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Election 2008

Some Voters Are Going to Have to Lose Their Homes Before They Connect the Dots

By Garrison Keillor, Tribune Media Services. Posted October 27, 2008.


It's clear that some Americans are beyond persuasion. Thankfully, it seems that most of us are willing to recognize BS when we see it.
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We are a stalwart and stouthearted people, and never more so than in hard times. People weep in the dark and arise in the morning and go to work. The waves crash on your nest egg and a chunk is swept away and you put your salami sandwich in the brown bag and get on the bus.

In Philly, a woman earns $10.30/hour to care for a man brought down by cystic fibrosis. She bathes and dresses him in the morning, brings him meals, puts him to bed at night. It's hard work lifting him and she has suffered a painful hernia that, because she can't afford health insurance, she can't get fixed, but she still goes to work because he'd be helpless without her. There are a lot of people like her. I know because I'm related to some of them.

Low dishonesty and craven cynicism sometimes win the day but not inevitably. The attempt to link Barack Obama to an old radical in his neighborhood has desperation and deceit written all over it.

Meanwhile, stunning acts of heroism stand out, such as the fidelity of military lawyers assigned to defend detainees at Guantanamo Bay -- uniformed officers faithful to their lawyerly duty to offer a vigorous defense even though it means exposing the injustice of military justice that is rigged for conviction and the mendacity of a commander in chief who commits war crimes. If your law school is looking for a name for its new library, instead of selling the honor to a fat cat alumnus, you should consider the names of Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift, Lt. Col. Mark Bridges, Col. Steven David, Lt. Col. Sharon Shaffer, Lt. Cmdr. Philip Sundel and Maj. Michael Mori.

It was dishonest, cynical men who put forward a clueless young woman for national office, hoping to juice up the ticket, hoping she could skate through two months of chaperoned campaigning, but the truth emerges: The lady is talking freely about matters she has never thought about. The American people have an ear for B.S. They can tell when someone's mouth is moving and the clutch is not engaged. When she said, "One thing that Americans do at this time, also, though, is let's commit ourselves just every day, American people, Joe Six-Pack, hockey moms across the nation, I think we need to band together and say never again. Never will we be exploited and taken advantage of again by those who are managing our money and loaning us these dollars," people smelled gas.

Some Republicans adore her because they are pranksters at heart and love the consternation of grown-ups. The ne'er-do-well son of the old Republican family as president, the idea that you increase government revenue by cutting taxes, the idea that you cut social services and thereby drive the needy into the middle class, the idea that you overthrow a dictator with a show of force and achieve democracy at no cost to yourself -- one stink bomb after another, and now Governor Palin.

She is a chatty sportscaster who lacks the guile to conceal her vacuity, and she was Mr. McCain's first major decision as nominee. This troubles independent voters, and now she is a major drag on his candidacy. She will get a nice book deal from Regnery and a new career making personal appearances for forty grand a pop, and she'll become a trivia question, "What politician claimed foreign-policy expertise based on being able to see Russia from her house?"

And the rest of us will have to pull ourselves out of the swamp of Republican economics. Your broker kept saying, "Stay with the portfolio, don't jump ship," and you felt a strong urge to dump the stocks and get into the money market where at least you're not going to lose your shirt, but you didn't do it and didn't do it, and now you're holding a big bag of brown bananas. Me, too. But at least I know enough not to believe desperate people who are talking trash.

Anybody who got whacked last week and still thinks McCain-Palin is going to lead us out of the swamp and not into a war with Iran is beyond persuasion in the English language. They'll need to lose their homes and be out on the street in a cold hard rain before they connect the dots.

AlterNet is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by its writers are their own.

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View:
WTF, Garrison?
Posted by: 6399 on Oct 27, 2008 1:30 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is one of the most discombobulated pieces I've read on Alternet in quite some time. I suppose there was a message embeded in their somewhere, although for the life of me, I can't figure out what it was. McPalin are dangerous? Uhh, we've generally figured that out. Pastor Keillor, meet the choir.

