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meegbear

(25,438 posts)
Wed Sep 5, 2012, 11:52 AM Sep 2012

The Rude Pundit - DNC Day 1: Now That's the America We Know

Occasionally, every now and then, the Rude Pundit feels a sense of transcendent love for his fellow humans. While most days, he pretty much feels like going on a stabbing spree and then getting rid of the bodies through the cleansing power of fire, sweet fire, there are times when he is in a group of mostly strangers, on the subway or at some event, some place where there's a diversity of races and classes, and everyone is just so tragically human and interwoven by circumstance, by space and time, that a warm feeling of love shoves aside the misanthropy and he thinks, "Yes, this is how we're supposed to be." And he feels uplifted, in a very real and physical sense, as if he's floating for just a moment. Then, usually, some asshole yells at a kid or some jerk gets too loud on a cell phone, and he hits the ground again.

When the Rude Pundit first turned on C-Span's coverage of the DNC (because fuck MSNBCCNNFox; he can think for himself), no one was speaking and the cameras just kept cutting to various parts of the crowd. "Jesus," he thought, "this is the America I know." See, unlike the incredibly white Republican National Convention, with the uncomfortably wedged in token people of color, here was the United States that most of us experience on a daily basis, including all those white idiots at the RNC. It is a constant stream of difference, of engaging with difference, of looking beyond difference in order to accomplish everything that needs to get done, whether at the workplace or the school or the grocery store when you just need to pay for your Pop-Tarts.

The RNC's narrative was based on a fantasy, that the country is made up of entrepreneurs and entrepreneur-wannabes, a bunch of gun-toting freedom loving men whose wives proudly give birth to whatever children are ejaculated into their wild, untamed vaginas, a white rural fantasia where all anyone needs is to be left alone in order to fulfill one's destiny, the chimera of rugged individualism never so seemingly at odds with the true day-to-day lives of Americans.

The truth is something so very different and so very messy compared with the neat, white fictions the RNC laid out. The truth is that most people don't want to start businesses. They want jobs or better lives and if they get it through the government, then at least it's a fuckin' paycheck. The truth is that most people won't ever need a gun, even if they pretend they do. The truth is that this is a messy country, and stories move forward, into a hard-fought and unsure future, even if the GOP is stuck in a flashback to a nation that not only never existed, but could only exist in the most extreme dictatorial state. The RNC portrayed the citizens of the country as being in a locked battle with an evil government, as if the Obama administration was the Assad regime in Syria and they were just meagerly armed rebels, the better to appeal to the knuckle-dragging Tea Party, who were barely mentioned but whose neanderthal gruntings echoed constantly in the speeches. The Democrats, last night, at least, called "Bullshit" on their war.

And no one did it more beautifully, succinctly, and devastatingly than First Lady Michelle Obama. Speaking directly to the image of her husband as a brutal socialist totalitarian, she not only called out the lies of the right without mentioning them (always a more brutal tactic), but she laid out how a president, and a government, can affect the everyday lives of all Americans, embracing Obamacare by saying the President "did it because he believes that here in America, our grandparents should be able to afford their medicine...our kids should be able to see a doctor when they’re sick...and no one in this country should ever go broke because of an accident or illness." It's that last one that Republicans have no answer for at all.

She said, &quot I)f our parents and grandparents could toil and struggle for us...if they could raise beams of steel to the sky, send a man to the moon, and connect the world with the touch of a button...then surely we can keep on sacrificing and building for our own kids and grandkids." At least two out of three of those occurred only because of government investment in research, science, and industry. Michelle Obama rebuked the notion that the greatest good is making money, that financial comfort and material accumulation is the only measure of success. There is more, she said, there is family and love and community, and, goddamn, isn't that worth more than another ten million? When Republicans tried to say such things, they came across as winking jokes.

People keep comparing Obama's speech to Ann Romney's, and, yes, they both played the role of supportive spouse. But a better comparison would be to Mitt Romney's attempts to humanize himself in his speech. Michelle Obama's emotions throughout her speech, and especially towards the end, her stutters, her repetitions came across as so very real, as if she was one of us talking to us. Mitt Romney attempted to appear dewy-eyed and sincere, but mostly he just looked as if he was patronizing an audience that thinks such patronization is identification; he was talking to a fake nation. Michelle Obama talked to a real America.

