Friday, February 29, 2008
Black & White World
I was running in place on the elliptical trainer (the kind of activity that would seem to imply that the evolution of the species had reached a dead end, or was, perhaps, moving backwards), listening to the Rail and Road Report on NY1 when I heard: "And if you're taking the Taconic, there are reports of some black guys out there so you want to be careful."
Sure, I thought: black guys on the state parkway. That would be scary. Set phasers on stun. Until I realized that the reporter had said black ICE, a special and treacherous feature of East Coast winter driving.
It was one of those subliminally racist moments, the kind they
sang about in Avenue Q. Race has been in the air a lot of late, thanks in part to the candidacy of Barack Obama; the Clintons have opted for a subtle approach in reminding people that the man isn't white (Bill mentioning Jesse Jackson in South Carolina, Hillary digging in on Louis Farrakhan's endorsement in the last debate) while the Swift Boat types on the right are already roiling the internet waters with rumors that he's a closet Muslim (
his middle name is Hussein, you know). And did we mention that he was black?
One of the reasons Obama's victory in Iowa was such a stunner is that the state is so damned white, many pundits thought voters would follow suit. And after Hillary's victory in New Hampshire those same dispensers of conventional wisdom said see? We told you. But since then, as he has romped to victory in 11 primaries and counting, winning support among whites of all ages, and both sexes, a lot of us have held our collective breath. Could it be that a sizable number of Americans really just don't care anymore?
I have no particular expertise here. I grew up in a couple of small towns in Northern California that were probably 95% white. The few black families there lived in their own communities, outside of town (and you can imagine what the less enlightened townsfolk called those communities) and I didn't really encounter a lot of blacks until I moved to San Francisco, and then Oakland, and now Brooklyn -- where the neighborhood I live in is still majority black (though growing whiter by the day). I am still subject to unconscious race reaction, making a note to myself when everyone on the bus, save me, is black.
But my kids, who grew up in the same cities mentioned above, are coming from a different place entirely. When my son told me about his friends at his Brooklyn middle school, he never mentioned what color they were ( don't think it registered), and I was always surprised to meet these black, brown and Asian kids. Our daughter, who was born in Paraguay, identifies herself as non-white and left a mosh-pit slam-dancing party last month "because everybody was so white." She likes to give me a hard time for having only dated white girls.
Sharon Begley wrote an enlightening piece in Newsweek entitled
How Your Brain Looks at Race. Evolutionary scientists let us off the hook by saying: some racial reaction is hardwired. Early man didn't wander far and when he encountered people who looked different than him, they generally wanted to kill him. But time, and experience, can override that wiring.
"Many whites who profess to be race-blind unconsciously associate dark skin with negative traits and ideas (evil, failure, dangerous), and light skin with positive ones (joy, love, peace), shows an assessment called the Implicit Association Test," writes Begley. "When white Americans see photos flashed so quickly that they can be detected only subliminally, the amygdala, which signals 'Watch out!,' is significantly more active in response to black than white faces. If the photos appeared long enough to be processed consciously, however, the amygdala quieted down and the rational, thoughtful prefrontal cortex perked up. You could practically hear the cortex telling the amygdala to pipe down and stop being a racist jerk."
Over the next eight months I suspect we will experience something like this, collectively, as the nation tries to wrap its mind around the reality of a black party nominee (not to mention a black president). It may get treacherous at times, and downright slippery, but I think, in the evolutionary sense, we are moving in the right direction.
I suddenly recalled being in high school and trying to leave some literature about
Shirley Chisholm (a black congresswoman who ran for president in 1972) at a barbershop in Auburn, California. The barber responded by taking a rifle down from the wall. Chisholm is dead now -- but I bet you anything that barber is, too. In fact, it's probably not even a barbershop anymore. For all I know they sell candles there now, the kind you're supposed to light instead of cursing the darkness.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
America is watching
MSNBC's broadcast of last night's Democratic presidential candidate's debate was
the second most-watched programin its time slot. With 7.9 million viewers it was bested only by American Idol , making it the most watched televised debate of this season and the most watched program in the cable net's history.
