Recently GrimyGoods.com had Paul and I travel to ACL Music Festival 2009 and cover the happenings. Paul was mainly on photos, I was on words, until the last day when Paul was struck by a dreaded flu or cold or general infectious malaise.
So on the last day photo duties fell to me and Lesley Sullivan’s trusty Canon 20D.
Kamogawa Horumo – a lot of the films that early in the morning are Japanese, and while there was a time when my ultimate goal in life was to move to Japan and live/work for five years, the culture doesn’t appeal to me as much as it once did. This film, however, spends a lot of time focusing on the Japanese concepts of Oni spirits, training & fighting, and the control of proxy minions. Think Pokemon, or as I kept thinking throughout the film, Miyamoto Shigeru’s classic Pikmin game for the Gamecube. The story revolves around a club at a local Kyoto university and how it changes the lives of the protagonist. Who, in Japanese fashion, is a whiney pussy of man. This should be no surprise to anyone who’s seen Japanese material – as much as I love Evangelion, Shinji’s reluctance and selfish moping grate on your nerves. So is the case with Abe and his best friend. This fil was really slow to get going, with Peter Yoder and I both waiting anxiously for a corner to be turned. luckily, once it does, the movie becomes genuinely adorable and entertaining, regardless of it’s punkass protag. Ultimately, the movie is leaves you satisfied and happy, which is what you want, right?
7 out of 10 Stars/ 1 Sleepy
Anti-Christ – this Willem DeFoe/Lars Van Trier film is stirring up controversy wherever it plays. I will tell you nothing specific about the film other than it surrounds the death of a loved one and a husband trying to help his wife overcome her grief. I love and hate this film simultaneously. The artistry of the opening scene is fantastic, and wholly set the subject matter at hand. However, in a way eerily similar to Richard Kelly’s trainwreck Southland Tales, Van Trier is overtly pretentious when it’s unncessary, robbing the film of the seriousness and precious screen minutes it needs to truly tackle its subject matter. There are genuinely brilliant moments in this fil, characters and dialogue that anyone who has been in a prolonged, dysfunctional relationship will recognize. Not the exact words, but the exact progression of the conversations and the reactions/motivations behind them. This couple manipulates one another, and the film asks you to decide who is th villain (if one exists) and whether or not the course of events was deserved. Alas, you’re not given a picture of these characters outside the grief situation that serves as the inciting incident, so you are left feeling unsatisfied and potentially perturbed. Like the amazing film May, Anti-Christ could be an amazing character study into a particular type of psychosis, however, with the last shot of the film, it seems to be damning an entire group rather than a single soul, and that’s unfortunate.
6 out of 10 stars, huge points deducted for pretension/0 Sleepies
The Men Who Stare at Goats – I had never heard of this secret film, though many others had seen the trailer. Starring Ewan McGregor, George Clooney, Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges, the movie is about a reporter who haps into a supposedly true story of the US government funding a secret organization to train soldiers in psychic warfare. The subject matter is handled neither with 100% respect or significant comedic disdain, which seems to be what viewers are disliking the most. McGregor is stunt cast, and while I want spoil what starts out as an interesting joke, the whole schtick gets really old after awhile, maki g you wish another actor had gotten the part. Everyone turns in good performances and everything happens basically like you want it to. The fact that it wasn’t more extreme in it’s presentation or attitude leaves you with a lukewarm feeling, which was ok with me. The version we saw was early, no color corrected, without final sound or music, and with watermarked stock shots still present. So maybe some editing and music magic can add the teeth this movie needs to really grab audiences. I don’t think it’s too late to I fuse a little bit of style into this flick and get audiences more interested.
So far the score for Fantastic Fest is one okay day, one good day. I’m talking about the films themselves, not the Festival itself. With the opening of the Highball, this years feet is rocking it as the most fun yet, though I admit to a bit of lamentation for the days of standing in long lines of filmlovers and meeting new people. But now I can actually get into the screenings I want, so that trumps the nostalgia factor.
