Hello Bakersfield
I've had a pretty intense week. I'm in grad. school focusing on Online Communities, which is basically a degree looking at technology and society. So for a class last semester, we used the latest digital political tools on our class blog - http://weblogs.annenberg.edu/digipol/- and I had a series of running debates with my professor on how special the blogasphere is and what I've called "the arrogance of reason" of some academics, like him, in the "ivory tower." You can check one of our exchanges in the "Resisting The Inevitable" post, or the "In closing, listen to Public Enemy: Don't believe the Hype Sucka" and esp. this one "Dylan, Butterfield, Brand Marketing & USC" - http://weblogs.annenberg.edu/digipol/2007/04/dylan_butterfield_brand_market.html. Now, we're arguing over the Iraq war and it's hard not to take this stuff personal as I know young American will die in increased numbers due to the "arrogance of reason" of politicians on both sides of the aisle.
About Lewisha


Member Since:
June 02, 2007
Last Signed In:
June 29, 2007
Profile Views:
125
Blog Views:
251
View Profile
Send a Message
Send To A Friend
Sign Guestbook
Add as a Friend

Previous Posts
Bakersfield GEts OverNetworked, News=Entertainment, Democracy Weaken
Will a New Center Hold in Bakersfield, the State, the Country & World - Pienso que No!!
The Blogasphere's Arrogance and Narcissism: Don't Blame the Mainstream Media, First Look in the Mirror
Bakersfield & LA Times: 2 Different Networks & the Free Press
Archives
June 07
July 07
August 07
September 07
October 07
November 07
December 07
January 08
February 08
March 08
April 08
May 08
June 08
July 08
August 08
September 08
October 08
November 08
December 08
January 09
February 09
March 09
April 09
May 09
June 09
July 09
August 09
September 09
October 09
November 09
Subscribe!
RSS 2.0 feed RSS 2.0
Add to My Yahoo
Add to My Google
Add to Bloglines
Add to My AOL

Share!


Lewisha - > Hello Bakersfield -> Will a New Center Hold in Bakersfield, the State, the Country & World - Pienso que No!!
Will a New Center Hold in Bakersfield, the State, the Country & World - Pienso que No!!

This is cross-listed @ my Blue Mandy Blog.

A new center - es possible, te piensas?

Please, Blue Mandy's become quite a cynic, and a day after Internet Radio Silence day, it's grounded in the all-too-true, set-top cop chains becoming more and more invisible and stronger than ever.

But two recent articles, Ron Brownstein's <em>LAX</em> "Opportunity knocks for Democrats - At the state and national levels, the party has a rare chance to work with GOP executives on healthcare and immigration reform" (link) and Fareed Zakaria's <em>Newsweek's </em>"Beyond Bush - What the world needs is an open, confident America" (link) offer a more optimistic spin.

At both the national and California state levels, we're seeing blowback against the  extremism and idiocy that our dear Dubya represents.  Zakaria illuminates the dynamic: <blockquote>More troubling than any of Bush's rhetoric is that of the Republicans who wish to succeed him. 'They hate you!' says Rudy Giuliani in his new role as fearmonger in chief, relentlessly reminding audiences of all the nasty people out there. 'They don't want you to be in this college!' he recently warned an audience at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta. 'Or you, or you, or you," he said, reportedly jabbing his finger at students. In the first Republican debate he warned, 'We are facing an enemy that is planning all over this world, and it turns out planning inside our country, to come here and kill us.' On the campaign trail, Giuliani plays a man exasperated by the inability of Americans to see the danger staring them in the face. 'This is reality, ma'am,' he told a startled woman at Oglethorpe. 'You've got to clear your head.'</blockquote> Fear, uncertainty and labels power propaganda efforts.  Our country has been inundated by codes and media messages propagating fear and anxiety.  The nadir occurred in the '04 elections when folks voted in a President they knew was lying.  Now, we're entering surreal new stages.  Brownstein expands:<blockquote>A TABLOID without a spread on Paris Hilton. A snowball in July. A humble Yankees fan.

Pick your metaphor. None would be as rare as the opportunity now presenting itself to the Democratic majorities in Congress and the California Legislature.

In each case, a Republican executive has signaled his eagerness to sign into law a long-standing progressive goal: President Bush on legalization for illegal immigrants, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on universal healthcare. That convergence represents a unique but fragile asset in today's polarized political culture. Both sides may regret it for years if they fumble these opportunities.

Failure might be most inexcusable in California. With both the state Senate and Assembly approving plans to significantly expand coverage, and Schwarzenegger committed to covering all of the uninsured, California could soon finalize the most comprehensive state-level plan yet to guarantee healthcare for all residents.</blockquote>  Brownstein acknowledges that the possibility of compromise and a new center arising is hard to predict.  Given how polarized the electorate, it's safe to say the foundation is extraordinarily delicate.

Anyone want to bet on compromises in both Congress and the state?  Yo pienso que no....or following Ozomatli, Can we or "Can't [we] Stop now"?

Or, put another way, Blue Mandy was fortunate to hear Andy Stern at Annenberg in the Spring.  Stern, president of the Service Employees International Union, states in the <em>Times</em>, [Success in California] "would be the most significant thing to jolt the healthcare system [toward national reform]....If we have a California failure, it just adds to the weight of this being an issue no one can solve."

Brownstein closes, <blockquote>Stern could match his words with deeds if he steers the union's powerful California affiliate toward accepting a deal that couples a higher fee on employers than Schwarzenegger proposed with a requirement that at least middle-income individuals buy insurance. Liberals may resist that price, but if they consider it difficult to impose an employer mandate now, they should imagine trying it without a Republican governor running interference.</blockquote>  Que tu piensas?

<strong>POSTSCRIPT</strong>:  Round 1 was won by the Blue Mandy, Randy cynics.  There went the immigration reform bill, adios amigo!

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: democracy, bakersfield, California, United States of America
posted by Lewisha on Thursday, June 28, 2007 at 03:17 PM
Report a Violation
Viewed 36 times
1 comments from 1 users

1

posted by randomfactor on Jun 28, 2007 at 03:24 PM

Schwarzenegger's take on insurance is almost worse than the present system.  He shares that trait with *EVERYTHING* proposed by the Bush Administration over the past six years--it's worse than the status quo would have been.

.

The Republicans killed immigration reform.  Good.  We'll do better next term.

They couldn't succeed in gutting Social Security.  Good.  We'll do better next term.

They couldn't succeed in gutting health care.  Good.  We'll do better next term.

.

Why should we settle for a compromise with the "other side"?  We'll do better next term.

1

  (You need to be signed in to leave a comment)

Advertisement