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Wrant

August 16, 2011

Just when you thought maybe things were opening up and simplifying and you might have a little space to pursue a few carefully chosen, priority activities, and just when you thought your focus was clear and your time reasonably alloted …

Along comes a truly embarrassing, shameful republican primary filled with unhinged, whackadoodle extremist candidates who say impossibly ignorant, hurtful, dangerous things… and try as you might to sort of ignore the drama–which feels mortifying and surreal, and it doesn’t deserve the coverage it gets or our time to understand it–it creeps into the news stream, and, in fact, is a huge part of the news stream, and in order to stay informed and conversant in matters of the day (because, actually, that was one of my priority activities, having found myself in recent years way lost and disconnected when we stopped getting several newspapers and magazines delivered to our doorstep because, obviously, the internet (duh) is where information resides, but for years have not given the internet (and really, who calls it “the internet” anymore anyway, it’s just simply today’s information source, period) its due attention (for news) because it felt like it was just time spent online and not time spent intentionally keeping up with current events, and as such, seemed a frivolous and illegitimate use of time, so felt guilty for spending too much time online and in social media sites, but now I don’t because it’s where the I get my news, but I spend a LOT of time online reading, more than I’d ever imagined I’d need to allow) you have to pay attention to what these people are saying.

You have to pay attention.  And that takes time.

So… the republican candidates…the extreme sensationalist aspirants who are dominating the presidential race on the right side of the house.  Or right of the right side of the house.  But really, where have all the reasonable republicans gone?  Can’t we really just have a civil, honest debate with legitimate differences of opinion, and then can’t we make grown up concessions when we find ourselves in the minority, and can’t we be willing to find some win-win things to work with?  Where’d those people go?  We were those people when we were on the minority side.

We can’t run a country on ideology, people.

Until the race started heating up, I’d had just enough time to take care of my own personal projects –mothering my teenager and managing his summer schedule, daily writing, gardening, processing my trip to Nepal (and writing about it), healing a broken pair of achilles, following my curiosity about buddhism–thinking and being inspired about what I’ve been reading (and writing about it), spending more time with Jim this summer than in the last fifteen years combined (it seems) (and writing about it), making monthly visits to Southern California to visit my mom (which, yeah, I definitely gotta write about that)… it seems full but manageable, like I’ve had the focus to choose these pursuits and give of myself fully, even between vacations and baseball tournaments.. it was fine and it’s been a satisfying, thoughtful, stimulating summer.  Good priorities.  All good.

But then it also has to be a presidential pre-election season, one that happens to be populated with people even weirder than the last go-round, people who possess the weirdest damn religio-political views, views that have no business creeping into a mainstream conversation about the running of our country.  And to keep up and stay knowledgeable and responsible–because, as I said, staying politically current is now back on one of my front burners, and we have to pay attention to what they’re saying, because the flock is lining up behind this fringe and I’m not sure the majority of them realize what’s being said here–takes a little time.  Time I didn’t really have much more of.  I do read the news, online, mostly as it appears as links in my Facebook stream (talk about adapting social media..) from favorite sources (mainstream  and non-mainstream newspapers and magazines, Jon Stewart (but of course), political blogs and friends who find even better stuff), but now it feels like a full time job just keeping up with all I want to read.  And.. uh.. I don’t really have that kind of time.

That’s all I’m saying.  I’m fascinated, mostly because I care about the future of the country.  And, I’m in chronic despair over its future, the future of our democracy, the legitimacy (or illegitimacy) of this experiment in democracy, its failures to protect the interests of our human population, to protect our resources, its crumbling at the hands of corporate interests…  Despair.  Where are all the smart people and why aren’t they 1) being listened to by the most people and 2) running our country?  No, we do have smart people in charge, but they’re not taking that charge.  No, he’s trying to do the right thing, doing what he said he’d do–finding the center, compromising–but the other guys aren’t playing along.  And their only objective is seeing Obama and his administration fail, and they’re holding unreasonable lines at the expense of the public interest.

