Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Rant Salad - 6/27/2008

Friday, June 27th, 2008

Ingredient: 3 stalks of LOL, chopped.

Bill Dennis posted a blog about the SC(r)OTUS decision to overturn the Washington DC handgun ban, a decision I support. BJStone’s response was great and sums up my view beautifully.

Woo hoo! More guns! We don’t have enough! Give me more! Woo hoo!

The problem is not that the “liberal Democrats” oppose homeowners having guns…most of us DO NOT oppose the constitution or the right to bear arms…the problem is WHAT guns, HOW MANY, and WHY in the hell you need ‘em?

Want a shotgun or rifle to hunt? Fine, good, great even. Want a pistol to defend your home? Fine, good, we can work with that I think. Want a semi-automatic or a military assault rifle so you can put not just one cap, but 324 caps in some poor rabbit’s ass? We don’t get it.

*clap*clap*clap*

Ingredient - Sour Apples; fry for thirty seconds, then flip.

Obama’s flip-flopping is getting pretty annoying. I don’t blame the man himself, I blame his campaign supervisors who are still stuck in the Clintonian mindset that “the Centrist wins.” As NPR points out, Obama has steadily been moving towards the center to posture himself as a moderate on many issues as a gambit to draw more votes from centrists in the General Election.

This is a mistake. The reason we had record turnout during the primaries, the reason he won the Democratic nomination and the reason voter confidence is so high on our side is because he hasn’t been a moderate and hasn’t played election-year politics. This is a serious error and very detrimental to his campaign.

Think about it, he’s leading in all of the recent polls by, in many cases, large margins. Liberals and left-leaning people throughout the country are fired up and eager to get out there and vote. As much as I hate to use the word, we have indeed been galvanized. Things like this are only going to dampen spirits and reduce enthusiasm, and, Mr. Obama, whoever advised you to move to the center ought to be fired immediately.

Enthusiasm is the number one thing we have going for us in this election; get more of our people to vote than theirs. Honestly, the gains to be made though moderation are not larger than what we stand to lose in doing so.

You’ll note that I listed enthusiasm as our major advantage, rather than the war, the state of the economy or the excesses, lies, fuck ups and tyranny of the Bush administration. That’s right. You see, due to the fact there are still Republican voters who have not defected by now–after all this they still remain unmoved–the only reasonable conclusion one can reach is that they will not be moved.

Let’s not kid ourselves: the old ways are gone. The lines have been drawn and people have chosen sides. As a strategy to strengthen your side during an election year, I think making inroads to the others’ base has become mostly obsolete. Appeal to your own base, stick to your guns, and when the chips fall you can say you were right all along. People will defect in the end.

Remember, Barry? Like you did with Iraq? Let’s get back to that mindset, hm?

Ingredient: a spritz of brainwashing.

For you guilt-wracked Republicans out there who flog yourself with an electric metal cross while pretending to speak in tongues over the mental stress of realizing all the glaring inconsistencies in your belief patterns and are now thinking about defecting but fear you’ll go to hell and be shunned at the country club for doing so… *deep breath* let’s do a little exercise to put you back in la-la land.

Repeat after me:

If you tell yourselves that enough times, you might even start to believe it again.

Let the Political Acrobatics Begin.

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

I understand why he’s doing it. I understand the nuance involved, but I still don’t like it. Yes, I’m referring to Barack Obama’s apparent flip-flopping on the FISA bill. I understand the importance of the bill, but damn, are we really going to give another free pass to the telecommunications companies? Honestly? We’ve given them wiggle room in many areas, and what have they done with it? Bandwidth throttling, anti-competitive business practices, illegal surveillance… Once again, the Republicans are favoring them over the American people. I swoon in disbelief.

Naturally, even though this act shows bipartisan effort and the ability to compromise (a marked improvement over the President v.43 model), John McCain and the Republicans at large will undoubtedly attack him on this issue (even though he’s conceding to them) for being a flip-flopper.

I would challenge the wisdom of this. Maybe I should join the trend and switch to John McCain over this one issue. Y’know, like the fanatical portion of Hillary Clinton supporters did.

It’s not like I don’t have reasons. Another issue I strongly disagree with Obama over is the issue of Ethanol. John McCain agrees with me. Oh wait, maybe not. Oh well, at least he shares the view that people like Jerry Falwell are bad for the nation. What? He’s down with Jerry? Hm.

Well, there have got to be plenty of issues we see eye to eye on. Abortion? He used to. Surely he disagrees with the use of torture. Damn. Offshore drilling? Damn. I KNOW I heard him say he was against the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy… DAMMIT! Gay Marriage? Pff, that was short-lived.

What about the issues we know Obama has flipped on? How about his decision not to take public financing? Nope. McCain can’t attack him on that, considering he doesn’t even agree with himself over what campaign finance reform ought to be. Then there’s the issue of immunity for the telecoms. Can we honestly say he flipped on this issue too? Yes. We. Can.

On second thought, maybe I’ll stick to the guy who has been giving me the straight talk. Y’know, the one who has been mostly consistent. You know which one. Still, you just know they’re going to drag him through the mud over this. Despite everything John McCain has flipped on, they’ll accuse Obama of pandering. The thing is, considering his Democratic and largely liberal base, doesn’t his stance on FISA prove that he is not pandering? (Ethanol, not so much. We’ll take ownership of that one.)

I’m troubled by the fact that John McCain turned out to be the kind of politician who will say anything to gain power, leaving us without the foggiest clue as to what he’ll actually do with it. Frightening. He had such potential in 2000.

Thanks, You Bastard

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Charles Black, a top McCain adviser, said that a new terrorist attack “certainly would be a big advantage to [McCain].”

Ever wonder why there are 9/11 conspiracy theories all over the place?  Ever wonder where they get their ammunition?  Let’s look at the list:

  • Government officials acting as if they’re hiding something
  • Blocking investigations
  • Refusing to testify
  • Mishandling evidence
  • Lying about trivial things
  • Lying about important things
  • Refusing to answer questions
  • NEW:  Making cynical, dumbass statements like this.

