Sunday, September 14, 2008
The Hurricane Ike Election
In the year 1900, William McKinley and William Jennings Bryan fought for the presidency. McKinley, the Republican, beat Bryan in that election. At one campagin stop in West Virginia, Bryan was cussed out on the train platform by my great-grandfather. Bluntness runs in the family I guess.
But then, my great-grandfather had two brothers who fought in the Civil War, and being the only state formed because of that Civil War, it was reasonable to assume no Democrat was going to get a warm welcome in that state. The scars from the Civil War still ran deep forty years after the firing upon Ft. Sumter.
Also in 1900, the city of Galveston was destroyed by a hurricane. Not damaged, but destroyed, along with over 6,000 people. It was the worst loss of life in U.S. History. The scars and memories from that ran very deep.
But scars heal and sometimes fade a bit. People forget things, or memories of one generation fail to get passed on to another. Not to sound like a prig, but that is what history is for; it lets us travel the future with references from the past.
So I'm a little taken aback by those in Galveston who ignored dire warnings, and decided to "tough it out" while Hurricane Ike chewed up the Texas coast. Anyone who has lived through a hurricane knows that you don't "tough it out." You boogey, and then some.
Yet thousands didn't, and now await rescuers out risking their own lives needlessly. Despite all the technology available to warn people, these foolish souls decided to ignore what Galveston had gone through a century earlier.
I thought there is an anology here. It's why there is such a "buzz" about a former P.O.W. turned bald-faced liar and a neophyte neocon sycophant running for national office. The American electorate (or at least a sizable portion) are fascinated by the soap-opera aspect of this. It's fun, and let's just not get bogged down in details. Details like, oh, maybe at least four more years of policies (or non-policies) inflicted on those who adhere to Einstein's observation that insanity is doing the same thing over and over yet expecting different results.
2008 is the year Americans actually vote on a hurricane. Oddly, instead of wanting it to go away and let the damage control begin, there is this narcotic effect luring people to ask for a hurricane's return. It's insane, but let's try the same way just one more time.
Indeed.
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