Here’s something my close friends know about me, but others don’t: I fall asleep in movies. I know I’m a filmmaker myself, but I have a problem that if my mind isn’t actively engaged and stimulated, on come the sleepitimes. In the reviews below, I’ll be rating things in how many sleeepies I had and the how many stars from 1 to 10.
If something gets one sleepy that’s not the kiss of death. Just something to note.
First Squad – Mix Russian historical fiction with Anime mixed with some Nazi’s and live action, documentary style interviews to add verisimilitude. The story circles around a young orphan girl with psychic powers who is the last living member of her paranormal warfare squad (interesting sister piece to The Men Who Stare at Goats I saw on Friday). The film is handled like traditional anime, with crazy hair and characters, demons and ghosts, but tries to keep tethered to the real world. I don’t think the mixing of the two was effective and their goal of keeping the battles realistic and accurate essentially melded together to make a snooze fest. Most everyone that saw it with me said it made them sleepy. I personally fell asleep 4 times, which is pretty damn bad. Ultimately, if you love anime for the sake of anime, you can may enjoy the film, but it definitely wasn’t for me.
5 out of 10 Stars / 4 Sleepies
Gentleman Broncos – Take Wes Anderson and John Waters, mix them together in a blender and filter through uber strict Mormon ethics, and you’ve got the filmmaking style of Jared Hess. Gentleman Broncos is an absolute mess of a film. Never that funny, never that heartfelt, and never, ever believable. Napoleon Dynamite worked because Hess and the cast were able to do the rarest of things in filmmaking: creating genuine, original, quirky characters that you buy. Wes Anderson is the master of this. Royal Tennenbaums does it perfectly. Waters is on the other end of the spectrum – he makes movies so compellingly entertaining that you’re willing to go along for the ride and love each minute. Hess doesn’t do this. Gentleman Broncos has stupid, goofy, surfacely quirky characters with poor motivation in a world that is wholly boring and I consequential.
All this being said, Jermaine Clement’s Chevalier and Sam Rockwell’s Bronco/Brutus sequences are enjoyable, but not worth the price of admission. Wait till a friend buys it on bluray and catch it then. Or on cable. This movie is already so sanitized thatit could probably run on any network and the FCC wouldn’t bat an eyelash.
4 out of 10 stars / 0 Sleepies
Paranormal Activity – Not since the Blair Witch Project has a film been this scary and cringe-worthy. Not because of copius amounts of gore or crazy squirm-enducing torture porn, but for the same reasons Blair Witch worked: the fear of what you can’t see and the inability to get away from your location specific horrors. Handled with one cMera the entire time, in the style of someone goofing around with shooting footageof their own family, Paranormal Activity affords you the ability to truly put yourself in the shoes of the main characters and exist in the world. There are only three actors in the film: the female lead who has been followed by a spirit since the age of 8, and he live-in boyfriend who buys an HD camera to document the noises and odd things that happen to her.
And document it he does. The camera is handheld through most of the film, except in nighttime bedroom time lapse shots on sticks. This creates a perfect device to build dread, because everytime we cut to this shot, you know bad things are about to happen. This is a great film that deserves a full release and not to be remade (as is rumored) with bigger name stars. It works because of the situation and the unknown actors, like a Blair Witch before it, and audiences will respond equally positively. And no one will ever look at powder the same way again!
Got the news yesterday that the Sons of Gods logo has been chosen to be in the new Logo Lounge publication – Initials and Crests under the Animals and Mythology portion of the book.
Huge, massive thanks to the people at Logo Lounge for this honor. As hokey as it sounds, this is definitely one of those dreams come true!
We’ve done a test screening and have more on the way. The feedback has been pretty good so far, but the work still continues. Today Paul and I will be going out and shooting some various insert shots that we think need to be there to really sell the whole thing. Its funny how the shot of a coffeeshop can add so much clarity.
Apparently my email is bouncing back replies. I have no idea why. So if you’ve tried to email me and gotten an error – please email to qmanning@gmail.com. Ugh! Sorry for the trouble.
