It was a much better setting for Barack Obama in mile high
Denver than Jesus of Nazareth had in Galilee almost two millennia ago. Mountains
versus hills, and a crowd probably 500-fold! But just as Christ is said by many
to have given the central tenets of Christian discipleship on that momentous
occasion, Obama gave an acceptance speech that defined not just the tenets of
the Democratic Party and his vision of America; but many of us came away with
the unchanging reality of the sad state of politics in America.
Barack Obama�s acceptance speech on August 28 as
presidential candidate of his party has been described from inspirational to
transformational plus in several other laudatory terms, certainly by those in
his party and so-called independents as well. The speech had carefully crafted
content, almost as comprehensive as that which Christ delivered at the Mount,
and one would be on the mark saying the speech was eloquently delivered, with
as much or more finesse than that usually exhibited by televangelist preachers
throughout this God-blessed America, and probably with far more believable
zeal.
This speech, timely delivered on the anniversary of Martin
Luther King�s memorable �I have a dream� speech of 45 years ago, capped
perfectly a four-day convention in which unity and change were the two themes. Party
unity is widely believed to have been achieved after Hillary and Bill gave
convincing, even humbling, speeches to assure America, Democratic America in
particular, of their unqualified endorsement of Senator Obama. It could be
argued that it really had a lot to do with the Clinton legacy which had been
dangerously put at risk during the course of the last six months; or, perhaps
this concession to the party was but a prepayment on future political knighting
for daughter Chelsea; or, even a way to be able to have Hillary�s personal loan
of over $10 million to her campaign retrieved somehow, all or even part. But
unity was achieved.
Change as a theme proved to be not as coherent an issue, and
much of the change espoused by Obama and his party, was (is) really Pyrrhic,
perhaps no more than a few incrementally positive degrees from the type of government
and society in which we live today. And that means same wars, same foreign
policies, vassalage to Corporate America, and a totally irresponsible blindness
to what is happening to America�s economy. On the latter, returning to the
pre-Bush tax structure, as proposed, will not suffice, the gap between rich and
poor has widened to an obscene extreme during the past quarter of a century . .
. since Reagan�s presidency -- and his voodoo economics -- not to exclude the
Clinton years when all those millions of jobs created, and for which his
administration takes credit, were for the most part low-skill, minimum wage
jobs.
Salve Barack Caesar! The Democratic Party has convened and
found you to be worthy representative of the party to become CINC of the United
States, and leader of the �free world,� for come next November it is another
commander-in-chief that will be elected. And here we are, thinking that we�ll
be casting our ballots for a president . . . not a chief of police empowered to
protect the wealth and power of an elite; a person that will be expected to
allow such elite to plunder and enslave at will, as in the recent past. That is
in truth the power that Americans have at the ballot box: the selection of a
CINC.
Granted that we have known all along that politics in these
United Sates is the closest thing to a cruel joke, with Tweedledee and
Tweedledum (our duopoly of Demos and Republicans) mockingly telling us that
people do rule, and that we are a democratic nation. Now, as if that ongoing
cruelty weren�t enough, there are some Democratic politicians espousing an even
greater bipartisanship. For the sake of national purpose, they claim. Are they
favoring that we be governed by TweedleOne? Or is that too weirdly
homo-incestuous since Dee and Dum are brothers? Well . . . maybe they turn out
to be enantiomorphs!
Other than party unity the convention brought Democrats
another success story: making history by selecting the first African-American
candidate in American politics selected by a major political party. And that
brings to light a major source of problems in American politics: this is a
nation where its citizens have one critical priority; one concern; one issue . .
. letting the rest take care of itself. Women, blacks, religious zealots, and other
identifiable groups have for the most part one item agendas; and the rest
becomes secondary or even irrelevant. War and social justice have had
diminished interest; war being waged �elsewhere� and social justice not very
fashionable in a consumer society.
Thusly, these primordial issues were not addressed at the
convention, properly or at all:
- Bringing to trial for
international crimes and genocide, Bush, Cheney and all the other
responsible officials in the administration (Kucinich�s effort just a
gesture).
- Open discussion on the
true state of the economy and how, why it came to be.
- A �no holds barred�
discussion of American Foreign Policy going back as long as it need be to
ascertain the reasons for our imperialistic policies with, (a) Latin American
countries; (b) our rigid and incestuous relationship with Israel; (c) our
coveting efforts for Middle East oil; (d) our asphyxiating treatment of
Russia and unnecessary challenges to its legitimate zone of influence and
interest; and, (e) our attitude, economically and militarily, towards
other upcoming global powers.
Should we be surprised that the real issues, the real major
problems facing the nation were never honestly addressed? Something, rest
assured, that will also be the case with the Republican Party Convention this
week.
The Sermon on the Mount at Galilee addressed important
issues for Christianity with the Beatitudes and the reinterpretation of Mosaic
Law. The Sermon on the Mount in Denver�s stadium gave us great oratory with the
usual political platitudes and the same old interpretation of American
Exceptionalism. Obama is unquestionably no Jesus!
If it is change you expect with an Obama presidency, it will
come from an eyedropper. Whether Americans accept it or not as an irremediable
truth, their politics are being ran by Corporate America and the Pentagon. The
show staged in Denver was sponsored by them . . . and so is this week�s (GOP)
in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
It�s unfortunate that a charismatic leader with a very
likely sense of humanity and social justice needs to find accommodation in his
soul -- read, sell his soul to the devil -- if he is to achieve top recognition
in American politics. It only took Obama two years to do so. But that�s how it
is with American politics. Love it or love it . . . that�s our choice!
� 2008 Ben Tanosborn
Ben
Tanosborn, columnist, poet and writer, resides in Vancouver, Washington (USA),
where he is principal of a business consulting firm. Contact him at ben@tanosborn.com.