To the Candidates: "Kiss My Ulterior!" Print E-mail
By Stan Moody
Mar. 05, 08 16:34

It has been a long time since I have felt as nauseated over national politics.  The last time, as I recall, was when both parties became mired in the Watergate scandal that went on interminably.  The supposed advantage, 36 years later, is that we have "Christian" candidates.

 

 

To that I say, "Kiss my ulterior!"

 

 

While John McCain poses with his half-smile and his manikin sidekick, reveling in the disassembly of the Democratic hopes, the donkey morphs into a jackass kicking its own.   The only way to "win" the nomination, it seems, is to tear down the opposition, leaving the remains as fair game for the general election.  We "swiftboat" our own.

 

 

"Experience" and "Change," enemies of the good in pursuit of the perfect, are at odds.  One is ready to govern; the other will need time to find the men's room and all of that sort of thing, trusting that the phone won't ring at 3:00 am before he finds out where it is.   The one ready to govern stole the china from the White House the last time around and had to return it, thereby giving experience a rather odd twist.  He who advocates for change couldn't seem to rally his colleagues to effect that change while in the Senate so wants to be king so he can "work across the aisle."  Curious twist that, as well.

 

 

The rest of us have had enough, already.  "Experience" will be going on to Denver in second place, while "Change" will be moving from the high to the low road to regain his momentum.  Whoever wins the nomination will have to steal it, thereby confirming public opinion of our political leadership. 

 

Enter mild-mannered wannabe President McCain, spared the ordeal of having to deal with or explain his rage, often a topic of public interest. 

 

 

Having already thrown out the TV and now refusing ever again to subscribe to a newspaper, I shall turn off the Internet news.  I'll be damned if I will cave into the white noise that shrieks in stark terror of losing our undivided attention.  Come to think of it, the fastest way to the valley of the damned is to cave into the white noise.  At this point, even Lou Dobbs, current champion of "Independent's Day," is looking every bit a used car salesman who has been hit in the face with the flat side of a shovel.

 

We have become a nation addicted to reality-TV now spilling dangerously over into real life.  To be the most powerful man or woman in the world is a rush that only the man who smoked but didn't inhale could lust after, even if it means playing second banana.  There has been some suggestion that he has been inhaling of late.

 

 

Well; I have vented, and I thank you for listening.  Once this thing is settled, the technique for keeping Experience or Change out of our faces and our lives will directly impact how well we maintain our sanity over the next 8 years.  In the final analysis, though, no President in my lifetime has ever been a miracle worker.  We muddle through with a limited number of folks thinking that to be at the top is everything.  To them, perhaps, it is.

 

 

Anybody got an extra $100M for political leverage?


LIST OF COMMENTS

1/7. No Miracle Worker But It Matters
Written by George  | Mar. 07, 08 07:20

Stay in the fight. It's easy to become disillusioned with the process, but it really does matter who the next president is. We have the option of electing a man who says that we may still have troops in Iraq 100 years from now or someone who will begin the painful process of bringing them home. We have the option of promoting a government who spies on its own citizens and intervenes in medical decisions or one which respects the rule of law and which respects the right of family to execute the wishes of their loved ones. We have the option of electing an administration in which James Dobson, Pat Robertson, and Richard Land will be welcome at the White House or one in which Tony Compolo might receive an invitation.

 

America can once again become a great nation. The president can't do it all, but he (or she) can set the tone. If we lived in a perfect society, the candidates would not have to bob and weave, or spend hundreds of millions of dollars getting elected. To paraphrase a former Defense Secretary, "...we have to deal with the system we go...."


2/7. What R you doing here?
Written by pollchecker  | Mar. 09, 08 07:50
George W, what are you doing posting here?  Wascally Wabbit (gggg)

3/7. What's Good for the Goose
Written by Amy  | Mar. 10, 08 15:13

Pollchecker:

 

Please take your sarcasm elsewhere,  If you don't have something constructive to add,  then please go elsewhere.

 

Incidentally, what's the latest with superdelegate Eliot Spitzer?


4/7. who made you king of the roost
Written by pollchecker  | Mar. 12, 08 07:49
Since this is not your blog,  where do you get off?  By the way it wasn't sarcasm.  Too bad you don't understand the difference.  Your comments say a lot about you.

5/7. Touchy
Written by Amy  | Mar. 12, 08 16:09

I just find it amusing that you, who routinely blast others on your weblogs have such thin skin.

 

You can dish it out, but you sure don't take criticism well.  I guess that says a lot too.


6/7. Just For The Record
Written by george  | Mar. 14, 08 09:57
I'm reluctant to stray too far from the topic of the original post but just for the record, Mr. P checker must have me confused with a different George (my last name does not begin with a W). I really enjoy reading and responding to the posts by Jesse and other at this site, and I hope this will end the dialog over irrelevant issues.

7/7. He's a She
Written by Dan  | Mar. 15, 08 05:46
...Just for the record, "Mr. Pollchecker" is Cindy Catlett.

Last Updated ( Mar. 05, 08 21:24 )
 
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