I feel that having a gun is a big responsibility, and part of that responsibility is to refrain from using guns in any sort of metaphor.
Quote from: MooseMom on January 08, 2011, 08:36:23 PMI feel that having a gun is a big responsibility, and part of that responsibility is to refrain from using guns in any sort of metaphor.And aren't Republicans all about personal responsibility???
There are too many people who are making a lot of money in creating the impression that we are more polarized than we really are. There is money made in creating conflict. Obama won in 2008 because the majority of people who voted wanted an government that could work together to improve our country's future. The 2010 mid-terms were evident of the same theme. Obama got a shellacking because people are tired of the partisanship. Like you pointed out, most of us are tired of everything being labelled R/D, left/right, liberal/conservative.Most Americans want to keep most of what they earn and have the chance to make a fair wage. I don't know anyone who doesn't want that very thing for himself and his family. I'm not sure that's necessarily a tea party thing only.I don't know much about Glenn Beck, so I won't comment. Sarah Palin worries me because she seems to believe that she can determine who is a real American and who is not. I did not appreciate her rhetoric about how "small town Americans" had some sort of moral superiority, and her whole "small town America" versus "liberal elites" arguments are bogus. As I've said before, there is something very divisive about her...she seems to have to create a "them" to get people geared up. I listened to her give a speech at some school not long ago where she railed against the school system banning cookies in school because it was taking away rights from parents. The school board had never banned cookies, rather, they were discussing nutritional values of school lunches. I do believe that she is one of those who are making money out of trumped up conflict.Hemodoc, I have a question about concealed carry. I'm neither pro-gun nor anti-gun, so I am not asking this out of any political belief. Why, if it is legal for you to carry a gun, does it have to be concealed? I mean, if I am concerned about my safety and am carrying a gun, if it is concealed, isn't it harder to get to when you need it? And wouldn't you want someone to KNOW that you're carrying a gun? I've always wondered this. Thanks for any enlightenment!PS...I've never lived in a small town, so I guess I'm not really American. I couldn't help but wonder if "small town American" was code for "not Urban, ie non-white." That could be an unfair assessment, but that's how it struck me.
Hemodoc, thank you for that very interesting post. I am a city girl myself, but the allure and the joy that one can get from living the way you do/did in Idaho/Alaska is not lost on me. I'm very glad that there are people in this country who are fortunate enough to live in what is considered to be our great frontier. There have been times lately when all I wanted to do is hole up in some cabin in Montana (in the summer!) and live in peace.My family is from Cajun country. My father spoke a bastardized French until he started school. He was from a unique culture that is disappearing as it seems that this geographical area has become the rubbish bin of America. The wetlands are being destroyed by vast quantities of fertilizers and phosphates used by the agricultural conglomerates in the very state in which I now live; these chemicals seep into the waterways that ultimately feed the Mississippi river. There is a dead area of the Gulf of Mexico at the mouth of the Mississippi. The disappearing wetlands leave Cajun country vulnerable to the Camilles and Katrinas of our time. A special way of life is disappearing. Self sufficiency is a way of life there, too, but as the waters are fouled, people more and more have to look to the state and federal government for help. Agribusiness will thrive at the cost of those people who just want to be left alone to live off the swamps and provide for their families.I don't have to understand "the free and wild way" that some folks live in order to see its value. I have no reason to denigrate the way people live in our wild woods. In fact, I would want to see it preserved. Our nation is so geographically and topographically varied, so it is entirely understandable that the way people live would be influenced by their surroundings.And thanks for the explanation re concealed carry. It makes more sense to me now.
We've long had a history of fiery rhetoric and political assassination. We may think this is all new, but it isn't, not really. What makes this all feel particularly frightening and pervasive is the existence of the Internet. Instant communication can ignite firestorms in a nanosecond...there isn't always time for cooler heads to prevail. You can call people the most horrible names while sitting behind a computer screen in your underwear...
As I see it over here in the UK, Sarah Palin is somewhat to the right of Attila the Hun. If she is to further her political career she has to appeal to a greater proportion of Americans, i.e. move towards the centre. The testing time is now. Keeping her gob shut over this issue, as she has done so far, isn't an option.
Another thing about Palin, which MooseMom mentioned on the other thread about her, is she calls small town Americans "real" Americans. This to me implies that those of us who live in more urban/suburban areas are not in her "club" so to speak. The USA is made up of many different kinds of people, who live different lifestyles. We do not all fit one "type", so to speak. This does not mean that those of us who don't fit "her" type are not real Americans. We are ALL real Americans. Anyone who implies otherwise does not belong in the face of national politics. Personally, I think her 15 minutes are coming to an end. If not, then God help this nation. Seriously.KarenInWA