Just wrote a letter to one of my extended chosen family nieces.
She's the older sister in the photo.
Doesn't look like that anymore, now that she is potentially grandmother material.
She lives in the Bible Belt, bless her heart and soul, yet votes Democratic and has written a book on why she left the church. Lots of strength of character here.
Thought I'd share.
Christina:
I’ve been following Face Book lately, and I noted your
frustration when dealing with somebody down on Hillary Clinton. You are a loyal and engaged Democrat and I
share your sense of concern that the country could be thrown back again into
the clutches of the Republicans. An
unmitigated disaster, in my view, given that Ruth Bader Ginsberg is likely to
retire during the next administration and appointing yet another of the ilk of Scalia, Roberts,
Alito or Thomas to the Supreme Court would mess us up even worse than we are
now, with Citizens United and all power going to those who support the wealthy
ruling class and corporate America over the rest of us. I think you are right to worry Hillary might
not get elected, assuming she is the only real person who might make it to the
White House on the Democratic ticket.
I’m watching Bernie Sanders with fascination. I can’t believe he’s doing so well. What’s going on, and I think this is obvious,
is that the left has been left out for so long that they can’t help but get a
little optimism back, now with his candidacy, that the country might actually
be able to correct its course. And he
speaks to the left in a way Hillary can’t.
She clearly represents the established middle. (And from where I sit the “middle” is center-right,
compared to the rest of the world’s democracies.) She represents the wealthy. Those who bailed out the too-big-to-fail
banks and put a band-aid on rapacious corporate America, instead of fixing
things. We have not had anybody around
who could actually fix things. Ralph
Nader was never somebody who could appeal to large numbers of people. Bernie Sanders is much better, because he
walks and talks like a politician and makes people think he might know how to
work the system, if elected, unlike Nader.
I listened to an interesting interview with Cornel West
recently in which he expressed the worry that in the end Bernie Sanders might
throw his weight behind Hillary, instead of holding out to the bitter end for
the interests of marginalized Americans.
That’s kind of where I am. I’m
not sure Bernie Sanders is a wunderkind or a savior. I’m too convinced the system cannot be
adequately dealt with by any single individual, that the only way America can
right itself is for people to recognize how really bad off we are, how much we
have surrendered to the imperialists among us, to the liars, the propaganda
machines, those who defend torture and the hypocrites who run the show, both
Democrats and Republicans. Without a
revolution in thinking, a revolt of people fed up who don’t want to take the
lies anymore, I doubt any individual in the White House could make a
difference.
I will vote for Hillary, if she gets nominated. I will vote for Bernie Sanders with much
greater enthusiasm, if he gets nominated.
I will vote for the two of them if they share the ticket. I will vote for Mickey Mouse, provided he’s
the candidate on the Democratic ticket against God, if God runs for president
on the Republican ticket. I don’t want
another conservative on the Supreme Court.
People say those of us on the left are making a mistake
running “against” Republicans, instead of “for” a clearly articulated program
of progressive goals. I agree that this
isn’t the best way to go, but it’s the cards we have to play with at the
moment. Any democrat is likely to be
better than any republican. That’s
overstated, but essentially how I feel.
If I were king of the world, I would get more people to
listen to Noam Chomsky. I know he drones
on endlessly and refuses to engage in debate and discussion, preferring to see
himself as the only one around who really understands things. But he’s so good at pointing out the history
that gets hidden, the facts that we should have on hand for making
decisions. I think if we listened more
to people like Chomsky and Cornel West we’d begin to see Bernie Sanders for what he is, a reasonable man, and not a crackpot socialist. We don’t get enough perspective. We get people in the media who point our
heads toward the centrists posing as progressives, those who make the
fallacious argument that the truth always lies in the middle, rather than pointing
out that when you are arguing with somebody who makes up his own facts, you’re
arguing with a liar and the debate is rigged.
If we had a more knowledgeable citizenry, we would know more about what Chomsky
and West are all about – never mind how much we may find their takes unbalanced at times. We'd see the line between Bernie Sanders as a fair-minded man and Hillary Clinton as a tool of Wall
Street.
I repeat, I will vote for the tool of Wall Street, because I
still believe not to vote is a sign of incoherent thinking, of throwing the
baby to the wolves instead of making them tear it out of your hands.
I hope you can make a case for voting for Hillary. It’s not the least of all evils in my view. But it’s
practical. We have to be practical. We have to work with the doable.
I wish you success.
And you know I’ve always thought you must be some kind of hero for
enduring life in the Bible Belt, in any case, so please know that my admiration
continues.
XXX
Alan
2 comments:
Also, what a great picture! Can I post your post to Facebook?
Of course. It's public information. Will you let me know where you put it? And who you are?
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