Looks like Mr. Black let the cat out of the bag, confirming many long-held suspicions that the Republicans are lusting after another 9/11 to legitimize their wars, their military budget and agenda, their grievous attack on civil liberties and the consolidation of power in the Executive Branch.  That’s to say nothing of all the Halliburtons out there who would benefit from exclusive, no-bid government contracts for billions of dollars.

I think the fact that this guy wasn’t immediately terminated for the statement reinforces my opinion on the matter.  It’s as if the Cons are saying,”why bother?  They already know, we’re not fooling anyone.”  Fortunately for the CT’s, if we do get attacked between now and November, this statement gives them another argument to support their case:  a motive.  Good job, dumbass.

Republicans: Still Delusional

Friday, June 20th, 2008

Some filler for the transition:

“While we may never know the answers, Scott McClellan alone will have to wrestle with whether it was worth selling out the president and his friends for a few pieces of silver.” - comment from Republican Lamar Smith to Scott McClellan over his book chronicling the corruption of the Bush Administration during his time as a White House aide.

The important phrase here is “for a few pieces of silver.” This is what anchors the whole statement–a biblical reference to the betrayal of Jesus by his disciple Judas for thirty pieces of silver.

I’m not bothered by the comparison of McClellan to Judas. From the Administration’s view that one is easy to understand. What I find troubling is the equation of Bush to Jesus in the same reference. WTF?

People, this is the kind of batshit mindset we’re up against.

—————-

Things are coming along with the redesign. Once I get a handle on this whole theming process, everything else should fall into place.

Rant Salad - 6/11/2008

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Ingredient: A Dash of Relief

The primary season is finally over! Thanks Hillary for saying you’ll support Barack Obama. You’ve run an incredibly bitter and negative campaign, and liberals everywhere thank you for aiming your cannons across the aisle for a change. Please, don’t play the veepstakes. That small percentage of extremely vocal and stunningly obnoxious supporters who say they’ll vote for McCain are now saying they wouldn’t vote for Obama even if you were on the ticket. They’re the weak-minded morons I have repeatedly described, and the Republicans are playing them like a fiddle. So please, let it go.

Yeah, yeah, party unity. I’m not interested in prolonging the division, but after running the kind of ruthless, cutthroat operation we’ve suffered over the last 4 months (let’s face it, February was when things turned ugly), she’s the one who need to make amends and redeem herself. To be honest, I hope she does. She could be a great asset to the Party and the country, but first she needs to lick her wounds and swallow her pride. Additionally, any Obama supporters who start pouring salt on said wounds by gloating should throw themselves off a bridge, right now.

Ingredient: A Healthy Smattering of Sleaze

I’ve got to hand it to the Republicans, who are proving to be every bit as stubborn and tenacious as the Clinton campaign was. I mean, seriously: internet trolls? That’s their strategy? It makes sense that the only thing they have to rely on are smear tactics, spreading rumors and subterfuge (let’s not be coy, they’re frauds). What else can they use? They set the standard for epic failure on issues like policy and record, and they know it.

For all you Vonsters and Dittoheads out there who believe Limbaugh’s crap that “the Democrats gave us McCain,” as justification for your fraudulent little campaign, read the “frauds” link. It wasn’t us who gave you John McCain. Sans Michigan and Florida, we were too busy making sure our favorite got the Democratic nomination to bother with foiling your plans. Maybe what Limbaugh and his followers have failed to realize is that they’ve become irrelevant. They failed to realize that they, not the “liberals,” are the problem and people are sick of their shit. They might have a few reasons to be bitter.

In short, the Republicans are going to lose because they deserve to lose. Cry about it somewhere else.

Ingredient - Road Rage.

I’m expanding my targets of gas price-related anger. Instead of focusing on a few, I’m going to spread my anger evenly on all those responsible, including the oil companies, the speculators, the GOP and the ones I get to deal with most, BFV drivers.

Big. Fuckin’. Vehicle.

Nothing bothers me more than seeing a BFV capable of hauling steel beams to a construction site in the bed of the truck, yet not have a single scratch on it. Why does this bother me? They don’t fucking need it! Get a car. Get a smaller truck, hell, get a Chevy Blazer. They drive well, they’re spacious, the gas mileage is better, and you don’t look cartoonish getting in or out of one. The bottom line: if you don’t use a truck for work, don’t buy a goddamn work truck, dumbass.

Then there are the BFV drivers who have no courtesy or regard for others on the road. As I sit here trying to imagine the elitist attitude and sense of entitlement of those who would purchase one of these things, I can’t what is going through the mind of one of these miscreants as they pull into a gas station and neglect to pull into the far end of the pumps, thus forcing you to go around them, missing the pump they should have used because of the width of the turn you had to make due to the unnecessary size of their vehicle.

I got to experience this last night, and for the last time, I swear. The cocksucker in the drivers seat, naturally, was the only one riding in their 10 mpg vehicle. Great. They come out wearing nicely tailored garments undoubtedly made from linens skillfully crafted at the hands of a 7 year old working in a garage-turned-factory on the outskirts of Calcutta. I finished pumping gas and went inside to pay.

After waiting in line for about five minutes, the same shithead cuts in front of me in line. I responded with a booming voice that wasn’t quite a yell, but designed to be loud and imposing,”EXCUSE ME I WAS STANDING IN LINE FIRST,” then stepped in front of them. If the fucker would have said anything, I’d have been more than happy to give them a pipe wrench polish on their BFV as soon as I stepped out the door. Assholes.

When they’re not cutting me off, trying to hit me or doing something completely rude, my encounters with BFV’s and their owners tend to be benign. When gas is at $4/gallon, the economy is in the shitter, our illegal invasion is going terrible and the asshole in the BFV has a GOP election sticker on their bumper, I tend to get a little less friendly.

