Que sera, sera, whatever will be, will be, but first I need more coffee.

Author: Christopher Merle (Page 46 of 53)

I made these boots to honor the memory of those who came before.

Fight the Future

Do I want to get off my political kick? Yes and no. I’d certainly like to move on to other things, but politics still dominates my thinking. I’d prefer to think about things like science fiction or bikini car washes. I am overjoyed that Obama has won and that Democrats have picked up a lot more seats, but I am under no illusion, that things will be tough.

The Democrats really didn’t make that much progress when they took over Congress in 2006. They decided that their one victory on defeating FISA wasn’t good enough, so they went and undefeated it. Obama voted for the new FISA bill. The old FISA was perfectly adequate. It’s just that Bush didn’t want to be bothered with following the rule of law. All those companies to be granted retroactive immunity could have gotten it in the first place, if Bush had been following the law. Again something he seems to be allergic to. And the absolute worst decision any Speaker of the House ever made was to take impeachment off the table. I’m not sure I could ever forgive Nancy Pelosi for that.

There were many things that the Democrats did that helped to enable the Bush administration and perhaps their reasoning was as simple as covering up their own complicity, or some tortured strategy for winning bigger in 2008. If it’s the latter and those responsible for administrative malfeasance are held accountable and the major damage by this administration will be healed, then I can forgive that.

The Democrats need to govern well. They will have to keep the Republicans from being even more obstructionist than they are now. This means there will have be a reconciliation and a real reaching out to the Republicans. They should only compromise when the compromise achieves real progress. I fear the Republicans and their willing accomplices in the media (e.g.- Fox News, Limbaugh, Drudge) will be assholes. Winning the primary was hard for Obama, winning the election was harder, governing well will be the hardest. I think he’s up to the challenge. Time will tell.

I live in the reddest of red states. No other state gave a higher percentage of the vote to McCain, 66%. We beat Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Louisiana, Alabama, and Alaska. Not only that for the first time in Oklahoma history has the Republicans gained control of both houses of the state legislature.

I though Oklahoma had finally joined the 20th century when it banned cockfighting in 2002 (Even though 30 out of 77 counties filed challenges to the ban. Thankfully the Oklahoma Supreme Court upheld it.) Apparently, not. I am deeply ashamed that my home state has decided to be so willfully ignorant in this election. It really should come as no surprise as we keep re-electing perhaps the most reviled Republican Senator remaining in office, Jim Inhofe.

I suppose it’s a good thing that I’m moving to Tucson. Arizona is pretty red, but I’ve been told that Pima county is the most liberal county in Arizona. I’ve checked the election map and that seems to hold up.

No Rest for the F***heads

I was on the wrong side when Clinton became President. I listened to Rush Limbaugh and G. Gordon Liddy. I thought Newt Gingrich was smart. They are not stupid people. Their arguments aren’t dumb. My worldview was limited to thinking Ayn Rand was the best thing since sliced bread. As a former libertarian, I thought if only people had the facts I did, they’d come around. The problem was my facts were cherry picked and did not reflect the wider world, it’s history or human nature. I was trying to fit the facts to my world view and not the other way around.

Newt sounds smart and reasonable for about the first two minutes and then you come to realize he’s batshit crazy. Limbaugh was very entertaining. I really enjoyed Paul Shanklin’s conservative parody songs, though I must confess some of them were borderline racist and misogynistic. I should have known better, I was glad to see that someone was making fun of the Democrats and not just Republicans. As for Liddy. He’s someone I could still respectfully disagree with, despite how reactionary he is. He’s by far more educated than most conservative pundits with the possible exception of Michael Wiener (aka Michael Savage).

It feels good for once to be on the right side with the right people at the right time. How do I know I’m on the right side this time? I don’t. Only time will tell. I never felt I could adequately defend my views when I was of a libertarian bent or persuade others with evidence they’d accept. This time I do feel I can adequately defend those views. I know that some would not accept the evidence I’d present but this time I don’t fucking care. If they won’t examine it, that’s their fucking problem.

Winning the election was the easy part for Obama. Now comes the hard part. Bush & Cheney still have 70+ days to screw things up even more. Their supporters, and most especially the pundits like Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity, Michelle Malkin, and Michael Savage will continue to be major fuckheads. These people and their ilk will not stop being fuckheads. In fact their fuckheadedness is just beginning. Obama isn’t Clinton 2.0. There will be no Monica 2.0, no Troopergate 2.0, no Whitewater 2.0, no pick your Clinton scandal 2.0, real or manufactured. Their attacks on ACORN and questioning small donations over the Internet will only get louder and shriller. Who knows where else they will attack? Probably they’ll make complaints of voter suppression and stolen elections. They’ll pretend that didn’t happen in 2000 or 2004. They are not interested in working with us. They are not interested in bipartisanship. They only know how to do one thing, attack.

It looks like the Democrats will be 3 seats shy of a supermajority in the Senate. That will be the Republican’s line in the sand, where we can expect the most obstruction. We cannot be like them. Just because they want to be fuckheads doesn’t mean we can’t reach out to them. We have to show them we can be decent human beings. Isn’t my calling the fuckheads being counterproductive? No. I want them to know how I really feel, but that I’m capable of moving past that. I’ll have to demonstrate that after all this namecalling.

