I won't have much to say about it or about the GOP convention. Most people who still bother to read this blog know my point of view,
and given my low regard for the media and the Democratic Party and its
way of doing things, its pageantry just doesn't interest me. I can't imagine anything happening during either convention that isn't predictable or in any way important or interesting.
And does anybody really care what I think about Michelle's speech last night or Hillary's tonight? Why should you? I'm not interested in the perceptions game. I'll leave that to the Chris Matthews of the world. The whole business makes me ill-tempered and unpleasant to be around. I owe it to my family to keep my distance.
Nevertheless, my son, who will be a first-time voter this November, in his spirited idealistic way is very much into this election and the whole process, and I am trying hard not to dampen his enthusiasm for Obama. It's important for his soul's sake that he not become a cynic too soon. So he keeps me tied in to a certain extent. If he alerts me to anything unusual or interesting, I might pay a little more attention, and wind up writing about it here.
I want Obama to win, and I wish him well, but if he wins I'll be paying more attention after January to see if he'll be able to use his talents to move the momentum of state in a healthier direction. I'm not without hope that he can get something done, but my expectations are low.
It's impossible for me to take McCain seriously, although I'm quite aware he might find a way to win. If a majority of Americans are dunderheaded enough to give him the presidency, then it will force me to reconsider whether Democracy in a country like ours is really possible. For surely we are living among a people who are unwittingly voting their democracy into annihilation. It's happened elsewhere; it can happen here.
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UPDATE: Hillary's speech: Thank God we don't have to listen to this tedious, platitudinous, robo-pol for another four or eight years. It is just painful to have to sit an listen to her.If Obama has achieved nothing else, it's saving us all from more of that. Dear Lord, is it really over now?
P.S. Olbermann, according to my son, called Hillary's speech a home run. Hardly. At best it was a sacrifice bunt. You'd think an old sports guy like him would know the difference.
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