Anyway, this isn’t a rant on what’s wrong with our political system.. which is a lot…. can rant on that later…it’s a rant on what it takes to keep up.

I’m just saying that it’s taking more time to take an interest and that that time comes at the expense of other real life priorities.  Priorities I’d been thoughtful in selecting.  But this is important, too.

Sigh.

Oh..  picture of the day..  I’ll use a nice one from a couple days ago.  No relation to this post, but a picture that says expand, breathe, relax, broaden perspective, open up, peace… all that.

5 Responses to “Wrant”


  1. Yep. Which is why I don’t keep up anymore. Just gave it up. Realized it wasn’t worth the time and stress. I’m not apathetic now, I just don’t get as involved and as worked up as I used to. It’s nice to not even know the names of all the “actors” involved anymore. And did you know I’m a registered Republican? No offense taken though 🙂 They’re all jackasses, on both sides. Bunch of power-hungry morons.

    Loved your last photo!

  2. Kari's avatar Kari Says:

    Republicans are fine. I started as one, too. It’s the loss of reasonableness I’m grieving. I have some real problems with republican ideology, and relate vastly easier to the democratic view of the world, but I’d agree to compromise in the interest of moving forward in the best interest of the people. That’s just not happening on the republican/tea party fringe side of the house anymore. Their strategy is to ensure nothing works and pin the resulting fiascos on obama in the sole interest of seeing him fail. The platform, the goal is Obama failure at all costs. It’s petulant, irresponsible and totally dangerous, Our kids will suffer, education will suffer, older people will suffer, our poor will suffer, our environment will suffer. The only ones who benefit from the path we’re on now are corporations and rich people. Who will continue to fund the campaigns of people with extremist ideological views. That was the debt ceiling “debate.”

    Wait.

    All I wanted to say is that there is very very very little reasonableness on the right. There was not an ounce of compromise coming from the right in the debt ceiling stuff. That was their arrogant, unapologetic tactic and it’s not ok. We all lose in that, and that’s their objective so they can blame Obama. Not not NOT ok.


  3. LOL! I know how very important this is to you. I wish I could care. I will again someday, just not now. Some politicians are reasonable and good people but most of them only care about their own interests. That is why I refuse to blame because I think they’re all Aholes. Both sides. Maybe one side is more the Aholes right now, but soon enough the pendulum will swing back and it will be the other side. No one is without blame in politics.

  4. Kari's avatar Kari Says:

    I’m more peaceful and way better off when i’m not paying attention. blissful. i’ve given consideration to prioritizing politics right out of my life for that reason.. being current feels like a trap and it’s inevitably a losing battle, and i can think of so many more things to focus my efforts on.

    i was very self critical when i fell behind, however, feeling like i wasn’t being a responsible citizen and feeling like i had nothing to complain about if i was going to remain blissfully ignorant..

    i am really worried though.. not in my life (i don’t think the quality of MY life will be affected much one way or the other in the next 30 years — we’re people of privilege and resources and we plan well) but i do fear for peter. I don’t at all like a world that is run by corporate interests. don’t even get me started on a country run by intolerant fringe christian fundamentalists (read the New Yorker’s article last week on Michele Bachmann… and Rick Perry’s in the same camp… and they’re both considered to be in the top three of the rep candidates right now.. and i’ve seen how elections turn out… not to be paranoid, just to be aware.)

    anyway. yeah….. it is something i’m thinking a lot about… but yeah.. it takes time and comes at a cost.

    sorry to go on.


  5. I think all parents have feared for their children. Every generation has gone through this. Our children will get through and deal with whatever it is they have to get through, just like we have. There is always injustice and always crappy politics. This is nothing new. I think your instinct to let it go for a more peaceful existence, is a good one! 🙂 Our country has survived many bad presidents and politicians and we will continue to do so. Hey, it’s your blog, you can go on all you want! :-))


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