(standing ovation)

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:                               well, that's the 
balancing act of being a leader of any kind: weighing what you think is right 
versus what those you serve think.  Always keep only your own counsel, and 
you're an autocrat, harmful to the people. Do whatever is popular, and you're a 
weakling, not helping the people to see what's best for them in times when they 
don't know it themselves. 
 
 Maybe I'm a cynic, maybe I distrust authority. But I always think of those 
times in history when the majority (or the most vocal and influential minority) 
of the population wanted something that wasn't right or moral, or simply 
efficacious in the long run: when whites wanted slavery, then later, Jim Crow. 
When men didn't want women to vote. When Germans actively wanted--or passively 
agreed with--the subjugation of the Jews. When white South Africans wanted 
their colored countrymen to remain as second class citizens. A century from 
now, perhaps some will look back on a society that taxed gays but refused to 
let them serve in the military equally, or enjoy the same domestic rights as 
the rest of us, and say "If only there had been a leader who'd done what was 
right instead of what was popular".  After 9-11, this country wanted 
blood--anyone's blood. I always liken America's mood then to that of a crazed 
dog that snaps at and attacks whomever happens to be near. Bush and his
 gang poin
 ted us in that direction, then said "This is what they want". And all of our 
leaders--almost every dang one of them with a few notable exceptions--went 
along with that fevered fervor, afraid to buck the will of the people. Well, 
that's why I have a leader: to see things more clearly in times when perhaps I 
can't, to make decisions based on more information and considered thought than 
I have.  
 
 If I'm going to have someone lead me, it's because he or she has the capacity 
sometimes to make me better, to see the bigger picture in ways I can't always 
do. That requires someone with certain convictions and basic principles that 
will guide him or her, that won't change with the times or the whim of the 
public.  A leader should be a rudder for a ship in a storm (lots of metaphors I 
know!) that can guide us in the right direction. Yes, sometimes sticking to a 
set of beliefs stubbornly can be wrong. Bush is proof of that in the way he's 
singlemindedly pursued a disastrous foreign policy.  But you know, at least I 
know where Bush stands, and that's a good thing because i can then decide that 
he's not right for the job and get him out. I know who and what he is, and I've 
decided he's not right for me. There's a certain honesty and courage in his 
stance, that allows me to see him for what he is and then--fire him. And that's 
the point: a leader leads by trying to get us to
 go in cert
 ain ways, based on what we want and what he or she thinks is best for us. If 
those two views differ greatly, then perhaps that leader will be sent packing. 
Look at how McCain is hated for ultra-conservatives because he wants a more 
reasoned approach to illegal immigration, and the Bush tax cuts.  But despite 
what it's costing him, he still holds to those views. yet at the same time, 
he's trying to modify them somewhat to go along with the people. A balancing 
act.
 
 But with someone like Romney, who keeps changing to meet the mood of the day, 
how can we ever know whether he's ultimately good or bad for us? How will I 
know that in that one moment when I am wrong, and I need him to be right, he 
won't do the popular thing instead of the right thing?
 
 A
 -------------- Original message -------------- 
 From: "maidmarian_thepoet" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
 I may be stepping into it...but what exactly is wrong with a public
 official supporting the wishes of his constituents? I wish that my
 officials here really supported my beliefs instead of catering to the
 religious right. Of course, you can say that they are supporting
 them---but that's my point. Wasn't he being a true representative of
 Mass. voters at that time? Now he is claiming that he could be a true
 representative of conservative voters. Isn't that his job?
 
 I am still recalling listening to a "This American Life" episode in
 which a guy who was pro-choice supported Bush because he didn't
 flip-flop on issues. He admitted that he didn't like any of Bush's
 stances on issuses, but he voted for him because he didn't flip-flop. 
 Why on earth should I vote for someone who won't vote my way? He's my
 representative, not a representative of his own convictions. If he can
 change my mind because he believes me wrong, that's one thing. But he
 shouldn't be voting his convictions whilly-nilly.
 
 Ok, I will get off my soapbox now. :-)
 
 --- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 >
 > Like i said, an opportunistic flip-flopper. He was pro-choice, pro
 immigration (in terms of working something out instead of sounding like
 a Klansman), not averse to taxes as needed (which he calls "fees", but
 same difference). I heard a speech he gave just a few years back where
 he explicitly said he didn't want to try and recreate the Reagan days.
 Now he's a rabid ultr-conservative nut who evokes Reagan more than some
 of us call on God!
 >
 
 [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
 
 [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
 
 
     
                               


"There is no reason Good can't triumph over Evil, if only angels will get 
organized along the lines of the Mafia." -Kurt Vonnegut, "A Man Without A 
Country"
       
---------------------------------
Never miss a thing.   Make Yahoo your homepage.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to