Thursday, September 27, 2012

We Have Nothing to Hate but Hate Itself




With the tone of political rhetoric becoming more and more visceral, I have a few points to put forth without malice. I ask the reader to hear this in the tone in which it was written – earnestly, quietly, reasonably.
I have been through a few campaign seasons, voted in the Presidential elections since 1976, and have been involved in campaigning this year. I feel more strongly about this Presidential election than any other. It isn’t the particular candidates. It isn’t even this campaign’s particular issues, so many of which have been ignored in the fray. It is the general atmosphere of hatred present in the Republican campaign, not sensed so strongly in any other election, which makes me feel compelled to participate.
I have many friends, and family members, who usually vote for the Republican candidate. I usually vote for the Democratic candidate. Based on my personal experience as a non-wealthy person, I believe that they have pushed for a government that cares about all of its citizens and, historically, have been better for the general economy (look up the figures). I have never felt the need to agree with everyone I like, or like only people with whom I agree, and those I love are certainly not judged (by me) for their political preferences. I have always found that most people feel the same way. Until this year.
This is the first time I have ever felt personally hated by a candidate and the people who support him. I think that so many vicious lies have infiltrated political speech that people have no idea whether they are being warned or duped. It is difficult to carry on a reasonable discussion with the “Obama haters” because they believe the lies. It is difficult to find Romney supporters who will discuss the election without calling the President names or repeating hateful lines they have learned from the Republican spin factory. And very few people can even begin to talk about the actual issues. All most people talk about is how horrible “it” all is and how much worse “it” is going to get, etc.
The hatred is also based on fear. After all, the FOX News pundits have been screaming that the sky is falling ever since President Obama was elected. The truth is that the President isn’t “ruining” America. There is no evidence of that. The economy is recovering. Over 4 million private sector jobs have been created over the past 30 months, $60 billion in taxpayer subsidies to big banks have been cut, and your personal freedoms have not been squelched.
The lies told about the Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care Act (Obamacare) are numerous: The Affordable Health Care Act is not forcing our grandmothers into death camps or making you change your chosen health insurance plan, or even forcing the small business owner to pay for employees’ health insurance.
What it is doing is allowing children with pre-existing conditions, such as leukemia, to get the health coverage they need to be treated; including check-ups and wellness tests for Medicare recipients; requiring your current Health Insurance provider to spend 80% of your premium on actual healthcare (instead of the 40% most use now); and giving tax credits to small business owners (with fewer than 50 employers) if they want to provide insurance for their employees. There is no mandate for those companies to provide health insurance. I promise. I have actually read the pertinent portions of the bill. If people cannot afford insurance, based on their income, they will not have to spend money they do not have for health care coverage. They will be covered by Medicare, and that money will come from the savings of Medicare payments to now uninsured patients. Those who can afford it will pay for it in amounts determined by household income, so Medicare will no longer have to pay for their uninsured visits to the emergency room for routine care.  Social Security and Medicare are intact and will be protected.
You can look up these facts and more, but most people have just believed what they were told by people they thought they could trust.
I don’t blame the average Republican voter, or even the candidates. I think the real problem is the strange “morphing” of the once-respectable Republican Party with the media extremists who make their living by spouting hateful rhetoric. The worse they are, the more fanatics they attract - and the more money they can demand. The generally accepted rules of engagement have been tossed out for the attitude that “the end justifies the means” when it comes to getting what they want, which is power. Nixon and his cohorts resorted to dirty tricks and illegal means, which they justified with the inflated importance of his reelection, but the Republican Party of the nineteen-seventies wanted my vote. But even then, the entire party didn’t seem to hate me. At least they didn’t admit it in public. The Republican Party of today just counts me out. They won’t care if I don’t vote for them. I get the feeling that they would be insulted if I considered voting for them.  I don’t want to be pandered to, but saying what you really mean and sticking to what you really believe should not be too much to ask of a Presidential candidate.
Mr. Romney believed wholeheartedly in the near-Universal Healthcare system he helped establish in Massachusetts. According to the state records on that law quoted in Wikipedia, “In 2006, Romney signed legislation that mandated that nearly all Massachusetts residents buy or obtain health insurance coverage or face a penalty in the form of an additional income tax assessment. The bill established a regulatory authority to implement the law and establish insurance standards. For residents below certain income thresholds and without adequate employer insurance, state subsidies were established, by using funds previously designated to compensate for the health costs of the uninsured.” That is what “Obamacare” is going to do.  Romney’s plan works and so will the President’s plan. Also, while in Massachusetts, Mr. Romney promised to uphold a woman’s right to choose, as stated in Roe vs. Wade. However, when leaving office in Massachusetts, Mr. Romney, looking forward to making a run for the Republican Presidential candidacy, began to change his policies of balancing the Massachusetts budget through raising fees to business owners. He began to read the GOP booklet and changed his mind about key issues to match the Republican Party’s more conservative policies. He became what he had to become to get the nomination. This is an attitude that taints the whole process of elections in the United States of America.

