Amazon.com Widgets RightWingBob.com » 2008 » March

 


You are in the RightWingBob.com archive.



Advertisements


RightWingBob.com
Another side of Bob and more!

The tempest may howl and the loud thunder roar
And gathering storms may arise
But calm is my feeling, at rest is my soul
The tears are all wiped from my eyes



 


Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Lawyers, guns and money ...11:43 am

Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in District of Columbia v. Heller, the case testing the constitutionality of Washington D.C.’s virtually complete ban on the ownership of handguns. It is, amazingly, the first time since the Bill of Rights was adopted in 1791 that the meaning of the Second Amendment is being squarely addressed by the nation’s highest court. That amendment of-course reads: “A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.”

I think that reading the transcript of those arguments (pdf file) yesterday ought to make anyone exceptionally proud to be American. Governments by their nature will always tend to prefer disarmed to armed citizens, and across much of the world democratic governments (never mind the tyrannies) have steadily removed such rights to own firearms as may have existed in their laws, taking advantage of waves of outrage over high profile crimes to punish law-abiding gun owners. Yesterday, a 217-year-old piece of paper spoke out across the centuries and said that America is indeed intended to be an exceptional place. It appears that people were listening.

It is said, based on the tone of the questioning yesterday, that an individual right to keep and bear firearms is bound to be upheld by this court. I wouldn’t be complacent about it, but I would at this point have significant hope that we can be grateful for John Roberts, Samuel Alito and George W. Bush. It’s a stark reminder that winning elections matters.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Obama and the Reverend, cont’d; cont’d ...4:48 pm

While Obama’s speech was impressive on multiple levels, I would find little to disagree with in James Taranto’s critical take on it today:

Obama was trying to accomplish something very specific by dragging his “white grandmother” into this political mess. He was trying to diminish Wright’s hateful theology by implying that it too is a private matter. Said Obama:

For the men and women of Rev. Wright’s generation, the memories of humiliation and doubt and fear have not gone away; nor has the anger and the bitterness of those years.

That anger may not get expressed in public, in front of white co-workers or white friends. But it does find voice in the barbershop or around the kitchen table. At times, that anger is exploited by politicians, to gin up votes along racial lines, or to make up for a politician’s own failings.

And occasionally it finds voice in the church on Sunday morning, in the pulpit and in the pews. The fact that so many people are surprised to hear that anger in some of Rev. Wright’s sermons simply reminds us of the old truism that the most segregated hour in American life occurs on Sunday morning.

Note how Obama elides the difference between a comment at the “kitchen table” and a sermon delivered to a congregation of thousands and recorded on DVD.

Obama rightly faulted his spiritual mentor for using “incendiary language to express views that have the potential not only to widen the racial divide, but views that denigrate both the greatness and the goodness of our nation.” But he tried to treat Wright’s most outrageous comments as if they were aberrations rather than the most extreme expressions of an extreme ideology …

Obama is saying the right words to the right audience — the Democratic primary voters — and I think that his speech today will most likely rescue him from the worst possible damage that the Wright sound bites could have done him in the upcoming primaries. However, he has evaded the most fundamental issues involved, and the ones which would rightly be brought to bear in the general election were he the nominee. In addition, in his speech today he is portraying himself as the necessary source of racial healing in America. But as the always astute Rush Limbaugh observed today on his radio show, Obama is in a real sense the product of racial healing in America. In that distinction lies a whole lot of argument, to be sure. By making today’s speech about the whole broad topic of race, instead of being more narrowly about the specific and horrendous things that the Rev. Wright publicly asserted in his church, Obama has opened up a whole new area of debate. And this election just gets interestinger and interestinger.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Buenos Aires ...3:36 pm

It’s a different twist on the hand-held digital cam concert clips that we generally see on YouTube. This one is letter-boxed, and in a kind of semi-black and white, and even appears to be the product of edited footage from more than one camera. It features parts of several songs performed by Bob Dylan on March 15th in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Click here to go to YouTube or play below.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Obama and the Reverend, cont’d ...11:42 am

