President Obama gave an interview with Matt Lauer some days ago. He categorized the Tea Party as consisting at its core of some people who doubt the legitimacy of his presidency. I've been thinking the exact same thing for a while, and I am hearing the president iterate my exact thoughts.
Now, why is that? When Bush was elected, the circumstances were such that he didn't win the popular vote, but wont the electoral vote. We saw signs carried by people that said, "not my president." That is how I felt. But the way the election laws work, you have to win the electoral votes in order to become the president. That is how it has always worked. The legitimacy of Bush's presidency was no doubt. He was the president, and I quietly bid my time and voted for a Democrat.
There is no question whatsoever about how Obama became the president. He won an overwhelming majority of the votes. He won the popular vote, he won the electoral vote. The legitimacy of his presidency is beyond doubt.
However, there are those who question his presidency, not based on the law of the land, but based on Obama as a person. They question the very eligibility of the president to be the president in the first place. Is Obama an America citizen or not? All the documentation has shown that he is. Because Obama is so unlike other presidents (read: not white), they shout that they want to take the country back. Back to what? To the white rule?
These are people who cannot accept the fact that there is a biracial president in the White House. They seek to weaken his presidency by raising, not the constitutionality of the presidency, but rather the very qualification that allowed Obama to run for presidency in the first place. In their minds, citizenship equals race. How distorted is this mind?
Republicans are stoking this thinking. As David Frum says via WonkRoom, "Republicans care about politics, Democrats care about government." If Democrats cared about politics more than government, health care reform would have never passed.
I like Democrats. Now they are politicians with guts. Republicans, not so much.
Friday, April 2, 2010
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Being Pushed to the Left
Wow.
The noise from the last summer has abated a little bit. The vitriol, however, has not. The so-called Tea Party Patriots, who say they want to take their country back, are really advocating taking the country back to the way it was, to its white ways, to its segregationist ways, to its racist ways, all those ways that we thought were so behind us.
They have Sarah Palin, whose slogan is immutably "common sense" (what does it mean anyway? It's not commonsense when people disagree. She needs to go back to high school) politics, but who really has nothing but a big hollow between her ears. Glenn Beck, whose historionics has the feeble-minded mesmerized, is nothing but a clown who will do anything for a laugh. And both of them are so loud.
Well, the more noise emanates from these people, the farther left I am pushed. And believe me I am not a lefty.
The noise from the last summer has abated a little bit. The vitriol, however, has not. The so-called Tea Party Patriots, who say they want to take their country back, are really advocating taking the country back to the way it was, to its white ways, to its segregationist ways, to its racist ways, all those ways that we thought were so behind us.
They have Sarah Palin, whose slogan is immutably "common sense" (what does it mean anyway? It's not commonsense when people disagree. She needs to go back to high school) politics, but who really has nothing but a big hollow between her ears. Glenn Beck, whose historionics has the feeble-minded mesmerized, is nothing but a clown who will do anything for a laugh. And both of them are so loud.
Well, the more noise emanates from these people, the farther left I am pushed. And believe me I am not a lefty.
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