American Politics is a fractured mess and the Republicans don't understand that this needs to change
I’ve been busy the last few weeks but no more blog neglect
as I have some things to day and they need to be said (or my head might
explode).
Lets start with the recently concluded US election. The last
4 years under President Obama in the US has seen a slow economic recovery from
the 8 previous years of financial deterioration under Bush. At the same time,
right from when President Obama began his campaign, the Republican Party has
seemingly adopted a radical tone which, at times, has taken on racial overtones
to try and show Obama as something he isn’t.
President Obama has had to endure relentless baseless
attacks on him, on his birthplace, on his religion, on his values and, of
course, on his choices. He has had to endure BLATANT racism from other elected
officials having the audacity to bark orders at him and wave their fingers in
his face to being yelled at while addressing Congress, being called a liar. All
of this by people who, in any other nations, might be considered treasonous for
the way they speak of and to their own political leader. I say that mostly
because for the last 2 years, the Republican Party has done more to hurt their
own nation then any terrorist organization ever could; They have ground the
political mechanisms of the US to a screeching halt.
With President Obama’s resounding re-election victory (thank
god!!!), which for whatever reason the idiots at Fox News never saw coming (and
neither did Romney or Ryan), the hope is that the differences between the two
parties can somehow be resolved and Washington can actually get back to working
as a unit instead of having Republicans (led by their Tea Party members, the
most blatantly racist of them all) doing everything they can to make the
President look bad. As I say that, the Republicans are already continuing down
the road they have been going along for 5 years now of polarizing the nation
even further by conducting a witch hunt over the issues that led to the deaths
of 4 Americans in Benghazi, Libya.
Mitt Romney came out 2 days ago and blamed his loss in the
election on the same reasons Bill O’Reilly used that same night; Obama pandered
to people who “wanted things from the Federal Government”. Basically, these
rich white guys are whining that people who have nothing, want something. They
are whining that poor people don’t want to have to pay for basic, fundamental
health care. These people don’t want to have college loans force them into poverty
because repaying them the way they used to be structured in the past, would bankrupt
them. They want women to be equal to men in their pay. They want access to
contraception and (in the worst of cases) abortion, a right enshrined in the 1970’s
in the Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court case and yet still re-visited over and over
again by the religious right-dominated Republicans.
“They”, the 47% which Romney pilloried in the now infamous
secretly recorded campaign speech (plus the 4% of other people who also
happened to vote for Obama), want gay people to be able to love and marry like
the rest of the country, they want US troops to come home from war for the
first time in 12 years. They want their elected officials to represent them and
their moderate views instead of the extremist views that the Republicans seem
to have embraced over the last 5 years. The Republican message is a narrow
minded, predjudice view of the world that is as outdated as the message itself.
Once that sinks in to the talking heads and head honchos of the party, only
then will they mature into a political party that is representative of the will
of the people and not the select few upper class, rich snobs who would rather “go
it alone” then help out their fellow Americans.
I really have a hard time seeing why anyone would vote for Romney,
especially when he wouldn't even tell you the basic tenets of his fiscal plan
One of the most intriguing parts of their election was how
some of the words used by both Mitt Romney and President Obama about Americans
really do ring more true of Canadians then it does of Americans. America is not
the “great social experiment” that they claim it to be. That is in fact Canada.
When you go to the US, you are indoctrinated into a mindset of becoming “American”.
Maybe this has lessened now then before but as recently as 10 years ago, many
immigrants identified first as being American, and then where they were from. I
was born and raised in Toronto and the first thing I say when people ask me is
that I am Portuguese because that’s always been the way we describe ourselves
in many parts of this country. Sure we are Canadian, but we identify first with
the country of birth of our parents (even more so when both our parents are
from the same place and are the same ethnicity, but that’s another subject
altogether).
Canada is the mosaic model that US political pundits speak
of when they (now, suddenly) use that word, not America. Just look at how the
voting panned out for the electoral college votes. All of the major
metropolitan areas of the US voted for Obama (New York, California, Florida,
Illinois, Michigan, Massachusetts, and Ohio), while all of the states that voted
for Romney were part of the former Confederate States during the Civil War (the
ones that had the hardest time with the idea that slavery was a “bad” thing)
voted in favour of Mitt Romney (mainly Texas, Alabama, Louisiana, the Carolina’s,
Wyoming, Arkansas, Georgia and Kentucky).
This map didn't have the added 29 Electoral College seats that Obama won from Florida
nevertheless, it was a total asswhopping, something Fox News was completely shocked to see
As much as we differ in Canada about certain issues, Universal
health care is something we all agree is needed simply based upon how poorly we
see the US health care system in the US runs. It’s all about money over people
in the US when it comes to health care, not in Canada. We have a strong central
Government (that some do not like) which keeps our fiscal house in order while
still maintaining the kinds of social programs that Americans can only dream of
having (as much as Fox news has continually tried to denigrate us about
throughout their hotly contested and testy election).
Despite the push back from the Right in America against the
concepts of community and being compassionate towards their most destitute, the
political push for policies that actually help out EVERYONE instead of just the
top 1% have gained traction and are now on the verge of being engrained as the
lasting legacy of President Obama’s presidency.
The changing demographics of America are certainly a huge factor but
they are still miles away from being the kind of fully integrated and accepting
society that we are in comparison to them.
We are the cultural mosaic that they are now trying to
convince themselves that they in fact are. It is almost laughable to hear
Americans who say that about themselves. It is almost as if they fail to see
just how far away they actually are from being a true “mosaic” of nationalities
and ethnicities. When an entire political party can get away with
institutionalized racism against the President of the nation for nearly 5 years,
then clearly America, you are nowhere near what we have in Canada. It is true
that in the major cities, the melting pot is starting to show some cracks.
People in New York and LA and Chicago are beginning to identify differently than
they used to in the past, mostly due to where they emigrating from. This
self-identification sea change may well be the result of seeing how we as
Canadians identify ourselves. Is it possible that we are having an effect on
them?
Maybe for all the things we worry about how our culture has
been negatively influenced (for example, US TV) as well as other traits that we
have been absorbing from American culture, maybe one thing has transferred back
down south from us; the need to have some <GASP!!!> socialist-types of
ideas about helping out everyone, no one being left behind (sounds like that
old Bush phrase about no student being left behind doesn’t it), and protecting
the poor by giving them free health care. America, it appears, is trying to
become a little Canadian suddenly and its not a bad thing despite what Racist
Republicans would have their constituents believe.