Barack Obama gave a very impressive speech this morning. Credit where credit due, and I think he does deserve credit for a significant amount of courage in speaking on these issues of race in the midst of a campaign rather than doing something less challenging and more politically expedient. He takes a long view of things and is explicit about how he sees himself straddling different races and ethnicities, and in a sense different Americas, by virtue of his own family background. Really, he was winning me over pretty well until he reverted near the end to his usual economic populism and anti-Iraq-war talking points. A good question is whether there are sound bites from this speech that can to any significant extent counteract the power of those sound bites of Rev. Wright. Bottom line: it is hard to see how a man can get elected to the presidency of the United States when someone he has described as his spiritual mentor, and someone to whom he has given such broad credit, can be seen and heard at the push of a button saying, “God damn America.” Tie this to other suspicions about Obama’s patriotism — justified or not — and it becomes, ah, counterintuitive to think that he could win in a general election. The Democratic contest is another question. It continues to be remarkable to observe Hillary Clinton’s campaign not going after Obama on the Wright issue. I guess at this point the fear of a backlash from Democratic primary voters takes precedence. If the media appear to be letting the issue go, perhaps the Clinton campaign will consider pushing it, but in the current circumstances Hillary has little to gain and potentially a lot to lose.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Monday, March 17, 2008

Obama and the Reverend ...4:26 pm

The mono-monikered Spengler writes illuminatingly in the Asia Times Online on the peculiar theology of black liberation.

Since Christianity taught the concept of divine election to the Gentiles, every recalcitrant tribe in Christendom has rebelled against Christian universalism, insisting that it is the “Chosen People” of God - French, English, Russian, Germans and even (through the peculiar doctrine of Mormonism) certain Americans. America remains the only really Christian country in the industrial world, precisely because it transcends ethnicity. One finds ethnocentricity only in odd corners of its religious life; one of these is African-American.

[...]

In the black liberation theology taught by Wright, Cone and Hopkins, Jesus Christ is not for all men, but only for the oppressed:

In the New Testament, Jesus is not for all, but for the oppressed, the poor and unwanted of society, and against oppressors … Either God is for black people in their fight for liberation and against the white oppressors, or he is not [Cone].

In this respect black liberation theology is identical in content to all the ethnocentric heresies that preceded it. Christianity has no use for the nations, a “drop of the bucket” and “dust on the scales”, in the words of Isaiah. It requires that individuals turn their back on their ethnicity to be reborn into Israel in the spirit. That is much easier for Americans than for the citizens of other nations, for Americans have no ethnicity. But the tribes of the world do not want to abandon their Gentile nature and as individuals join the New Israel. Instead they demand eternal life in their own Gentile flesh, that is, to be the “Chosen People”.

That is the “biblical scholarship” to which Obama referred in his March 14 defense of Wright and his academic prominence. In his response to [Fox News host] Hannity, Wright genuinely seemed to believe that the authority of Cone and Hopkins, who now hold important posts at liberal theological seminaries, was sufficient to make the issue go away. His faith in the white establishment is touching; he honestly cannot understand why the white reporters at Fox News are bothering him when the University of Chicago and the Union Theological Seminary have put their stamp of approval on black liberation theology.

It will be interesting to see whether — and if so, how — Barack Obama addresses these angles in his speech tomorrow.

My guess is, of-course, that he will not get anywhere near to the heart of what it’s all about. In his own way, Obama is displaying a kind of condescension towards Rev. Wright and his theologically like-minded friends and mentors, by acting like their very serious words and beliefs can simply be glossed over.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Happy St. Patrick’s Day ...9:58 am

The tune is the traditional Dawning of the Day; the words are from a poem called On Raglan Road by the great Irish poet Patrick Kavanagh (1905 - 1967). It is sung by Luke Kelly (1940 - 1984) of the Dubliners. Click here to go to YouTube or play below.

