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Trying To Make Nice (Mary Lyon)
(World News Trust) -- Dear Senator McCain,
Well, gee, look at you, ‘eh? Have we finally met the “kinder, gentler”
Republican that Republicans have been teasing us with for 20 years now?
And why is my first instinct still to pull away? Maybe because it’s a
Republican talking. Pure and simple. Perhaps you’ve heard the joke
about what’s actually going on when a Republican’s lips are moving.
Hey, don’t mind me. I’m used to this. I’ve had to suffer the
embarrassment, disappointment, and discouragement of the last
seven-and-some miserable years of GOP/Bush rule. Our whole country is
on its knees as a result. Your fellows at the Republican convention
seem to agree, while not actually saying so -- or mentioning the name of
the guy who’s been calling all the bad shots all this time. Otherwise,
they’d have been wallowing in his wonderful triumphs for most of the
week instead of just bashing us Democrats all day every day.
Overreaching is still your thing. There was a moment provoked by a
rather lurid “Memories of 9/11” film that aired before prime time.
MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann broke format with a subdued emotional
interruption. Voice choking, he quietly slammed your party for its gory
over-exploitation of a national tragedy in which he said some of his
friends perished. CNN’s Campbell Brown verbally recoiled from it also.
But was any of this surprising? Don’t we know the game, after all this
time? I can already hear a thousand riffs from The Who: “Meet the new
boss, same as the old boss.” Out with the bad air, in with the new, you
say. The problem is, you’re still breathing with the same old diseased
lungs.
I guess Barack Obama’s overriding call for change really must be a
pretty good idea. Seems everybody else wants their names on it, too.
Senator McCain, you finished up at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul
by assuring us you’re different. There’s that m-word, “maverick,”
again. You were solidly for the Bush-brand Republican-ism of most of
this decade before you were against it. You’ve been in Washington for
years, with most of what now afflicts America passing through your
hands, but somehow your fingerprints aren’t on any of it.
On the final night of the GOP convention, Senator, you’ve now said we
should forget everything we know and have witnessed since your
colleagues took the White House almost eight years ago. We’re supposed
to pay no attention to that political party behind the curtain. Never
mind that you’ll dwell on the same stuff, using the same language,
coming from the same party spouting the same philosophy and mindset
that’s been our host on this freak-show ride since January 2001.
And you’re going to earn our trust, you say. A trust that nameless,
faceless, overgeneralized “Washington”, I guess, has lost. You did
briefly mention Republicans who “gave into corruption.” But everywhere
else, the blame was spread around to vague groupings of both parties.
So much for being a real stand-up guy and accepting Obama’s challenge
of the week before -- to own your party’s failures. It all sounded like
the noncommittal “mistakes were made” schtick we’ve heard too
frequently already.
But no, it’s gonna be nicer now, you insist. The Republican Party is new and improved and our arms are open.
They are?
And I suppose Sarah Palin didn’t mean any of it, either. She was just funnin’ the other night, I guess.
Look, Senator McCain, I’d like to offer you some of MY straight talk.
The change you earnestly outlined in your acceptance speech is not
about to promote the results we really need. You’ll flatly reject what
really should be done: a reversal of the penny-wise/pound-foolish,
narrow-minded, short-sighted dictates of modern-day conservative rule.
That dominance is what’s gotten us to this sorry state that roughly 80
percent of the country agrees we need to abandon. The Republican Way
has resulted in the largest debts, the greatest shame, and the most
horrifying mistakes our nation has ever had to swallow. THAT is what
has to change, and that’s the one thing you can’t and won’t offer.
You’re not about to rethink the same stale old philosophy that’s so
easily led astray by greed, cronyism and lust for power and domination.
It’s a philosophy that still obsesses myopically on “what’s in it for
me” rather than considering a broader and more inclusive “how can we all help heal each other.”
Senator, we know your story. We get that you’ve felt a longterm
devotion to your country and you’ve endured great pain for it. I don’t
doubt your sincerity there. I almost believe you when you look into the
camera and reach out to those of us supporting Barack Obama, soothingly
telling us that we and our candidate have your respect and admiration.
Okay. So what was last night about, then? What’s with the nasty
name-calling narrative with which liberals have been battered for a
couple of decades by now? What about the ongoing demonization of
Democrats from your party and your hate-radio buddies and your Fox News
echo chamber? They’re all doing it in your name and for your benefit
these days. How about the fact that your pals never even do ours the
simple decency of saying our party’s name correctly (hint: it’s
Democratic Party, NOT Democrat Party)? Two or three token sentences of
kumbaya, GOP-style, thrown in toward the end of several days of nonstop derision and all is forgiven?
Senator McCain, it will be hard to take your soothing words at face
value every time I think back to the snide insults from the smug young
smart-ass Sarah Palin. It doesn’t matter than you ran down a list of
nice, generous, selfless activities you urged us all to explore to
enable a more perfect union. That business about teaching an illiterate
adult to read or feeding a hungry child sounds an awful lot like the
community organizing efforts that your mean-spirited minions on the
convention’s penultimate night couldn’t mock loudly enough. It will be
difficult not to feel my lip start to curl whenever I’m unlucky enough
to look at the wretchedly cocky Rudy Giuliani and remember his
sarcastic cruelty. Mr. McCain, you’ve got a LONG way to go before any
stated claims to reach out to someone like me can be viewed with any
credibility. This isn’t the kind of surface boo-boo you can just kiss
and make it all better. This goes much deeper.
To an outside observer like me, who will vote for Obama/Biden in
November, you spent an hour massaging a rewrite of “message, I care” --
even while you didn’t even have the candor to mention that slogan’s
original owner, President George H.W. Bush, by name. And yes, I noticed
that the closest you got to his feckless son was to name his wife
Laura. You claimed that despite party preferences “we’re all Americans”
-- “an association that means more to me than any other.“ Sounds nice
enough. Why don’t I believe it?
Like your predecessor before you, you’re always going to want me to see
it your way rather than the other way around, even though you insist
you’re here to serve and not to dictate. You’re never going to revisit
your view that my daughter and I must not be allowed to have the last
word over what happens to our bodies. You won’t get off the
testosterone treadmill that will perennially lead you to want to
impress people with an example of our power instead of the power of our
example. You say you hate war, but I get the feeling you can’t wait for
your turn to “settle something.” You’re not exactly a newcomer here.
You promise that the have-nots will get the breaks to revive our
economy, but you’ll continue to favor the interests of big
corporations. You’ve been around long enough to remind me that those
things that make me wary of you are your universal default positions.
And I’ve been around long enough to realize that your party won’t hail me as a maverick because I disagree. I’ll be loudly condemned as a traitor instead.
I can trust one thing after listening to you: that I know enough not to want to trust you.
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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CreatedFriday, September 05 2008
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Last modifiedWednesday, November 06 2013