Finally, there are good Christian people who believe that the heads of the Republican Party are actually concerned with morality. At some point during the last two decades of the last century, there appeared a great voting block called the “Christian Right,” and the Republican Party saw the potential for warping their campaigns to match what those voters seemed to want. They started talking about “God and Country,” “Family Values,” and other catch phrases that fit the demographic. If that is what it took to get those votes, it was easy enough to change a candidate’s speech to include those phrases. They could even change their borderline-liberal positions on certain “hot button” issues like abortion rights and gay and lesbian rights to draw a bead on moral issues in government; and those positions certainly wouldn’t chase off many of the Republicans who vote for corporative interests. The money-for-influence system would still be at work. It was a win/win for candidates who didn’t mind trading personal integrity for votes. Some moderate Republicans of good character left the party at that time. Books were sent out telling the candidates what side of an issue they must support, and what they must oppose, if they wanted support from the National Committee. But that wasn’t enough. They needed a system by which the opposing party could be demonized in the eyes of millions, and in came FOX News. Listen to the raving pundits and you cannot miss the flow of hatred. Now, the GOP will not tolerate any dissension even within the Party. They proved this at the Republican Convention, when the Ron Paul supporters’ shouts and votes were ignored. But do they really care about morality issues, or have they just become people who wear the Christian faith like a costume when it is needed? If the goal is smaller government, how can it be spread to include domain over the personal lives of its citizens?
It is impossible to legislate morality in a free country. Even if he wanted to, Romney could not, as President, ban abortion. It is just a talking point. And he will not be able to make it illegal to be homosexual, or dictate that this country treat homosexuals as second-class citizens.
It is completely against the principles of the founding fathers to make laws telling Americans to change the way they live when that way of life does no harm to others. And hurting someone’s feelings does not count as harm. My personal beliefs on morality should have nothing to do with your government, and neither should yours dictate mine. It seems the religious community has confused the US Constitution with the Ten Commandments. One states the rights and privileges of a free society, and the other is a faith-based guide for how that society should live. The first one can only guarantee your freedom up until it steps on mine. If any one group (religious or otherwise) tries to dictate the beliefs of an entire country, that group is supporting the tenets of a Dictatorship, not a Republic. Our religious freedom depends on not bowing to whatever religion is the loudest or richest. Next time it might not be yours.
From the wish for dictated morality, and blind trust in its proponents, grows hatred of anything different: hatred of people who don’t care if you agree with them - they just want to be left alone to live their own lives; hatred of a President who has tried to do, and is doing, what he can for the American people- not just the wealthy, but all Americans. There is present in this country today a falsely-supported, pervasive hatred of a President who believes in fighting for the basic freedoms of all Americans, even those who oppose him. That is the real Christian attitude. I am not saying that Republicans in general are not Christians, or even that they would have to be Christian to be good people. I am saying that those at the top of the GOP ladder are using the beliefs, and misguided fears, of a blind-faith group of people to gain power over all of us. They are promoting hatred.
Of course, there are bound to be some hateful Democrats, and there are supporters of the President who have no idea what the actual issues are; it’s a big group, after all. But they are an inclusive group which allows and even welcomes diversity of people and opinions. More often than not, humor is the Democratic weapon of choice, very rarely accompanied by a sneer or smirk.
The venom of this year’s Republican Presidential Campaign – and I fear all the campaigns that will follow it down the slippery slope – is not in any way Christian, and should not be hiding behind that cloak, which they can so effortlessly toss aside once those tenets get in the way of their money or power. The hatred has to stop, or that is what will ruin our country.



No comments:

Post a Comment