Otherwise, I'd say you're well advised to stick to your folksy Prairie Home Companion bit on NPR. We're you ice fishing on Lake Woebegon and snorting Wild Turkey when you wrote this?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: WTF, Garrison? Posted by: quatschsezitall
» RE: WTF, Garrison? Posted by: AlexaD
» RE: WTF, Garrison? Posted by: mainspark
» RE: WTF, Garrison? Posted by: 6399
» RE: WTF, Garrison? Posted by: medusa
» RE: WTF, 6399? Posted by: donl51
...And for some, even that is not enough to make them react
Posted by: ZPaul on Oct 27, 2008 3:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"They'll need to lose their homes and be out on the street in a cold hard rain before they connect the dots."

Judging from personal experience, I am inclined to think that some people are so brainwashed that even in a desperate situation, they refuse to see that they have been taken for suckers.

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Garrison should have included how Palin was picked. . .
Posted by: dustdevil on Oct 27, 2008 6:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An article in this week's New Yorker reveals how Palin was sold to the Republican Party by pundits from The Weekley Standard and National Review.

Neocon stalwarts William Kristol and Fred Barnes, while on an Alaskan cruise in 2007 were guests of governor Palin at her mansion.

A group from The National Review including John Bolton, Robert Bjork and Dick Morris made a similar trip to the governor's mansion that same year.

The above mentioned neocons loved Palin and I suspect the main reason they want her for VP is because she is so much like George Bush.
I have a lot more respect for Christopher Buckley now that he has resigned from National Review because of the magazine's endorsement of Palin.

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» 8 years way too late Kiellor Posted by: weathered
» I have to agree . . . Posted by: dustdevil
X-POLYGAMIST WIFE in ARIZONA
Posted by: X-POLYGAMIST WIFE on Oct 27, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Polygamists are a microcosmic example of the average Americans propensity to worship their perpetrators.

http://www.bankingonheaven.com/

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Thanks, Garrison, I've been saying the same thing
Posted by: sausage on Oct 27, 2008 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've been saying pretty much the same thing for the last six...year, now, "They'll need to lose their homes and be out on the street in a cold hard rain before they connect the dots."

And by "they" both you and I mean the brain dead j'mokes in the latest McCain/Palin TV commercial making the rounds. You know the one that starts out with Obama saying to skinheaded Ted Nugent-fan Samuel "Joe the Plumber" Wurzelbacher, "It's not that I want to punish your success. ... I think when you spread the wealth around, it's good for everybody." There follows a hallelujah chorus of "I'm Joe the Plumber" from various Rush Limbaugh-listeners, Ayn Rand-cultists, Lou Dobbs-worshipers and MinuteMen (pronounced mī-ˈnüt, as in small, lacking importance)all worried that big, bad Barack Obama will impose some sort of wacko socialist order that will take all their hard-earned cash and give it to the undeserving. Unmitigated bullshit.

This gaggle of Ted Nugent-fans, Rush Limbaugh-listeners, Ann Coulter-lovers, Ayn Rand-cultists and Lou Dobbs-worshipers in the commercial, I've described above, are the Americans who'll benefit most from Obama's,as of yet sketchy, progressive, and decidedly pro-capitalist, economic plan. A New Deal 2.0 as it were.

Yet so jealous of the tiny crumbs which those lower on the socioeconomic ladder receive from our parsimonious government, that these ersatz "Joes the Plumber" will cut their own economic throats. These dog-like lumpenproletarians, wrapped in the delusion that one day they too will live in the rarefied atmosphere of the Warren Buffets of the nation, will protect their corporate masters to the death, even as those same masters are looting their food bowl.

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Dana L. Stern
Posted by: Dana L. Stern on Oct 27, 2008 9:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America stood by a government that didn't stand by them. Our government has betrayed us. The rich, Washington D.C. elitists, and Wall Street doesn't care about the rest of America. Foreclosures will continue to escalate more people will loose jobs. Stock market will continue on a downward spriral. Money from Bailouts goes to Salaries of the favored few on Wall street and to luxury vacations.