Most of the time when I see someone driving a BFV, I simply think,”Nice SUV. Sorry about your penis.”

As an aside, can anyone tell my why the fuck there are so many Impala’s on the road? I can’t drive for 5 minutes without seeing the ugly ass-end of one of these things staring me in the face.

Ingredient: 1 lb of Satisfaction

After running the most positive campaign I can recall, Barack Obama came out swinging in the GE. Now the crybaby pisspants Republicans are whining about it by calling him a hypocrite. Why? Because it’s “politics as usual” and “negative campaigning.”

Really? I haven’t seen any ad hominem by the Obama camp. I’ve seen some propagandistic comparisons to “Bush’s third term,” but nothing serious. In fact, almost every attack has to do with McCain’s stance on the issues and, by extension, calling his election Bush’s third term does a pretty good job at summing it up.

What the wingnuts are really saying is “you can’t attack us, period.” I can see why they’d adopt this attitude, considering how their shitty policies led us to an illegal war and an economic recession while letting companies run amok with little or no regulation and are thereby directly responsible for the fix we’re in.

They’re certainly not pulling any punches though. They’ve already called Obama a liar. Then there’s the internet trolls and his shameless speech last Tuesday, in which he criticized Obama’s proposals while repeatedly lying through his dentures. Ooh, a point-by-point with the transcript could be fun…

Ingredient: Republicans are fucking scary.

It seems the average Conservative is still excessively bad at making a case for… well, for anything, really. Take, for instance, your average dittohead troll:

It’s the same old spill from liberal bloggers. They are blinded to the facts. Obama is not a reliable candidate. He has not even finished his term at present. Do you think if there were a higher office he would quit the presidency to run for it? There is not a higher office in America. Maybe they do agree with his voting record, as short as it is. To associate MCcain with the klan is completely ignorant on their behalf. His record shows bipartisan efforts. Obama’s does not. McCain’s past shows strong leadership and reform. Obama’s does not. Of course it does not matter to the leftist. They will continue to attack based on their biased,bigotted forum.

This is an excellent example of what I’m referring to. The have a penchant for making broad-based, absolute statements. They state them as if they were set in stone, factual and unchanging. What’s terrifying about it is that they never question themselves. They say what, but they never, ever, ever say why. “They are blinded to the facts.” How? “Obama is not a reliable candidate. He has not even finished his term at present.” Why does that make him unreliable? “Do you think if there were a higher office he would quit the presidency to run for it?” Moot question, implications appeal to ones ignorance rather than their reason. “There is not a higher office in America.” No shit? Was this written by a fourth grader? There is one higher office you Cons recognize: CEO. “Maybe they do agree with his voting record, as short as it is.” Who agrees? Are you talking about this voting record? John McCain has his share of No Votes too, buddy.

The rest of it is just too goofy to mention. Obama, for instance, had a reputation for getting the other side involved at the state level. McCain, if you read the news, has turned out to be a political wind vane. Whichever way the wind is blowing, especially around an election, John McCain is sure to follow.

This, I think, is why I want to be an educator, especially at the college level. Maybe, just maybe I can lead someone to reason before they become assimilated. At the very least, it would be a victory to get someone to reason with themselves to at least express why they think that way, instead of just presenting their opinion to the world. Saying why you think someone is a communist is worth far more than simply stating that you think they’re a communist. Better still is to logically demonstrate how your reasons are valid. Not a single one of the conservative dipshits who’ve left comments on my blog have done this, but I’d shake the hand of one who finally does.

The sad thing is, this comment was one of the better ones! Blows ol’ Vonster right out of the water. Sure, it reads like it was written by a third grader, but at least the person was trying.

Oh Right, THAT’S Why I Quit Reading the pjstar.com Comments!

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

In response to an opinion piece that spoke unfavorably of the venerable and holy Oil Industry, some moron made the following claim: the environmental activists and lobbyists are the reason we’re paying $4 at the pump.

Cue studio laughter.

Yes, fella, because environmental lobbyists have sooooo much more money than Big Oil and can hire sooooo many more lobbyists.

I don’t get people like this. They’re essentially fanning away mosquitos while ignoring the tiger that’s eating their leg.

Reminds me of the 90’s when the right-wingers pointed to seatbelt laws, bicycle helmet laws and video game ratings or the parental advisories on music as the harbingers of democracy’s impending demise while describing how it would lead to a totalitarian police state while abusing the phrase “Big Brother.”

Now we have all sorts of GOP-originated big government, and people like this are still swatting at the mosquitos! Jeez.

What we’re seeing here with the protection of Big Oil is a co-dependent mingling of government and business, providing us with, as KO once put it, a textbook example of fascism. Thanks, guys. Way to love freedom.

——-

I’m really looking forward to having another Democrat in office. The wingnuts go from vanilla crazy to full-throttle batshit insane.

See what I mean?

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Remember how I’ve often remarked on how far politics in this country have shifted to the right? This is the kind of thing I’m talking about. Behold, the good ol’ days:

Hat tip to Grandma’s Attic.

Much Ado About Nothing.

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008
“Barack Obama’s dubious claim is inconsistent with world history and demands an explanation. It was Soviet troops that liberated Auschwitz, so unless his uncle was serving in the Red Army, there’s no way Obama’s statement yesterday can be true. Obama’s frequent exaggerations and outright distortions raise questions about his judgment and his readiness to lead as commander in chief.”Obama’s False Claim:

Obama: “I had an uncle who was one of the — who was part of the first American troops to go into Auschwitz and liberate the concentration camps. And the story in our family was is that when he came home, he just went up into the attic and he didn’t leave the house for six months. Right, now, obviously, something had really affected him deeply. But at that time, there just weren’t the kinds of facilities to help somebody work through that kind of pain.” (Sen. Barack Obama, Remarks On Memorial Day, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SV1sxq8mqvA, Las Cruces, N.M., 5/26/08)

Historical Fact:

According To The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Auschwitz Was Liberated By The Red Army On January 27, 1945. “On January 27, 1945, Soviet troops liberated the Auschwitz concentration camp complex, where they discovered some 7,000 prisoners, including young children, who had not been evacuated by the SS.” (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Web Site, http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/focus/liberation/, Accessed 5/27/08)

Paid for by the Republican National Committee.

