|
It's Payback Time
November,
2000
It is the height of irony that George W. Bush is "asking for
your vote" based on his promise to end partisan bickering in
Washington. Because its Dubbya's Grand Ole Partisans which are largely
to blame for that very bickering, and worse. The Republican eight
year reign of terror against Bill Clinton was unprecedented in its
nastiness. It included a $52 million, tax-payer funded "fly"
fishing expedition that, as far as the President's culpability was
concerned, turned up some dissembling about an Arkansas gold digger
and an affair with an overeager intern. For which the President has
profusely apologized and endured a public humiliation that makes the
Salem Witch Trials seem like a Wiccan solstice celebration.
Electing George W. Bush would be a vindication of the Republican politics
of destruction. A vindication of the grossly one-sided, undemocratic,
and destructive demagoguery of the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Bob Barr,
Lindsey Graham, Ollie North, and their ilk.
George W. Bush is the good-natured, good-timin' front man for the
dark back side of the Republican party and its operatives. It's no
surprise the GOP chose to elect such a simple, congenial, frat boy;
a man who makes Dan Quayle seem like a Mensa brat. All the better
to distract the American public from the patently evil Republican
reign of terror. The Republicans, and ONLY the Republicans, created
the bad will in Washington, DC over the last eight years. Newt Gingrich
shut the government down TWICE. What a duplicitous act of disingenuous
propaganda to ignore that fact and blame the ill-mannered tone of
Washington debate on Mr. Clinton himself, the one person in town who
tirelessly tried to rise above the base and heartless fray.
Remember Ronald Reagan? Remember what a nice fellow he
was. A bit of a bumbler. A bit of a half-wit. Didn't care too much
about the details of public policy. Depended heavily on a cadre of
aides and advisors to make and frame his every utterance. And who
were some of those men behind the scenes--real honest altruists, right?
Men like convicted Iran-Contra criminals Elliott Abrams and Robert
C. McFarlane, and other Iran-Contra criminals who got off the hook--Caspar
Weinberger, Clair George, and a man by the name of George Bush, Sr.
With George Bush, Jr., you will be getting, as Yogi Berra put it,
"deja vu all over again." Good ole Dubbya--nice, uncomplicated,
and unthreatening, both physically and intellectually. A bumbler.
A fumbler. Not a wonk. Not a thinker. A man who depends heavily on
the kindness of strangers. Except his henchmen are no strangers; we
know the type--the same old shadowy creatures that have hung out behind
Republican nice guys for the last thirty-odd years.
Now, Al Gore is no Bill Clinton. Arrogant, stiff, a trifle immature--he's
not perfect. But when are we all going to grow up and admit there
is no such thing as a perfect president. Every single candidate has
a personal foible or two, or three. Forget that Al Gore served his
country in war. Forget that he has been a tireless champion of the
environment. That he has been faithful to his wife and constituents.
Big Al's major foible seems to be that he gets a bit excited and exaggerates.
Big deal. You can't exaggerate public policy. Let his record speak
plainly, when he can't.
Heck, maybe Ralph Nader, this year's Jerry Brown, is right. Maybe
the differences between Gore and Bush will not be as great as we fear,
or hope. Which is why we should continue to push for campaign finance
reform and a genuine and positive third party alternative. But, for
now, we have some unfinished business to take care of. A little matter
of payback. Eye for an eye, Mr. Lott. Tooth for a tooth, Mr. Hastert.
Remember the indignation many of you felt during the impeachment?
Perhaps, like me, you were disappointed with Mr. Clinton's lapse of
moral judgment. But far more than that you were outraged that the
Republicans, in their bitter, desperate, self-centered scorched earth
vendetta against this man, had succeeded in winning an international
audience for their paranoiac delusions (Filegate), outlandish conspiracy
theories (Vince Foster), unconscionable invasions of personal privacy
(The Ken Starr Porn Report), and rapacious character assassinations
that would make Machiavelli blush. These weren't minor ad hominem
attacks, such as I have tossed out here, but, rather, a systematic
attempt to unseat a sitting and freely elected President, by
any means necessary .
Many of us vowed to pay the Republicans back in November, 2000. Well,
November, 2000 has arrived. And lost amidst the barrage of pundits,
ads, and the illusory veneer of competing policy positions, is our
righteous and wholly justified anger at the way Bill Clinton was hounded
by the Republican Congress and their brazen puppets on AM radio, at
Fox Television News, and in countless other arenas of American public
life.
The 2000 Presidential election is not about prescription drugs for
seniors, or how to spend the surplus, or a dozen other policy positions,
even though Al Gore needs to argue that it is. We know that Mr. Gore
cannot make our case for revenge. We need to make it for him. Al Gore
needs, as he says, to "stand as his own man," even though
we know he cannot hold a candle to Mr. Clinton. If he were running
against his boss, he wouldn't stand a chance. He knows that. We know
that. But this election is not about Al Gore. And it certainly is
not about George W. Bush.
It is about who we are as a people.
I ask you to remember the fire you felt back in January, 1999. Remember
the umbrage. This election IS about ethics. It IS about character.
It is about the ethics and character of our public life. Whatever
you feel about Bill Clinton's personal peccadilloes, there is no denying
that he withstood an astounding level of unjust and brutal attacks
from the very moment he entered office. There was no honeymoon for
Mr. Clinton. Yet through it all, he managed to maintain an almost
superhuman composure, an astounding degree of decorum, humility and
grace. This is the great legacy of William Jefferson Clinton. And
in a country which has only gotten more shrill in its opinions, cruder
in its reporting, more personal in its attacks, Mr. Clinton's gentlemanly
example of how to be civil in public discourse must be honored and
preserved. Such civility is more important than candidate campaign
promises that will invariably shift once in office. Civility is so
important because it ensures a proper and safe environment for real
solutions to appear. Civility engenders trust and freedom to disagree,
to risk, and, yes, to grow. Al Gore will preserve that civility, however
abrasive he may appear at times. George W. Bush may very well preserve
that civility too. But in electing George W. Bush, and by extension
his behind-the-scenes Republican attack dogs, we will send an unequivocal
message: an eight year pattern of vicious, cruel, and imbalanced attacks
will not only be tolerated, but rewarded at the ballot box.
America deserves better.
VOTE AL GORE.
|