That last ain't saying much, of course. Back when I was
writing about the media for Salon, I would often hear from Brian Williams, who was then hosting the network's ten pm news hour, just because I mentioned him in my column. A hundred thousand viewers was a big night for him; it was the Lonely Guy's network, a comforter for political wonks who liked to curl up in front of its news shows with a box of chow fun and a cold can of ginger ale.
Cable news has been enjoying
a huge spike in ratings this year, thanks in part to the surprising rise of Obama and the protracted fall of Hillary Clinton. I was flying to California last Thursday, during the Texas debate on CNN, and at least half of the seat-back TVs were tuned to that debate as well. (The others were watching college hoops.) Arguably, any flight from NY to SF is probably not a representative cross-section of the electorate, and it was Jet Blue, not Jet Red -- but still, voters (and viewers) are undeniably fired up, as the man says. No wonder the GOP is worried.
Last night's was the 20th Democratic debate of this political season and though I had resolved not to watch one more, I couldn't help myself. I had told one of my students earlier that the only way HRC could change the course of events would be to pull out a gun and shoot her opponent on stage, and while things never quite reached that level, it was far from the hand-holding successful therapy session the Texas debate had been. In the evening's most bizarre moment, Clinton even quoted a
Saturday Night Live skit which made fun of the press for kowtowing to Obama ("Save me, Tina Fey, save me!"). But this time nobody laughed.
As much as I love a good fight, I found this last stand rather grim. It reminded me of the second act of
Groundhog Day. Bill Murray long ago realized that he will live this day over and over but now that he has hustled every available woman in town and even tried killing himself, it is no longer fun. Hearing Clinton accuse Obama of abandoning 15 million Americans with his health care plan is just this side of waking up to Sonny and Cher singing "I Got You, Babe" for all eternity.
Their revels now are ended. Though Clinton didn't pull a piece she did (as promised) hit the senator from Illinois with everything but the kitchen sink. Her accusation that he failed to chair hearings into the military's handling of the war in Afghanistan may have some traction (the
Clinton-friendly Salon thought it was worth a story), even though Obama admitted it and even said he was too busy running for president. (Oh, that old honesty trick!) Then she tried to snaggle him with
the Farrakhan endorsement, which again only resulted in Obama saying he rejected and denounced the Nation of Islam's leader. Now what?
The
elephant boy picture that someone in her camp sent to Matt Drudge seems to have backfired, unless it was merely intended to remind people that he is black. That job will soon fall to Republicans (some of whom
don't even know how to pronounced "Kumbiya") though they'll need more than a turban to make people care.
Monday, February 25, 2008
Acting president
Hillary Clinton could take acting lessons from Julie Christie. For anyone who saw last night's
Academy Awards got a glimpse of the latter leading lady's internal struggle with her emotions when the Oscar went to Marion Cotillard for her portrayal of Edith Piaf in
La Vie en Rose. (You know how Americans love Piaf. Rice Piaf.)
Cameras were trained on all the nominees -- a dirty trick the Academy does, but a way of making sure that nominated performers never forget that it was their acting skills that bought them their seat -- and when the long-shot Cotillard was announced you could see Christie's face go through something like
Elizabeth Kubler Ross's stages of grieving -- you know, denial, anger, depression, ending in acceptance. There was a nanosecond (check your Tivo) where you could see the horror: "Great, give it away to some French bitch no one has ever heard of, that's fine, I'll just come back the next time you have a perfect role for an aging screen diva." And then that full-throated, wide-smiling moment where the English icon acknowledged the work and the craft and the magic that brings us all together.
How much you want to bet that she went home and kicked her cat?
Hillary has her own arriviste to contend with, of course, and resorted to some histrionics herself over the weekend to try and wrestle back the limelight from Obama. (I don't know how you wrestle light, but I think there is a CGI award for that.) First she accused him of misrepresenting her position on NAFTA in some flyers being distributed in Ohio, saying
"Shame on you, Barack Obama!". Then she made fun of the Hope-monger for the messianic nature of his rallies, riffing on
"celestial choirs" and Obama's "magic wand". (If despair and cynicism were a winning platform, Dick Cheney would be running.)