In the world of film and screenplay writing, there are literally hundreds of books and tutorials you can find to help you refine your craft. Every author has their own ways to help you get started.
Many times this doesn’t equate to simple suggestions, but to actual rules and structures to make sure you are hitting the appropriate beats at the appropriate times.
In an effort to get some of my older work up on the site to show the breadth of my design abilities, I’m not going to be writing anything on this first pass.
Instead, I’ll just post the images associated with that project. Once I’ve made a dent in this backlog, then I’ll go back and add in some text, explaining the project, what it was, etc. Occasionally I’ll write something if there may be confusion, but in general, the work will have to speak for itself for a little while.
I just finished directing my first feature film. The movie’s called Conflict of Interest and for a self-professed political junkie like myself, it was right up my alley.
The film was initially the brain-child of David Cuddy, owner of Ranch Studios in Kyle, Texas, a place where filmmakers can go, work, foster their ideas by utilizing the numerous set-houses by day and the hot-tubs (6ft deep) for relaxation at night. Elements that can help inspire some seriously creative ideas.
David brought me onto the project to help fill in some of the gaps and the organic process of creation spurned the Case of Katie Douglas.
What’s in a Name
Katie Douglas (Danielle Rene) was previously named Katie Combs, a name that caused me much chagrin due to it’s similarity to the name Katie Holmes. Within the course of the film, Katie witnesses a major crime and serves as the sole witness to the incident. The only one that took time to pay attention instead of just taking information at face value. But this brings her to the attention of some heavy people, in particular crooked Senator John Mordire (Michael Madsen).
Originally she was handled a little haphazardly. I nearly made the same mistake, but realized that an integral scene with her needed to be rethought. As often happens, the best things lie in the execution and not in the conception. Once the scene was shot, it was clear that its emotion resonance and significance were much stronger.
As a result, other planned scenes were modified to match the gravity of the reborn Katie Douglas scene, creating a strong seeming sub-plot which directly changes everything. One can sit down, plan out, think they know the ultimate outcome of a situation, but once the collaborative process of film starts to work its magic, greater things are born.
Only in filmmaking is it okay for artists to so heavily rely on each other in a primordial bath of ideas.
My situation’s been interesting for awhile. Interesting in that it was not necessarily the most conducive for updating this blog.
Sure, I could find time to talk about politics, since that’s a major passion and knocking out some long-winded diatribe about Obama, Republicans or Tax Breaks takes no more than 5 or 10 minutes. But when it comes to adding the work I do…that I’ve been bad about. That’ll change soon.
My situation’s changed, and though enough people know about it, I’m not one who likes to talk about things because I fear the dreaded JINX. For some reason, and this is probably one of the few things I’d say I’m superstitious about, I’ve always disliked talking about the prospect of good fortune.
Until that good fortune is in my hand, talking about it seems more like thumbing your nose in the face of God/The Universe/The Spaghetti Monster/Fate. Things have a way of falling through, even at the last minute, even when everything is seemingly set in stone. Counting your chickens before they’ve hatched, as it were, comes across as hubris. Or at least it has in my experience, and accordingly, the offender (me) is punished.
So once things get going, like officially, like there’s a check in my hand and I know it’s happening, then I’ll start blogging about the experience. In fact, there will be a lot of graphic design/motion design/art design that I’ll be doing which would and should be posted here.
On another, smaller note – I’ve added a “Follow Me!” on Twitter graphic to the page. I think he’s a cutie :p
Something I’ve been thinking about lately is this whole debate of Tax Cuts versus Paid Projects. Which are going to stimulate the economy more, which are better to get our country back on track, etc.
Republicans keep saying that if we give tax cuts to small businesses, then those small business will then have more money to hire new employees.
When you write that out – it reads really well. Makes some sense. But think about this – We are in one of the WORST economic times in our history. MANY businesses are barely on the cusp of surviving, much less making an actual profit. So put yourself in the shoes of a small business owner.
