Terry Preston's in-depth views on the pressing issues of the day, from God, sex and national politics to the high price of a good beer at the ballgame. Any and all comments to these comments are encouraged.

Friday, June 16, 2006

San Francisco Uber Alles

A shameless cross-post, but relevant:

---------------------------
By Garrison Keillor

Jun. 07, 2006 / People who live in mud huts should not throw mud, especially if it comes from their own roofs. As Scripture says, don't point to the speck in your neighbor's eye when you have a piece of kindling in your own.

I see by the papers that the Republicans want to make an issue of Nancy Pelosi in the congressional races this fall: Would you want a San Francisco woman to be Speaker of the House? Will the podium be repainted in lavender stripes with a disco ball overhead? Will she be borne into the chamber by male dancers with glistening torsos and wearing pink tutus? After all, in the unique worldview of old elephants, San Francisco is a code word for g-a-y, and after assembling a record of government lies, incompetence and disaster, the party in power hopes that the fear of g-a-y-s will pull it through in November.

Running against Nancy Pelosi, a woman who comes from a district where there are known gay persons, is a nice trick, but it does draw attention to the large shambling galoot who is speaker now, Tom DeLay's enabler for years, a man who, judging by his public mutterances, is about as smart as most high school wrestling coaches.

For the past year, Dennis Hastert has been two heartbeats from the presidency. He is a man who seems content just to have a car and driver and three square meals a day. He has no apparent vision beyond the urge to hang onto power. He has succeeded in turning Congress into a branch of the executive branch. If Mr. Hastert becomes the poster boy for the Republican Party, this does not speak well for them as the Party of Ideas.

People who want to take a swing at San Francisco should think twice.

Yes, the Irish coffee at Fisherman's Wharf is overpriced, and the bus tour of Haight-Ashbury is disappointing (where are the hippies?), but the Bay Area is the cradle of the computer and software industry, which continues to create jobs for our children. The iPod was not developed by Baptists in Waco , Texas . There may be a reason for this.

Creative people thrive in a climate of openness and tolerance, since some great ideas start out sounding ridiculous. Creativity is a key to economic progress. Authoritarianism is stifling. I don't believe that Mr. Hewlett and Mr. Packard were gay, but what's important is:

In San Francisco, it doesn't matter so much. When the cultural Sturmbannfuhrers try to marshal everyone into straight lines, it has consequences for the economic future of this country.

Meanwhile, the Current Occupant goes on impersonating a president.

Somewhere in the quiet leafy recesses of the Bush family, somebody is thinking, "Wrong son. Should've tried the smart one." This one's eyes don't quite focus. Five years in office and he doesn't have a grip on it yet. You stand him up next to Tony Blair at a press conference and the comparison is not kind to Our Guy. Historians are starting to place him at or near the bottom of the list. And one of the basic assumptions of American culture is falling apart: the competence of Republicans.

You might not have always liked Republicans, but you could count on them to manage the bank. They might be lousy tippers, act snooty, talk through their noses, wear spats and splash mud on you as they race their Pierce-Arrows through the village, but you knew they could do the math. To see them produce a ninny and then follow him loyally into the swamp for five years is disconcerting, like seeing the Rolling Stones take up lite jazz. So here we are at an uneasy point in our history, mired in a costly war and getting nowhere, a supine Congress granting absolute power to a president who seems to get smaller and dimmer, and the best the Republicans can offer is San Franciscophobia? This is beyond pitiful. This is violently stupid.

It is painful to look at your father and realize the old man should not be allowed to manage his own money anymore. This is the discovery the country has made about the party in power. They are inept. The checkbook needs to be taken away. They will rant, they will screech, they will wave their canes at you and call you all sorts of names, but you have to do what you have to do.

----------------------------

Again, ain't it funny that the people most afeared of the homos don't have any themselves? And that the places most likely to be hit by terrorists, like San Francisco, object the most to the "war on terror?"

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh, Jeb! He-e-e-a-r Jeb...!

Yup. He's a-comin'..!

Terry Preston said...

It's about time. If most people were shown a picture of George W and a picture of Jeb and asked, "which one is president?", I don't think George would be the one they picked out.

But he's the most pliable, so he's the one the Dark Order of the Rove knew they run from the sidelines. And the rest is history.

Anonymous said...

Great post on many levels, Terry.

Keillor is great! One has to wonder how many Repubs understand much less appreciate him; they can't be that much a part of his fan base, yet his genius is obvious.

There can be no doubt now that Repubs treasure greed over the common good, incumbency over sound governance and the status quo over accountability. They'll run against gay marriage (again!) and, if they win, think they have a mandate to continue the failed policies that have made such a mess in Iraq and the WOT. All the conservative so-called principles have been turned on their head by "Dear Leader" and still most Repubs blindly follow him...or is that "Big Brother".... If only the Dems would realize it's theirs for the taking (according to all the generic polls) if they would only stop listening to all their focus groups.

San Francisco is great and still my favorite city. I'd have to win the lottery to do it, but I'd love to live there someday. And, yes, I know about the quakes.

Peace.

Terry Preston said...

Dan,

Looks like Jeb's brother's coattail are wearing him down.

According to a CNN poll on who people -wouldn't- vote for:

As for (Jeb) Bush, brother of the current president, 63 percent said there was no way he would get their vote. The younger Bush has denied interest in running for president in 2008.

I guess once burned on a Bush boy, twice shy.