Maybe she is in the final throes herself, moving through the anger and denial to accept the very real possibility that she will be called upon to play a supporting role in the big blockbuster coming this fall. As Jon Stewart noted last night, "Normally when you see a black man or a woman president, an asteroid is about to hit the Statue of Liberty." All hands on deck!
Besides, as the
New York Times reminded us this morning, the expression "a heartbeat away from the presidency" might never be truer than it would be under Obama. Assassination rumors were circulating before the primary in South Carolina (a long-time political reporter in DC said when he heard about the backwash, "I wonder if the Clintons started that chatter?") and it was one of the first questions Michelle Obama raised with her husband before he ran. Just last week a friend forwarded me a story about the
Secret Service relaxing security at an Obama rally in Dallas. According to the Dallas police chief, the very people charged with guarding Obama told cops to stop searching bags and having people walk through metal detectors, I guess due to their great track record of protecting people in Dallas. Sounds like one of those
paranoid political thrillers that Americans like about as much as Piaf.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Can this marriage be made?
Couples counselors see this scenario all the time: A couple comes to them say 18, 19 times. First few months there is a lot of old garbage hauled out. That old girlfriend that keeps calling. The line of credit she opened without telling him. And would it kill you to pick your gym clothes up off the bathroom floor?
But at some point the old barbs don't work anymore. One party decides that he or she is done and the tried and true insults just don't get the same reaction that they used to.
So it seemed to me watching
last night's Democratic debate. It was for the most part an amicable affair; if
as reported Clinton's camp had been warring over how hard to come at Obama, the nicer side seemed to have won -- most of the time. And when the non-issue of
Obama plagiarizing words from a supporter's speech came up, and Hillary tried to hit him with a late, lame shot (calling it "change you can Xerox"), the crowd groaned and her opponent shook his head. He didn't care anymore. He was so over her.
And small wonder, given estimates that HRC must win very decisively (ie, by more than 10%) in TX and OH to stay in the hunt. The nomination is now his to lose. And though her closing remarks were truly altruistic and brought the crowd to its feet, some such as
Chris Matthews saw them as valedictory, like the scene where the hero does something really noble because he knows he's not coming back. (For those who missed it, most of the questions posed to the candidates had been substantive ones regarding health care, immigration, the state of the economy and other hot-button issues. But the last, from CNN moderator Campbell Brown was a big meatball of a slow pitch: "I'm wondering if both of you will describe what was the moment that tested you the most, that moment of crisis." (She did not get to ask them if they were a color, what color they would be.)
Obama actually fumbled this one, offering a precis of his life (single mom, absent dad, bad choices, call to service) that sounded more like a Hollywood pitch than a defining-moment moment. Hillary romped, first going for self-pity and sympathy -- "Well, I think everybody here knows I've lived through some crises and some challenging moments in my life" (huge applause) -- before putting some serious spin on it by recalling watching limbless Iraqi war veterans limping their way into a hospital in San Antonio. "You know," she concluded, " the hits I've taken in life are nothing compared to what goes on every single day in the lives of people across our country."
She knocked it out of the park, proving if nothing else that the old girl still has some serious game. Obama did not look too concerned, though. In his mind I think he may already be out the door, looking at apartments. Perhaps he'll ask her to join him as partners -- strictly business, of course -- when this messiness is over. She did, after all, take his hand in front of everybody and say, "Whatever happens, we're going to be fine."
Isn't it great when therapy works? Makes up for those
other clients who are in so much denial.
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Just add charisma
There's an interesting piece by Kate Zernike in today's Times on
The Charisma Mandate. Presidential historians including Robert Cato and Doris Kearns Goodwin opine on the record of such orators as FDR and LBJ -- who, when he wasn't in front of the country on TV defending a war he hardly believed in could speechify with conviction. Or at least enough conviction to get the job (ie, the Civil Rights Act) done and move others to follow his lead, which is sort of the point.
The subtext, or pretext, for the article is Obama, naturally, and the criticisms coming from both Clinton and McCain that he is all talk and no experience. Or as HRC said campaigning in Texas last week,
"all hat and no cattle", which makes for a funny image: Obama in a ten-gallon hat, like
Cleavon Little in Blazing Saddles, who rode into town to the sounds of Count Basie's big band. Most of the town wanted to lynch him, you may recall.
