Category Archives: Politics

David Lynch and the Reagan Assassination Attempt

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It was thirty years ago today that an assassination attempt was made on President Ronald Reagan. I realize most of our regular contributors are far too young to have any kind of memory of the event (if they were even born), but I have a very vivid recollection of that day, and David Lynch plays a part.

I was a sophomore in college, and wrote for the school paper in the Arts section. That afternoon David Lynch was scheduled to give a talk, and I was covering it. I had just recently seen his film The Elephant Man, and I was thinking about a question to ask (even though I hadn’t seen, nor have I yet, Eraserhead). For whatever reason the talk was cancelled, so I headed back to my dorm room. There were a few snow flurries falling. I went into my bedroom, but I heard some guys in the suite room talking. One of them was a guy named Joe Bova, who didn’t live with us but was always there hanging out. I hadn’t turned the TV on, so when I heard snippets of conversation about someone being shot I immediately entered the conversation and learned that President Reagan was the victim.

“Is he dead?” was, I believe, my response. Now it must be told that I have never been an admirer of Ronald Reagan’s, and harbor the liberal belief that this country really started going to hell during his administration. I’d like to think I wasn’t wishing him dead, but instead realizing that he was a likely victim of the famous (to nerds at least) “Zero Factor.” From 1840 to 1960, every president elected in a year ending in zero died in office: William Henry Harrison, Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley, Harding, FDR, Kennedy. Certainly Reagan, who set the record for oldest man elected to the presidency, and seventy years old at the time of the shooting, would never make it out his presidency alive. Of course he survived and lived for more than twenty more years.

Reagan would break the Zero Factor, seemingly for good (George W. Bush’s closest brush with death came at the hands of a pretzel lodged in his windpipe). The assassination attempt, thankfully the last on an American president so far, was a brief media whirlwind. Alexander Haig jumped constitutional ladders by declaring himself in charge, and then the made-for-TV drama of the shooter John Hinckley’s obsession with Jodie Foster unfolded, which Stephen Sondheim included in his musical, Assassins.

The Academy Awards, scheduled for that night, was postponed for one night (news reports had to rub it in that Reagan had never won an Oscar–he was never even nominated). The NCAA basketball championship was held, though: Indiana, led by Isiah Thomas, defeated North Carolina. In those years the Oscars and the NCAA finals were always held on the same night, creating agita for those who fancied both. I’ll never forget Elliot Gould’s appearance on the 1976 Oscar show. He came out and said, “Indiana, 86-68.” This final was galling to me, as the Hoosiers had beaten Michigan, my favorite team.

Perhaps the most lasting legacy of the attempt on Reagan’s life was the wounding of press secretary James Brady, which would lead a movement to attempt to make it harder to buy a handgun. Strides have been made, though not enough.

So there it is. Thirty years later, and when I think of this event in American history I think of David Lynch, who I still haven’t met.

11/04/2008

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Michigan and Congress

Michigan and Congress

In the end, things unfolded more or less as expected. The election had turned decisively against McCain in the past few weeks, and by the time Jeanine and I heard that Ohio had been called for Obama, just after we got out of the subway downtown, it was clear enough that McCain would be unable to overcome those long odds.

I spent the day working as an election judge for the 21st precinct of the 49th ward, where things were mostly uneventful, with no long lines (or any lines, for most of the day) or equipment problems in sight. Early voting numbers were substantial, and that particular precinct is located in the heart of the Loyola University campus, where few students were registered (most students register in their home precincts, not the college precinct). We had about 125 ballots cast for the day, which, couple with the early votes, represented a fairly substantial turnout in percentage terms.

Immediately after I finished there, Jeanine and I headed downtown. Jeanine had received a ticket for the Obama rally earlier in the day, so we were excited about that. After all, how often do you get to see a President-elect give his acceptance speech, even without the historical ramifications of this election? Shortly after, we learned that Pennsylvania had been called for Obama. This was expected, of course, but good news nonetheless since McCain’s closing strategy depended heavily on winning the state.

We got to Grant Park (at Michigan and Congress) at about 9:00, only to find a line stretching south down Michigan Avenue. And stretching. And stretching. By the time we got to the end of the line, we were at Michigan and Roosevelt, over half a mile from the park entrance. It took about an hour or so to get through, and all the while we were hearing various news and rumors about states that had been called. Finally, as we neared the park entrance, the networks officially called the race for Obama, and cheers went out up and down the street.

