
Terraced hills
drape the creek bed,
flowing down
to a burbling brook.
Billowy bales of cloud
roll overhead
as spring blows
across the plains.
New home of Miner Queries, political musings of an artist, writer and person of faith living and working in Southwest Iowa
In 2003 during the run-up to the
Similarly, the Republican Party should recognize their responsibility for their current presidential candidate. They may not be overjoyed with John McCain, but he is the product of the morally bankrupt administration they pushed into office in 2000 and 2004 – by any means necessary.
John McCain, once admired for his willingness to buck his party and take unpopular stands on principle, was broken by the Bush Administration, capitulating to their demands in his overarching desire to win the Republican nomination in the future. Now, they own him.
Once against Bush’s tax cuts for the wealthy, now McCain wants to make them permanent. Once critical of the Iraq War execution, now he argues it’s a success. Once against torture, he quietly caved when the President watered down the legislation banning such practices. On so many issues, McCain has abandoned former thinking to embrace the stances of Bush Neo-con Republicans and their extreme agenda. This is only made more evident with the use of the current Karl Rove campaign tactics and talking points McCain was once the target of himself.
So I say to the Republican Party, “Good luck with McCain. You broke him; now you own him.”
For the last several months, I have been obsessed with the presidential election and the state of our nation. I am fascinated and appalled at the divergence of threats: our crumbling infrastructure, the mortgage crisis, rising gas prices and unemployment, further political breakdown and violence in
What may appear to be an amazing confluence of events to many only reinforces observations I’ve made for years.
First, as an artist, specifically a drawer, I have been trained to observe -- and to observe relationships between objects so that I can reproduce them realistically. Nothing is ever seen in isolation. So I tend to connect events and actions in relation to other events and actions, as well as on the continuum of history.
Additionally, this observation requires an attempt to view things objectively, with as little emotion as possible. In fact, when you are truly observing and drawing with your right brain, there is a sense of detachment which allows you to analyze without making evaluations.
Similarly, when I observe political and current events, I view them as related. Thus for many years, I have observed that America’s economy, based on consumer spending and wall street stock prices, is a teetering house of cards. One stiff breeze would be enough not only to blow it over, but to scatter the cards in all directions.
So how did we think the War in
Also, based on the history of war in
Add to these problems our long history of spiraling medical and drug costs, loss of jobs and spiraling education costs.
Yet as a culture, we compartmentalize these concerns. The presidential candidates and campaigns parcel their positions on individual topics: health care, energy, education, the military, the War in
For example, I want the candidates to discuss the possibility that universal single payer health care (yes, socialized medicine!) could provide a great economic stimulus by encouraging entrepreneurship and small business enterprise, as well as freeing capital for existing companies to retool and grow. I have always been taught small businesses were the best drivers for stimulating growth.
In addition, to battle unemployment as well as rebuild infrastructure, why not develop a new Works Progress Administration for the 21st century? This could dovetail with a new national service requirement for all youth that would include civic as well as military options.
And as we repair our own country with service and shared sacrifice, we can rebuild our relationship with the rest of the world. Because it is not our freedoms that are hated, it is our foreign policy, especially with regard to the
Viewed on the continuum of history, I see
Fifteen months into this presidential campaign I’m sick of it all. Sick of the candidates hammering away at each other as another state’s contest rolls nearer. Sick of the media echo chamber presuming to speak for the American people. Sick of Republicans and Democrats. Sick of endorsements and ads. And sick of hearing who got “thrown under the bus.”
Let me tell you. It ain’t Patti Solis Doyle or Barack Obama’s grandmother. It ain’t Jeremiah Wright or Mark Penn. It sure ain’t George Stephanopolous or Charlie Gibson.
It’s the American people.
While elected officials try to determine whether or not to endorse and mainstream media personalities chatter on about the latest trivial non-issue, we the people are gasping for breath out here. We can’t afford to fill up our cars and buy groceries. We’re praying no one in the family gets sick or has an accident. We’re hoping we can make the next mortgage payment while Charlie Gibson is worrying about his capital gains tax. Honestly! And it’s been like this for years.
I say it’s time we throw our political elite and media mavens under the bus. Vote ‘em out and unplug the radio and TV. Enough is enough.
I am sick of hearing from whiney women about how sexist everyone else is. Enough already!
I’ve spent a lifetime listening to self-proclaimed feminists pontificating about how the world hates women. And I’m a woman.
I grew up the youngest of three sisters with one brother. My oldest sister gave me a “Sisters Unite” t-shirt, complete with raised clenched fist, that I lived in at age 8. And when I was in college, my brother’s girlfriend gave me a “69 cents” t-shirt that I wore at least once a week. My college roommate also referred to me as “Woman” because I insisted it was condescending for people to refer to us as girls at 18-plus years of age.
In graduate school, I pointed out to two of my professors that I felt there was some bias involved in providing older, single guys with teaching assistantships that put them on their own in classrooms, while some of us women were overlooked or given graduate assistantships pairing us with professors.
I’ve witnessed or experienced bias all my life. But I didn’t whine about it.
I simply spoke honestly when appropriate and went on to do the work, whatever it was. And I tried to do it better, smarter and more completely, acting as a person first.
So the Geraldine Ferraro flap sent me over the edge. I’ve been seeing for months whiney, self-righteous, bloviating statements and posts all over the Internet about how Hillary Clinton is so discriminated against. Cry me a river!
This woman has floated along on her husband’s coattails. Experienced! Only if you give her credit for her husband’s years in office. And what kind of “feminist” takes credit for her husband’s resume? Shouldn’t she do it on her own?
In reality,
But because she’s a woman, other women refuse to look at her as a person and evaluate her more broadly. I’ve seen post after post by Taylor Marsh, Kathleen Reardon and Roseanne Barr, among others, touting the knee-jerk reaction that everyone is a woman-hater. Can they not comprehend that some of us are choosing to evaluate the candidates based their resumes, experience and skills? That we’re evaluating them as people? That perhaps Hillary being a
I’m tired of women who want to blame all their troubles on how someone else perceives their gender. I’m a human being.