But the cattle Clinton is talking about is experience, and maybe a wonky grasp of policy. (To counter these criticisms, Obama has been
slowing his stump speech down and studding it with the political equivalent of filler, saving the all-killer routine for his victory speeches.) And while the historians quoted in Zernike's piece warn against hubris and "the cult of personality," most allow that you need to inspire to lead. “Politics is about policy, but it’s also about giving people some kind of sense of participating in a common venture with their fellow citizens,” says Alan Wolfe of Boston College. There's a reason they call it a mass movement: the masses have to be moved toward the mountain. And when not being paranoid, even Clinton's supporters admit that Obama's mountain does not look a lot different than hers. So the question is still: who can get us there?
Goodwin, who has written biographies of presidents as diverse as Lincoln and LBJ, thinks this dilemma could be settled "if you could mush Clinton and Obama together as one person" But isn't that what a joint ticket is for? Why not Obama-Clinton? If the debate really comes down to details versus charisma, I would argue that it is easier to add details than charisma. My wife, who has had the privilege of meeting the former First Lady, swears she is dynamic in person. It just doesn't translate so well behind the podium, or even working the town hall meeting. Bill, when he isn't hating Obama's guts, has to be marveling at the kid's moves. He is the best natural politician of our time and denying it just makes you look tone-deaf.
One of my political epiphanies came many years ago. I had volunteered to help the gubernatorial race of Tom Bradley, mayor of Los Angeles, in 1982, not because I was high on Bradley (don't know anyone who was) but because I felt guilty for not sucking it up and voting for Carter in the presidential election of 1980. (I think I voted for
John Anderson, who created his own Nader effect in that race.) Reagan was now in power and giving us a very vivid picture of just how bad a GOP presidency could be. (It would take GWB to come along years later to make the Reagan years look positively utopian in contrast.) Since I was driving a taxi for a living then, and since I was friends with some pretty girl who was working as a campaign flack for Bradley, I ended up playing chauffeur to him and his campaign manager for a day in Northern California.
It was an eye-opening afternoon. We drove from house party to house party (the last and most notable of the day was held at Francis Coppola's estate in the Napa Valley) and I watched as the well-heeled slipped checks into the mayor's pocket and they froze for a grip-and-grin photo. He spent the time between events poring over spread sheets and making notes (this was in the day before cell phones, remember, or else he might have been raising money as he rode as well). It wasn't until the end of the day, when we stopped at a labor rally in the East Bay and I heard an old-fashioned, red-meat, Republican-bashing party boss get up and rouse the rabble that I realized what Bradley was missing: Charisma. The man did not have a drop of it and when he rose to speak in the larger venues, people in the back of the hall turned to talk to each other.
He lost, of course. Polls put him on the fast track to being our nation's first black governor and the fact that some voters apparently changed their minds once they got in the voting booth has come to be referred to as
The Bradley Effect, which states that white people say they'll vote for a black politician until left to their own prejudices. The Bradley Effect was evoked when Obama lost in New Hampshire but has been called into question as he has made inroads with more white voters in the following state primaries.
That whole topic is too much for one post, obviously. My takeaway from the day I spent with Tom Bradley was that nothing replaces charisma. He lost to the equally uncharismatic GOP candidate George Deukmejian at a time when Californians were just crazy for anyone who promised not to raise their taxes. (Californians, with their failing infrastructure, collapsing schools and closed libraries are still reaping the whirlwind of their civic greed.) It seemed up close that Bradley didn't have the fire in the belly, or any other part of him. It seemed like he was running because he had been told to, or just thought that he deserved the job. And that's no way to run a campaign.
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Youth Without Youth
Among the encouraging data emerging from
yesterday's Obamarama was the news that more women and older men voted for the senator from Illinois. Clinton's camp had been claiming a lock on working women, men over 65 and blue collars of all ages but Obama made inroads with all three in Virginia, splitting those demos with Hillary across the state. Those who had hoped this was a doomed children's crusade are left looking for new arrows to sling.