Jesus, they were quick on this one. These days the RNC is so used to grasping at straws that they get over-excited and jump the gun when they think they have something–anything–they can work with. Note the “gotcha” tone and pointed finger. Too bad they were wrong:

“Senator Obama’s family is proud of the service of his grandfather and uncles in World War II — especially the fact that his great-uncle was a part of liberating one of the concentration camps at Buchenwald,” campaign spokesman Bill Burton said in a statement. “Yesterday he mistakenly referred to Auschwitz instead of Buchenwald in telling of his personal experience of a soldier in his family who served heroically.” (Source: Associated Press)

Naturally, Fox News showed up first on the Google News list, and we know how neutral they are when it comes to things like this. Normally I wouldn’t bother with this kind of crap, but it seems viewers of Fux News never seem to hear when what they’ve been told on that particular network has been proven to be categorically false.  So here ya go, morans.

Is it Adult Swim Yet?

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

I’m sure by now everyone has noticed the increasing amount of Clinton supporters saying they won’t support Barack Obama in the general election. By comparison, Obama supporters have been considerably more pragmatic in stating that they would vote for Clinton if she gets the nomination, even before the contest was over.

The punditry has dedicated a moderate amount of attention to this but both hosts and guests alike have written it off as a byproduct of passion that comes with close contests such as these. They’ve also been dismissive of the backlash by claiming that only the most die hard supporters are stoking the fires, but they too will come around by the fall.

I disagree. I think the problem is simpler than it looks, and some people are beyond reach for simple reasons.

Here we have people like Geraldine Ferraro being given air time as she actively campaigns against the Democratic Party. She says it’s because Barack Obama is a sexist. Mind you, she hasn’t been able to cite a single example of sexism on behalf of him or his campaign, even though we could cite several examples of overt racism on her behalf. She’s played the victim in both instances.

Then there’s the “Not so fast” crowd from the WomenCount PAC promising to “stand united in [their] unwavering support for Hillary Clinton,” claiming that “Hillary’s voice is OUR voice, and she’s speaking for all of us.”

Time out: who do you mean by “us?” She’s not speaking for me, that’s for damn sure, so who? “We know that when women vote, Democrats win. Now it is the responsibility of our party to hear our voices and count all of our votes. We want Hillary to stay in this race until every vote is cast, every vote is counted, and we know that our voices are heard.”

I can’t be the only one who sees a problem here. On one hand her supporters are saying that the reason her campaign failed is because of sexism on behalf of the media and the Obama campaign. On the other, they’re identifying themselves as women voting on gender lines. You can’t have it both ways–sexism is a two-way street. Using sexism to fight sexism is self-defeating. The claims of sexism completely fall apart as a result–this is opportunism.

That’s just the tip of the iceberg. Clinton supporters–men and women alike–saying that they will vote McCain or not at all has a ringing familiarity to it. When this switching-sides garbage started, the Clinton camp reminded me of children throwing a temper tantrum in the middle of the grocery store after being told “no.” But this has escalated beyond irrationality and soared into the stratosphere of selfishness.

Now whenever I see a child throwing a temper tantrum in the middle of the grocery store, I’m going to think of Clinton supporters.

It’s about time for the children to get out of the pool. They’re getting way more attention than they deserve. Even after running the most ruthless, dirty, race-baiting, fear-mongering, lie-filled campaign I’ve ever heard of outside a general election, Clinton still lost despite the name recognition and crushing domination in all the polls from day one.

It is unavoidable that certain elements of her base supporters will call themselves disenfranchised, but I’ve got a better name for it: sore losers. The real problem is vanity.

How it went down.

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

Looks like Kentucky joins West Virginia in the classification of racist states… but let’s not ignore the elephant in the room.

9 out of 10 people who said they were voting based on race were white Clinton supporters. 65 percent are conservatives, many of whom have no intention of voting for a Democrat in the General Election. That ought to tell you something.

——–

The timeline of the following story, while generally linear, tends to overlap at times for the sake of continuity and readability. All of it, however, is accurate to the best of my recollection. It’s long and probably self-effacing. The majority of it was written between 10pm last night and 3am this morning while watching the results of the Oregon primaries, and is probably poorly written as a result. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

——–

A few weeks ago I revealed to a new group that I had voted for Bush in 2000 and was once a staunch Conservative Christian Republican with nothing but contempt for “the liberals” and “the liberal media.” On a political quiz in one of my college courses, I ranked just to the right of Rush Limbaugh.

Instead of ridicule, I was simply asked why. I explained that I had attended a Christian high school when I first discovered politics and my main influences were fundamentalist and conservative. They asked,”What was the mindset were you in though? What info which was later dispelled? You have a special insight here and it’s a good opportunity to understand what goes on over there. Furthermore, how exactly did you turn, and with what info?”

My response: “I don’t even know where to begin.” Really, it’s not an easy answer.

The Early Years.

My mother is a devout Christian and has always tried to lead by that example. During my youth, we attended church infrequently, mainly on holidays or other special events. Then we came upon a small church that was meeting in the Notre Dame high school’s auditorium once a week. They called themselves Northwoods.

Looking back on it, I can see where the appeal came from. The group was comprised of a few hundred people of many demographics. Every Sunday there were sweets and baked goods in the lobby, contributed by members of the church (and naturally, as a pre-pubescent boy, my favorite part of the gathering). It was a place you could go without being judged, one which offered a different approach to faith.