On a quiet street where old ghosts meet I see her walking now
Away from me so hurriedly my reason must allow
That I had wooed not as I should a creature made of clay–
When the angel woos the clay he’d lose his wings at the dawn of day.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Sunday, March 16, 2008

Mack the Finger said to Louie the King ...6:18 pm

Going back to Monterrey, I think that this is a tremendous, dynamic, scorching version of Highway 61 Revisited from that February 29th gig in Mexico. The ability of Bob and the band to make this song new again in tour after tour is mind-boggling. Listen to how Dylan riffs exuberantly on the vocal from somewhere about the third minute onwards. And his organ playing is just white hot these days. Fantastic.

And if you dig your Dylan live clips compressed or otherwise, don’t miss the treasure trove currently offered at this location.

For those who are inspired by the themes of faith in the songs of Bob Dylan, I think that considerations of the nexus of Judaism and Christianity hold a special interest. Thanks to Bob Cohen for an e-mail forwarding a link to this article in TIME magazine, which provides a thumbnail sketch of some current debate in that area.

Recently a popular blogger — let’s call him Rabbi Ben — zinged the scholarship of a man we shall call Rabbi Rob. R. Ben claimed R. Rob did not “understand the difference between Judaism prior to the two Jewish wars in the 1st and 2nd centuries A.D. and later Mishnaic and Talmudic Judaism.” He helpfully provided a syllabus.

Actually, neither man is a rabbi. (Sorry.) Ben Witherington is a Methodist New Testament scholar, and Rob Bell a rising Michigan megapastor. Yet each regards sources like the Mishnah and Rabbi Akiva as vital to understanding history’s best-known Jew: Jesus.

[...]

The shift came in stages: first a brute acceptance that Jesus was born a Jew and did Jewish things; then admission that he and his interpreter Paul saw themselves as Jews even while founding what became another faith; and today, recognition of what the Rev. Bruce Chilton, author of Rabbi Jesus, calls Jesus’ passionate dedication “to Jewish ideas of his day” on everything from ritual purity to the ideal of the kingdom of God — ideas he rewove but did not abandon.

What does this mean, practically? At times the resulting adjustment seems simple. For example, Bell thinks he knows the mysterious words Jesus wrote in the dust while defending the adulteress (”He that is without sin among you, let him cast the first stone,” etc.). By Bell’s calculation, that showdown occurred at the same time as religious Jews’ yearly reading of the prophet Jeremiah’s warning that “those who turn from [God] will be written in the dust because they have forsaken [him].” Thus Jesus wrote the crowd’s names to warn that their lack of compassion alienated their (and his) God.

A trickier revision for readers involves Paul’s Letter to the Romans, forever a key Christian text on sin and Christ’s salvific grace. Yet this reading necessitates skipping over what seems like extraneous material in Chapters 9 through 11, which are about the Jews. Increasingly, says Jason Byassee, an editor at the Christian Century,, scholars now read Romans through those chapters, as a musing by a lifelong Jew on how God can fulfill his biblical covenant with Israel even if it does not accept His son. Byassee the theologian agrees. But as a Methodist pastor, he frets that Romans “is no longer really about Gentile Christians. How do you preach it?”

Towards the end of Romans, Chapter 11, referenced above, Paul writes of the olive tree:

But if some of the branches were broken off, and you, a wild olive shoot, were grafted in their place to share the richness of the olive tree, do not boast over the branches. If you do boast, remember it is not you that support the root, but the root that supports you.
You will say, “Branches were broken off so that I might be grafted in.”
That is true. They were broken off because of their unbelief, but you stand fast only through faith. So do not become proud, but stand in awe.
For if God did not spare the natural branches, neither will he spare you.
Note then the kindness and the severity of God: severity toward those who have fallen, but God’s kindness to you, provided you continue in his kindness; otherwise you too will be cut off.
And even the others, if they do not persist in their unbelief, will be grafted in, for God has the power to graft them in again.
For if you have been cut from what is by nature a wild olive tree, and grafted, contrary to nature, into a cultivated olive tree, how much more will these natural branches be grafted back into their own olive tree.