Speaking to a energized crowd in Madison, Wisconsin Obama went for inevitability. "At this point the cynics can no longer say our hope is false," he said but at almost the same instant,
John McCain was trying to harsh the mellow. "Hope is a powerful thing," he said in his own victory speech. But: "To encourage a country with only rhetoric rather than sound and proven ideas that trust in the strength and courage of free people is not a promise of hope. It is a platitude."
Take that! Interesting that Mac has already decided who he is running against in the fall (note to Hillary) and even more significant that his antidote to the powerful "Yes We Can" message of Obama's McCain is the rather expected refrain of "No You Can't." He would swat Peter Pan down with a swipe of his hook if only he could raise his arms above his shoulders. By reminding everyone every chance he's got that he was tortured as a POW during the Vietnam war, McCain is counting on that good soldier juju that worked so well for Bob Dole and John Kerry.
But Obama has been anticipating that line of attack by honoring McCain's
"half century of service" (wow, how old is that guy?) while
criticizing his politics. "We honour his service, but his priorities don't address the real problems of the American people because they are bound to the failed policies of the past," he said, not for the first time. The contrast between the vibrant Democratic candidate and the rather jowly, angry looking Republican was all the more striking because CNN cut away from Obama to McCain, standing in front of a waxworks worth of followers. That was when my daughter, who is from South America, looked up from her homework to say, "Wow, who are all those old white people?"
I'm glad if we've got some of them, too, even if you want to include me in that equation. As a member of the boomer generation, though, I am looking forward to debates that don't focus on Vietnam or for that matter
Woodstock. I was 14 then and, like McCain, couldn't make the scene (I was busy dancing around my bedroom in my underpants, pretending I was Pete Townshend -- he was there!) Enough already. Woodstock to me is
Snoopy's friend, and they must be celebrating themselves. With
Uno declared best in show at the Westminster Kennel Club dog show, Tuesday was a great day for beagles as well.
Let's all dance.
Sunday, February 10, 2008
I've just seen a Face
British magazines like
Uncut and
Mojo exist to prey on middle-aged men like me. There I was in the temple of the
Virgin on Thursday (record stores, as we once called them, are a refuge for boomers too), buying an odd assortment of CDs (Marley's
Exodus; the soundtrack to
I'm Not There, Tom Waits' odds & sods assortment
Orphans and Radiohead's
In Rainbows -- just ten bucks! which was about the kids had already decided it was worth when the band did a forward-looking pay-what-you-want sale of the album online) when I saw the latest Uncut at the checkout line.
The March cover features Rod Stewart and the Faces, circa 1971, with a teaser that promised yet another rehash of a story many rock fans have heard before ("Bottoms Up! The untold story of rock's ultimate hellraisers"). Of course I had to buy it. These magazines are like porn for guys like me and I have to smuggle them past my wife. ("Didn't you bring home a big Jimi Hendrix special last month?") I think of the Time-Life books ads I use to see on TV when I was kid, for titles steeped in nostalgia for people of my parents' generation, filled with images of soldiers and their girlfriends dancing to Benny Goodman, and wonder if I have fallen into the same trap.
Of course Uncut and Mojo are not entirely mired in the past. This issue includes reviews of contemporary artists (
Supergrass,
Drive By Truckers) and a whole CD of mostly new "rock 'n' roll in the spirit of the Faces". But I have to cop to wanting to buy a piece of the past, a moment lost in time.
I was a junior in high school in 1971, and most of the bands we went to hear in Sacramento and sometimes San Francisco were at the tired end of the psychedelic scene. I remember seeing
Quicksilver Messenger Service in a rather late and unfortunate phase. Lead singer Dino Valenti (who had been MIA on a drug rap for a few years) paced the stage, babbling incoherently before singing hippie shit like "Have another hit of fresh air." It felt like the end of an era, lacking in both verve and showmanship. It was the beginning of shoe-gazing, from performers too stoned to do anything else.
The Faces we knew from when they were Small. Their psychedelic hit of a few years earlier, "Itchycoo Park," would inspire countless kids to skip school ("Why go to learn the words of fools?") and I was no exception. But the new Faces were a slightly less droogie bunch. With Ron Wood and Rod Stewart, who had both recently fled Jeff Beck's band, added to the mix (Stewart to replace former frontman Steve Marriott) they were singing more rough-and-tumble, tongue-in-cheek numbers about girls and drinking.
