battle is much longer and more costly than previously thought and there still are sacrifices to be made before the promised "trèsors" will be reaped.) On the other hand, of course, one should not discount what G's movie has to say about the commoners, who've been persuaded (and indeed avail themselves) of the promises made to them in the beginning that all is fair in war ("can we kill the innocents?" a reluctant future enlistee asks. "Yes," the king's man replies. "Can we burn the towns?" "Yes" "Can we burn the women?" "Yes" "Can we eat in a restaurant without paying?" "Yes"). Beautiful.
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Settled
By the time the primaries rolled around in Georgia, I was becoming an Obama supporter, but not strong enough to actually bother voting for him. Hillary completely lost me when she started her Michigan and Florida sophistry.
I like Obama. I will vote for him wholeheartedly, if uselessly, given the electoral system and the political predilections in this state. I am not “inspired” by him, but then, nor have I ever been inspired by a politician, so it’s probably me. Paradoxically, one thing that endeared him to me was his leaving his church the other day. There have been repeated instances of crazy stuff spewed out by bona fide church leaders or church members these days, so much so that I’ve been weighing lately putting together an anthology of the craziest sayings to reach the mainstream via the mass media. Left and right, people in churches think and say crazy things. Like the government wanted to kill blacks and invented AIDS; or, the one about Hitler shepherding the Jews back to the promised land, which is all the more horrifying to me in so far as it seems to be sanctioned by erudite interpretations of I don’t know what line in I don’t know what prophecy in I don’t know what book of the Bible. Although, of course on the other hand I should not be horrified: the ultimate consequence of the Bible-informed view is that the worst outbreaks of human monstrosity are the result of “God allowing them to happen”. (Remember the older one about God punishing us with 9/11 for our gays and lesbians and with Katrina for our “abortionists”? Nor do Christians have a monopoly on this sort of stupidity: Sharon Stone, on behalf of some religion yet to be identified, had to put her foot where her mouth is, about the China earthquake as karma for the way Chinese treat her friend, the Dalai Lama… I bet he won’t be too eager to return Mrs. Stone’s Karma cards come the holiday season.)
So there… for all these reasons I am glad Obama is churchless. I would be even happier if that was the result of a philosophy of life not of a contingency. The contingency though is pretty telling: crazy stuff goes on in churches and in church-infected minds all across America. People trying to swift boat him will use that crazy stuff against him, forgetting the crazy stuff that goes on in their own churches, of which the examples above are only a pale and minuscule sample.
The other reason to feel good about the coming election is that opposite Obama sits McCain, who is the best one could have hoped from the Republican Party at this juncture. So even if the electorate does its worst again, come November, we should still be a lot better off than now. That's the one good thing about hitting bottom: you can only go up...