To bottom line it: At a jury trial, the Rude Pundit would want Michelle Obama as his attorney. And he'd love it if she'd face off against Romney.

Michelle Obama brought the soul. Tonight, Bill Clinton will bring the funk (and, frankly, you can bet that Mitt Romney is shitting himself over what Clinton is gonna say, no matter what the GOP says).

Note: "It's okay," the Rude Pundit told himself this morning. "It's okay to every now and again put aside the cynicism and the rancor and the doubts and just enjoy a good patriotic boner."

http://rudepundit.blogspot.com/2012/09/dnc-day-1-now-thats-america-we-know.html

18 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The Rude Pundit - DNC Day 1: Now That's the America We Know (Original Post) meegbear Sep 2012 OP
Massive k&r for the Rude (& sometimes wistfully optimistic) one, n/t appal_jack Sep 2012 #1
And, in comparing ... 1StrongBlackMan Sep 2012 #2
That was the very first thought I had on tuning in hifiguy Sep 2012 #3
K&R cliffordu Sep 2012 #4
The Republican Convention was all about "White Power" fer sure. Spitfire of ATJ Sep 2012 #5
Or the lack of it. Let's hope it signals a lack of Republican power. nt Bernardo de La Paz Sep 2012 #6
What's sad is the number of people who are going to vote because the fear a loss of white dominance. Spitfire of ATJ Sep 2012 #8
That's the 'cleanest' post I've seen from the rude pundit in a long time. Civility will do that. mnhtnbb Sep 2012 #7
Kicked for the entire "wild, untamed vagina" paragraph VWolf Sep 2012 #9
And the patriotic boner... zeemike Sep 2012 #16
K&R&K&RK&R&K&R&K&R&K&R&K&R&K&R.........!!!!! nt docgee Sep 2012 #10
Sure. it's nice to have a patriotic boner ejbr Sep 2012 #11
K&R Warren DeMontague Sep 2012 #12
Lovely Rudie malaise Sep 2012 #13
"The truth is that most people don't want to start businesses". bluesbassman Sep 2012 #14
That is laugh out loud funny!!! truebrit71 Sep 2012 #15
Can. Ever get too much Rude! gateley Sep 2012 #17
K&R. (nt) Kurovski Sep 2012 #18
 

1StrongBlackMan

(31,849 posts)
2. And, in comparing ...
Wed Sep 5, 2012, 12:14 PM
Sep 2012

the two conventions, this:

"Jesus," he thought, "this is the America I know." See, unlike the incredibly white Republican National Convention, with the uncomfortably wedged in token people of color, here was the United States that most of us experience on a daily basis, including all those white idiots at the RNC. It is a constant stream of difference, of engaging with difference, of looking beyond difference in order to accomplish everything that needs to get done, whether at the workplace or the school or the grocery store when you just need to pay for your Pop-Tarts.


Is exactly what has the gop-base's butt-hole tightening ... being shrugged off their, largely, unearned/undeserved perch at the top of the pile.

 

hifiguy

(33,688 posts)
3. That was the very first thought I had on tuning in
Wed Sep 5, 2012, 12:14 PM
Sep 2012

to Rachel & Co. last night: "This convention looks like the world I live in every day."

mnhtnbb

(31,381 posts)
7. That's the 'cleanest' post I've seen from the rude pundit in a long time. Civility will do that.
Wed Sep 5, 2012, 01:21 PM
Sep 2012

Bring out the best in others. The anger disappears.

bluesbassman

(19,369 posts)
14. "The truth is that most people don't want to start businesses".
Wed Sep 5, 2012, 02:24 PM
Sep 2012

This sentence addresses the heart of the GOP's economic lie that keeps their followers cheering tax cuts for the rich. While many people say they would like to start their own business, the odds of them doing so and overcoming the gargantuan hurdles a new business faces in the first five years are slim. But the GOP sheep continue to buy the dream while supporting and voting for a nightmare.

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