On stage, there was a live band–something I would have never imagined after attending the long, dreary sermons of other area churches where counting sheep meant surveying the number of poofy white hairdos atop grumpy faces. Unlike these sleep factories, this church didn’t spend the first thirty minutes of the service singing obscure, ancient hymns. Instead, they sang a few contemporary songs and had a drama presentation. After that, the sermon was energetically delivered by a young and charismatic pastor. The body of followers was enthusiastic and on the grow, signaling a fundamental change in marketing–thus evangelizing–that was proving to be more than merely effective; it was revolutionary.

After the church had grown some and I became active in group activities and volunteering in both youth productions and Sunday services as part of the stage crew, I eventually joined the ranks of the “born again” after attending a Christian concert (then, not quite grasping the concept of Christian salvation, once again at another concert). I was excited about it, giddy almost. It was new and inviting even as I was finding my niche.

A few years went by and I ended up at a local Christian high school after petitioning to gain acceptance. More bonus. By this time I wasn’t exactly excited in my faith anymore, but I wasn’t adverse to it. I felt as if I had grown more mature, that arbitrary rebellion was childish and had developed a bit of a disdain for those who weren’t at my level (parental rebellion, naturally, was still fair game). Looking back on it now, obviously, I remember being as confused as anyone that age.

It was during this time that I began to develop an idea of what I wanted to do with my life. I was adept at music, being able to passably play any instrument I tried after a short period of time. I was also technologically proficient, having surpassed the majority of my peers with my knowledge and abilities in using and maintaining a PC. However, I also had an insatiable thirst for intellectual endeavors in the areas of history and psychology.

Then, something strange happened. In the wake of the uniquely teenage style of depression following my first major romantic rejection (a complete comedy of errors on my part, by the way), I found something to cling to. After being introduced and becoming involved in the straightedge and local hardcore music scenes, animal rights and social awareness, my world history teacher assigned me to write a report on a book by none other than Rush Limbaugh.

I was already familiar with his conservative rants and remarks from being in class with the dittohead teacher. After immediately discovering how unpopular it was to be a Democrat in a Christian school (and after being called a “Demoncrat” by one of my friends) I became completely apolitical. After all, I had only identified with the Democrats because my family was largely comprised of centrist Democrats. What did it matter to me?

It never occurred to me that I ought to challenge my history teacher on anything he had to say. For starters, challenging the teachers on any matter was strongly discouraged, and even punishable by disciplinary action (as apparently free thinking is un-Christian and equates to disrespect in the eyes of the administrators). More significant was the fact that I didn’t even know there was another side. The only information we were given was slanted to the right. The only thing we had to know about liberals and liberalism is that they were bad and immoral. End of discussion.

Who could blame me for blindly agreeing with everything I read in Limbaugh’s book, even the parts slamming the environmentalists and animal rights activists? What source was I to draw on to balance my understanding of the topics that were being presented? Certainly not the school library, filled as it was with Christian-themed books, the most arguably liberal tomes in the collection being classic poetry (which I still happened to read frequently).

I scored an A on the report after sacrificing the night to breeze through the second half of the book and come up with a coherent presentation. The teacher was giddily asking me to share my thoughts on certain parts of the book, then barely able to conceal his laughter as I worked through one point after another, as told by El Rushbo himself.

Before the next student even started his presentation, by the time I had settled in my seat, one deafening thought drowned out all others: I was pretty damn good at this.

Warrior for God

After learning to talk the talk, I was getting better at walking the walk. I still had a love affair with secular music that my peers said I needed to “turn over to God,” but other than that I was a stalwart Christmeister. My involvement at Northwoods was growing along with the number of followers and moreover, the offerings.

By now we had long moved beyond the high school auditorium and into a truck stop that had been remodeled for our holy purposes as the church elders began making promises to break ground on a brand new construction project: we were building a permanent location.

The church now had a complete mission statement and a thriving word of mouth marketing campaign working in their favor. The message was simple: “We provide a safe place to investigate the claims of Christ.” The senior pastor had ever emphasized the need to compartmentalize our community. “As we grow larger,” he would say,”we need to become smaller.” Specifically, he was referring to the smaller groups targeted at different demographics. The elderly groups. The youth groups. The singles group. Church activities groups, etc.

Meanwhile some other changes were happening. In growing larger, we had indeed become smaller but not in the way they had intended. As is natural for teenagers, the youth groups had splintered into our own cliques. However, at group activities, we were all able to get along and have fun together, regardless of social barriers. The chord that seemed out of key in our Godly little chorus was the way our adolescent compartmentalization spread beyond our age group–the adults were forming cliques as well.

Being one of the more frequent volunteers, I was privy to overhearing conversations that weren’t intended for my consumption. Two people talking about another member. That member telling his or her friends about what the other person did, and so on. Not only that, but I noticed an air of self-importance surrounding some of the staff. Naturally, after a sermon it seemed that everybody wanted a piece of the speaking pastor’s time. As membership grew, time became more scarce for these well-wishers and adoring fans.

But something else was at play here too. While there was business to attend to in anticipation of the coming groundbreaking ceremony at the new location, things sort of became, well, businesslike. Not only was there jockeying for favor and other positioning amongst staff members–in retrospect, this something which seems rather apparent now that I’m working in an actual corporate environment and observe this sort of thing pretty regularly–but even the small groups and program teams had seemed to be more about productivity than community. If you were important enough, you got the time of day. If not, well, thanks for helping out, be here early tomorrow morning.

It took awhile for the alienation to really set in, since I was mingling with other area youth groups and attending their gatherings to supplement my own church’s events. It was at these events that I became more deeply entrenched in the fundamentalist, conservative Christian lifestyle. Some of these were innocent bonfire gatherings and weenie roasts, occasionally with a band present. Others were more “rooted,” where you got funny stares if you didn’t have your eyes closed and your arms slowly waving in the air during worship sessions. Others detailed the devilry of the world and the fire and brimstone which awaits those who stray from the One True Path™ of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ™.

