I never know whether to laugh or cry when people accuse Clinton, Obama, or the larger Democrat party, of being "liberal". Apart from a few social equality issues they are generally fairly conservative and play straight into the hands of big money/entrenched power. If one must use the terms "right" and "left", which strike me as dull knives, the Dems act, in the main, significantly to the right of center. As to liberal thought being a bad thing, without it we'd still be swinging from trees, the earth flat, Protestant religions un reformed, women barefoot, in the kitchen and not voting. One could go on ad nauseum; not the kind of world most of us want.
Failure to expand Medicare to be the single payer system for all of us has effed us over mightily. The folks who oppose it, frequently the beneficiaries of Tricare or Medicare, astonish me with their hyprocracy and lack of command of the basic structural and financial principles. There is something about authoritarian personality types, often ex-military/police/etc., vilifying social programs and government in general while accepting the benefits of them, that I can't quite get my head around.
Would that Obama had Johnson's guts and determination:
The President looked his old friend in the eye, Mr. Valenti recalled. ''He said: 'Dick, you've got to get out of my way. I'm going to run over you. I don't intend to cavil or compromise. I don't want to hurt you. But don't stand in my way.' ''
Mr. Russell, the patriarch of the Senate, a legislator respected even by those who disdained his defense of the old Southern ways, looked back at the President and spoke sorrowfully.
''You may do that,'' he replied, ''but by God, it's going to cost you the South and cost you the election.''
''If that's the price I've got to pay,'' said the President, ''I'll pay it gladly.''
Well, its still costing the Democrats the White South but I'm glad he stuck to his guns. Write some letters. Make some noise.
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