Monday, July 4, 2011

Why I’m “obsessed” with politics

If you’re on my Facebook Friends list, you know I’m a serious political junkie. And even if you’re not, you probably know it’s a vice I admit to freely. But you may not understand why.

I grew up with a quiet father who observed the world closely. He didn’t say a lot, but he didn’t miss much. And he read constantly. I spent evenings in his lap as he read the paper and a host of magazines. He read a variety of sources, and he never took any of them as the gospel truth. He asked a lot of questions, and he never assumed he had all the answers. But he worked diligently to inform himself. I’d venture he was one of the best read men in the neighborhood.

That’s how I was raised. And like my father, I read – a lot. Why?

I learned from my father that it mattered. The political decisions we make – not individually but as a society – set our course. So if we choose poorly, we all pay. That is the tyranny of the majority. That’s our democracy.

So for 30 years I’ve been tracking our political record, and it sucks. I’ve paid more in student loan interest, earned less and am now watching my kids (and yours too) struggle even harder than I did because my generation and succeeding ones have made poor choices based on misinformation we’ve been fed by corporate media.

How do I know this? I’m part of the system.

I was trained as an artist to create illusion, and I work in business communication and public relations. I know how word choice affects perception, and I know how color, perspective and design play on emotions. I can spot the frame almost before the words are out.

Additionally, I care about the people I live with. I’ve spent 30 years watching family, friends and neighbors get hoodwinked by politicians bought and paid for by corporate interests. Election after election I watch them vote based on emotional reactions to ads and mangled rhetoric, rather than facts, then wonder what happened when they get screwed later.

Consequently, I get a little frustrated when people assume I’ve just “drunk the Kool-Aid.” As I did in drawing class, I try to walk around situations and see them from as many sides as possible. I came very late to choosing a political party, and I’m not terribly comfortable there yet.

So instead of assuming I’m an ideologue, maybe you need to join me in the search for real information and solutions. Maybe you need to start asking questions and looking beyond the morning radio broadcast and the evening TV news for information. (And trash the e-mails – please!) Maybe we need to talk.

Because democracy begins with dialogue; tell that to your congress people as they play chicken with the debt ceiling.

Happy Independence Day.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

It’s not the deficit, it’s the defunding

Note: The following is my latest letter to the editor of the Red Oak Express. It's a response to an opinion column in which he proposed lowering the debt ceiling.

If you want to crash our economy, refuse to raise the debt ceiling. The deficit’s a red herring; government budget is not like your household budget. Do you control interest rates and print money?

Without tax revenues, government can’t operate. America’s problem is an eroding tax system, cowardly politicians and an apathetic citizenry.

For 40 years, conservative and corporate interests have worked to poke holes in our tax code. Loopholes allow them to pay less and less, while lower and middle class citizens take up the slack. Income tax rates are lower than ever, especially for the top income earners. Did you know the income tax rate for the top bracket was 91% under Eisenhower? Corporations have poked so many holes in the tax code, some pay no taxes even while their tax rate appears prohibitive.

You want a military, schools, emergency services, Medicare, Social Security, good roads, clean water, safe food and other things? You have to pay for it with taxes. And then you have to hold elected representatives accountable by voting, monitoring them and advocating for these things. What’s your record on that?

But first you have to inform yourself beyond what you hear on radio, TV or e-mail. ‘Cause this stuff isn’t simple, and it isn’t like your household budget. Again, see: http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=692 from the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities for some history of taxes and deficits.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Thoughts on the “War on Christmas/Christianity”

As a Christian living in America, I was surprised recently to hear someone express their distress about the assault on our faith, and I was struck by the very different perspective I have.

Having been raised within and choosing to stay as a United Methodist, I have never felt discriminated against or persecuted because of my faith. I have noticed some changes, such as public schools’ more careful adherence to the separation of church and state. As a country growing ever more diverse and having family of another faith myself, I accepted these changes as proof of our country’s guarantee that all beliefs will be respected in our civic institutions. I took that guarantee as a protection, rather than an assault. When and if I become a minority, I would welcome those protections, wouldn’t you?

And regarding Christmas, how can we complain? Isn’t Christmas the only religious holiday in our country that is written into the federal holiday calendar? Frankly the only war on Christmas I see is the way American business has used it to sell, sell, sell. It is no longer about a celebration of Christ’s birth, but a marketing bonanza. How much junk can we buy and wrap!

Where do these feelings of persecution come from? Whom do they benefit? Because from my perspective, there is no war on Christianity. Instead I feel that others are using the Christian label to separate me from my Jewish, agnostic, Islamic, etc., friends. In fact, I do not label myself.

I have always done this. I think of myself as a person. So in those times in which I have experienced sexism, it has come as a shock. Being evaluated based on someone else’s view of the label “woman” rather than on my skills and abilities as a person limits and demeans me.

This happens every time we attach a label to something – be it to ourselves or others. So I even avoid the term Christian. I think of myself of a “person of faith.” To me, that means I have a working relationship with God. And it allows me to respect other persons of faith, regardless of their chosen beliefs.

And frankly, I fear the label Christian because our history, like all human history, has been a story of abject failures and atrocities as well as triumphs – the Crusades, the Inquisition, our treatment of Native Americans, to just scratch the surface.

Our faith is the story of human struggle. Jesus calls us to love God and one another, and we fail at that every day. Yet it is our sacred responsibility. To be judged by that standard is enormous, and frankly, I fear it. So Christian is not a label I wear easily. Instead, to quote an old hymn, I hope people will “know we are Christians by our love.”

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Is the GOP – just a one-trick pony?

I am so sick of Republicans whining about the deficit and obstructing legislation designed to help their constituents.

"The only thing Republicans have opposed in this debate are job-killing taxes and adding to the national debt," said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky in an Associated Press story June 25. "What we're not willing to do is use worthwhile programs as an excuse to burden our children and our grandchildren with an even bigger national debt than we've already got."

No, they’d rather burden our children and grandchildren with the debt from two unnecessary wars and tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.

They continue to deny our own history – when President Franklin Roosevelt responded to a similar economic crisis with government spending to provide benefits to the poor and employment to the jobless. It’s called the New Deal, and it worked.

Go look at the record of tax cuts and economic growth at the Center On Budget and Policy Priorities at: http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=692. The Republicans are full of baloney. Economics is complicated, and a simple proposal like “cutting taxes and spending” is a sound bite. But apparently it’s all the GOP has.

I’m ready for them to get out of the way and let the rest of us try something new to grow our economy. All they’re proposing is more of the same. This is simply political obstruction over governing; politics over people.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Tent of Heaven



















Needlework, 2010, 8" X 7 1/2"


Inspired by Psalm 19.

Sweep



















Needlework, 2010, 5" X 5"

The roads and terraces
sweep around the hills
and across the valleys,
caressing
the earth's folds
tenderly.

Wedge




















Needlework, 2010, 5" X 5"

Rolling between earth and sky,
thunderous clouds and arcing road
divide
diamond-studded dusk
and fertile furrowed fields.