If those on the conservative side of the aisle don’t want to give Obama a chance and work with the progressives, then they deserve to be miserable for the next four years. I will not let them screw this up. There’s too much at stake.

Proposition 8

So far the anti-gay marriage amendment seems to be winning in California. The religious morons and bigots are winning. For some unknown reason religious morons don’t like being called MORONS, and bigots also for some equally unknown reason like being called BIGOTS. Over the years I’ve had to confront my own homophobia when I thought I had overcome it. Some friends of mine who are gay were getting married and I initially decided not to go. But I realized that they were friends of mine and that I was going to show my support for them even if I didn’t agree with gay marriage at the time. I’m glad I went. The ceremony was very nice and everyone had a great time. The most amusing part was when they had to decide who would walk down the aisle first.

Overcoming my prejudices takes time and requires me to actively examine my beliefs. It’s not easy and sometimes when I thought I wasn’t being prejudiced I was. This isn’t about being politically correct or being sensitive. It’s about trying to be a human being and learning to live with others.

Strangely enough it was G. Gordon Liddy’s definition of marriage that helped me. So what is marriage? We think the definition is obvious until you start defining it. I might as well ask what is a chair? Is it something made of wood, has four legs and a back that you can sit on? Couldn’t you have a chair made of steel with three legs and no back? Yes. It could also be padded and no legs. Do you see where I’m going?

The traditional definition of marriage is a between a man and a woman. It’s not a physical thing. It’s a relationship. It’s a commitment. In what tradition is this definition? Our Judaeo-Christian tradition. Might as well throw Muslim tradition in there as well. But when you start looking at the civilized world and marriage, you’ll see that there are men with more than one wife. That’s also pretty traditional. If you start looking at other cultures that have marriage, you’ll see arranged marriages and child brides.

What is the purpose of marriage? I could give an answer to that, but I can see this journal entry should be much longer–in fact–I could probably write a whole book on the subject. I’d start with human evolution, our primate relatives, move on to human anthropology and history. There was a time when marriage didn’t exist. It’s definition has changed over time, but it all comes down to a special relationship between two individuals. It’s social, personal, and legal.

We’ve been arguing over the legal definition of marriage. It’s not a slippery slope. It doesn’t mean if men can marry men or women can marry women that men will be marrying sheep, inflatable dolls, or rutabagas. Or that women will be marrying washing machines or their cat.

There is well worn argument that at one time it was illegal for blacks to marry whites in some states. So why not gays? As I said marriage is a special relationship between two individuals. It’s a commitment to share their lives together. Another defining quality is that their is a perceived level of equality between partners. It should go without saying, but sex and reproduction play a big part of marriage. Or if I want to be polite, intimacy.

G. Gordon Liddy would say that his definition would not apply to same sex couples, but he said that two individuals marry each other. Short of threats of violence and death, no power on Earth can stop two people from marrying. A preacher, rabbi, or boat captain may preside over a marriage, the witnesses may recognize the marriage and it becomes a socially recognized marriage. No where in the U.S. Constitution does it explicitly mention marriage. It was considered a fundamental right and didn’t need to be spelled out. Along with a lot of other rights.

The Mormons played a big role in helping to pass Prop. 8. Was it there way of saying, that since polygamy was taken away from them no one else can have a non-traditional marriage. So really the argument isn’t over the personal marriage or social recognition of marriage. It is over the legal recognition of marriage.

I think gay marriage should be legally recognized. First and foremost they get the marriage tax penalty. They’d have to pay more, but heaven forbid they should be allowed to adopt children. Nothing prevents a marriage partner from fathering or bearing children. It happens all the time. Children are born of wedlock. Women get pregnant by men that are not their husbands. How is that not destroying marriages and families?

Now there is the issue of polyamory. Since my definition of marriage is between two individuals, could it not be between three or four? Say two heterosexual couples. Some couples are swingers and swap partners. I’ll have to think about it. I mean if four adults say they are married to each other and live and share lives together there is nothing I can do or say to stop it. Regardless, the individuals involved should all be consenting adults and are committed to being partners. I’m uncomfortable with the idea that polyamory is marriage. I’d have to give it more thought, but for now I socially accept gay marriage.

There’s so much more that needs to be clarified and expanded upon. I could go on about social and gender roles of marriage. I could go on about parenting, but since I don’t have kids, I could on speak about it in general terms. Make no mistake California’s Proposition 8 is grounded in religious bigotry. I could be nicer and say it’s based on religious prejudice and ignorance, but I’m not the one trying to deny the rights of others.

Cautiously Optimistic

Bush is still President and Obama is projected to be President-Elect. Bush can still do a lot of damage in the time remaining he has in office. Like say bankrupt the country so badly, that the next President will find it very difficult to clean up the mess this one has created.

But for tonight and the next day or two it’s time to dance in the streets! Congratulations President Obama and to everyone who helped make this happen. This election was about us and that the promise of America is really for everyone.

Fist bumps for everyone!

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