I’ve seen it all: exorcisms, healings, stories of salvation, revivals. At one event near Chicago, I heard a young woman detailing the story of her birth, and how her delivery had been performed in a Satanic ritual.

“Must’ve been liberals.”

This assumption always seemed to follow a negative perception. You see, in the world of Christian Republicans, the problem with all social ills and perceived immorality is due to the radical mindset of god-hating, anti-family liberals in the Democratic party.

My peers always seemed to agree with my assessment–no further thought was necessary. Further discussion, however, was inevitable. Bill Clinton had been painted as the oppressor of all freedoms and the antithesis to the Constitution which we all held so dear (the irony!). What would begin as a single comment about how the liberal media was attempting to derail justice and was involved in a cover-up to protect the White House (odd since they devoted so much time to the Lewinsky thing) would unfailingly lead to a never-varying discussion on abortion, the environment, atheists, affirmative action, feminism, smaller government, states rights, the military, taxes, prayer in schools, evolution and the breakdown of the American family.

The discussion of each topic never strayed far from a central viewpoint we all shared: the conservative one. One of us would start to “make our point,” which would always be a monologue, and another would pick up right where they left off. Any one of us could have had the entire discussion, verbatim, with ourselves, because each of us knew it so well.

Looking back on it now, I can see the appeal. Making a statement and having everybody in the group around agree with you 100% leaves one with a good feeling. These people respected your ideas. They were interested in what you had to say. Who could resist encouragement like that?

I was discovering another thing as well: politics not only got you recognition, but it was easy. As long as you know your lines, you’re in.

Or so I thought.

Carrying the Torch.

By the beginning of my Junior year in high school, I was already sick of the condescending attitudes of my classmates and tired of the constant show people put on to out-Jesus each other in public, but act like utter hypocrites in private. I spent the rest of my high school career in a public school. I had also mostly stopped going to church, but still kept in touch with a number of old friends. I became more of a casual Christian in practice, but never abandoned the rhetoric, even though I had already lost my virginity, smoked and drank on occasion, smoked weed a few times and cursed with a mastery that rivaled that of my uninitiated peers. At the same time, I was becoming my own person, not giving a flying fuck what anybody thought of me as long as they gave me my space.

My clothing style was, ah, interesting during this time as well. Some days I’d show up in full regalia, complete with baggy pants and a t-shirt featuring an obscure hardcore band. Other times, I’d be dressed in a suit and tie, looking like I was getting ready to meet with a major client behind closed doors and win their business with charm and a brilliant sales pitch.

By the time I was entering college, however, I was a finished product. Business casual dress wherever I went (to this day you’ll rarely find me in anything but a button-down shirt), sometimes more, depending on the event and how pretentious I was feeling that day. My academic career, however, was an utter failure.

I’ve justified it in the past as overambitiousness. Now I see it for how it was: my main problem was that I entered college with something to prove. Coupled with an energetic but horribly undisciplined study method and work ethic, I was doomed from the start.

My academic choice, naturally, was political science with a minor in philosophy. I did well in the classes initially and as the semester went on I got braver and started challenging my instructors. What was bad wasn’t that I was challenging them (something I strongly encourage), but why I was challenging them.

I was enlightened, you see. I listened to right-wing radio on a regular basis. I read the political websites and newspapers. I watched Fox News–the alternative to the bias of the liberal media. Unlike my college peers, I was aware of the intellectual establishment’s contempt for American freedoms. I had come prepared, dear reader, armed with the knowledge that colleges were bastions of liberal indoctrination!

To pad the resume that would eventually carry my ambitions, I joined every student organization I was eligible for, openly identifying myself as a conservative. My first semester of college I became an elected senator of the student government–quite a feat considering some had been running for several semesters and still got no further than “appointed” status. I became the secretary of both the environmental organization and the student philosophy association. Then, of course, there were the Christian groups.

My reasoning was that they’d give me greater credibility and experience. After all this time, here I had become the one jockeying for position, something I had rejected at Northwoods. So it comes full circle.

My “enlightened” status eventually led to my academic demise for a number of semesters after going through several majors, determined to “get it right this time.” It wasn’t until I gave up on politics and switched to computer science that I actually started earning decent grades and not dropping out of classes halfway through the semester.

The bias through which I drew my inspiration and counted as my greatest strength ended up being my undoing. It wasn’t the work or the complexity of the subjects I was studying–it’s that I was resistant to new ideas, convinced that I had it right the first time. I made the mistake of entering a place of learning with a closed mind and suffered the consequences.

I went further than that, too. I was finding it increasingly difficult to defend my views. Before, when I was surrounded with other conservatives and Christians, I never had to worry about backing up my claims with facts or even reasoning (something which I was still pretty adept at for having little or no factual ground or sound logic to back it up with). When I was asked to scratch beneath the surface to defend my arguments, I came up empty-handed… or resisted, or resorted to ad hominem, or changed the subject. I eventually got pissed at the ones who were questioning me instead of listening to their arguments. I, on the other hand, was guilty of saying the same thing over and over, in as many ways as I could think of, as if putting it in a thousand different contexts somehow solidified it.

I would think of this period as the start of my conversion, but it really marked the beginning of a long period of disenchantment. Disillusionment would come later.

Espresso and Discourse.

Sometime in the later phase of my academic crash and burn, I came upon a group of people by complete accident. A friend of mine had invited me to a show for some local bands at a coffee shop in a nearby town. The only other thing I had going at the time was writing a paper on how big government was evil and business and free market were the source of all that is good and right with the world… for the millionth time.

That more or less opened the floodgates to what I would eventually become. I hit it off with the regulars as well as the family that owned the place. It became my second home–during the summer I would spend entire days there, and eventually landed a job. I made a number of persisting friendships with people I previously never would have given the time of day.

They were liberals. My first real, live liberal friends.

