"History's verdict is all we have left.  And when tomorrow calls today into account, some of us want to say we stood up.  We called out.  We were not silent."
--Leonard Pitts, Jr., "Gestures of Conscience Bring Solace," Baltimore Sun, March 19, 2006

"THANK YOU FOR NOT BLAMING ME FOR THE REST OF MY PARTY'S INSANITY"

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This entry was posted on 5/28/2009 3:21 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

My friend Robby, God bless him, has endured my writing about him before, so I don't think he would mind if I do it again--this time, in response to a phone call he made to me today in which he really did say, as soon as I answered the phone: 

"Thank you for not blaming me for the rest of my party's insanity."

Some of you may remember that Robby is my friend who is a bona fide, card-carrying right-wing Republican.  A passionate gun collector and member of the NRA, he actually LIKES Ann Coulter and Ted Nugent ("I wish I was their illegitimate child"), Chuck Norris is one of his heroes, and he's one of the dwindling minority who believes George W. Bush was...well, if not actually a GOOD president...he, er, MEANT WELL.

You'd think we'd hate one another, but we've been friends for years, and no one else could have possibly been more supportive of me when my son was deployed--and I say that knowing that I gave him utter, outraged, infuriated HELL about Bush and Cheney and Rumsfeld year after year, and he took it because he loves me and because he understood how terrified I was for my son.  Eventually, he even came to see my point where the war was concerned.

But during the recent presidential campaign, Robby called me one day to say that he had given up listening to talk radio, something he had done faithfully for more than 15 years.  The blatant racism he heard there was so offensive to him that he complained to me that, "My party ran away from me," and that, as far as people like Rush Limbaugh were concerned:  "I don't know who they think I am when they claim to speak for conservative Republicans, because I am not that person."

Of course he voted for McCain, but he told me that, even though he disagreed with Obama on most things and would have preferred seeing a Republican back in the White House, he considered Obama to be calm, rational, reasoned, intelligent, and careful about making decisions.

(Something, by the way, my conservative Republican brother has also said.)

It was Robby who came to me when the viral e-mail campaign started going around in earnest to conservatives, claiming that Obama was dead-set to take away all our guns.  Robby had checked those claims out himself, both in legitimate websites such as the NRA, and in right-wing political blogs, and said that, as far as he could tell, it was all sheer baloney.

"Obama has never said a single word, not during the campaign, and not since he's taken office, that would appear to validate these fear-mongering e-mails," he said.  "As far as I'm concerned, they have been started and kept going by gun-sellers and others who stand to profit from panic-buying."

He was disgusted at that because it meant he couldn't find ammunition just to go to target practice, and felt that the constant hysteria whipped up by those e-mails--juxtaposed to Obama's calm, sensible demeanor--was making his party look crazier and crazier, which, as a lifelong Republican, he resented.

It's been one thing after another.

Today, he called because he was just so embarrassed, this time, by the whole Judge Sotomayor frenzy.

I said, "My husband just told me he'd gotten three e-mails today all about how Judge Sotomayor is going to take away all our guns."

With a heavy sigh, he said, "And yet, just yesterday, President Obama signed into law a provision that will allow gun enthusiasts to carry loaded weapons in national parks."

"I know," I said, "and there are a lot of us on the left who are dismayed at that.  It was an ammendment stuck onto the budget by a conservative congressman, and he really wanted the budget passed, so he had to hold his nose and sign it."

"But that's the thing about it that I appreciate," he replied.  "He didn't go before the cameras and make this big show about how he was being forced to sign the law even though he hated it.  He just did it quietly.  He knew that, the political reality of any sitting president is that they have to make onerous political sacrifices sometimes in order to get something bigger and more important passed later on.  None of them like it, but they all have to do it eventually. 

"The difference with Obama," he added, "is that he doesn't grandstand about it."

I commented about the presence of so many Blue Dog Democrats who'd been elected from very conservative states, such as Montana and Utah, who have pressed the president on gun rights.  They have to be able to show their constituents that they have upheld their pro-life, pro-gun values.  It doesn't mean that he has to sell out to them, but it does mean that he has to give them little victories now and then so that he can count on them later for the big things, like health care and energy legislation.

We talked about how, if the Republican Party really wants to keep from disintigrating, it is going to have to reach out to a few "Blue Dogs" in its own party, meaning, moderates like Colin Powell and others with more nuanced views on national security and more liberal views on social issues such as gay rights.