I don't remember who opened for them at the Cal Expo but it was a kind of heavy metal I had not been subjected to, at least in concert, and what was worst about it was that I couldn't split; it was way too crowded. The crunching chords and death-tinged songs weren't mixing with the drugs I had taken for the concert and by the time they finished I was exhausted from fighting off visions of purple windmills and bats from hell.
From the Faces' opener ("Bad 'n' Ruin," I think; that tour was captured on the live album Long Player) it was clear that this group had another agenda. They were laughing and strutting and drinking (I learned in the Uncut article that they innovated the idea of putting a bar, complete with bartender, on stage for their live act) and the whole thing seemed like a lark. When Stewart dueted on Paul McCartney's "Maybe I'm Amazed" with bassist
Ronnie Lane, the latter had to stand on a soap box. (That's why they had been known as the Small Faces.) It was funny, in a arms-around-the-shoulder-of-your-mate kind of way, and made everyone in the crowd feel like they were up on that stage with them.
By picking up Uncut the other day I was probably trying to capture a little of that feeling, that out-with-the-old, in-with-the-new kind of vibe I had that night. (I'll resist any Obama comparisons here -- though
Hillary is the one who wanted to commemorate the Woodstock festival.) Lane is dead and Wood became a Stone and poor Rod Stewart seems to be turning into Perry Como, right before our eyes. But a few well-chosen pictures and memories got me rolling home, back to "Gasoline Alley" where I started from...
Thursday, February 07, 2008
Poetry, man
One rap on Obama that keeps coming back is that he is too poetic. I suppose that is supposed to conjure images of what the country might look like if run by
Gregory Corso or something but it still seems like an odd criticism. "Oh, he's too eloquent!" After seventy-seven years of Bush aren't we due for some eloquence?
The real message of Hillary's line -- "You speak in poetry but you govern in prose!" -- is: beware the sliver-tongued devil! I think the male-female split over Obama-Clinton (made all the clearer as the
results of Tuesday's primaries are parsed) is very telling. A lot of hard-working women relate to Hillary and think of her as one of them. She's been paying dues for years, working her fingers to the bone while her faithless husband (a sliver-tongued devil if there ever was one) fluttered about making a mess of things, and making time with the help while he was at it.
Women in business have seen this pattern: they spent nights and weekends cranking out spread sheets and doing due diligence and into the Monday morning meeting comes some Johnny (and he's always a Johnny) come lately. He's slick, he's handsome, he can charm the pants off a meter maid and he may not be up to the minute on the latest data, he sees the Big Picture. He's an inspiration guy, here to give the team a big lift, and Suzy, maybe you can help him with some of your research?
Burns their biscuits, and rightfully so. But I don't think Obama is that guy. First, he's been a hard working legislator, eight years in the state legislature in Illinois and then two in the US Senate, and before that a community organizer is Chicago, in parts of the community no one wanted to touch, let alone organize. Secondly, now's the time. As he says
invoking the inexperienced JFK, history won't wait. I honestly believe that HRC can't beat McCain -- too much baggage, too many negatives, not the least of which comes with old silver-tongue himself. The GOP will hit Obama with the inexperience charge but I believe that the national nausea over the old fights is not to be underestimated. Fresh and optimistic might just trump
raging, war-mongering paranoia.
And thirdly, poetry has a time-honored place in politics. When the two converge, movements are born. People are stirred by words to action, sometimes even sacrifice -- a concept that Obama (unlike our president) is not afraid to invoke. What was
Kennedy's inaugural address if not poetry? You may not think much of his legacy or accomplishments in his too-brief time in office, but the poetry got a lot of people to think about what they could do for their country, instead of vice versa, some for the very first time. What was the "I Have A Dream" speech? The Sermon on the Mount?
Not that I pretend to know
who Jesus would have voted for. Chances are he would have said, "Vote Ceasar, and move on." But let's stop dissing the healing, and moving, power of poetry in politics. As a good friend of Corso's said, singing his own paean to America,
"I'm putting my queer shoulder to the wheel."
