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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

 

Day One, Year One


Many have come to our nation's capital to protest wars and injustice. Today the largest number of people ever to gather in Washington DC comes to welcome, toast, and support Barack Obama and all that he and his new Administration stand for.

Today's assembly braces against sub-freezing temperatures that match the absence of warmth, generosity, and American goodness left by the outgoing regime. Ironically its chief henchman, no friend of people with disabilities, will appear in a wheelchair. It's as if the oncoming good spirit of the gathering has served up some sort of poetic justice for his unabashed legacy of disability.

The in-pouring of hope we see in the faces of the American people today expresses their determination to bring the American spirit back to America. That wholesome determination is washing like a tsunami over the stench and stain the former regime—built on greed and pettiness, led by a profoundly stupid man, a puppet of evilly greedy men.

People from every corner of the world recognize our eight-year failure. Yet once again they are about to forgive us. They are with us now, just as they were immediately after 9/11. Their good faith will not be squandered this time. We are starting over.

When thinking of starting over, it occurs to me how purely arbitrarily we number our years. We still count from the purported birth of a Messiah of one, dominant religion among our thousand faiths. Somewhat less arbitrarily we divide our numbers by tens and come up with centuries.

So to accept that the current millennium began with the Supreme Court appointment of our nation's most corrupt and un-American regime—one bent on bullying its way around the world—is not only ill-founded, it's discouraging and counter-productive. We don't have to accept it.

Why not start over, not just with our efforts but with our calendar? Why not mark this new beginning with an appropriately fresh way to number our days? Well, because that would be arrogantly self-congratulatory. We're over that. More to the point, we have yet to prove we can create an America worth calling new. That's for history to decide.

Besides, we and our new Administration have many and much more pressing issues to address. All of us have to pitch in and make things better before we deserve such a distinction. But there's nothing wrong with setting a new calendar as one of the ways we might measure our success.

Can we make this point forward so worthy of note that one day it will be called Day One of the Year One?

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Comments:
It's political Springtime in the United States. For a harvest to grow anew, we must all tend the fields. For a new type of harvest, we must all tend the fields in a different way than we have in the past.

Barak Obama has spent the last 18 months telling people of change and filling people with hope. He tells us that we are not blue states and red states, but United States. In the greatest political speech in my lifetime, Mr. Obama said,
"Yet even as we speak, there are those who are preparing to divide us, the spin masters and negative ad peddlers who embrace the politics of anything goes. Well, I say to them tonight, there's not a liberal America and a conservative America - there's the United States of America. There's not a black America and white America and Latino America and Asian America; there's the United States of America. The pundits like to slice-and-dice our country into Red States and Blue States; Red States for Republicans, Blue States for Democrats."

So, I'm amazed how few people who embrace President Obama, actually embrace his message. I'm amazed how many people talk of change, but continue the hate-spitting, insulting, no-comment-is-too-harsh-for-that-idiot politics of "yesteryear".

This country is based on principled opposition. In recent years, principled opposition has turned into a blood sport. Barak Obama talks of Hope and Change. Change does not mean that our opponents will abandon their principles, suddenly, and tomorrow join our way of thinking. No, change means that we can disagree with our opponent and still respect his opinion and his service. Change begins at home; until we have change, we cannot have hope.

G-d bless Barak Obama. May he be our best and brightest President.
-Nick
 

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