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Dem Convention Day 3: Is This the Day America Started Growing Up? (Mary Lyon)
(World News Trust) -- An awful lot of childish behavior has been on parade on the campaign trail this year. Well, yeah, pretty much every campaign season we see that, but this year has seemed even more juvenile than usual. Are we getting beyond that, at long last? Did we just take a big step?
There’s one way in which we certainly should be trying to grow up as a
nation: It’s long past time for us to get over the racial issue. Do we
really want our nation to cling so tightly to the bad old ways? Is it
just that doggone critical to maintain the pout on our collective lips
about a tarnished few still-cherished old grudges and grievances? Or do
we really want to move forward? We come far enough by now -- crossing
over into a completely new millennium, numbering 350 million, venturing
to the moon and back, presently on our way to Pluto, celebrating the
first woman Speaker of the House, and honoring the first viable female
candidacy for President. But can we push farther -- can we go all the
way -- perhaps beyond the old boundaries of a societal solar system?
Were we, are we, fully aware of the threshold leaped and the distance
traveled on this third night of the Democratic National Convention?
There were two major events to distinguish the day, and the principals
involved looked pretty darn grown-up. After a long and nauseating
obsession on whether the Barack-versus-Hillary would slice the party
like a sushi chef filets a fine fish, it seems a lot more cool to link
arms with some strong leadership and kick our differences into the
corner.
There didn’t seem to be any traces remaining of a family squabble.
Hillary Clinton was hardly half-hearted when she spoke for the New York
delegation, shortstopping the delegate tallies to nominate Barack Obama
by acclamation. It was a vigorous and enthusiastic follow-up to her
rousing speech of the previous night. Then, the rabid speculation about
“What Would Bill Do” was firmly ended.
No wavering from him after his lead-off sentence, once the screaming
standing ovation died down. President Bill Clinton’s second line was a
straightforward declaration of support for Barack Obama, and then a
pledge to work with Hillary and her “18 million” to help get him
elected. He left no doubt about his resolve to join and work hard for
the team. Throughout Clinton’s speech and that of Joe Biden afterwards,
there were more detailed remarks -- statements and phrases that the rest
of us in the trenches in the days ahead are going to need to maintain
our resolve and answer some nasty email or uninformed claim borrowed
from conservative hate radio. More of the red meat that many of us have
been yearning to bite into was indeed served, and on a fairly large
plate. If not quite beefy enough to come with candles, good crystal,
and Grandma’s sterling silver flatware, then at least it was presented
on some nice place mats with clean stainless steel knives and forks.
I would have liked the knives on that table to have had somewhat
sharper edges to them, however. Childish of me, maybe. It was elegant
for Clinton and Biden both to praise John McCain’s service. Not sure I
could have been so kind. Clinton didn’t dwell on his own glory days
beyond a reminder of how many ways we were better off by the time his
stewardship ended than we will be by the time George Bush gets through
with us. But he did say those eight years of his convinced him that
Obama is the man for the big job, and noted that people once said he
also was too young and inexperienced to be Commander-in-Chief.
A really great part about the Third Night, in terms of making a public
case for Obama’s eligibility came in two words from Bill Clinton:
“here’s why.” For the first time in prime time, from both Clinton and
Biden, we heard specific reasons why -- as Biden’s litany put it --
“Barack Obama is right and John McCain is wrong.” That was a clear
delineation that had not been firmly established this week. They both
spelled out in some detail how the economic and foreign policy blunders
of the Bush administration that have left our country in such woeful
shape would carry over into a McCain reign. For the first time, at
least among the principal figures, we actually heard references to an
assault on science, torture, Hurricane Katrina, and cronyism. Even so,
these constituted a mere handful on a list of thousands of unmentioned
reckless political, moral, and legal benders from which we will have a
monster of a national hangover, and which we soft-peddle, overlook, or forgive too easily -- at our peril.
The only enlargement which might have covered any atrocities committed
by Dick Cheney and friends, came from a Joe Biden joke to those who
uphold the law and honor the Constitution -- “no longer will you hear
those eight most dreadful words in the English language -- ‘the vice
president’s office is on the phone.’” Biden did come up with another
one, inadvertently, a Freudian slip about the America that George Bush
has left us being the America that George -- oops -- that John McCain is
going to give us. I guess the Twin City Twins really are awfully hard
to tell apart.
The night of Clintons Behaving Graciously and Joe Biden fighting with
finesse was unexpected. The first half of it was a most welcome change
and a big step toward maturity. We’ve been repeatedly told by the media
about the Great Democratic Divide -- that in reality seems only a vague
memory by now. Perhaps we really are growing up in that regard. I must
admit I would have liked to see Biden thrash around in the playpen a
little more. John McCain hasn’t taken anywhere near the lumps from our
side that his side will be shoveling at us with every bulldozer in
Minneapolis (and some ceremoniously flown in from Iraq), and with an
aim to bury us alive.
But while we agonize about whether to hit hard and keep hitting, or to
try a more adult approach, we do have one thing that makes us all very
grown-up indeed. Tactics and individual convention highlights aside, we
all took one giant leap for American-kind on the Third Day. The smiles,
the tears, the rapt expressions, the bliss -- from faces of all skin
tones throughout the arena -- told the full story. Our country evolved
tonight. We grew up a little more. We reached farther. We stood just a
little taller and took a longer, deeper, more deliberate breath. We
knocked 18 million cracks in one glass ceiling and utterly shattered
another. We are not the same America now. We’re a nation with an
emotional, cultural, societal, and historical wound that we’ve nursed
for centuries -- and a whole lot of us just made it official -- that
we’re getting over it and putting it behind us.
There is a person of color just one election away from possibly winning
the biggest, most powerful, and most important job in this country. We
should all stop a moment in the midst of this partisan madness and
appreciate that. Hey, world -- we’re growing up. It’s a huge first in
American history that some Democratic party elders stated today that
they thought they’d never live to see. Joe Biden put it nicely -- “these
are extraordinary times. I’m ready, Barack Obama’s ready, this is his
time, this is our time.”
Maybe it finally is.
***
Mary Lyon is a veteran broadcaster and five-time Golden Mike Award winner, who has anchored, reported, and written for the Associated Press Radio Network, NBC Radio "The Source," and many Los Angeles-area stations including KRTH-FM/AM, KLOS-FM, KFWB-AM, and KTLA-TV, and occasional media analyst for ABC Radio News. She began her career as a liberal activist with the Student Coalition for Humphrey/Muskie in 1968, and helped spearhead a regional campaign, The Power 18," to win the right to vote for 18-year-olds. She remains an advocate for liberal causes, responsibility and accountability in media, environmental education and support of the arts for children, and green living. In addition to World News Trust, Mary writes for Huffington Post, OpEdNews, Democrats.us, WeDemocrats.org's "We! The People" webzine. Mary is also a parenting expert, having written and llustrated the book "The Frazzled Working Woman's Practical Guide to Motherhood.
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CreatedThursday, August 28 2008
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Last modifiedWednesday, November 06 2013