Who will drive your voters to the polls, John McCain?

Beyond being pretty bottom-of-the-barrel as a critique, someone in the GOP has to realize that attacking community organizers is just plain stupid, right? Yes, it’s true that community organizers achieve a lot that’s counter to the GOP platform. They get child care, health care, and retirement benefits for workers. They protect the rights of tenants against slumlords. They block efforts to drill or mine or pave natural areas. They keep books from being banned and librarians from being fired. They escort women into and out of clinics and educate young people about contraception. They exchange needles and advocate for more HIV/AIDS research and education. They work to ensure the health and safety of the people who harvest our crops and slaughter our farm animals. I can see how the GOP would be happy if these folks all dropped off the face of the planet.

It does, however, seem more than a bit callous for Republicans to insult the life work of so many other organizers in communities that support them. I mean, all that stuff that goes on in church basements? Community organizing. Feeding people who are hungry, sheltering people who are homeless, getting flu shots for those who need them, and teaching folks of all ages to read? That’s all community organizing. Now, it may be that the GOP is getting hung up on linguistics, seeing the provision of all of these things as community service. But the people who make it all happen — who call the volunteers, book the halls, buy the food and the clothes and the shampoo and the books, and most importantly of all identify the needs? Those folks are the community organizers, and it’s not at all clear what the Republicans have against them.

It’s especially unclear with regard to the base that McCain and Palin are looking to mobilize, because those folks are some of the best organizers around. Demonstrating outside funerals? Community organizing. Screaming at people on the sidewalks outside of clinics while waving plastic fetuses? Community organizing. Blocking initiatives to provide equal rights to same-sex partners? Community organizing. Getting religion into public school textbooks and curricula? Community organizing. Most importantly of all for John McCain, registering voters and driving people to the polls on election day? Community organizing.

But, you heard them: community organizing is a joke. So, I have this to say to loyal and hard-working Republicans in towns across the country: come November, why don’t you stay home, put your feet up, and let the mayor do the driving.

Who will drive your voters to the polls, John McCain?

no zen for Joe Lieberman

I think it’s fair to say that no one yanks my political chain quite like Joe Lieberman. I don’t know why, if I’m being honest. If I were more enlightened, I might be able to find it in myself to be more compassionate and accepting of Joe. Even if I’m not there yet, there are plenty of other smarmy lying position-shifting power-hungry old white dudes in Congress that I could be hating on. Except.

Except none of them are quite like Joe. Back when he was just a Republican in Democrat clothing, I gave him the same derision I shared with the other panderers to the right who remained Democrats because that’s what their home states and regions demanded in order to continue to be elected. That was, generally speaking, the problem for Democrat true believers, not so much a problem for me. The Democrats in general, and Joe in particular, really started to get my goat when he was selected as the Democrat candidate for vice-president. Surely they could have found an actual Democrat for that position? Bygones, water under the bridge, et cetera. Let’s move on.

Having been the millstone around the Democrats neck — why vote for a Republican in Democrat clothing when we can just vote for an actual Republican? being what any thinking person would say — Joe just carried on voting with the other party. Until, you know, the Democrats back in his home state got tired of that and he lost his party primary as an incumbent. Oops. Not to be deterred, Joe left the party.

That’s right, Joe. It sounds like you need to be reminded of this: you LEFT THE PARTY, which makes you NOT A DEMOCRAT. Now, if you had joined the Republican party, in accord with both your stated politics and your voting record, I might have a little more respect for you (it would be hard to have less). But you didn’t. Because that would be career-ending for you, a Senator from a state in the Northeast, and you know it. Instead you just vote with them, shuck and jive for them, and lie about your party affiliation on national TV. Way to stand by your convictions, Joe! Not.

Of course, it would be a little harder for Joe to lie about his party affiliation with a straight face if the Democrats hadn’t rewarded his defection from the party and his Republican voting record by making him a committee chair. That’s right: Joe Lieberman, the Democrat incumbent that his party didn’t want, who is no longer a Democrat at all, holds a committee chair position of the majority. Please tell me you knew that already. This right here is why I leave the Democrat-praising to the true believers. When the party stops rewarding Republicans in Independent clothing with chair positions — positions they only have to dole out because a lot of people worked their arses off two years ago to get actual Democrats elected to office — that’s when I might consider supporting the party as a whole.