Lest you be wise in your own conceits, I want you to understand this mystery, brethren: a hardening has come upon part of Israel, until the full number of the Gentiles come in, and so all Israel will be saved; as it is written, “The Deliverer will come from Zion,
he will banish ungodliness from Jacob”;
“and this will be my covenant with them
when I take away their sins.”

[...]

O the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways!

From my unlearned point of view, I’m always impressed by the interest of practicing Jews in any of these questions, since, at least as it appears to me, Christ can have no theological significance in Judaism. No doubt the subject may nonetheless be fascinating on its academic merits, and I guess it also can have a very practical and social application for Jews living in a society which is largely Christian. It clearly is good to understand one another, and to value that which we have in common. I think that Christians, on the other hand, have additional and very compelling reasons for grappling with the subject matter. The Bible that Christians read (or sometimes read) is, per pound, mainly Hebrew scripture. Even the part we know as our New Testament consists largely of things written by Jews about Jews. All of this should make anti-semitism, from a Christian point-of-view, all the more of an inexplicable evil.

Recently I’ve been attending a class on the Psalms given by the pastor at my church. The Psalms provide a great example of the gulf which can separate a Jewish versus a Christian reading of the same scriptural text, and yet individuals of both faiths can pray them as fervently. That’s pretty nifty when you think about it. It is possible, and I guess it has been quite common in certain times and places, for Christian interpreters to relentlessly present Jesus as being present in the Psalms, both as an addressee of the psalmist and an addresser of God (the Father). And, indeed, there can hardly be anything wrong for the average Christian reader in reading them in this manner, except to the extent that it might exclude other ways of appreciating the text. Understanding — to any degree — the historical and spiritual context in which they were written only enriches one’s sense of the depth and truth of God’s word; how it can be true both then and now, from this point of view and from that point of view. For a Christian, I think, any journey down this avenue increases one’s understanding of what it means that we worship not just any god, but the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

And so another Dylan connection: Years of listening to and reflecting on the songs of Bob Dylan is a kind of training for this understanding of a text that holds true on multiple levels. It is one of the defining characteristics of his work, after all. As one small example, take the song It Ain’t Me, Babe. Taken one way — the most immediate and obvious way — it addresses a romantic lover who expects too much, who wants the singer to live up to her notion of the ideal mate, and is ignoring the reality of who he actually is. Taken another way, it is a singer and balladeer — or any kind of artist — addressing an audience who demands of him to be that which they want him to be; to articulate their opinions and to reinforce their world-view. (Arguably, depending on how it’s sung it can lean one way or the other. I think of the rollicking Before the Flood version as being very much addressed to a lover; I think of the Real Live version as being addressed to the audience, and all the more poignantly so as a result of the audience participation which takes place.)

You say you’re lookin’ for someone
Never weak but always strong,
To protect you an’ defend you
Whether you are right or wrong,
Someone to open each and every door,
But it ain’t me, babe …

One interpretation need not deny the validity of the other interpretation. Part of the pleasure is in feeling how the emphasis can shift moment by moment, performance by performance. Accepting both angles enriches the listener’s experience of what is taking place. There are many other examples in Dylan’s oeuvre; too many to list, and many which have a faith-oriented nature (even It Ain’t Me, Babe tells the listener that he/she really seeks someone “who will die for you and more”).

Dylan’s music is not holy scripture, although he is someone who takes holy scripture seriously, and who has expressed the thought that he would not consciously write something that was anti-scriptural (1985 interview with Bill Flanagan). Although his life is not an open book, nor one that we should force open, it is one that has brought to many people’s attention the deep question of this nexus of Judaism and Christianity. He is someone who can attend and participate in a Yom Kippur service while being able contemporaneously to perform in concert a song of his own composition which says that “there’s only one road and it leads to Calvary.”

