Walking Into Minefields
The race issue blows up for
the Clintons
There are only two rules you need to remember about
minefields: 1. Never knowingly walk into one; and 2. If you do,
walk softly because mines can really hurt when they go off.
In the current run up to the Presidential election, the Clintons
seem to have forgotten both rules.
Here’s where I’m going with this. If there's anything
that's been made resoundingly clear to everyone over the past
umpteen years, it's that when you start messing around with race
in any way - words, phrases, speeches, emails, jokes, expressions,
shrugs, winks, nods, or whatever - you've basically walked into
a minefield.
I don't know nor do I care about what resides in the hearts and
minds of Bill and Hillary Clinton. I do know that, in their all-out,
take no prisoners, and anything goes pursuit of the White House,
they've recently - wittingly or unwittingly - injected race into
this election. And that's something we really didn't need.
Just now, we face a litany of problems that could curl just about
anyone into the fetal position were we told to go out and fix
them.
Our bridges and highways aren’t what they should be. An
unplanned visit to the emergency room could bankrupt many. Social
Security isn’t secure. Math and science seem to have slipped
by many of our high school graduates. Our borders exist only as
lines on maps. Our budget isn't worthy of the name. Our tax code
is written in hieroglyphs. Gangs are everywhere. Predators are
a mouse click away from our kids. Britney’s lost it. Rosie’s
nuts. And there are many who'd like nothing better than to plant
a nuke under our national doorstep and watch us all go up in a
plume of radioactive smoke.
With all of this, even a casual observer would think that there's
more than enough material available for any Presidential candidate
to capture our attention by offering well (or even ill) conceived
ideas to solve any or all of the above.
I think it'd be refreshing to hear detailed proposals and counter
proposals focused on these problems rather than 30-second, focus-group-tested
statements designed to rake an opponent over the coals. It'd even
be nicer to have an election wherein the candidates skip taking
quotes out of context, playing fast and loose with the truth,
and playing “gotcha” at every opportunity.
Alas such isn't to be and now we've been dragged into the morass
of race by having our attention called to the fact that Senator
Obama is black.
Do tell.
We've had it pointed out to us that the blacks in South Carolina
voted overwhelmingly for Senator Obama and that Jesse Jackson
won there too when he ran.
And the point is?
We've been nudged toward the idea that if blacks are likely to
vote as a bloc maybe that might not be a bad idea for whites too.
I’m not liking that one at all.
Come Election Day, I won’t be voting for Senator Obama
should he be the Democratic candidate for President. I won’t
be voting for him because his beliefs on everything from taxes
and abortion to gun control and illegal immigration differ so
widely from mine that there's no way on this good green earth
that I could support him.
That said, the one thing that won't matter a whit to me - or
to many millions of other voters - is the color of his skin. In
fact, I'd wager these many millions of us would vote for a three-eyed,
foul-smelling, green-skinned Martian (who happened to be a natural
born citizen) if his, hers, or its positions were honestly presented,
fair, sensible, and sound.
Given that simple fact, I'd truly prefer that such things as
race not be waved in my face in the hope of eliciting some sort
of knee-jerk response and I resent those who'd do such a thing
in the hopes of capturing a few more votes.
Minefields.
As noted, they're tough to get out of once you've wandered into
them. The really dumb thing to do, though, is to wander into one
that's been clearly marked for years.
I won't feel sorry for the Clintons if they lose this election
partly because of all of this foolishness.
You'd think they'd know better by now but, then again, arrogance
has a long history of trumping good sense in Presidential wannabes.
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