Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

My Visceral Response to Palin

By Aastha Verma
Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

I’m guessing I surprised many of you in the September 13th airing with my visceral response to Sarah Palin. Since it aired, I’ve been looking for an analogy to explain why I feel as strongly as I do. I finally found the answer while watching football last Monday night. It was a Texan style shootout between the Dallas Cowboys and the Philadelphia Eagles. It was exciting with lead changes back and forth and by the end of it, I didn’t care who won because I was worn out.

For 18 months, we’ve seen the Republicans and Democrats duke it out for the election cycle equivalent of 3 quarters…we’ve even had our own Clinton/Obama quarterback controversy. Now late in the 4th quarter, the game has gotten ugly. Each week there’s a new attack followed by media frenzy, 24/7 loops of speech snippets, and each week the polls see-saw.

Chances are you’ve grown tired or de-sensitized from overload. But if there’s anyone to blame, it would have to be ourselves. The American public has become obsessed with the sensational and the shallow. We’re so attracted by the “beat down” one candidate inflicts on another; we’ve lost sight of the big picture – things like healthcare and the environment and the globalization of the economy. Actually, we hear these words all the time but they are as formless and shapeless as our understanding of the candidates themselves. They have turned these large and complex problems and themselves into two-dimensional sound bites. If we took a poll, they way Jay Leno does, on ordinary topics of real relevance, most of us could probably not articulate two intelligent sentences on the ramifications of oil dependency, but we’d have a lot to say about Brittany’s comeback on the VMAs last week.

Let’s pause for a minute and look at why - Our world is in hyper sensual overdrive - overly consumerist, overly disengaged with the community, overly engaged in tabloid gossip, and consumed by distraction. We rarely enjoy a moment of peace and quiet. Our cell phones ring off the hook, our Blackberries keep us on a permanent leash and now any piece of information we desire is on our fingertips and probably already posted on YouTube.

What’s my point? It is as if we have “devolved” into a people who only respond to stimulation. We don’t afford ourselves the quiet time anymore to think. We simply react and what’s worse, we criticize others who don’t immediately react. Obama has been called “slow on the uptake” for his cool demeanor and “inability” to come back quick against McCain’s constant jabs. We’ve lauded McCain for being first out of the gate with a sound bite. Let’s ask the question – is that a presidential plus? Should the president of the United States be reactive or contemplative? Isn’t the reason we are where we are, because we’ve endured a president who was “gut” reactive? As Americans we ought to reflect long enough on why we are so dissatisfied with our status-quo in order to make intelligent decisions about what we want to change. That is difficult to do when we are so bombarded by disjoint and polarizing messages that render us useless to think on our own.

My visceral response to Sarah Palin by my own admission has little to do with her as a mother of 5, or as the governor of Alaska or her appetite for Moose burgers. It has everything to do, though, with John McCain’s calculation that the American public would be so “taken” by the charming lady from Wasilla, that we, and in particular women, would overlook everything else of consequence. Sadly, the polls suggest he may be right, but if we do, it says much more about our lack of desire to probe deeper than the surface of anything important in this nation - and that our attention span is about the length of a sound bite or a commercial. George Bush’s administration was counting on that and won. Now we have a choice to let it happen again, or to make an intelligent, informed decision. This time it is serious – not just for the 4 disasters we have endured under Bush, but because we could have a new president that does not survive office, a possible president who didn’t get a passport until last year, a president who many can’t separate from his race or his Arabic derived name, and a possible president who has a reputation for spouting off at any moment on any subject.

The new president will have real problems to solve, new global competitors who will challenge America’s dominant position, new crises like energy and healthcare and environment and perhaps, most uncomfortably for some, a new growing demographic divide that looks less like the Utopian Republican convention of early September and more like the panel of Democratic Presidential candidates. To that end, I certainly hope we won’t just vote for the guy who lands the strongest punch or trots out thin but attractive veneers.

Sarah Palin is interesting, no doubt, but a distraction. She may be a player some day, but right now, her resume is thin and we know it. If John McCain really wanted a woman in the White House, he had many career long Republican women in the government and industry to choose from for the position. Instead we’re watching a new “celebrity” and waiting for her to stumble and falter instead of asking how we are going to solve our problems. We’ve got 40 days left so let’s spend them “interviewing” the candidates, with the harshest of criteria, for the highest office in the land, let’s not lower the bar just to enjoy the moment and forget who won the game.