So, I guess the lesson we might draw is, “Be not afraid.” There should not be an insecurity in considering how God’s word can be true on one level and on a quite different level at the same time. It is not something to shy away from, but rather something in which we can rejoice. And that, I think, is very good news indeed.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Friday, March 14, 2008

A gig in Russia ...11:23 am

Bob Dylan may be playing a concert in Russia this June, according to a report in the St. Petersburg Times (and it’s also listed at Bill Pagel’s tour guide). The article by Sergey Chernov also highlights some of the past history between Bob and Russia, so to speak.

Dylan received wide coverage in the Soviet press which developed his image as a protest singer and opponent of the Vietnam war, but the music itself was never really available either on Soviet records or on the radio. One 30-minute program which accidentally broadcast on local Leningrad radio in the late 1970s was an exception.

On top of that, rock fans tended to despise whatever was praised in the official Soviet press, so the articles hardly brought Dylan many new followers.

“You know you need a whole new beginning / Don’t have to go to Russia or Iran / Just surrender to God and He’ll move you right here where you stand, and Ye shall be changed, ye shall be changed,” sang Dylan in “Ye Shall Be Changed,” the song that he wrote in 1979 when he was exploring his new-born Christianity.

He did come to Russia in 1985, when it was still the Soviet Union, and Mikhail Gorbachev had been leader for just two months. Little information is available, but the reports have it that he came to Moscow’s First International Poetry Festival following an invitation from Andrei Voznesensky.

According to reports, Dylan did perform but the concert was not advertised (of course) and the public was a selected bunch brought in on buses. Allegedly, the room was half-empty, the public was indifferent, and Dylan stopped after 30 minutes, deeply upset. He could be glimpsed on television news reports, however.

It’s interesting that Dylan was promoted by the Soviet press as an anti-Vietnam war singer, and that this, if anything, only turned off people who were otherwise hungry for Western popular music. We know that Dylan wasn’t singing songs about the Vietnam war, or particularly protesting about anything at all. (At least most of us know.) It’s something to add to the list of ironies. In a way, of-course, Dylan was also falsely promoted by the ideological bed-mates of the Soviet communists here in the U.S.A. (and elsewhere) as being an anti-war and anti-establishment protest singer. And that did have an impact on how the general public perceived him, and doubtless some kind of impact on the number of people who were willing to lend his music an ear. The very significant difference is that the U.S.A. was not and is not a totalitarian society, and people are able to just turn on the radio or buy a record and make up their own minds. Thank God.

A not-off-topic quote from Dylan’s memoir, Chronicles:

It seems like the world has always needed a scapegoat — someone to lead the charge against the Roman Empire. But America wasn’t the Roman Empire and someone else would have to step up and volunteer.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Thursday, March 13, 2008

Disguised as Robin Hood? ...11:15 am

At the moment, this story doesn’t seem to be anywhere but on the Ireland Online news service, and no specific information is provided as to when or to whom Paula Abdul made the remarks, but here it is:

Legendary rocker Bob Dylan twice tried to sneak into tapings of ‘American Idol’ in disguise, according to the talent show’s co-judge Paula Abdul.

The ‘Hurricane’ singer donned a fake beard in a bid to try and go unnoticed during the recording of the reality TV hit’s fourth season in 2005 - but Abdul spotted him.

The ‘Straight Up’ singer says: “He (Dylan) had a beard and tried to be in disguise. But I knew it was him.”

It would be easy to dismiss this as some kind of bizarre hallucination on Abdul’s part. However, I distinctly remember rumors in the press back around 2004 that Bob Dylan might appear as a guest judge on American Idol. As these things go, it seemed relatively legitimate. Stars like Barry Manilow were going on the show, coaching the contestants, having their songs performed, doing some guest judging, and seeing big boosts in CD sales (remember CDs?). As much as the show is largely ridiculous, and the standards of singing generally perverse (huge over-singing gets rewarded all the time), you could see Bob being amused by it and intrigued at the idea of throwing his stuff into the mix. It would’ve also given him a platform to talk about what he most likes to talk about: music. So, if the preceding is true, it’s conceivable that Dylan would have tried to sneak into tapings in order to make up his mind whether it was something he really wanted to do or not. Who knows? We do know that he was worn a fake beard on a number of occasions (like Newport in 2002).

