get donkey!

Still Reality-Based After All These Years

What’s next? I Have No Idea.

I tried writing this nice conciliatory post about how silver the lining to this awful election loss really is, but I keep coming across little anecdotal snippets of people who waited in line for 10 hours in Ohio, 6 hours in Florida, and 4 hours in VA (my brother and sister-in-law) and I can’t quite get over the sneaking suspicion that the election was stolen. I just cannot believe that people would wait in line for a whole damned day to vote for the status quo. How many people could truly be that afraid of gay people getting married or whatever “moral values” means? Of course, like I said, these stories are all anecdotal and therefore don’t, include verifiable evidence of fraud. I still wonder why Kerry folded so fast. I think he should have waited the 11 days for the provisional count in Ohio and had his legal team kick over as many stones as possible in the interim. I think he failed us there, but there is nothing any of us can do about that, and I can’t hold it against him.

On top of that I heard Bush’s press conference this morning and I almost had a stroke. His arrogance goes to 11.

At this moment, my political feelings can best be summed up by the chorus to the Bloodhound Gang’s “The Roof is on Fire”. It’s probably not constructive to feel that way, but that’s the way it is.

I don’t have any answers. I don’t know what the Democratic Party is supposed to do now. I don’t know who should lead it. I don’t know if they should swing right or left or spin around in circles. I do think there is a lot of entrenchment and inertia in the party hierarchy on all levels and somehow that needs to be cleaned out. Of course I don’t have a clue about how to do it

My gut tells me that some really bad things are going to happen in the next 4 years. I hope to God that’s not the case, but, if the far right really is allowed to fulfill its agenda, I hope it wakes people up to the fact that the most pressing social problem in the nation is not gay marriage.

There are a few slivers of silver, I guess. On a personal level, I have made a lot of friends and gotten to know people I would never have met had I not become involved in the political process. Those friendships will carry on. We’ll need each other for moral support.

On a larger, less personal level, we on the left have some nascent institutions that weren’t there in 2000. We now have groups like the Center for American Progress, Media Matters for America, MoveOn, ACT, the New Democrat Network, and Democracy for America. We have a new media outlet in Air America that will continue to grow. We have an online community that has real power when it is united (see Dean and Sinclair). We need to support all of this stuff and probably more so than the party apparatus. If I had to guess, I would say these new institutions are where our success lies and our new leadership and direction should come from.

For now, I am going to take a step back from activism in the purely political realm. For the immediate future, I’m going to focus my energy on getting involved in my community. Initially I have chosen to volunteer with an organization that mentors kids in inner-city public schools. I feel that I can make a difference there, and Lord knows public school kids will need all the help they can get in the shadow of No Child Left Behind. I think a lot of Democrats who don’t know what to do next would do well to try the same. It can only be good for the soul after this awful, brutal campaign. On top of that, secular non-profits are really hurting right now. They need help and they are surely not going to get it from this faith-based administration.

As for this blog, all I know right now is that I have no desire to spend the next four years posting articles about Bush Administration atrocities. Others can do that. Additionally, as much as I enjoy it, I will probably not post many articles about process. I think that was part of the problem with the Democratic effort this time. Many of us, myself included, got too focused on polls and strategy and electability and just being anti-Bush. Somewhere in all that mess we lost our message, or at least allowed it to be diffused. The truth is I don’t want to be solely against something anymore. That sucks up too much energy. I want to be for something. Maybe I can use this blog to figure out what that should be. At the very least it will be a convenient place to post pictures of my cats and dogs.

So that’s it for now. It’s over. And it sucks. But we are still here and we have to move forward.

November 4th, 2004 Posted by Rob | General, General comments, Interesting stuff, Politics, Texas | 4 comments

4 Comments

  1. Your final paragraph is it! Energy devoted to building is more easily replenished than
    energy devoted to demolishing something. It is time to build, PERIOD.
    What? I will respond this way. Forget about the values stuff, it is a crap. From the more
    empirical side of stuff: look at voting patterns from select counties in areas you have
    knowledge about and compare the 2000 with the 2004 elections. Generally these counties have
    have populations of less than 100K, and would be considered rural or of semi-rural and
    have towns of less than 50K in population. I suggest two Nevada and Louisiana. In sum
    this is the most basic reason for the current day mess; it ain’t about message, values
    ,being folksy, hicks, rednecks etc. It is about moving 15% to 30% to 25% to 40%
    The Demo. gurus forgot about the simple stuff. Now you have something to do!!!! That
    Donkey just need maps to roads too long avoided.

    Comment by NUMAJ | 11/4/2004

  2. Amen.

    Comment by Marc | 11/4/2004

  3. :lol: agreed! I also give you a lot of credit for working within that mentoring program. Perhaps if more kids have good mentors like you and Jenn, I won’t have some many kids who can’t read and have horrible lives in my practice someday. Of course that will take a lot of good mentors and sadly a lot of individuals don’t really realize how many kids are getting “left behind. Sigh…

    Comment by Amy | 11/4/2004

  4. I agree with you about Bush’s press conference. It was a big “Cheney you!” to anyone even slightly inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt.

    Comment by Mad Kane | 11/4/2004

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