In other words, they have to move toward the middle.  And in a situation such as the one facing Republicans right now--they'd better, if they want to survive.

Robby told me about a right-wing friend of his who still listens to talk-radio, and how frustrated he's grown with her blind acceptance of everything she hears there.  "They're still talking about the Muslim connection," he complained.  "Can you believe that?"

The thing is, Robby is a loyal Republican, and he is a conservative--make no mistake about that--but he feels that the party has tilted SO far to the right that now they seem to be embracing only the loudest, most extreme points of view as representative of the party as a whole, which he finds deeply embarrassing and deeply offensive.  He knows there's a fairly obvious undercurrent of racism to the whole thing, and even though he's a white male redneck (and proud of it)--that does not mean he is racist.

My sister, who is also a conservative Republican, understands that very well.  After the death of our daddy in his 40's, my mother moved my much-younger sisters to Texarkana, where they grew up.  (I'd grown up in Dallas and was already in college and out of the house.)

So my sister pretty much embraced the whole Southern redneck, biker, beer-drinking, country-music-listening themes of that background, well into her adulthood.  But a few years ago, after a particularly painful divorce, she moved, first to anything-goes Austin, where she lived for four or five years, and then to Abilene, which is also a conservative city, but not in the same way as Texarkana.

"Family values" yes.  Racist attacks on a sitting president, no.

And over time, her viewpoints changed.  Though still conservative in many ways, she was a big Obama supporter even before I was, only the campaign was much harder on her, emotionally, than it was for me, because she was still on the right-wing e-mail merry-go-round, and every day, she received the most vile, hateful, nasty stuff in her Inbox from her former "friends."

Usually, she'd forward them on to me to debunk, and even though she told some of the people on her list--or maybe BECAUSE she told them--that she was an Obama supporter, they continued to flood her mailbox with crap.

Eventually, she met a truly fine man, and fell deeply in love for possibly the last--if not the first--time in her life, and moved to be closer to him.

And then one day, she got an e-mail from one of her old right-wing friends.  It was titled, "Ships Named for Presidents."  There was the U.S.S. George Bush and the U.S.S. Bill Clinton, and so on.

Then there was the "U.S.S. Barack Obama."

And the photograph depicted a rattletrap Haitian refugee boat, laden with black people, some hanging off the edges.

This one was the proverbial camel-straw--immediately she responded to the "friend" who had sent it, saying, "I thought you should know that I have a new boyfriend whom I love very much.  And he is an African-American."

She said she never heard from that person again.  Doesn't expect to.  Doesn't want to.

What these two stories of people close to me tells me is something that is verified by an op-ed written by Nicholas D. Kristof in today's New York Times"Would You Slap Your Father?  If So, You're a Liberal."

It starts out pretty funny, describing various studies that show the differences between, not just points of view of liberals and conservatives, but emotions as well.

In one study, participants were asked if they were performing in a comedy skit that required them to slap their fathers, and they asked his permission, and he said yes--would they do it?

Those who leaned liberal, the study said, would do so as long as Dad said it would be okay. 

Those who leaned conservative would NEVER slap their fathers, under any circumstances, for any reason.

Kristof writes:

 

"The larger point is that liberals and conservatives often form judgments through flash intuitions that aren’t a result of a deliberative process. The crucial part of the brain for these judgments is the medial prefrontal cortex, which has more to do with moralizing than with rationality. If you damage your prefrontal cortex, your I.Q. may be unaffected, but you’ll have trouble harrumphing.

"One of the main divides between left and right is the dependence on different moral values. For liberals, morality derives mostly from fairness and prevention of harm. For conservatives, morality also involves upholding authority and loyalty — and revulsion at disgust."

 

Referring to a column he'd written before on the subject of differences between liberals and conservatives, Kristof says he'd suggested that the best way for people of any persuasion to open themselves up to the best information (rather than spoon-feeding themselves from the pool of like minds), was to engage someone of the opposite point of view in lively debate from time to time.

But a scientist friend called Kristof on that theory, explaining that all such a process would do is "inflame antagonisms."

In other words, neither of us would change our minds, but would most likely wind up with wounded feelings and maybe a cutting-off of a relationship.

So how, as Kristof says, "do we discipline our brains to be more open-minded, more honest, more empiracal?"

It seems we should follow the example that has been set by our own president:

 

"A start is to reach out to moderates on the other side — ideally eating meals with them, for that breaks down “us vs. them” battle lines that seem embedded in us. (In ancient times we divided into tribes; today, into political parties.) The Web site www.civilpolitics.org is an attempt to build this intuitive appreciation for the other side’s morality, even if it’s not our morality.

