Pride & Passion

My husband warns me to avoid a cultish affection for Palin;  I suspect that’s a good idea.   We are fallen creatures and that is true of even extraordinarily attractive women who seem to live by their principles and are sensible, far-sighted, and cagey in negotiations.   Still, I think she helps us see the best of McCain and reminds us that on both coasts & flyover country  are many accomplished, thoughtful people doing productive, sensible things.   She may be exceptional but she is also representative giving us  confidence in  the wisdom of crowds,  the open marketplace of goods and ideas.   She  reminds us – by her personal obscurity and  consequential actions –  that we can trust one another, that democracy does work.  

 

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The Country Mouse and the City Mouse

In an earlier post, Jonathan sums up Palin as a “frontierswoman.”   This seems to me to be true, but she also represents an old tension – between the city and the country.   The distinction between Moscow and pretty much all the rest of Russia seems to be awfully important to the few Russians I know; a similar tension exists between Paris and rural France, Prague and (especially) Moravia.   One of the commuting families at U.T. in the seventies split because, the husband explained, his wife could not imagine not living on one of the coasts.  (Not surprisingly, similar commutes began happening here:   if Austin’s the sticks, how much more are the hinterlands.)     Some people identify with a city and some with the city.   I can hardly complain about such self-definitions, since I’ve always felt the powerful pull of place; it’s a key part to the identity of many of my family and friends.     Those of us from  flyover country   speak of it with some irony, but also with  pride:   all  intensified and sometimes defensive because we feel others say it with disdain.  

If, as one wit put it, McCain/Palin gets all the votes of  brides  pregnant on  their wedding days (maybe add in the grooms), then  if we can add the votes of those with strongly felt  country roots,  the favored Obama/Biden ticket will  need to resurrect all  those  dead voters Acorn was finding.   How well this  plays out  depends on how  many understand  these two and, on the other hand, how  many can’t.   They are hardly typical of “Jesusland” but in important ways they represent it.   Plain talking, for instance,  arises from  the Puritan plain style,  echoed in the American middle west & west.   (And embodied in the Laura Ingalls Wilder  books my mother gave every grandchild.)    We speak with a tough wit,  but,  aren’t ironic about duty, loyalty, resilience, perseverance, active engagement, hard work.   We  don’t consider them ambiguous; we assume  they just are, in themselves, good.  

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O.T. Comment on Shannon’s Last Post

I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a “community organizer,” except that you have actual responsibilities.

Obama  (apparently  from a  very early stage in his career) has left little  paper trail.    Decision making means taking risks – of criticism, of results.   I don’t see risk-taking but the kind of assurance that comes from not having to live with consequences.  

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Dr. Helen on Her Hopes

I think Palin would focus on helping Americans achieve their dreams by staying out of their way.

Why Palin is a Fantastic Choice

Speeches give us glimmers; campaigns tell us more.   I suspect most of us want to learn more, but Palin is attractive in more ways than one and she  clearly offers a choice.   Dr. Helen  sums up the difference between  the speech Thursday and the one Friday in this comment.   And I suspect  Palin doesn’t believe we are in the middle of  a great depression –  the  picture rather grimly painted at  the Democratic Convention.   Is my corner of the world that different from the rest of America?   What do these people do if unemployment goes up to the levels of most European countries?   How  do  they explain  the 17 million new homeowners in the last eight years?  

The Gut: Tribalism’s Home and Not Always a Bad Thing

Thanks, Shannon for your blogging, which has  provided a  smorgasbord.  

 

In the comments to his “Identity-Politics Insanity” post, Helen’s observation reminds us of a truth about American politics but more importantly about human nature.   For instance, a balanced ticket is attractive, because we assume more ideas are in play and more people feel an identity with their leaders.   On the other hand, Shannon is right:    identity politics encourages a tribalism whose restraint has been the great triumph of western civilization and a prerequisite for a diverse nation ruled by predictable, equitable laws.   We rightly fear identities that trump law & duty, but we also fear ideologies which encourage children to betray their parents and wives their husbands.   We ignore such passions natural to our species at our own peril: unacknowledged they threaten chaos; diminished, we lack a glue that holds communities and even identities together.

 

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