Over the last year, you’ve stopped making as much money. Not nearly as much profit has come in to re-invest into the company, pay suppliers, pay bills, etc. Labor is the NUMBER ONE expense for most employers, especially small businesses. So maybe you’ve laid off a few employees already, even though you didn’t want to. The government decides to give your business a nice tax-break. You’ve got extra money coming back into the company for the first time in 6 months to a year. What are you going to do with that money?
Are you going to turn around and IMMEDIATELY hire another employee? Another salary to pay. Another benefits package to pay. Another person to put on your workers compensation insurance?
Or are you going go to pay bills? Pay creditors? Pay your own salary? Keep it in the bank because things aren’t getting better yet and you realize that if things continue to go south, that extra money could keep the current slate of employees you have already on board paid and part of your labor force?
You’re going to do the latter. You’re going to do push the status quo, because in this instance, that’s not a bad thing. At least not for your company.
This is why I think tax cuts aren’t going to do diddily squat to help stimulate the economy. They aren’t going to create new jobs, they aren’t going to create a huge amount of spending into the economy, they aren’t going to move us forward. They’re going to hold the line. While I do think there’s something to be said for keeping things from getting worse, how long can that last if we don’t actually get new jobs going? New buying happening? People back to work at new jobs, so they can buy new things, which will be better for your company in the first place, because that allows real growth versus status quo thinking.
A spending bill IS what we need. We need to get all the infrastructure projects going we can. All of the public works projects we can. Nothing else is more important. We need to get people back into paying jobs, so they buy the goods all these small business manufacture or employ the services they offer. And, because we’re actually doing public works projects, we’re killing two birds with one stone – because we’re fixing things that need to be fixed as well.
We’re fixing our bridges. We’re fixing our roads. We’re getting municipalities online. We’re getting rural areas better powerlines or internet coverage, so they can stay tapped into the world and potentially open new jobs and resources for themselves in ways we haven’t thought of yet.
DO NOT BUY INTO the erroneous concept that tax cuts are going to solve this at all. I wish we could fix this situation without government spending more money, getting into more debt. No one likes spending – not Democrats, not Republicans – when we’re already in debt. But the government has the opportunity to try something and change something, get something going.
You may fundamentally disagree with me – that’s fine. You may think that it’s a bad idea to spend money in an economy that’s having trouble – that’s fine. But don’t try and tell me that giving tax cuts to ANYONE is going to get the economy going in the right direction. Unemployed people don’t get those tax breaks, so they stay unemployed and a drain on the system. Middle class people get some extra money, and they keep it to themselves, put it in the bank, in case they get laid off and can’t find another job, so they’ll have a safety net. Small business will do the same thing.
Tax cuts alone or in majority in comparison to spending will not turn anything around. I’m sorry.
I’m a Prince fan. But I’ll confess to not having all of his albums. Especially his earlier, pre-Purple Rain material. Some of it I’ve had, and not listened to thoroughly, some of it I have.
Yesterday, I filled in the gaps in my collection and I decided to start listening from the beginning. From “For You” on – in order.
Presently, I’m at 1999 – and that’s when I made a discovery: Prince didn’t become Prince until 1999.
Surely, he was Prince. Surely, there were moments of Prince-ness in Dirty Mind or Prince, but it wasn’t until Controversy did I begin to see the seeds of who Prince would become and, more or less, remain. Before 1999, we’re given a couple of glimpses into what we know as the Prince approach to music making – songs like “Do Me, Baby,” “So Blue,” “Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad” and “I Wanna Be Your Lover” in particular.
But the key factor in the fast majority of these songs is Prince’s singing voice.
“Ronnie, Talk to Russia” is the *first* Prince song that isn’t in the upper-octave, falsetto singing voice. It’s sort of amazing to hear this voice – that is *the* Prince voice we all know, suddenly appear.
He falls back into the Funk/Disco fusion with “Let’s Talk” but then we get the extremely awkward, extremely interesting “Annie Christian.” This isn’t a good song in particular. The lyrics are relatively puerile, the whole thing feels like a college cheer. There’s no subtlety or nuance to the message or the style, but suddenly, as a fan – you see that Prince isn’t happy with the music he’s been doing. He’s ready to move to the next level, he’s ready to change things, and he’s got some ideas.