We got to the rally site just as McCain got to the meat of his concession speech. It didn’t get much reaction from the crowd, other than visceral disgust when he started talking up Sarah Palin. It’s possible, even likely, that McCain would have lost had he not selected her as running mate, but I can’t help thinking that her selection damaged him in a way that’s hard to measure. Obviously he wasn’t going to be popular with Chicago voters anyway, but with that selection, he went from a mostly respected if underwhelming candidate to a complete rightwing sellout in the eyes of a lot of people. In other words, I think it created hostility where there wasn’t any before, in exchange for what clearly was little tangible value.

At any rate, the rally site was already full by the time of our arrival. We ended up staking out a spot underneath the trees way in the back, where we could at least see the stage, no matter how far off it was. I thought his speech was perfectly appropriate, a gracious acceptance of victory but with a clear call to voters to stay engaged in governance now that the campaigning is over. I thought the story of the 106-year-old Georgia woman struck just the right note – a reminder of how quickly things can change but also of how hard it nonetheless can be for that change to take place.

Regardless of what happens from here, it’s hard not to see this as a watershed election. I don’t even mean that in terms of Obama himself, although a black President is obviously historical. But we saw three things yesterday:

1) A high turnout. The linked AP article shows disagreement over whether this was the highest turnout in a century, or merely the highest in a generation, but it’s clear that the electorate was highly charged this year.

As a footnote to this, let me also say this: one of the reasons that turnout wasn’t even higher is surely because some people simply don’t know how to vote. I estimate, at my precinct yesterday, that somewhere between 20-25 would-be voters were unable to cast a ballot because they weren’t registered in that precinct. In most cases, because they were college kids, they were actually registered somewhere else, even in a couple cases in different states, but had no way to cast a ballot because they couldn’t make it home to vote. Their only recourse was to cast a provisional ballot, but those won’t be counted because their registration is not valid.

In addition to that, some people showed up who simply were not registered to vote at all. They didn’t know that there was a registration deadline, and obviously they couldn’t vote. I hated turning people away, but that’s the state of things. The fact of the matter is that you have to jump through hoops in order to vote in most parts of the country, and if we made the process simpler and easier the turnout would be higher.

2) As that AP article indicates, the demographics of the elecorate have changed in this country. It is no longer possible to be elected President – or even to come all that close – just by winning a majority of white voters.

3) Exit polls are pretty clear that Obama won every age group other than senior citizens. This election is the passing of the torch, if you will, between generations of political power. The Republican Party is obviously not dead, but the current incarnation of it – dependent on jingoism, social conservatism, trickle-down economics – almost certainly is, at least as a national political force (it clearly remains strong as a force in the South).

The politics of the United States has changed. By 2012, the people who voted for McCain this year will be an even smaller percentage of the electorate than they are now, while Obama’s coalition will have grown. This doesn’t in any way tell us what will happen in 2012, but it does point to the challenge that Republicans will face between now and then.

In other races around the country, there were a few spots of bad news. I don’t understand how the Alaska Senate race can be close, with incumbent Ted Stevens’ recent felony corruption convictions and all; not even Tom DeLay could survive that, and he was only indicted (to this day, he’s yet to stand trial). As of right now, the race is yet to be called, though it looks as if Stevens will prevail. And the Prop 8 vote in California is patently ugly and disgusting, with the only silver lining being that the California constitution is notoriously easy to amend, making this result unlikely to stand for long.

But overall, it was a fantastic night. The eyes of the world were squarely focused on Chicago last night, and I think the city came through. It’s a small town in some ways, one of them being the way that they love seeing one of their own make good. The challenge is now on the Democrats to make good on their promises, having consolidated power in the House and Senate in addition to winning the Presidency. It’ll be a tough four years, but I’m looking forward to them.

Palin by the numbers

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Fairly entertaining round-up of “the numbers” surrounding Sarah Palin over at The Huffington Post today.

