I don't know about you, but I can't
wait for this election to be over. Remember how much fun 2008 was? That's how
much I've hated every second of this race. I've seen a lot in my time,
including wars, riots, assassinations and terrorist attacks. But never before
have I seen the face peeled off human nature to reveal the dark, ugly, hatred
underneath.
We are now at a point where the
nation is divided into two halves – each convinced that a victory for the other
side will mean the death of the Republic. Doesn't make the chance of compromise
after the election very promising, does it?
We are devolving into a tribal
society like Northern Ireland or the Middle East. Both sides are arguing from
different assumptions and different sets of "facts." And both sides
lovingly nurse their own grievances, forgetting nothing and learning nothing.
Don't get me wrong: There has never
been a Golden Age when Americans weren't at each other's throats. Even during
World War II, which we look back on as the last time when the country really
pulled together, there were race riots and labor strife, as well as the internment
of more than 110,000 American citizens of Japanese descent.
But not since the Civil War has
there been a time when Americans looked on other Americans as the enemy – until
now. There are Americans who hate the other party more than they hate Al Qaeda.
And there are politicians who will gleefully stroke those hatreds with the most
outrageous lies if they think it will advance their political agenda.
It's even worse than when I was young,
during the McCarthy era. And I ought to know, because my home was the
neighborhood polling place.
All the moms on the block were the
election officials. And when the dads got off work they'd join them. My mother
would order a huge platter of cold cuts from the local deli, and they'd have a
ballot-counting party – two people, one Democrat and one Republican, counting
the votes for each office.
Since my mother was the most
liberal Democrat on the block, she'd usually be paired up with Mr. Gerry, the
most conservative Republican. They never voted the same in partisan races, but
did that make them hate each other? No.
I never heard my parents call the
Gerrys the enemy, and they never thought of us that way, either.
And when it came to non-partisan elections,
like the local school board race, we and the Gerrys always worked together on
the same side.
Is it too much to ask why we can't
be that way again?
* * *
So whom should you vote for? Remember the old adage: Follow
the money.
Log on to maplight.org – run by a nonpartisan
Berkeley nonprofit - and you can view silhouettes of Romney and Obama with the
names of their corporate sponsors plastered on their clothes like NASCAR
drivers, as well as who's funding candidates in state, local and national races.
To find out who's bankrolling state
and local ballot measures, visit votersedge.org.
And if you log on to politicash.co,
you can download an app that will let you do all these things on your iPhone,
iPad or Android.
Don't forget: He who pays the piper
calls the tune.
1 comment:
Nice article, Martin. It is sad that things have devolved in this way.
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