“Jack U Off” is glorious in it’s own way. The first thing that I realized upon discovering this song, is how much “Can’t Stop This Feeling I Got” sounds like this tune. From the beat, to the singing voice, to the melody, here was Prince tapping into his future sound.
As such, it’s a great last track to go into 1999.
1999 is the arrival of Prince. The Prince we’d know for the rest of his musical history, up until at least this point. From the first notes of the title track – it’s already different than anything he’s done before.
The disco is gone. This is a new fusion – punk & new wave. And suddenly, we aren’t treated with Prince falsetto. We’ve got Lisa singing the first words, Dex following her, and then Prince himself. But not the Prince we’d heard for years – this is the Prince singing the way Prince needs to sing. The way Prince would sing to change the world and the face of music.
“Little Red Corvette” is the final nail in the coffin of the old Prince. Even though he’d go back to the falsetto voice on occasion, to great effect on ballads and softer songs, “Little Red Corvette” is slow, powerful, and emotionally driven. It’s a slow-churn, and Prince’s voice is haunting. He’s not trying to shock us any longer with discussion about his sister’s panties, or a blatant exclamation of jacking someone else off.
Now he’s using nuance. He’s using his voice, his music, and his poetry to transcend beyond standard faire overt-sexuality, and enter the realm of seduction. “I’ma try and tame your little red love machine” is far more potent and powerful than “A blowjob doesn’t mean blow.”
By the time the chorus has kicked in, Prince has arrived. “Little Red Corvette” is the first Prince song. The vocal stylings alone are defined. From his powerful singing voice, to his high falsetto and his low grumble, Prince moves all over the vocal scale and it feels right. This is the birth of the Man. The Artist.
I wish Prince would write a biography. I wish he’d tell us all what he’s gone through, how he was thinking about music at this time, how he made these transitions, what helped him change, what was going through his mind. All we can do is speculate, but man, it’s fun.
The rest of 1999 is eye-opening. Prince plays with musical styles. “Delirious” continues the slow, bass-heavy thump. “D.M.S.R.” is our first Prince-party JAM! Like “Housequake” or “NOW!” or “There will never be another like me.”
He continues to play with new sounds, new song-stylings that we’d hear throughout the rest of his career. “Something in the Water” is “My Computer.” 15 years early. And with “International Lover” Prince lets all of us know that he can still bring it like he used to, but that things have changed. You’ll have to open your mind from now on. He’s discovered his voice, and he’s going to do things you’ve never imagined.
But he can still give you that old-style disco/funk/falsetto ballad you fell in love with.
Maybe that seems obvious, but since the election has happened, I’m already getting a vibe from friends and acquaintances that if Obama doesn’t do the things he campaigned about, somehow, I should feel ashamed for it.
Continually I’ve stated one-thing over and over: If Obama turns out to not live up to his promises, I will be right beside everyone else to vote him out of office. That is the only pledge I can make to anyone.
I can’t promise you or guarantee you Barack Obama will live up to the promise he showed during the campaign. For my money, his actions since the election have shown his dedication to getting things done and working on tackling the problems facing this country, and most importantly, tackling them the way he said he would.
But if he turns out to be something none of us thought – you’ve gotta’ remember, I’m in that leaky boat as well. And even worse, I’m the one who will take it far harder than you. Afterall, I spent a lot of time and effort on this guy, and want to see him try to accomplish the things he’s campaigned on.
I’m a vehement Obama supporter, but no matter what I’ve said, sent, or done, I didn’t walk into your voting booth with you. I didn’t turn that dial or check that box. You did that, and you made your own decision. If it was the wrong one, then we’ll all deal with it in 4 years.
But Barack Obama is not a messiah. He’s not a demi-god. He’s a man, who’s going to make mistakes, be fallible, and stumble along the way. Be ready for it. I certainly am.
