Posted: 19 February 2010 at 6:12pm | IP Logged | 4
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Mike, A lot of people had very high expectations for Obama, that now suddenly, finally, thankfully, things were going to CHANGE! "Change"... A beautiful bit of value-neutral advertising, that. Honestly, I admire it greatly. Much like "Coke is it." What is "it"? "It" is whatever "it" means to you. You bring the "it" to the equation, the personification of value, a self-defined slogan. Because, after all, "Coke -- It's the real thing." More value-neutral wordsmithing. More self-definement realized. So, "Change". To some people, a change in national policy. To others, change in national priorities. To still others, a change in approach, perhaps a change in style and substance. A change from the old to the new. A change from the bad to the better. Whatever the case, "change" was nothing more than a self-defined expectation that differed from person to person to person. An effective way to campaign to get elected but an impossible way to govern. Why? Because there is a dark side to "change", the unexpected and unplanned part of "change". Katrina, after all, brought "change" to New Orleans. "Change" isn't always what you expect it to be or hope it to be. And, frankly, how could it EVER be when there were likely 100 million different expectations, desires and expressions of "change" that lived to be realized in the hearts of Americans? The sad truth is no one gets to be president without being in debt to someone with very deep pockets. Doesn't matter whether it's big business or big labour or big oil, whether it's Wall Street or Silicon Valley or the Bible Belt, you arrive at the White House bought and paid for. Doesn't matter if you're a Republican or a Democrat -- Goldman Sachs is going to be running your economic program. The titans of business and the powers behind SEIU may seem to have little in common at first glance, but both share a vast distance from the concerns of the common man. The sadder truth is we want "change" but don't want to suffer any of the difficulties of change ourselves. We want government to tax less and spend less and get the budget under control, but we don't want to close the military base next to town or to lose that favourite government program. We want high paying industrial jobs here in America, but we'll buy a Japanese import because it's cheaper and better made than anything in Detroit, and we'll shop at Wal-Mart because the prices are better. We don't want banks that are too big to fail, but we'll sign up for that big bank credit card because of a great teaser rate. We don't want to fight wars for oil and we don't want drilling off-shore and we don't want to give up on oil and gas and we don't want to stop driving pick-up trucks and SUVs. We are the embodiment of cognitive dissonance. The only way we'll ever get change in this country is if we start that change first. Change begins at home. Rather than sending our money to Wall Street and the stock market, we need to invest in our neighbors and build stronger communities. We need to shop locally, bank locally and invest locally so we remain in contact with our money and its impact. We need to be good stewards of our immediate environment. We need to elect people to office -- local, state and federal -- who hold true to those values, regardless of their political party. And we need to stop focusing on the wedge issues that divide us and instead affirm those issues that bind us together and build on them. ...Speech over. It's safe to come out now...
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