Where I would have done well previously in my studies is in listening to what people had to say without carrying my own judgments in the matter. I still have to catch myself at times so as not to slip into old patterns. Unfortunately for me, it took the complete breaking of my spirit to get to the point where I’d actually listen to what others had to say and where I’d challenge myself on matters instead of assuming anyone who disagreed with me was wrong.

In part, I think that merely being around these new people was enough for me to see the error of my ways. As it turned out, these weren’t the hateful radicals I had heard about. They weren’t the moral deviants I was warned would set me on the path to hell, nor were their thoughts and ideas so outlandish that they bordered on satire. Among them were people of multiple religions–or none at all. Each one of them had varying opinions that sometimes overlapped and were agreed upon, but still different enough to be distinguishable from the others. Where they disagreed, they didn’t accuse the other of being a Nazi or a Commie, or any of the labels my conservative ilk and I had applied to people like them.

“My God!” I realized,”they’re actually people!

That was the defining moment for me: opening my mind. I was hearing the other side of the story for the first time. Here were the missing pieces of the puzzle. Here’s why my arguments failed. Right here in front of me were all the things I had never considered, laid bare and without malice… but it wasn’t all rainbows and sunshine.

To this day, I can’t quite come up with a suitable comparison to having your beliefs shattered in wave after wave of disillusionment and realization. I can’t honestly blame them for what happened nor what followed. The catalyst for this transformation wasn’t in what they said, but that it had caused me to think.

I can see why the extreme right wants to stoke our fears and keep us apart.

What followed can only be described as hitting bottom. In thinking of my views on the economy, I found flaws in capitalism and the dangers and corruption inherent in free markets. By reexamining my views on affirmative action, it dawned on me that while the policy may have become mostly obsolete, out of desperation it may have been necessary when it was introduced. When exploring what I previously held to be Truth in my faith, I paid attention to the contradictions, the inconsistencies, the history and the science; but more so, it gave me a chance to objectively evaluate the negative social impact of the religious right and how well their politics matched their values. I looked at the science behind evolution. I looked at the debunkery of creationism. I weighed the costs and benefits of smaller government versus the ever-increasing powers of the corporate elite and their endless army of lobbyists.

After 9/11 occurred my sense of belligerent nationalism was inflamed along with everyone else’s.. only, it didn’t last. At least, not like it would have a year earlier. In the midst of my disillusionment, I became apathetic. Sure, I wanted there to be payback for the attacks. I wanted there to be WMD’s in Iraq. But I didn’t care if there weren’t. Even if there were, so what? I had been lied to for years and fell for it. I was a complete sucker and I knew it.

Depression set in for a considerable amount of time. I had quit school and was working in the downtown bar scene for about two years. I began to drink and lose ambition. It’s not like it wasn’t readily available. On most nights after work, we’d stay up and drink from 4:30 am until almost noon. I’m not saying that being a conservative will turn you into an alcoholic, my indulgence was more a result of apathy, convenience and acceptability. However, my conservative background left me with a cynicism towards minorities, so I didn’t have much of a problem enforcing a blatantly racist dress code in the bars I worked at (something which increasingly led to my radicalization against racism in any form). It wasn’t overt, I just didn’t give a shit.

It wasn’t until after an attempted suicide at the depth of my depression that I finally came around and started getting my shit together. There wasn’t a magical transformation nor a melodramatic conversion. I was too old for this shit. Sure, I hadn’t lost anyone especially close to me, but I had lost my ambition. Politics and my faith were everything to me and now they seemed so… meaningless. The friends who had opened my eyes to the world had moved across the country and took my non-downtown social life with them, I was jobless and penniless and was basically living off of my girlfriend for an unreasonable amount of time. My old Christian friends were busy with their own lives and spread across the country, but at that point I didn’t really want to talk to them, either.

Back to the Future.

I had taken a couple of night classes during my time at the bar and earned a PC repair certification. I decided to enterprise a bit and get back into the swing of things, bringing myself up to date on web design standards, teaching myself a bit of networking, programming and graphical design, once again drawing on my old strengths that I’d mostly forgotten about. I landed a few IT jobs and started making a livable wage.

Although, sometime in late 2004 I started gaining interest in these old subjects once again. I began reading again and paying attention to the news. I explored a number of political topics and boned up on what was going on in the world. I cracked open some old philosophy books and regained a sense of my old ambitions.

While I still had no desire to become involved it again, I never gave myself an excuse to stop learning about it. It would be a hobby, I thought. Like gardening. My intentions were to get a degree in computer science or perhaps a Cisco certification and make my living that way.

In the meantime, as my knowledge expanded, so did my political views advance. If I found out I was wrong about something, I’d find out why I was wrong and adjust my thoughts accordingly. Once again, I became a lover of knowledge, but this time without the preconceptions and biases that had previously held me back. If someone had done something commendable, I’d recognize it whether I agreed with their policies or not. If someone did something shady, I’d write them off as a scumbag–but never without the chance to redeem themselves. People change. I did.

The past few years have been somewhat of a blur, having come out of a failing relationship of nearly two years to becoming a husband and a father in a relatively short amount of time. I also landed a professional position as an IT analyst at a local company. Things were going great for awhile until… I got political again.

I can’t say that I wasn’t already political before the shit hit the fan, but I had no intention of changing course until I realized something: I have positively no interest in an IT career. Part of it had to do with general corporate behavior (a moot point for my job–the company I work for is quite clean and respectable in that regard) and office politics, which harken back to my days on the inside of Northwoods Community Church. More than anything, I was less than impressed with the the proverbial pissing contest between the technically inclined. I lived among fundamentalists and the wingnut fringe, guys, I recognize shallow self-importance when I see it.

I had intended to go back to school for the spring semester of 2008, but ended up moving to a new house with my family to be able to afford the cost of childcare, and paying for two rents until the lease at our old apartment expired didn’t give us an inch of wiggle room for budgeting this kind of thing. That, and FAFSA is slower than hell.