Since the election numbers came rolling in and everyone either rejoiced, cried, or shrugged at the results, there’s been a lot of chitter-chatter about why John McCain lost and Barack Obama won.
The Republicans ran on a platform of fear and hatred. Of things that are different from their ideals, of people who aren’t like the “rest of us,” and of changes that were to come. When it came down to it – the Republican party tried to divide the nation into ‘us and them.’ And Barack Obama told us all we could come together, unite and be one country.
That made all the difference in the world.
Fight a Rockstar…with a Rockstar!
Sarah Palin is very much the Conservative-Right’s version of Barack Obama.
She’s attractive, she’s young, she’s fresh, she’s got a way with words, and she seems to draw in tens of thousands of people to hang on her every sentence. If Barack Obama was a modern-day Messiah-wannabe, then Sarah Palin was the quintessential demagogue.
Palin is a rabble-rouser of the highest form. She should be commended for that, to some degree, because it’s not the easiest thing to do. Especially when you’re entering a stage far larger than anything you’ve encountered in Wasilla or any part of Alaska. She wasn’t just able to get people fired up and excited to hear her speak or to get out and vote, but she raised eyebrows through her at-times vitriolic rhetoric.
If Barack Obama is a Hope-Mongerer, then Sarah Palin is a Fear-Mongerer.
You may want to write me off because of that statement, it all depends on how willing you are to open your eyes and actually look back at the last few months. Yes, I am calling you close-minded if you try and write off my comments, because frankly, the Republican party has a lot of work to do, and it’s not going to get anything accomplished by listening to the Glen Becks, the Sean Hannitys, and the Rush Limbaughs of the world.
One of us! One of us!
My politics, to anyone whose read this blog, are pretty clear. I’m an Obama supporter. But here’s something you may not know:
I voted for Bob Dole over Bill Clinton. I voted for George W. Bush over Al Gore. I voted for George W. Bush over John Kerry.
Anyone that’s worked for me or worked with me knows that I’m an the espouser-supreme of hard-work gets you far. About making your own way for yourself. About beating down the odds, and doing what you can to get ahead. This is why I voted for Dole. This is why I voted for Bush. Because, like so many Republicans, I believed that the Republican party was the group to get across the message of individual responsibility being the saving grace of the world.
The Republican party, at least, that magical Republican party in all of our heads, is the party of individual freedoms. Of less governmental intrusion in the lives of its people. About spending appropriately when necessary, and cutting things that don’t work. This is how Bush got me, because though our memory of the man is peppered with the last 8 years of the actuality of his administration, we have to try and remember the campaigner. The “Uniter, not a Divider,” the guy who had plan after plan for what he was going to do, ways he was going to fix the problems of Washington, how he was going to be an outside guy shaking up the system and re-defining what it meant to have a government that wasn’t bloated or huge.
Bush had a surplus and the thought of a Republican with good ideas inheriting a surplus was a magical concept that swept many of us away.
The reality of the GWB Regime, however, is much different. After 9/11, everything changed. Bush used his political capital to start wars, bloat government, and whittle down civil liberties across the board. Things that are as un-American as un-American can get – torture, spying on civilians, imprisonment without cause or recourse – were the name of the game. And this was not the Republican party I knew.
Emotion outweighs logic
And all that’s well and good. All that’s a reason on the surface to vote in a different party, just to try and get things right again. But, even though they shouldn’t be, for many Americans who aren’t political junkies, who don’t read news page after news page, blog after blog, watch program after program, some of this stuff is too nuanced to base a decision on.
Emotion outweighs logic.
Think about your life, think about your decisions, and how many times you’ve gone with the gut-instinct rather than what your brain told you to do. Or how often you’ve done something you shouldn’t have done, because your emotions got in the way. Maybe it was helping someone who wronged you over and over, because you have that thread connecting you, or going back to a significant other even though it’s clear they aren’t the right person for you. There are a thousand scenarios here and you can fill in your own, but as a rule, for humans, emotion overrules logic.