Of course, by the time that unlikely scenario happens we’ll likely have a whole new actual opposition party on the left for me to get behind.

no zen for Joe Lieberman

‘George Bush Doesn’t Care About Black People’

It’s hard not to be thinking about Katrina, the flooding, and the breach of the neglected levees, with the Republicans doing their lying jiving schtick in Minnesota this week and the Louisiana gulf coast being evacuated ahead of flooding rains. It’s not easy to forget the outpouring of support and help, the way people across the country opened their homes to refugees, some of my neighbors among them, and others traveled to the region to help clean up and begin to rebuild, some of my students among them. It’s also not easy to forget the ensuing messes such as the toxic FEMA trailers and the embezzlement of funds from the Red Cross.

Not that we should be forgetting this stuff. We absolutely should not, and further, we should apply these lessons to the future. This was not an anomaly. This is the way Republicans run things in the new world order. This is the kind of thing John McCain will do, because this is what John McCain did do. Don’t be fooled by the appearance of a person with a uterus — but not one who believes in exercising her legally protected right to make her own choices about what to do with it — on the ticket or a former Democrat — but not one who is willing to take the career-ending step of becoming an actual Republican — at the convention. What we saw three years ago was the real deal, and to all of us who said on the morning of November 8th, 2000 — right after ‘dude, wtf happened while I was asleep?!’ — oh, how bad can it actually be, I want to say: a whole lot worse than it is already.

This wasn’t meant to be a political post per se. It was just to say, lest we forget: you can’t polish a turd. I know that, the Legendary K.O. knows that, and I hope that you all know that, too.

‘George Bush Doesn’t Care About Black People’

media literacy 101

Today’s article in the Wall Street Journal — ‘Latinos not the plague of society as previously believed‘ — is an excellent example of why I hammered away at my students year after year about their media deconstruction skills. It’s not even necessary to be aware of the retrograde politics of the Wall Street Journal to locate this article appropriately: it’s all there from word one of the headline. Beyond the basic shocked premise of the article and before we get to the ‘shoulda built that wall when ya had the chance’ quote, we know exactly where we stand with this paper.

The authors could have chosen any word to describe the burgeoning Latino/a population in the United States: growth, expansion, increase. There are myriad forward-looking pro-development progress-marches-on ways of describing the data, both neutral and positive. The Wall Street Journal chose ‘surge.’ Surge. In this way we are encouraged to link the normal event of people having children with the insurgency — a beaut of a connotation-laden reality-twisting label right there — we’re told nearly every day is a threat to our lives in the United States.

These types of linguistic sleights of hand are so pervasive that they’re easy to miss and tempting to ignore; yet, if you read the paper every day you might end up sounding like Polly-the-right-wing-parrot to those of us who actively don’t. I wish I could say that an education in media literacy created an army of deconstructionist lefties out of my students, but it generally did not. The two biggest points I would have likely heard in their analyses would have been: (1) The Wall Street Journal hates Latino/as, and (2) surge is a stupid word, don’t use it.

While I can’t say I disagree fundamentally on either point, I hold out hope for more nuanced understandings with each example I am compelled to point out. In the meantime, I combine both points into a rule of life that works well for me: The Wall Street Journal is a stupid paper, don’t read it.

media literacy 101

The New York Times promotes vegetarianism at long last

I found it highly amusing to open The New York Times this weekend—okay, to browse the ‘Week In Review’ online—and discover an article enumerating the reasons not to eat meat.

I don’t have any disagreement with the content, neither on grounds of data nor ethics. My amusement stems from the simple fact that these reasons are the same ones that led me, and many of my friends, to stop eating meat 17 years ago as teenagers. The negatives of meat consumption haven’t changed; if anything they’ve become more widespread in the United States since 1990. Ill animals crowded together on mounds of their own waste; land and water resources used to grow grain for animals rather than people; huge amounts of fertilizer and—let’s just call it what it is—poop running off and leaching into water systems. Back then, the factoids—’about two to five times more grain is required to produce the same amount of calories through livestock as through direct grain consumption,’ for example—were distributed in photocopied zine-like publications hand to hand; they were what we brandished to explain and justify our choices to those around us who didn’t understand the lure of going vegetarian.