However, I am now currently enrolled full time for the fall semester. Fortunately, due to the lapse between the last time I was attended college and the present, I’m also eligible to get the shitty grades erased by retaking the classes and passing a few others. Overall I’m pretty confident that things will be different this time. First off, my work ethic is far better than it was when I was 18, and now much more is at stake: 1) getting out of an industry I have no desire to stay in; 2) realizing that ambitious potential that has kept me awake at night; and most importantly 3) providing a higher quality of life for myself and my family.

And, now that I think about it, 4) opening a few minds in the process. It’s not for everybody, but looking back on it now, I wouldn’t change a thing… except, maybe, choosing to enroll in a Christian school and being suckered into a narrow ideology that has wasted years of my life. I still have no desire whatsoever to serve in any kind of government position.

The Circus is Still in Town.

So what is it like over there?

Well, I imagine that most of them have a very limited social circle where they’ve managed to, either by accident or intent, filter the *types* of people they interact with. If you look at the paragraph that begins with “My peers always seemed to agree with my assessment,” you can see how such a scenario might play out. Even when exposed to differing viewpoints, there’s still a social safety net to catch you and reconfirm your views. A stroke of the ego is the cure for any kind of self-doubt. Of course, by the time I had begun to mingle with the coffee shop crowd, I no longer had the safety net to conveniently catch me.

Since switching sides, one thing I’ve found in common among most self-styled conservatives is the condescending attitudes they display towards those they’re “debating” with. That’s another thing. They love to use the word “debate” to describe a one-way lecture.

For instance, in the “I was enlightened” paragraph, you can see where some of the attitude may come from. At the time I had considered myself extremely well-informed. The hosts and reporters and authors of my sources of information talked about how we were getting the real story, unbiased and spin-free. We were told we’re among the informed insiders.

Who doesn’t want to believe that? Looking back on it, it really is an ingenious marketing strategy. Appeal to people’s narcissism by telling them they’re the ones with knowledge or that they’re the ones who aren’t being duped. Tell them they’re the true patriots. Kiss their asses until their underwear chafes. When marketing to the petty side of human nature, a flattering lie will take you a lot farther than an ugly truth.

Another common reaction to opposing viewpoints that I both participated and regularly witnessed occurs the way I described in “The bias through which” paragraph and the following one. There was a clear resistance to anything that differed to what we thought or thought we knew. For instance, the initial reaction among many conservatives during the Elian Gonzales fiasco was to deport the kid back to the commies. Considering the blatant anti-immigrant policies and attitudes common among conservatives and the “open arms” policy we felt the left had displayed, it was a surprise to some of us when the Janet Reno Justice Department agreed. Then the punditry came in and took the other side leaving many of us confused. But like good soldiers we followed suit. Janet Reno was part of the Clinton administration, and the Clinton administration was the enemy of truth and freedom. As a group, we weren’t exactly hard to manipulate.

I still see the fickle phenomena of the conservative right when Limbaugh listeners try making the claim that their intentions with “Operation Chaos” were indeed to prolong the Democratic nomination process, not to get Clinton nominated since they felt she’d be a figure to rally against in the general election and, subsequently, easier to defeat. While it took me awhile to become “liberal,” it didn’t take long at all to recognize the flock mentality of the Limbaugh crowd and to distance myself from it to appear as though I had reached my conclusions independently. Even today there’s no shortage of Limbaugh clones blatantly plagiarizing the man but saying things like “I don’t agree with him all the time,” or “I don’t listen to him.”

Facts are another thing many conservatives still seem to have problems with. As long as a politician ran on a conservative ticket, we never bothered with him again unless a scandal broke–which we responded to by changing the subject and using gotcha phrases to silence the opposition. As conservatives, we never ever argued based on merits. Instead we started with a set of assumed absolutes, then built our arguments from there. It never seemed to occur to us that there may have been problems in what we assumed was settled. Anyone who reads my blog and is familiar with the person known as “Vonster” ought to be familiar with these methods.

When I call out the wingnut fringe on their trademark bullshit, it’s not because I want to silence the opposition or am being closed-minded to their perceptions. The fact of the matter is, I’ve been on the other side. I know all their tricks, all their lines and all their games. I’ve seen the flock mentality and the blubbering fervor that stokes their fires. I understand that they don’t see ignorance as a weakness. I’ve experienced first-hand the process by which this group comes to its conclusions and how they become confident in them. I was on the inside.

I do my best to hear someone out even after they carry on with these intellectually bankrupt tactics, but only up to a point. When I’m dismissive of an argument, it’s not that I’m filtering the person out. Chances are high that I’ve heard it before or said it before when I was on their side of the line years ago. Unfortunately for the person in question and their children for generations to come, they think that because nobody is interested in hearing their thoughtless bullshit, it means they won the “debate.” There’s that word again. Maybe they think it makes them sound smarter, I don’t know.

Conclusion.

What information caused me to turn? Everything and nothing. There simply was no one revelation that set me down the path. The pivotal moment was when I decided to listen. That’s really all it took. I’m not embellishing or romanticizing it at all; it was difficult, but I was weary. What followed was even more difficult, made me forget who I was and left me wondering whether there was anything I was ever supposed to do.

What happened led to my ability to empathize and recognize a bit more clearly the struggle and complexity that is the human condition. Did I become a “better person” as a result of everything? Maybe. Who can say? But it did give me a desire to do good by my fellow man and try to make the world a better place. That should count for something, right?

I’m not even sure why I bothered to spend all this time writing about it. I doubt my “unique insight” will help at all. After all the people I’ve dealt with on the right, I find it hard not to believe there’s truth in the idea that it might actually take an odyssey like mine to achieve the same realizations. That’s a nice way of saying “you can’t reason with these people.” What they call “news” involves two people yelling at each other, where the one yelling the loudest is usually the host of the show and thereby the winner. Maybe I lack the vision necessary to see how this will help influence people, but good luck to those who try.