So in this political campaign we had two emotions running rampant: Hope and Fear.
After the pick of Sarah Palin, the Republican campaign made a big switch. There was no longer any discussion about the issues. There was no longer any discussion about how this plan of John McCain’s was better than that plan of Obama’s, or how McCain and Palin as a team were better suited to fix a specific problem with a specific answer than the team of Obama and Biden.
Time after time, when out on the stump, John McCain and Sarah Palin pushed the politics of fear.
Fear of Obama because of his potential association with William Ayers. Fear of Obama because he was a socialist. Fear of Americans who didn’t have a job and would steal the money of hard-working Americans. Fear of people who had babies out of wedlock. Fear of homosexuals destroying marriage.
This fear created a divisiveness amongst Americans and turned people away from the Republican ticket.
Think about it like this: If you were gay, a single-parent, a muslim, a liberal, a couple that wasn’t married but had children, a foreigner or a host of other specific ‘groups’ in America, would you have voted for the party that continually did everything they could to say you were wrong? To breed fear against you? To say that you were the problem with this country?
Or were you going to vote for the guy who kept talking about all of us coming together? All of us working together. All of us doing what we could, to put the politics of hate and fear and separation aside so that we could confront the problems this country is facing.
You can’t get the majority of Americans to vote for you when you tell them they’re bad.
Two very different parts of a whole
Ronald Reagan took the religious and brought them into the fold of the Republican party. When he got the vast majority of Americans to support him, one of his biggest bases was the Religious “right,” who at one time was the Religious left.
When this happened, two parts of the Republican party slowly began to fight against each other, and as each became more vehement, the differences became more startling. All of this culminated in GWB. Bush II was very clear that he was a Christian, that he felt he was on a mandate from God, and that the Christian faith would lead America to the right place.
How can you be the party of less government when you want to morally mandate what happens in citizen’s bedrooms and what they do with their bodies?
The Christian Right is a dichotomy that doesn’t work with the tenets of the Republican party. Republicans wants the government to be smaller. To let the individual reign supreme, and the government be there to keep the very basic promises of the Constitution alive and well.
Yet, when you couple those ideals with the concept of refusing certain kinds of people from adopting children, you’re working against yourself. When you mix those ideals with refusing a certain sexual orientation the right to marry, you’re stripping them of their civil liberties. When you continually make aspersions that someone may be a “Muslim” and use that as an attack, you’re diluting the power our constitutional right of Freedom of Religion.
I understand that Christians have their beliefs and I’m not against that. I’m all for it, because that’s part of the beauty of America – you can believe what you want to believe. That’s freedom.
But trying to impose that Christian morality upon a populace that does not want it, does not feel they need it, and is opposed to it fundamentally strips away their rights as Americans and goes against not only their constitutionally laid-down freedoms, but also goes against the foundations of the Republican party.
So what’s a party to do?
Judging from my own family and friends, as well as many of the people I saw during interviews at rallies for John McCain and Sarah Palin, the Religious Right isn’t going anywhere. They feel they are the correct solution for America, and while their judgements and their vitriol may be directly against some of the teachings of Christ, they feel it is their duty to impose their Christian morality on the rest of America. For the sake of America.
But did you notice not a single bit of this really has to do with less taxes? Less government? Capitalism? Keeping your money?
Because they don’t go together. They don’t make sense.
The Democrats, through the simple inability for these two concepts to exist within the same party, have become the home for civil liberties and individual freedoms. Maybe it wasn’t meant to be that way, but that’s where America has gone.
So the Republican party needs to take a long-hard look at itself and see if it can survive.
Personally, I believe that the days of one group of people dictating their morality and their religious values upon the rest of a nation who may not agree are nearing to an end. This is how it should be, because Christian morality isn’t the same as Wiccan morality is not the same as Hindu, Islam, Zen-Buddhist or any other religious morality.