Oops, did I say vegetarian? Silly me! The New York Times managed to run an entire article about the general benefits of vegetarianism—that is what not eating meat is, right?—without ever printing the dirty word, and there I go busting it out in the second paragraph. Well, not quite never: the article’s author takes pains to clarify that he is not one, despite having published a vegetarian cookbook. Which I’d think would make some readers question his authority on the subject of vegetarian cooking, but that’s neither here nor there. My point: it seems odd that an entire article lauding the virtues of meat-free eating would shun the term used to describe such a dietary choice.

It could be that Bittman is simply being exacting in his terminology: if one doesn’t give up meat entirely, then one is not technically a vegetarian. The inverse of this truism—if one is a vegetarian, one also doesn’t eat the less attractive animals like clams—is something all of us have had to explain at one point or another to a well-meaning (and frequently elderly) relative, so it’s possible. It’s possible, but its seems—to my jaundiced sociological eye—that something more is going on here. It may be becoming more hip and classy to eat less meat, but it is just as un-hip as ever to identify as a vegetarian outside of certain established subcultures. We seem to be moving away from a definition rooted in the core ethical foundation for vegetarian choices, and toward one focused on a minute tally of each eating decision. In this framework, nothing less than perfection is ‘allowed’ to label itself vegetarianism, and every imperfect manifestation is open to being lambasted as hypocritical (‘how can you refuse to buy CAFO beef when I just saw you eat that salmon?’). In this way, vegetarian becomes a dirty word, code for a judgmental snob at best and a snarking hypocrite at worst, a label that no normal person in their right mind would willingly take on.

The truth is, though, that vegetarian—like organic—is a word that reflects a multi-faceted philosophy of interaction with the natural world. It encompasses systematic beliefs about resource management, human labor, compassion in life and death, moderated consumption, and respect for the balance inherent in natural processes. Any particular conviction will be of differing priority for each person, but the collective manifestations of holding them are similar and recognizable. They are, generally speaking, visible to an outside observer as the choices recommended by Bittman in The New York Times. Eat less meat, as little as you’re willing to. Buy meat and other animal products from people who have raised and killed the animals humanely, cleanly, healthily, and with minimal impact on the surrounding environment. Don’t waste a lot of other natural resources getting that food to your table. Eat things that improve your own general health, such as fresh vegetables, legumes, and whole fruit.

It would be accurate to say that I am a vegetarian and I eat meat. Fifteen years ago I wouldn’t have been comfortable enough with my dietary choices to be able to say that, nor would it have been accurate; my consumption of animal flesh back then would have been completely accidental. Over the past decade my choices have changed, though, and I’ve slowly incorporated more meat into my eating. Some of the times I’ve eaten meat in the past decade have stemmed from my inability to resist a slice of mouth-watering pepperoni pizza. Most of them, however, have been the result of more purposeful and systematic choices. My ethics and beliefs have never wavered, and the actions they recommend remain the same. However, in the intervening years since I first swore off animal flesh, I’ve gained additional information about my own physiology that has led me to reconsider certain choices.

I still don’t eat beef or pork (pepperoni lapses aside), because I believe the consumption of resources necessary to raise the animals and their generally poor quality of life to be too great a cost for me to be willing to pay. I make a different evaluation about various types of wild fish and chickens raised by my local organic farmer. I choose not to eat soy in order not to exacerbate the symptoms of my thyroid disease, a choice which dramatically limits the prepared vegetarian foods available to me in the United States. I make similar choices regarding where I get our eggs (our farmer) and milk (the Organic Valley cooperative). All of these are within the context of a web of interrelated considerations related to global economics, environmental impact, labor, and animal welfare.

The end result is that every day—ethically, philosophically, and politically—I am still a vegetarian. And, a couple of days a week as an eater, I am not.

The New York Times promotes vegetarianism at long last