"“Minds are very hard things to open, and the best way to open the mind is through the heart,” Professor Haidt says. “Our minds were not designed by evolution to discover the truth; they were designed to play social games.”

"Thus persuasion may be most effective when built on human interactions. Gay rights were probably advanced largely by the public’s growing awareness of friends and family members who were gay.

"A corollary is that the most potent way to win over opponents is to accept that they have legitimate concerns, for that triggers an instinct to reciprocate. As it happens, we have a brilliant exemplar of this style of rhetoric in politics right now — Barack Obama."

 

I wouldn't say that Robby or my sister started out as moderates, necessarily.  But no matter what they believed politically, there was one thing that both they and I had in common--none of us could abide bigotry in any form.

This was a common ground we could build upon.

Most of my family and extended family members are very conservative.  I find that when we get into lively political discussions, the best approach is to (a) remain silent on some of the crazier conspiracy-theory threads (b) stand up for my president when necessary, but do it with humor, humor, humor, and a respectful tone (c) search for common ground.

You would be surprised where you find it.

When one much-adored family member accused me of "not wanting to hear opposing points of view" because I refuse to listen to Bill O'Reilly, I named a raft of conservative columnists who I read, and said I wasn't crazy about, say, Chris Matthews, even though he's a liberal, because I don't like loud-mouths who interrupt and cut off their guests.

She confessed she didn't really like that much, either.

It's a start.

 

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Comments

    • 5/30/2009 1:44 PM Nigel Wickenden wrote:
      This is what winds me up about you colonials:- >>> "I thought you should know that I have a new boyfriend whom I love very much. And he is an African-American."<<< He is an American! Unless, of course, he's African? He can't be both. When I was working, a black lad came to me with some "friends" in tow. "We'll ask the Bobby about this." Wayne asked me what nationality he is? "Where were you born?" "London." "You're English." "There you are, you bunch of expletives deleted. Don't try and tell ME to go home. I AM home." Wayne was a good customer of mine when I was a Policeman and he used to get his wife to make me a cup of tea while we sorted out his arrest warrants.

      My point is:- You folk make a mistake by adding different nationalities or colours to the word "American." Such stuff is divisive IMHO. I'm all for keeping different cultures alive in our society. But, we must choose what nationality we want to be and stick to it. One of the lads at my school describes himself and as English Hindu guitar player. He is of Asian extraction, Hindu religion and guitarist musically. But first and foremost he is ENGLISH. You Americans should all be just that AMERICANS and no additives. Sorry to rant but I do feel strongly about this.
      Reply to this
    • 5/30/2009 9:09 PM Regina wrote:
      I am a middle-aged African American (pardon me, Nigel) female who happens to be a lifelong resident of the State of Mississippi. During the entirety of the eight-year-long George W. Bush presidency I and my African American co-workers listened silently and respectfully as our Caucasian co-workers, to a person, incessantly praised and glorified each and every act of that administration. Though we let it be known to our white co-workers that we violently disagreed with the Bush administration on virtually all of its policies; and while we vilified him privately among ourselves, we never spoke disparagingly about him in their presence. As you might imagine, our Caucasian co-workers’ reaction to President Obama has been an abomination! The disrespect, the vile racist innuendo, the hand-wringing and gnashing of teeth over his every utterance is just mind-boggling! The brazen displays of disrespect are bad enough in and of themselves but we are pained by the realization that their rude behavior seems designed to wound us personally. It is a very hard thing to live with on a daily basis. Finding you has been a lifeline in that regard. I needed to not hate. The fact that you are who you are and you are where you are from allows me to do that.
      Reply to this
      1. 5/31/2009 6:54 PM Deanie Mills wrote:
        Hi Regina--I have been away from my computer for three days, and wow, I missed some things, huh?

        Nigel is a friend of mine who was for some years a British bobby in London.  When my daughter studied for a year in London, he got up at some godawful pre-dawn hour to meet her at the airport and take her to her flat, even though we had never met in person.  He's a good guy, but he's as conservative in British political thought as my friend Robby is in American political thought.  He's not a bigot, though, and I"m sure you realize that, too.