For the Republican party to continue this fight is a losing battle. There may be an occasional flare up again that would help that particular iteration of the party get another candidate into office. But as America changes and becomes more diverse, as it should, as it will, then one religious set of rules will be shrugged off. And that’s how it should be, because that’s how our founding fathers meant for it to be.
You can say they were Christians, and some of them were, but they weren’t ignorant or living in a bubble. They travelled the world. They knew of other religions and they knew of other ideas and when they sat down to pen the constitution they knew what they were doing when they wrote in the concept of Freedom of Religion. They knew that would mean Religions they don’t agree with or Religions they had never heard of would have to be respected, and that’s the way they wanted it.
So what does the Republican party do now? Either find a way to quiet and move past the Religious Right, which seems completely against the Religious Right’s own desires, or to just split the party.
Split the party? What?
Yes. I think that’s exactly what needs to happen. From the ashes of the Republican party, two parties need to be formed, because these two facets cannot continue to live together, and won’t be able to continue getting the majority of Americans to support them, especially as this country moves forward.
Republican ideals are sound. Similar to the Libertarian, but without the hard-lined separation of everything and the destruction of regulation, the Republican party’s true ideals realize that the individual is important, that the states are important, and that the government doesn’t have to be massive and huge and bloated and doesn’t have the right to get involved with the personal day to day personal decisions of its people.
Make government efficient. Cut taxes. Support individual freedoms. Cut the deficit.
These are the ways you’ll defeat a socialist movement in America – if you think that’s necessary. If you think that the programs being sponsored by the Obama administration are too far-reaching. I for one don’t, but that’s not the point of this.
And what happens to the Christian Conservative Right folks? I don’t know. They make their own party, their own party that outwardly espouses the desires they have – to stop gay marriage, to stop abortion, to get God back into the public schools, to get God back into the government, to outlaw divorce to protect marriage, to keep most substances illegal, etc. Because these are their desires, and these desires are vastly different from a party whose goals continue to be the freedom of the American people and the protection of its rights afforded by the constitution.
What about the Democrats?
Barack Obama, though labeled as a super-liberal and a socialist, couldn’t be anything further. His policies, at least the policies he’s continued to espouse and write about over the years, have been consistent and while they lean more toward socialism than the hard-core right, they are far from being socialist in their execution.
America already has a progressive tax-system. America already redistributes wealth, except now the majority of breaks go to corporations, business and wealthy Americans.
America needs to take care of its own, like it does with Social Security or Medicare. We need a few more programs like this, not to control our lives, but to help augment them if we think they’re necessary. Just like a person can save up and eschew Social Security money, likewise can someone choose to disregard any sort of National Healthcare Initiative. Or any public works programs. Or any of the other things you’re worried about Obama enacting.
But for some of us, we see a problem in this country – and Obama (and not the Democratic party itself) has solutions. Ways to rebuild the manufacturing base in this country, to help put people back to work and build our economy, as well as shifting the balance of our trade deficit with foreign nations back into our favor. Ways to get car manufacturers and energy companies to move into the future, and by doing so, by embracing greener technologies, creating even more jobs. And ways to immediately help this country stay strong and sound and competitive by public works projects that rebuild our crumbling highways, roads, bridges, by fixing problems with dams, powerlines, by getting municipalities online to help themselves and American citizens, and by helping to lay down broadband access lines throughout the country.
These things do cost money. And Obama’s going to have to go into the budget and cut programs that aren’t working. None of the things he proposes will work if he can’t cut costs in other ways. But Barack Obama’s a smart guy, and he’s been saying these things for years.
In his books. In his speeches. In his policies. He continues to have the same ideas and the same solutions to fix our problems in America. Maybe these aren’t what you want, maybe you don’t see the value of it and that’s fine. That’s the joy of America.
But, if you’re a Republican, you do yourself a disservice by not realizing the problems with your party. How the pieces aren’t working together anymore, and how the detriment is beginning to outweigh the benefit.
I would actually look forward to a truly Republican party again, because that’s a party I could very much give my vote to if the candidate was right. Afterall, I would have voted for Ron Paul over Hillary Clinton any day