Of-course, that was a long time ago. Now he has “Theme Time Radio Hour,” giving him complete freedom and the ideal context to talk about music.

And in other water that has passed under the bridge, American Idol’s signature personality, Simon Cowell, put down Bob Dylan in widely published remarks in January of 2007, saying that he believed Kelly Clarkson was a superior artist. Time will tell on that, I suppose.

Addendum: The same exact story is also at ContactMusic.com, but still without specifics as to the context of Ms. Abdul’s remarks.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Wednesday, March 12, 2008

It happened in Monterrey ...1:59 pm

During their current concert tour, Bob Dylan and his band have been airing a sparkling new arrangement of Blowin’ in the Wind. It’s a song that’s always sounded underlyingly sad to me, but this arrangement is buoyant, genuinely pretty and uplifting. It seems to offer a different way, a really optimistic way of hearing that refrain that has been heard and sung so many times. But judge for yourself — there’s a clip here from the February 29th show in Monterrey, Mexico.

He may be 66 going on 67, but Bob’s still got plenty of gas in the tank.

Addendum: Thanks to Sue for the email apprising me of the fact that Bob and the band did the song similarly when she saw them during the tour of Australia and New Zealand last summer.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




But isn’t that just semantics? ...12:54 pm

The Times Online has a story about how the current world wide web as we know it will be superseded by something much more powerful called the “semantic” web; this according to the internet patriarch Tim Berners-Lee.

“Using the semantic web, you can build applications that are much more powerful than anything on the regular web,” Mr Berners-Lee said. “Imagine if two completely separate things — your bank statements and your calendar — spoke the same language and could share information with one another. You could drag one on top of the other and a whole bunch of dots would appear showing you when you spent your money.

“If you still weren’t sure of where you were when you made a particular transaction, you could then drag your photo album on top of the calendar, and be reminded that you used your credit card at the same time you were taking pictures of your kids at a theme park. So you wouldd know not to claim it as a tax deduction.

“It’s about creating a seamless web of all the data in your life.”

This stuff scares the living daylights out of me. Although, by the sounds of it, the IRS will be well pleased.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




How to go from cool to “neo-con” in one easy step ...11:00 am

David Mamet, the 60-year-old playwright, screenwriter and just plain writer, has decided that being “a brain-dead liberal” all these years has been, on consideration, a misjudgment on his part. He elaborates in a piece in the Village Voice, called “Why I Am No Longer A ‘Brain-Dead Liberal.’” (Thanks to Rich for the link.) There’s nothing so very radical in his essay, and some of it might even seem rather twee to someone who has been conservative-minded for many years, but it is valuable for illustrating the path of logic which he has followed to his ultimate enlightenment — in a C.S. Lewis kind of way, you might say. Snippet:

Prior to the midterm elections, my rabbi was taking a lot of flack. The congregation is exclusively liberal, he is a self-described independent (read “conservative”), and he was driving the flock wild. Why? Because a) he never discussed politics; and b) he taught that the quality of political discourse must be addressed first—that Jewish law teaches that it is incumbent upon each person to hear the other fellow out.

And so I, like many of the liberal congregation, began, teeth grinding, to attempt to do so. And in doing so, I recognized that I held those two views of America (politics, government, corporations, the military). One was of a state where everything was magically wrong and must be immediately corrected at any cost; and the other—the world in which I actually functioned day to day—was made up of people, most of whom were reasonably trying to maximize their comfort by getting along with each other (in the workplace, the marketplace, the jury room, on the freeway, even at the school-board meeting).

And I realized that the time had come for me to avow my participation in that America in which I chose to live, and that that country was not a schoolroom teaching values, but a marketplace.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Eliot Spitzer falls hard ...10:24 am

So, the governor of my state, New York, has gotten into some trouble for — at the least — purchasing the services of a $1000-an-hour prostitute. Governor Eliot Spitzer, a Democrat, and formerly a merciless prosecutor and state attorney general, now faces possible criminal charges. His political survival appears completely impossible, due not only to his transgressions, but also due to his lacking much in the way of dedicated political allies at this point. It’s a curious state of affairs.

