A snowstorm may be finally headed for Washington D.C. A thread of
the blanket of white that has swept across New York and Boston. So
far 49 out of 50 states have been hit with snow. Theres snow in
Hawaii, but still none in the nations capital. As the nation slogs,
the capital rolls on. Americans dig out, the elite dig in
deeper.divimg classalignright styleborder 0pt none
srchttp1.bp.blogspot.commveHL3n4METTQWiHZZrIAAAAAAAAEVULHlteNEaOb0s320curtame.jpg
border0 alt width320 height298 divThe 2010 elections marked a
pause, a hush in the cold winter air, an intermission for America.
A battle was won, and now the entire war is on the table. In a
White House, still untouched by snow, the difference between an
accident and history is one term. A one term president is an
accident. A two term president is history. Nixon was history. Ford
and Carter were accidents. Reagan was history, Bush Sr was an
accident. Clinton and Bush Jr were history. But what will Obama be
An intermission for America or the final curtain.As the snow fell,
he climbed up a wounded congresswoman in the polls. But he cant
count on one of those being shot every week. Or being able to score
points by playing Americas minister without a frock, delivering yet
another solemn homily about people he hardly knew. Gazing down from
jumbotrons on a congregation of screen printed tshirts with the
message of the hour. The polls rose in approval. Not for a deed,
but for a well read speech. But the best speech in the world will
not put food on a hungry childs plate or restore her fathers job or
bring the dead back to life. Speeches are artful collections of
words, artfully read. But unless they are actionable, then they are
just words.A good speech is a dessert after the job is done and a
great speech is an appetizer that inspires a movement. Obamas
speech was a snack. A confection without context. The treat that he
baked for himself and then offered to us. Ate it, smacked his lips,
rubbed the tips of his fingers together and then took a plane back
from a place he hardly wanted to be in. Buzzing in his mind, the
worry that he might be an accident of history after all. Just
another name, another face. Not so special after all.His menace is
the uprising of the middle class. They call it the Tea Party, but
it is bigger and broader than that. It is the great rumbling in the
nations belly. Where political correctness reigns, it goes unheard.
The sufferers remain in their couches, watching their televisions
speak to them, and mumble something while flipping through unpaid
bills. But across the broad stretches of the land, many are no
longer willing to be silent or silenced. The middle class does not
easily stir, but its frustrations run deep. Upon their shoulders
governments deposit the burden of their regulations and their debt.
When times are good, the middle class pays the bill and says little
of it. Civility is one of the burdens it bears. But when money is
tight and the government spends, then they learn to protest.The
middle class is not naturally given to shouting in the streets.
Where it is easy enough to gather a rally of idlers, men and women
who work all day are uncomfortable behaving that way. But they
learn. It is not the wealthy who have been shouting the most about
Obama. Economic turmoil affects the middle class, more than it does
the wealthy or the poor. It is those who walk the balance, who risk
slipping off. The middle class is an endangered species. In most of
the world, it is easier to find child soldiers and slavery. The
rich and the poor may always be with us, but the middle class wont.
The survival of the middle class demands a balance. A walk along
the tightrope between business and government, socialism and
monopolies, the bomb thrower and the top hat. Sheer vigor has
gotten them through this far, but this is a government that looks
askance at their kind.divimg classalignleft styleborder 0pt none
srchttp3.bp.blogspot.commveHL3n4METTSUTrLctIAAAAAAAAEVY3tdpPKwZyRgs320empty.jpg
border0 alt width320 height229 divBarrys honeyed speeches come
dipped in the comb of Reverend Wright who denounced middleclassness
as if it were a disease. When he speaks you may not always hear it,
but even many of the good and kindly people who voted for that
clean shaven young man who promised hope and change, are learning
to listen. The empty charm, the warm glow of a television set, the
beaming smile practiced four score and seven times before a mirror
every morning, are losing their magic. There is less of the
fireside chat about them and more of the depression era comedy,
lavish and tinkling, but only a distraction.Where to now There are
no answers. Just the ongoing intermission. The first act of the
play is over. The audience in their tuxedos and glittering dresses
meet, down cocktails, and look nervously out into the night. It is
beginning to snow. Soon they will have to go back inside. But they
are not just the audience, they are also the actors. And the
playwrights. The set dressers and the directors. That is the scene
in the capital where the next act is beginning.The Democrats wonder
whether Obama can win. The Republicans wonder who will run.
Solidarity is easy before the revolution, but ephemeral in the face
of victory. Unity quickly dissolves into careerism. Factions rise,
egos clash and snowballs with a heart of ice sail through the air.
The struggle is a complicated one now, with human complications. We
fight for ideas, but it is people who do the fighting, and when a
battle is won, it is people not ideas who divide the spoils of
victory. People can only carry ideas for so long, before ideas
start carrying people. It is not a new problem, but then there are
no new problems. Only old problems in new suits.What the middle
class wants most from government, to be left alone, is the one
thing that government will not give it. Ask for subsidies,
protectionism, grants and agencies and they shall be given to you.
Ask to be left in peace, and you shall meet with a pained sigh. It
is the middle class that makes this sort of government possible,
and it is the middle class that falls victim to it. The vampire may
change from a bat to a gentleman in evening wear, but not give up
his prey. The politician will don a protest shirt, but underneath
he is still wearing a suit. Business is business. And the business
of government is to provide unwanted services at nonnegotiable
prices.The next act of the play is a farce. It has already begun.
The Mourner in Chief on the Jumbotron, the slogan bearing tshirts,
congressmen learning to skit together like kindergarteners, the
debates over caucuses and conventions and the quiet sniping between
would be candidates. All thats missing are the wealthy dowager and
the Marx Brothers rushing along to add madness to the confusion and
confusion to the madness. The tug of war between issues and careers
tears apart even the best of politicians. And the happy and unhappy
warriors who tread the road to 2012 are no different.In his part of
the production, Barry must either prove to the public that the last
two years were unrepresentative of his style of governing by
distancing himself from himself. But if his pride gets in the way,
hell instead have to improve his messaging to prove that they were
actually not so bad after all. Prove or improve, proof or disproof,
it all comes down to ego. Barry has no shame, but he isnt shameless
either. He will humiliate himself on stage, but only if he doesnt
realize that hes doing it. Its a tricky task for his advisers to
maneuver him like a pawn across the chessboard of his own
arrogance. And if they cant do it, Barry has already boasted that
he could be his own Chief of Staff. Maybe he should try it. And his
own Treasury Secretary too.divimg classalignright styleborder 0pt
none
srchttp3.bp.blogspot.commveHL3n4METTTLURnARIAAAAAAAAEVcx8SXb7geCss320baton.jpg
border0 alt width320 height190 divOn the other side of the stage,
there are racers and fighters. The racers are doing their squats,
preparing for the November sprint. The fighters want to change the
country. The racers only want to cross the finish line. And the
fighters are in their way. The racers push aside the fighters. The
fighters try to get up again and explain their point, only to be
pushed down again. On the jumbotron, Barry is busy explaining his
latest civility proposal. He wants everyone to wear nametags. That
way everyone will know everyones name and be able to greet them.And
above, the snow whirls through the atmosphere, cold fronts meeting
warm fronts, breaths mingling and holding in the air. The snow will
fall regardless of what men talk about. It waits for no
intermission and cares nothing for elections and selections. It
will fall where and when it pleases. The snow sweeps forward
spreading a white curtain downward, as another curtain rises and
the second act begins.
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