        I do know exactly what you are talking about, though, how you work in Mississippi and you guys tried to be respectful of Bush even though you hated what he stood for and most of what he did, but how the whites you work with think it's just fine to make all kinds of White-House-watermelon-garden and so forth types of jokes and nasty comments in the office in your presence.  I agree with you that it is deliberate--and there was a time when I might not have thought so, too, but the Obama campaign changed my mind.  My African-American friends are always telling me stuff they hear from white co-workers too that leaves me DUMBFOUNDED.

        They can't possibly NOT know how offensive it is.

        But I find, that, as a rule, conservatives, for example, keep sending me right-wing hateful viral e-mails even though they obviously know full well how I feel about it and even though I NEVER send them stuff from progressives, hateful or otherwise.  And furthermore, to be perfectly honest, with one notable exception during the campaign (one viral e-mail about Sarah Palin), I NEVER GET HATEFUL STUFF FROM MY PROGRESSIVE FRIENDS. 

        By that I mean, we don't send around to one another nasty anti-conservative e-mails--you know, personal attacks on, say, Newt Gingrich.  But man, from the time Bill Clinton was elected and christened "Slick Willie" by conservatives, and the Internet grew more accessable, I've been getting that crap from conservative family and friends even though I would never dream of sending them anything along similar lines.  Not all the stuff I get is racist, BTW, but some of the hysteria toward his presidency really makes me wonder sometimes, you know?

        It's like, the first whisper-campaign they started about Judge Sotomayor was that she was "not too bright."  Well, let's see.  She was valedictorian of her high school graduating class; fulll-ride scholarship to Princeton where she won the Pyne Prize--their highest academic honor; graduated second in her class at Princeton, editor of the Yale Law Review while at Yale.  Was a successful NY City prosecutor and then hired by a big corporate firm before becoming a judge.  Appointed by the first President Bush and promoted by Bill Clinton.  Vetted and approved by congress twice.

        Exactly where does "not too bright" come in?  That she's a woman?  Or of Puerto Rican descent?  Do they truly think that those accomplishments were all affirmative action?  That she's really an F student in disguise but because she's a Hispanic woman they just handed her all those achievements?  C'MON!!  THINK!!!

        I mean really, you gotta wonder about this stuff.

        I asked my sister why conservatives keep sending around these e-mails to progressive friends and family, and she says they're daring me to prove them wrong because they secretly WANT to be proved wrong, because what they read in those stupid e-mails frightens them.  Sometimes I will refute some of the nastier charges on Obama, but mostly, I just hit DELETE.

        For God's sake, if some of them would just spend five minutes on Google or snopes.com checking some of this stuff out, they'd see for themselves how stupid it is.  Most of those e-mails get started on right-wing blogs and picked up by other right-wing blogs and quoted round-robin, with no one actually checking them out.  (Blogs have no journalistic or ethical reason to be factual, even though SOME OF US try to be.)  Then FOX News and the Hannity-O'Reilly echo chamber picks them up and reports them as news and still no one has really done any homework on the origin of the claim.  When you dig and dig, you'll read something like, "Original source has been removed," which means, it never existed in the first place.  If it ever truly existed, it can be found.  If not, it was made up, out of whole cloth, period.

        And sending it out thousands of times in e-mail form does not make it true.

        Sorry I got to rambling, my dear.  You've given me much courage since we "met" through the campaign, and I appreciate your support here and elsewhere.  Hang in there.  Even in Mississippi, there are whites who are not racist.  Maybe not in your office ha ha, but they exist.
        Reply to this
        1. 6/1/2009 11:52 AM Nigel wrote:
          I thought "Slick Willie" referred to his extra curricular activity, not his work ethic. Oops. As a furriner, I hear he did some quite good stuff for the USA. I was a Bobby in Lincolnshire 100 miles north of London. Mind you, you folk probably think 100 miles north IS in the burbs , bearing in mind that nowhere in England is more than 73 miles from the sea. I used to believe I thought that Attila the Hun was a pinko leftie pooftah until I did an online political questionnaire. Turns out Gandhi and I could be brothers. Except I believe that just occasionally violence is the answer.
          Reply to this
          1. 6/1/2009 4:25 PM Deanie Mills wrote:
            Actually, right-wing extremists, and then more mainstream Republicans began calling him that during the campaign, because they considered every single solitary word out of his mouth to be a lie.  When he was actually caught lieing about an affair, that just confirmed in their high and lofty moral standards that he was a profligate, worthless, lying son of a bitch and also the worst president in history.

            This was, of course, before George W. Bush.