From my point of view, his election to the governorship of New York was distinctly odd in itself. I don’t recall any particular competition. It seemed that nearly two years in advance of the election in which he was expected to run, a broad message was somehow communicated to all and sundry that he would be the next governor of New York. (The three-term incumbent, George Pataki, a Republican, was expected not to run, thereby creating an “open” contest.) The sense of inevitability regarding Eliot Spitzer’s ascension was reflected and magnified by the kinds of campaign ads he ultimately ran. There are all kinds of ironies to be found in watching them today. Take this one (click here for YouTube or play below), a 30 second ad called “Responsibility,” with references to “Trustworthy Turnpike,” “Honesty Road,” and “Integrity Lane.”

Now, I pay reasonably close attention to politics — although, in local terms, more to city than to state — but in the course of the campaign I’ll be darned if I picked up much of anything on the specifics of what Eliot Spitzer would do once elected governor. All I kept picking up was that he would be governor, and that then things were going to be just great. The ads seemed to be saying that this guy is so good that we can’t even begin to tell you how good he is; so, we won’t waste much time trying. Likewise, the ads told us that once he was governor, he was going to make everything fantastic and new again, on such a huge scale that to worry about specifics would be silly. He was going to bring back the good old days, while simultaneously leading us into a bright progressive future.

Take a look at this other 30 second ad, about the “New York that was” (click here to go to YouTube or play below).

Note how the voice says, “If you don’t remember that New York, don’t worry; He does.” I capitalize He, because that’s exactly how it sounds to me in the ad. Spitzer was truly being deified.

He was elected with 69% of the vote. We may as well have saved some money and just had a voice-vote, in fact. The “yays” would have been deafening. Nobody even remembers who the Republicans ran against him. (I do, and I voted for him, but I’m not saying.)

A campaign that was not fought over specifics — in a real sense, a campaign that wasn’t fought at all — made it hard to tell what Spitzer’s specific mandate was. It seemed he just had an overwhelming mandate to do whatever the heck he wanted to do. And it soon emerged that that’s exactly what he thought, too. However, he immediately ran into some powerful politicians in the state capital who didn’t take kindly to being run over by a “steamroller” (Eliot’s self-characterization) and who weren’t going anywhere anytime soon. A really nasty side of Spitzer’s personality simultaneously came out — one which the campaign ads had neglected to inform the public about, but one which had surely been there throughout his public life — and before long the first big scandal of his governorship arose, involving allegations of abuse of power, lies and cover-ups, and the use of state police to in effect spy on a Republican rival in state government. That whole thing is still facing pending proceedings. His poll ratings fell through the floor. The question had abruptly changed from whether he could accomplish anything he wanted, to whether he could accomplish anything at all.

You would think a chastened Spitzer would have realized he was not the untouchable perpetual winner that he had heretofore considered himself to be, but, judging by what’s emerging now about how he conducted himself in other areas, it seems not.

This story is a parable of some kind, but maybe it’s hard right now to sum it up. One thing is sure — if not so surprising — and that is that voters can be misled, on a massive scale. Elections can sometimes be won based only on factors such as good timing and slick campaign ads. Substance, and character, can be optional accessories. Beware a candidate who effectively says, “Just trust me; I’ll take care of everything.” It’s a parable about arrogance too, of-course. To behave in this way while governor of one of the largest states in the country is the mind-boggling thing. Yet, clearly he didn’t wake up one day and say, “I’m the governor; I’m going to go see a prostitute.” It’s something he has to have been doing for many years, and having gotten away with it for so long, he somehow didn’t think he would be discovered despite his enormously high profile. And clearly this man — who I heard described by many pundits over and over again yesterday as being “incredibly smart” — didn’t worry about putting himself in a position where he could be blackmailed by, for example, some organized crime figures. It’s a parable about self-delusion, too. Yet, Spitzer’s arrogance and self-delusion carried him pretty far, all in all: to the governor’s mansion. He’s going to need something else to carry him away from there.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Monday, March 10, 2008

