You know, there’s a reason
why people should never argue over politics OR religion. Both are fraught with
preconceived conclusions and BOTH contain mountainous volumes of emotionally
charged opinions.
Before some of you bombard my
email inbox with hate mail for “criticizing” religion, make note that I’ve done
nothing of the kind. As long as people don’t try to force it on others, I don’t
care what they believe.
The point is that “blind faith”
is an integral part of the process, whether it is religion or politics.
Politically, folks call this
partisanship. In religion, folks call it absolute certainty. Call it whatever
you want, the fact is that when there is too much of it, we should call it what
it is: excessive emotional investment.
No matter the given name or
who is doing it, the process is the same. It consists of two simple steps.
The first is to establish, mentally,
a favorable conclusion… one that’s in as near perfect harmony as possible with
what we already believe or wish to believe.
Then we simply reason
backward to reach the “logical” conclusion with which we began. This step is
critical and often requires epic volumes of incredibly subjective
rationalization.
But, not always! Many times,
pure abject stupidity accomplishes the same end with a mere fraction of the
effort required for backward reasoning.
As irrational and intellectually
dishonest as this is, many people do it, even some of us hard-nosed scientists…
you know, those who both preach and worship at the Cathedral of the Scientific
Method.
While there are many others,
I’m going to share two issues as examples. I’m using them because they are both
recent and critical to my point.
The first relates to the
current state of our nation’s finances. The second one relates to an apparent reversal
in long-established Left/Right socio-political pontifications.
I’ve stated it many times in
this forum. Although a Conservative of many years, I believe that George W.
Bush and most of his Administration have been disastrous for the United States,
particularly with respect to the execution of the Iraqi war.
However, as terrible as I
think he’s been as a president, he’s not directly responsible for this country’s
financial mess. The United States Congress is—both houses.
Even had he vetoed some of
the financial legislation that has lead to our current situation, it would have
done no good. First, the banking lobby had become so powerful that the Congress
would have overridden any related vetoes.
Second, the truly damaging
legislation—the stuff that segregated investment banking from commercial
banking and completely deregulated the former—became law under Bill Clinton.
This country has lived on a
growingly precarious speculative bubble and excessive consumer credit for two
and a half decades. As all bubbles go, they burst whenever they become too big.
The leaders in the United
States Congress, both houses, have let their greed for power reduce them to paid
agents acting on behalf of dominant lobby groups to either vote for legislation
or block it.
And, what makes it even worse
is the fact that a majority of the sitting representatives and senators do not
even read the bills they vote on. They rely on their respective staffs for “advice.”
So, lobbyists don’t even have
to talk to the rank and file, only their chiefs of staff. The Congressional
leadership—both sides—does the rest.
Unfortunately, for both sides
of the political aisle, convenience and personal accommodation have become
imperatives while deriving the truth through due-diligence—the reason we voted
for them in the first place—has become merely an option.
I wrote a column back in May
of this year concerning tax increases. You can read it here
if you want to. I received over 6,000 emails as a result. I remain steadfast in
those predictions. It will not matter who we elect, taxes in various forms are
going to have to go up.
I wrote another one just a
couple of weeks ago concerning the Sarah Palin VP nomination. I outlined our
current financial mess and how we arrived. You can read it here
if you’d like to. I’m still receiving emails about this one.
It will not matter one bit
which of the current presidential teams we elect this November.
Until we, the voters, get
Congress under OUR control, presidential elections will remain nothing more
than illusions that what WE want even matters.
Our politicians, with the aid
of a news media growingly obsessed with too many irrelevant “gotchas,” and the
unwitting participation of a dangerously apathetic electorate, are pushing America
to the brunt of a worldwide joke-fest.
In unwitting consortium, we’ve
all managed to raise the intellectualization of simplicity—affectionately known
in most practical circles as unadulterated mental masturbation—to a new level.
Congress’s general approval
rating is about 10%. It makes George W. Bush’s 30% approval rating look quite
good by comparison.
It’s laughable though,
because the same people who think that Congress, in general, is doing such a
terrible job, think that THEIR particular senators and representatives are
doing fine jobs.
Minions of sincere, but
issue-ignorant, devotees get their opinions from national radio talk shows
(Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and Air America) and cable TV talking heads at
MSNBC and Fox.
These broadcasters “report” pure
speculation disguised as real news. All it does is polarize dummies on both
sides of the political spectrum into waging useless wars of words over
irrelevant issues, many of which are figments of dull imaginations.
And, if you are looking for
the epitome in no-talent cluelessness, there is absolutely no need to tune into
national-level broadcast talent. Simply tune in at the local level.
For the umpteenth time, until
the voters decide to prevent the Neo-Cons on the Right and Liberal extremists
on the Left from setting political tones and agendas, things will NOT improve.
These people comprise less
than 9% of the total vote-count in this country. Yet, they account for 95% of
the harmful divisiveness that is tearing this nation apart at its seams.
As a nation that prides
itself on keeping its press free, we’d all do well to return to the notion of WHY
we keep it free and once again begin to force news reporters to report facts
(who, what, when, where, why, and how).
Myriad newspaper columnists
and TV/radio commentators can voice all the opinions they want. But we have to
make them stick to facts in doing so.
If they don’t, we should switch
TV channels/radio stations; boycott their advertisers; and, stop buying their
newspapers. Money talks, a fact known to lobbyists for years. It’s about time
we voters learned it, too.
Now, moving on to the second
example I stated above, what’s with the apparent reversal of some long-established
Left/Right political and social positions?
To wit, many moral-absolutists
(aka extremists) on the Right have always condemned “blatant” feminism,
especially whenever it seemed at odds, even remotely, with certain mainstay Conservative
family values.
Moreover, previous occurrences
of unwed pregnancies were enough to cause many of them to cringe right into thumb-sucking,
fetal positions.
Conversely, many relative-humanists
(aka extremists) on the Left have always identified with feminists’ causes,
especially womanly rights to self-determination, job-compensation equality, and
social independence.
Until recently, neither have
out-of-wedlock pregnancies been a big deal to self-respecting, “freethinking”
Liberals.
With the emergence of Sarah
Palin, simultaneously a supposed pre-eminent rescuer of the nation’s Right AND
a looming worst nightmare for the nation’s Left, things seem to have changed
rather significantly.
As I’ve said above, I am soooooo
confused. It boggles my mind how quickly the dawn of proper circumstance seemingly
inspires such a monumental glut of backward reasoning aimed at reaching
preferred conclusions.
Some might call it hypocrisy personified,
Conservative or Liberal slants notwithstanding. I know that I do, but this is
MY opinion. Your opinions, of course, may be different, But, I’m betting that
not too many of them are.
Joe Walther is a freelance writer and
publisher of The True Facts. You may comment on his column by clicking here.