            Then, they began to look back and realize that Clinton had (1) balanced the budget (2) left the country with a financial surplus (3) brought peace to the Balkans without the loss of a single U.S. soldier or Marine (4) streamlined the country's welfare program, putting millions back into the workforce within two years (5) set aside more wilderness as nationally protected parkland than any previous president since Teddy Roosevelt (6) and so on.

            They're not calling him "Slick Willie" so much anymore, but it is rather late, actually, especially since conservatives then squandered the surplus, ran up a trillion-dollar deficit, tripled the national debt, started two wars with no end in sight, really, for either, and plundered the nation's national resources so badly that the Interior Dept had to sue its own Bush-appointed head in order to force her to do her job, and STILL, they ignored the rulings, even when it went to the U.S. Supreme Court.  Yep, they ignored their own Supreme Court, which was conservative by a five-four majority, with two of the justices having been appointed by Bush himself and the other two by his dad.

            Yes, sometimes the occasional violence is the answer, just not, as the Bushies seemed to feel, to EVERYTHING.

            Although I must confess that, for a while there during the past eight dark years, I've been prone to wishing violence on some of the conservatives who began to backtrack on their own dumb-ass-ness.   I would especially appreicate it if they would put a gag on our previous vice-president, aptly named DICK, before his obvious Paranoid Personality Disorder sends us all over the wall.
            Reply to this
    • 5/31/2009 9:07 AM Nigel wrote:
      Regina,
      >>>while we vilified him privately among ourselves, we never spoke disparagingly about him in their presence.<<< Dubbya's a numptie and I can't think why one would not say so publicly. I just did! Deanie and I disagree on stuff but that doesn't mean we can't be friends. No doubt you and I will disagree on things too, but I do not see that as a problem. Just gives us something to talk about, you know, other than how wonderful my grandchildren are. America has got problems. Blimey! we've all got problems and should be working together to sort them out. Anyway, your President Obama isn't "black." He is mixed race and I actually think it was harder for him to get where he is than a "full blood" person of any race/colour (note the correct spelling ). I just hope that he is as good as everybody needs him to be.
      Reply to this
      1. 5/31/2009 7:00 PM Deanie Mills wrote:
        Your grandkids are wonderful?

        (I'm grinning and giggling and teasing you know.  OF COURSE they are!!!)

        (I just wish I HAD some grandkids to brag about!!!)
        Reply to this
        1. 6/1/2009 12:00 PM Nigel wrote:
          School holiday last week. Mike and I took the two older ones camping on Monday. Had a pitch with electrickery so took a small fridge for the kids' milk. Funnily enough our German beer (lager brewed to the Reinheitsgebot purity law of 23 April 1516) fitted in there too! Tuesday evening found four year old Ethan not too well and he wet the bed. Fortunately I had a spare inflatable mattress and put him on it. 04:45 Wednesday morning Ethan threw up over his bed, Esme's bed, himself, over Esme (six years) & the "bedroom" they were sleeping in. Then, blamed it on Esme. We came home Wednesday to do a bit of cleaning up. Yep, grandchildren are wonderful.
          Reply to this
          1. 6/1/2009 4:11 PM Deanie Mills wrote:
            Oh Lord Nigel!  What a nightmare!

            Yes, when one does not have grandchildren, one tends to wax nostalgic on all the cute parts and fun parts and adorable parts and wipe from the old memory banks the godawful vomiting viruses and other rather nasty parts ha ha.
            Reply to this
      2. 5/31/2009 8:18 PM Regina wrote:
        Nigel, I have no problem with anything in your comment. But since I began my comment with a description of myself as "African American" following your comment on the issue of such descriptions, I was merely paying lip service to what you wrote - not criticizing. Any friend of Deanie's, as we say in America.
        Reply to this
    • 5/31/2009 9:18 AM Nigel wrote:
      PS. I was a Squaddie for over 13 years and I was shown the following some time ago. I think it is correct. When I was in the Army, we were all in the same boat and what mattered was whether a bloke could be trusted to look after your back rather than the colour of his skin, ethnicity or his religious background.

      It is the soldier, not the reporter, 
who has given us freedom of the press.

      

It is the soldier, not the poet, 
who has given us freedom of speech.

      

It is the soldier, not the campus organizer, 
who has given us the freedom to demonstrate.

      

It is the soldier, not the lawyer, 
who has given us the right to a fair trial. 



      It is the soldier, 
who salutes the flag, 
who serves under the flag, 
and whose coffin is draped by the flag, 
who allows the protester to burn the flag.

      

By Father Dennis Edward O'Brien, USMC
      Reply to this
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