Few highlights:

$500 to $1,200: the fee that Wasilla charged rape victims to pay for post-sexual assault medical exams, after the city cut funds during Palin’s tenure that had previously covered the exams (Source)

0: Wasilla’s long-term debt when Palin took office in 1996 (Source)

$18.6 million: the long-term debt Palin racked up by the time she left office in 2002, amounting to about $3,000 per resident (Source)

33: the percentage by which Palin increased the budget of Wasilla during her tenure, despite billing herself as a fiscal conservative and champion of smaller government (Source)

25: the percentage by which Palin raised the local sales tax in Wasilla to pay for a sports center, despite claims that she cut taxes (Source)

$27 million: the total amount of federal earmarks Palin secured for Wasilla’s town of 6,700 people while she was mayor, thanks to the help of a Washington lobbyist with ties to indicted Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) and convicted felon Jack Abramoff (Source)

3: the number of times John McCain specifically criticized earmarks requested by Sarah Palin when she was mayor of Wasilla, citing them as examples of wasteful spending (Source)

$453 million: the total amount of earmarks Palin has asked U.S. taxpayers to fund for Alaska projects over the past two years, despite McCain’s insistence that she hasn’t sought earmarks or special-interest spending from Congress (Source)

$506.34: the amount of federal earmarks Alaska residents will receive per capita in 2008, the highest level of any state (Source)

50: the number of days after Palin announced she “will fully cooperate” with an ethics investigation into the “Troopergate” scandal that the McCain campaign announced she was “unlikely to cooperate” because it had been “hijacked” by Obama operatives. The probe was unanimously authorized by a bipartisan panel of eight Alaska Republicans and four Democrats. (Source)

More at Huffington Post.

Bush 44

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“Folks, we have seen this movie before, we know the sequel is always worse than the original…If you are ready for four more years of George Bush, then John McCain is your guy…Just as George Herbert Walker Bush was nicknamed Bush 41, his son was nicknamed Bush 43, John McCain could easily become known as Bush 44.” – Joe Biden

Super Tuesday

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republicans-for-voldemort.jpg

24 states. 52% of the Democratic Party and 41% of the Republican delegates at stake. Which respective candidate do you think will win the largest number of votes? Who are you rooting for? Are you voting? Do you care?

Online betmaker Unibet has these odds.

Democrat candidate
Clinton, Hillary, 1.45
Obama, Barack, 2.50

Republican candidate
McCain, John, 1.15
Romney, Mitt, 5.00
Huckabee, Mike, 30.00
Paul, Ron, 100.00

Will the next elected president be a man or a woman?
Man, 1.65
Woman, 2.00

Winning party
Democrats, 1.45
Republicans, 2.50

Who will win the presidential election?
Clinton, Hillary, 2.00
McCain, John, 3.00
Obama, Barack, 4.00
Romney, Mitt, 12.00
Bloomberg, Michael, 25.00
Huckabee, Mike, 50.00
Paul, Ron, 150.00

Great Words of 2007

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The Yale Book of Quotations 2007 is out, with the quotes we will remember most from this fine year in history.

1. “Don’t tase me, bro” – Andrew Meyer, September 17th, University of Florida

2. “I personally believe that U.S. Americans are unable to do so because some people out there in our nation don’t have maps and I believe that our education like such as in South Africa and Iraq and everywhere like such as and I believe that they should our education over here in the U.S. should help the U.S. or should help South Africa and should help Iraq and the Asian countries so we will be able to build up our future for us.” – Lauren Upton, August 19th, Miss Teen America Contest

3. “In Iran we don’t have homosexuals like in your country.” – Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, 24th September, Columbia University

4. “That’s some nappy-headed hos there” – Don Imus, April 4th, CBS Sports Radio

5. “I don’t recall.” — Alberto Gonzales, April 19th, Congressional hearing

6. “There’s only three things he (Republican presidential candidate and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani) mentions in a sentence: a noun and a verb and 9/11.” — Joseph Biden, 30th October, Democratic party debate

7. “I’m not going to get into a name-calling match with somebody (Vice President Dick Cheney) who has a 9 percent approval rating.” — Harry Reid, April 24th, to the New York Times

8. “(I have) a wide stance when going to the bathroom.” — Larry Craig, June 11th, arrest report

9. “I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that’s a storybook, man.” — Joseph Biden on Barack Obama, February 21st, for the New York Observer

10. “I think as far as the adverse impact on the nation around the world, this administration has been the worst in history.” — Jimmy Carter, May 19th, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In the Good Old Days

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It started as a minor labor dispute between a studio union and the producers and ended up as the bloodiest labor strike in Hollywood history, and it changed the face of Hollywood forever. It’s a story of murder, intrigue, bribery, collusion and Communist baiting. A cast of characters that include corrupt union bosses, movie moguls, gangsters and trade unionists.
- The War For Warner Bros

This strike needs some molotov cocktails.