Bay Windows

 
SEARCH: Contact Us | Find Print Edition  



«HOME

MARKETPLACE
Classifieds
Service Directory

NEWS
Massachusetts
New England
National
International
Politics

OPINION
Editorial
Guest Opinion
Letters to the Editor

BLOGS
Billy Masters
Finance
Generation us
Guest Opinion
Holding the Center
Keeping the Faith
Latino Vision
Letters to the Editor
Life in the slow lane
Mombian
Political intelligence
Reality check
So they say
The Romney Files
Your 15 Minutes

ARTS
Billy Masters
So they say
Culture
Books
Movies
Television
Radio
Music
Theater
Nightlife
Dining

SPORTS
Local
National

COLUMNS
Finance and Business
Seniors
Family
Religion
Latino

COMMUNITY
Community Guide
Aging Project
AIDS Action
Bi-Sexual Resource Center
Boston Pride
Fenway Community Health
Friends of Gay Youth
Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders
Gay Lesbian Education Network
Greater Boston Business Council
History Project
Justice Resource Institute
Mass Equality
Mass. Political Caucus
Mass Transgender Political Coalition
Multi-Cultural AIDS Coalition
Parents & Friends of Lesbians And Gays
Somos Latinos

Transitions
Weddings
Births
Obituaries
Milestones

ADVERTISING
Place an Ad
Advertiser Resources




ABOUT US
History
Masthead
Internships
Press Releases
Contact Us






Columnists :: Holding The Center

Countdown
by Richard J. Rosendall
contributing writer
Thursday Oct 23, 2008

I don’t remember counting down the days before an election the way I’m doing this year. Others are doing the same thing. Last Friday night outside D.C.’s Lincoln Theatre, as fans arrived for the Reel Affirmations film festival, I found an old friend who was a proud Hillary Clinton supporter selling Obama Pride T-shirts. The crisp autumn air has brought Democrats the smell of victory.

We’re a long way from last January. Back then, a prominent, progressive gay blogger asked me whom I supported for President. "Obama," I replied. He was incredulous. "Do you really think a black man can get elected?" he asked. "I don’t know," I said, "but I plan to vote for him." "Most white people will never vote for him," he assured me. One of many satisfactions from an Obama victory will be the disposal of smug dismissals like that one.

Of course, there are still naysayers. Some gay conservatives have taken to accusing Obama’s gay supporters of neglecting the California No on 8 campaign by donating instead to Obama, as if we cannot do both. I sure hope those critics have given No on 8 all the money they would otherwise have given John McCain.

Another conservative charge is that Obama will be to blame if Prop 8 wins, because polling suggests that the increased African American turnout for Obama will break disproportionately against marriage equality. These critics avoid mentioning the salient fact that the same poll shows Democrats breaking in favor of marriage equality, and Republicans against. Instead of exploiting ballot initiatives for cynical sniping, the Nobamacons should be educating their fellow conservatives about the concept of equal protection of the law.

Speaking of conservatives, it is satisfying to see so many of the most illustrious abandon the McCain ship. McCain’s operatives still seem not to have noticed that their over-the-top attacks fall flat because they are so at odds with the Barack Obama that people have been watching for two years. Last week, Sacramento County Republicans removed a call to "Waterboard Barack Obama" from their website after their own state party leaders were offended. Others inevitably get into the act, like blogger clifylq at LiveJournal.com, who stated in August that "Obama is a Gay Muslim."

The lunar-orbit quality of such attacks was captured on Saturday Night Live when the McCain Rally Lady wandered onto the set declaring that Obama "is 50 percent Egyptian, he’s going to change the White House to a pyramid." The desperate, tone-deaf hatefulness of the right-wing robocalls and ads perfectly illustrates the scorched-earth politics voters want to change.

Not long ago, many Democrats feared Obama’s preternatural calm would leave voters cold, and urged him to get hotter. But the financial crisis put Obama’s cool demeanor in a new light. Now it is seen as a key presidential trait, while McCain’s shoot-from-the-hip combustibility reminds voters that eight years of cowboy politics have not made them feel safer. Last week, conservative New York Times columnist David Brooks compared Obama’s self-assurance to that of figures like FDR and Ronald Reagan, who "rise with an unshakable serenity that is inexplicable to their critics and infuriating to their foes." Obama’s smooth blend of thoughtfulness and elegance recalls a classic jazz orchestration with Duke Ellington at the keyboard.

Obama has set a new standard for grassroots organizing, his operations in red states promising to boost down-ballot Democrats and help build a governing majority. At the same time, his history of respectful outreach across party lines reflects his ambition for transformational wins instead of the usual petty Washington gamesmanship.

Obama’s more supple and confident approach has considerable appeal after eight years of a president on a mission from God who only talks to people who agree with him. The greatest benefit of an Obama victory might be prying open the ideological echo chambers into which so many across the spectrum have retreated.

Last Saturday night I encountered a couple of young women holding signs saying, "Stop Bitchin’ and Start a Revolution." I haven’t the slightest interest in starting a revolution, nor do I need tips for creating change from people who fervently reject any candidate with the remotest chance of actually getting elected. The pursuit of power may be a morally fraught business, but romanticizing disempowerment is no improvement.

Lose the drama. Give us Obama.


Richard J. Rosendall is a writer and activist whose work has appeared on Salon.com and the Independent Gay Forum (www.indegayforum.com). He can be reached at rrosendall@starpower.net.



COMMENTS










Most Popular This Week


1.
Foxy Lady
2.
Broadway babies (who are also lovers)
3.
With love and pride, Governor Deval Patrick’s daughter comes out publicly
4.
Cambridge Mayor comes out during Pride Brunch
5.
Hawaiian hottie gets gay porn deal
6.
2010 Pride Calendar of Events
7.
Raindrops and rainbows
8.
Billy Masters: Scrambling for "Celebrity Rehab"
9.
Gender and politics: blurring the boundaries
10.
Anti-bullying measures advance against obstacles




Upcoming Events






Quick Poll






Columnists



New study finds adoptive children of same-sex parents are thriving


Corrupting influence


Going around again


Pols on parade








Copyright © 2007 Bay Windows Inc.