There was a presidential debate last night, and all the pundits are saying Romney won, and that his performance will change the course of the campaign. What bullshit.
The pundits either ignore or don't realize that Obama will win re-election. Why? Because his supporters (who number more than Romney's) don't just think he should be re-elected, they worship him as a deity! They voted for him in 2008 because he is a black man, without regard for his background, attributes or capabilities.
Obama is glib, attractive and black. He is someone you would like to pal around with, go out to dinner with, drink a beer with. Unfortunately, that is all he has going for him. He certainly showed no qualification to be president other than his likable personal qualities. He had no business experience--unless you somehow contort "community organizer" into a business. He has no understanding of economics (like most Americans). He was involved in the corrupt politics of Chicago, the worst breeding ground for any president. And he is not really representative of most black Americans, because except for his skin color, he is an upper-middle-class white American.
His policies and performance in office, despite his supporters claims, have been disastrous, and have put the country into a worse situation that we were in when George Bush left office. No small feat, that.
No, his worshipful supporters (would they be embarrassed if they could see themselves fawning over a man who clearly is over his head) are practicing a perverse form of racism. Because he is black, they are willing him to be a competent, successful president to show those racist Republicans that a black man can be a great president. No matter how much they will it to be so, though, it simply isn't, in his case.
The point is this: It shouldn't matter what color a man is. What should matter are his beliefs, his policies, his conduct, and whether he has the experience, the integrity and the personal strengths and capabilities to perform well in what arguably is the most difficult job in the world. In 2008, Barack Obama did not possess the experience, the integrity and the personal strengths and capabilities to perform well in office, and he has proved that in the past 3½ years.
But his supporters are in denial. They worship him and will him to be great when he is pedestrian, and they can't see it. They will re-elect him, and after he is no longer president, history will paint him as among the worst presidents. How ironic that history will group him with George W. Bush.
So why are his worshipers so adamant in their support? Because they don't want the first black man elected president to be a failure. But a failure he has been, and it's unconscionable that his worshipers want to stick Americans with him for another four years.
But what about the alternative. Romney is certainly no better than Obama. Both of them support more government spending--listen to Romney hedge when he talks about government spending--and both of them are in the pockets of corporate interests. Romney is no real alternative, and his Republican supporters certainly don't worship him--they merely tolerate him. Not a good sign as to his potential performance.
Let's face it. The grueling campaign, the long road and sacrifices necessary to gain political vetting (except in Obama's case), mean that no one will run who is not obsessed with power but who might be a good choice for president. So we are left to vote for the dregs, the ones who seek power, who are willing to manipulate us, and who do so relentlessly,
The problem is that the federal government no longer works, because its intended function has been so perverted over the years. And that is because Americans have become less well educated than they were years ago, less intellectual, just dumbed-down actually. Although we know less about our political process, our constitution and our government, we adopt an agenda and hold to it so tightly that we can't be moved. We so easily become polarized when we don't even understand the issues and are not willing to try to understand and debate them in a civil fashion. Without thinking of the consequences of political policy, we accept political points of view not because they make sense, but because they are popular. We jump on bandwagons without critical thought. We have become like children in our civil life. We just vote for whoever looks good, speaks well, and embodies the personal traits we like or the popular politics we blindly follow. And, of course, all this means that we are so easily manipulated by the leaders we worship.
Can we change all this and learn to think about ideas and debate policy without rancor, and with respect and civility to our fellow Americans? I wish so, but I fear not.
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