Wednesday, February 06, 2008
Yes we still can
Having just watched
Obama's non-victory speech in Chicago I found the heart I had been losing just an hour or so before. Watching Hillary claim the states that Democrats traditionally win (NY, New Jersey & Mass) that for a moment or two we thought we might steal away, I thought that maybe the dream was over. The machine that HC had oiled well in advance was paying off for her and Obama was supposed to be crushed by it.
But my man sure didn't sound crushed. Could it have been those significant wins in Connecticut and Minnesota, with Missouri hanging in the balance, at 12:14 am EST? Those are states the Dems need in a general election and not ones we can take for granted. Maybe he was feeling something that machines can't feel.
A number of people emailed me the link to
will.i.am's "Yes We Can" video yesterday, a musical mash-up of performers like him and John Legend singing and rapping along to Obama's last non-victory speech, in New Hampshire. It was a heartfelt and handmade tribute that it would be easy to mock if it weren't for the fact that no campaign paid for it. It was a true labor of love, of hope and optimism.
They're going to be counting votes in California for many more hours to come and I may wake up to a more decisive Clinton victory there than exit polls are predicting. CNN just declared her the victor with the majority of the delegates -- again, a state where she had a twenty point advantage just a few weeks ago. But the fight goes on, between the machine woman (why else did Hillary sound darn wonky and on autopilot in what should have been her impassioned victory speech in NYC tonight?) and the man of heart.
As Carl Bernstein quoted Vernon Jordan (old Clinton friend and benefactor) as saying, "It's hard to run against a movement." And as much as the Clintons may wish Obama and all of us behind him would just go away, we won't. It still comes down to delegates and let's talk tomorrow when we they have divvied them all up. No one's going to have enough marbles to go home. We're still in this and I do mean we. Hillary, who I really don't mean to demonize, seems to think she is here to save us if we would just give her the chance. Obama seems to suggest we could save ourselves from four or eight more years of endless bickering bullshit, if we believe we can. "We are the ones we've been waiting for," he said tonight. And now we are here.
Sunday, February 03, 2008
Changing one planet at a time
Watching the
last debate between Hillary and Obama, in which no punches were landed and niceness, even if slightly insincere, was the word of the day, I thought of my man in a new guise:
The brother from another planet.
Whether or not you buy the whole transcendance-of-partisanship thing, you have to admit that his Kenyan-Kansan legacy puts an interesting twist on the black-white rift that has defined so much of modern American politics. And in his Motown suit and pre-fro sixties short haircut, he even looks like a throwback to the style of late fifties. Think of Michael Rennie in
The Day the Earth Stood Still, whose character landed on earth preaching peace & harmony -- before it was too late! (I know, I've invoked that movie here before; I guess I saw it an influential age. I can still remember the lobbying effort my brother Brian made in order to convince us to watch that on TV instead of our standby for that time slot,
Rocky and Bullwinkle)
Just as I was slipping into a
moonage daydream of Democratic peace making, I read that
NASA had sent the Beatles' song "Across the Universe" across the universe. The space agency sent the Lennon composition, via its Deep Space Network antenna, toward the North Star, Polaris, 431 light years away, before anyone (or thing) out there had a chance to request it. This was done with the blessings of Ringo and Paul, though perhaps the latter wondered why NASA had not considered one of his songs.
Actually, I always thought "Across the Universe" a kind of
depressing song; that was part of its charm. Coming in the wake of the Beatles' visit to India, the chorus couples the Hindu chant "Jai guru deva om" with John's own odd non-affirmation: "Nothing's going to change my world."
Bummer! Is that the message we want to send to the universe? Sounds more like the message that the status quo of our party, and our country for that matter, want to send to the electorate. "You cannot change the rules of the game," is what Clintonistas like Sidney Blumenthal mean when they speak of
fulfilling partisanship rather than transcending it. In order for them to win, the other side must lose. It's how they keep score.
The last time NASA sent a rock song into the stratosphere was when they included
"Johnny B. Goode" on the Voyager playlist, amidst recordings of Bach, Beethoven and pan pipes from the Solomon Islands. That was launched over twenty years ago and they finally got word back from space:
"Send more Chuck Berry!"