NEW LOOK! Same great taste! ...4:40 pm

DO NOT ADJUST YOUR SET. The technical department at RWB headquarters has been working feverishly to give the decor around here a long overdue face lift. The aim was to drag it screaming out of the mid-90’s and plop it somewhere into the early 00’s. Try to avoid being too dazzled.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:




Stuck inside of Little Rock ...10:50 am

I don’t often quote Andrew Sullivan, but the new column of his in the U.K. Times demands notice in this space (thanks to Mike for the link). It’s called “The Clintons, a horror film that never ends.” Mr. Sullivan contemplates at length a sickening feeling of déjà vu which he finds overtaking him a good deal these days, as the prospect of having to live with the Clintons and their never-ending “psychodramas” during a new term in the White House continues to present itself.

The Clintons have always had a touch of the zombies about them: unkillable, they move relentlessly forward, propelled by a bloodlust for Republicans or uppity Democrats who dare to question their supremacy. You can’t escape; you can’t hide; and you can’t win. And these days, in the kinetic pace of the YouTube campaign, they are like the new 28 Days Later zombies. They come at you really quickly, like bats out of hell. Or Ohio, anyway.

But it’s the way the article closes that really earns it the mention here.

The Clintons are comfortable with this [red state/blue state] polarisation. They need it. Even when running against a fellow Democrat, they instinctively reach for it. Last week, in response to the Obama camp’s request that they release their tax returns, Clinton’s spokesman called Obama a new Ken Starr. For the Clintons, all Democrats who oppose them are . . . Republicans. And all Republicans are evil.

And evil means that anything the Clintons do in self-defence is excusable – even playing the race card, and the Muslim card, and the gender card, and every sleazy gambit that the politics of fear can come up with. This is how they have arrested the Obama juggernaut. It’s the only game they know how to play.

One is reminded of the words of Bob Dylan: “And here I sit so patiently / Waiting to find out what price / You have to pay to get out of / Going through all these things twice.”

Indeed.

...................
Share this!
[del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Fark] [StumbleUpon] [Email]

Posts which might be related to this one based on a mysterious algorithm:



« Previous PageNext Page »

BACK TO MAIN





Original text copyright © 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008 by RightWingBob.com
Quotes from the works of others are linked to their source or are as otherwise attributed, and are used in accordance with Fair Use guidelines. Contact: rightwingbob(at)gmail.com

Back To Main


Amazon Honor System Click Here to Pay Learn More


Buy it: Tell Tale Signs: the Bootleg Series Vol. 8

Buy it: Hank Williams: The Unreleased Recordings


Serious Dylan Related Things:

Right Wing Bob On:

Who Am I And What Is This Site About?

Q & A Series

Who's That Girl From The Red River Shore?

What Bob Dylan Said On Election Night In Minnesota

Preserved in Desire

Mister Pitiful

Theme Time Radio Hour(s) with your host Bob Dylan (Dylan's show on XM Satellite Radio)

Argument With A Leftist

God On Our Side

A Christmas Carol

Chronicling Chronicles

Look My Way An' Pump Me a Few (Marcus, Ricks and Wilentz at Columbia University)

John Brown

The Whole Wide World Is Watching

Coming From The Heart

Also see: From the Weekly Standard, What Dylan Is Not

From First Things, The Pope and the Pop Star


Search Right Wing Bob's Back Pages:

Google
Web RightWingBob.com




Recent Posts:


Email:
RightWingBob@gmail.com
(emails may be published)


Bob Dylan Interviews:

1985 20/20 TV Interview

Transcriptions of various Bob Dylan TV interviews



Remnants Of The Recent Past:

  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006
  • April 2006
  • March 2006
  • February 2006
  • January 2006
  • December 2005
  • November 2005
  • October 2005
  • September 2005
  • August 2005
  • · August 2004 thru July 2005