Aastha Verma

The “My Space” Generation

By  
Monday, May 12th, 2008

In Ian Shapira’s article in the Washington Post, he strongly states that Chelsea Clinton is not a representatives of her generation. Mostly because she isn’t putting all her dirty laundry out for the press to go through and for not being totally accessible for both the fans of a Clinton Presidency, and against. Is that all our generation represents to Mr Shapira? Are we just the MySpace generation who use the internet to find dates and to put up that picture of us partying with our friends? Are we just the generation of people dying to be on the latest reality show?

I think those who seem to have no privacy are the minority. I think most people in my generation (those of the age 25-30) are educated, socially minded citizens. We are the ones who set up bake sales to save the music program at our high school and did the community service before it was required before high school graduation. I think Chelsea perfectly represents this part of the generation who work hard for themselves so they can turn around and help their community.

I have always been impressed by Chelsea. I always empathized with her during the first Clinton Election (remember the one in 1992?). We were about the same age and going through the early 90’s with bad teeth and a bad haircut. But there she was by her parents side always smiling and behaving well in the lime light (remember Rudy Giuliani’s son in the 1994 inauguration?). I knew I wouldn’t want anyone to see my 8th grade graduation picture, where I had mall bangs and a big Laura Ashley dress, but there is Chelsea at the inaugural looking so proud of her father forever immortalized in press pictures.

She then disappeared for a long time suddenly coming back with a fabulous hair cut, no braces and announcing she was off to Stanford as her college of choice. Once again my peers looked at her as a role model. I am sure it doesn’t hurt in her college essay she could reference trips oversees as a representative of her father… the president.

By college graduation Chelsea had matured into a well spoken, educated, and tough as nails young woman. Since being born Chelsea has had to not only choose her words wisely, but choose when she would make a public appearance. Everything was read into when she appeared and which parent she stood next to.

My generation has grown up with spin. We know how to sense it and we know who to believe before they even start speaking. Chelsea has had to be both private citizen and public figure at the same time and now as she has chosen to speak for her mother on many college campuses that balance is being tested. Maybe she should have made that decision earlier on how open to be, but it seems she is happy with the decision she has made. Her words are criticized as spin. I can’t imagine how one should “spin” their accolades for their mother. She is a spokeswoman for her mother as HER DAUGHTER, not as another elected official. So why should Mr. Shapira give her bad marks for struggling still with this dual citizenship? How many other people under the age of 30 have had to be questioned by a stranger on the strength of their parents marriage publicly?

Whatever happens with the Democratic Party and the Presidential election in unknown. What I can tell is that Chelsea will learn a lot from this experience and will use it to propel her to the next level in her life and career. I will keep checking the news for what she is doing throughout her life to be not only motivated, but proud of one of my peers. Maybe it is time for another Clinton in the White House, one who has seen it from all sides. How about Chelsea in 2016?

Author: Sonya Gavankar

God Save the Earth

By  
Sunday, March 30th, 2008

English bishops Richard Chartres and James Jones joined with the Christian charity Tearfund to push cutting back on carbon emissions during Lent as the most effective way to protect communities already affected by climate changes. So far, the charity has received 300,000 requests for the list of suggested actions, which range from the creative (”Ask your city council for more recycling options”) to the spiritual (”Reflect on ways to love our neighbors”).

Many feel that we need to redefine the seven deadly sins to reflect the modern age today. Some of the things being suggested as ‘new deadly sins’ are : Genetic Modification, polluting environment, causing social injustice, being obscenely wealthy, causing poverty, taking drugs etc. Private faith already speaks to public duty, as Mohandas Gandhi suggested with his version of the seven deadly sins: “Wealth without work, pleasure without conscience, science without humanity, knowledge without character, politics without principle, commerce without morality and worship without sacrifice.” The responsibility rests with the individual, but that includes the duty to take care of others as well as your own soul.

Saving the environment is critical to the humanity, with grim predications being that the the icebergs in Artic Ocean, which were predicted to melt 50 years from now, may melt as early as 2013. 

Source: Newsweek


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