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Dishonest Americans
Posted by: SEDGFLD on Oct 27, 2008 10:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many Americans aren't as clueless as they pretend to be. Some are just showing their selfishness, greed and/or true colors. Others continue to live in a fantasy world where their egos are stroked by telling them they are good Americans, patriotic, moral, christian and/or any number of rhetorically used adjetives that give them permission to excuse their complicity and condonement of dishonest and reprehensible acts committed by those they support.

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bush's "legacy"
Posted by: willymack on Oct 27, 2008 10:16 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is a bizarro world where nothing is real, and the ruling elite are NEVER wrong. We've got some major reparing to do, not the least of which is the exposure of the bushies as the treasonous criminals they are, and a very public prosecution of the sorry lot for multiple crimes against our people and those of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. I'd say give bush a chance to slither away to his compound in Paraguay, stripped of his American citizenship and the money he stole from us. The rest can rot in prison right here in the USA. NO forgiveness, no pardons, EVER.

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Well said, Garrison!
Posted by: austintexas_1 on Oct 27, 2008 10:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It just so happens that a few minutes before I read this piece by Garrison Keillor I received an email from a friend of mine who happens to be supporting McCain. I like this fellow, he's a good guy, but in this election season his emails have become fairly predictable, and this one was no different: it consisted of a long laundry list of outlandish, ridiculous and largely unsupported, scary claims about Obama. Fear and smear, fear and smear.

I have many times asked my friend, "Have you read Obama's book(s) yet?" The answer is always: "I've been meaning to get around to doing that ..." This guy won't take the time to read "The Audacity of Hope" or actually study Obama's positions on the issues; he supports John McCain because he was an aviator and he is a war hero. For my friend, an ex-navy man, that's all that matters - end of story.

I can talk all I want about McCain's lack of concern about restoring habeas corpus, his selection of the Alaskan Airhead as his vice-presidential nominee, his self-professed lack of understanding of economics, his age, short temper and the fact that his policies are pretty much George Bush redux - none of this counts - the important thing is that he was an aviator and is a war hero. His attitude seems to be like the old joke: "Don't confuse me with facts, my mind's made up."

I agree with Garrison Keillor - there's no point in trying to persuade such people. Logic won't work, language won't work, reasoned arguments can't cut through the fog. After the election I'll continue to have spirited discussions about politics with this friend, but just for fun - I know he's not going to change his mind because of anything I might say. Now, it could be that Obama will be elected and all the terrible things people are saying about him will turn out to be true, and all the scary predictions of ballooning deficits, expanding government and financial meltdown will happen ... but wait a minute, isn't all that stuff happening NOW????

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Maybe whoever recommended Palin
Posted by: Old Skeptic on Oct 27, 2008 2:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is a covert Democratic operative? What quicker way to expose McSame's impulsive and unthoughtful decision-making process than this poor lady's nomination? She is so clearly out of her depth, it is actually sad.

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YOU MUST BE KIDDING!!!!!!!
Posted by: sirios on Oct 27, 2008 2:58 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Thankfully it seems that most of us are able to recognize BS when we see it" The condition of the country is proof enough that this is certainly NOT the case.

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Obama's already sold out on FISA and Iraq War funding,
Posted by: lindat on Oct 27, 2008 6:33 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and he's not even president yet.

If Obama really represented real change, he'd never be a candidate.

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I enjoyed this post Lets Put GOP on the endangerd Spieces List
Posted by: Doyle Wheeler on Oct 28, 2008 2:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I enjoyed the artical and got some comic relief from a couple of the republicans that actually have the gall to try and prop up their failed party that with any luck will soon be on the endangered speices list. I'd much rather protect a polar bear than a republican. With a polar bear I know what expect. If I get to close and he's hungry I'm going to be on the lunch minu. With a republican he'll be smiling shanking my hand well his other hand is picking my pocket!

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