Showing posts with label You'd Think We Could Do Better Than This. Show all posts
Showing posts with label You'd Think We Could Do Better Than This. Show all posts

Monday, October 11, 2021

In My Defense ...


Last Friday I presented the October Right-Cheek Ass Clown award to the Republican Party, an award I felt was particularly righteous at this moment in our conflicted history. The post got a few comments, as most of them do, but one of them was particularly interesting.

In the original post, I included this disclaimer: "my first vote for president was cast in 1972 for Richard Nixon, and I cast mostly party-line votes for Republicans until, in disgust at what the party had become, I voted for Democratic challenger John Kerry over George W. Bush in the 2004 election. I have voted exclusively for Democratic presidential candidates ever since, although in the past I occasionally voted for a Republican at the state or local level when I felt he or she was the better pick ... but it's been a long time since I was able to do that in good conscience."

In response, an anonymous reader left this lengthy comment:

"I am a member of the same age cohort a [sic] you ...

"So tricky dick, the crooks excuse ford, addled ronnie raygun, perjurer poppa and finally the twits first run did not offened [sic] your sanity but finally the largest fiasco in US history. the Iraq war, finally, finally did turn your stomach?

"You certainally [sic] must have had a strong stomach and rare natural talent for increditable [sic] tolerance for gognitive dissonce [sic] to take that long.

"Question did you bring your thuglican delusions over might making right, pissing down economics and other inane thuglican dogme [sic] with you?

"Was it that you wished to pull the D's further into the miasma of thuglican economic fantasy's [sic] while being such a po;itical [sic] coward that you surrndered [sic] what had ben [sic] your party to the lunatics rather then engage them in the name of reason and sanity? 

"Of course after you had helped create and pave the path for thuglican behavior of today you washed your hands and decamped.

"A bit like ex mafiosa's [sic] making public exhibit of supporting churches to buy their way into respectable society.

"Sorry no sympathy for those who helped lay the cornerstone of today's seditious amoral thuglicans."*

Well, I guess I know where this particular reader stands ... and I have to admit that he** makes some points worth answering. If nothing else, it got me to thinking about how we develop our political beliefs and how they change over time.

Looking back, I think I started out as a Republican because my parents were both Republicans, and I absorbed their belief systems as most of us probably do. I suppose I remained a Republican largely because of three things: political inertia, personal comfort, and concern over the social and political unrest of the 1960s and 1970s, which I found offensive. In retrospect, that unrest was offensive mainly because none of its causes directly affected me - a young man with the good fortune to be born into a stable, white, solidly middle-class family. 

But like many people, my social and political views changed over time. Someone*** once said that a man under 30 who is not a liberal has no heart, while a man over 30 who is not a conservative has no brains. My experience, though, has been the opposite. 

My college years exposed me for the first time to people with experiences and ideas very different from my own, and my career in the Air Force allowed my to work day-to-day with those people. It also gave me the opportunity to travel widely, get to know people of other countries and societies, and see how the rest of the world lives. All of this led me, however slowly, to question my original political beliefs and social outlooks and develop into the person I am today.

One of the reasons we're in our current mess is that too many of us have not been able to grow, learn, and change our opinions and beliefs. Too many of us are comfortable with the way we grew up and formed our ideas. The idea that other people have led lives less safe, comfortable, and rewarding than our own doesn't matter because it doesn't affect us.

Except that it does.

We can see that clearly now if we simply look clearly at the world around us. Economic inequality, religious intolerance, and racial prejudice are terrible problems, even when they don't directly affect us. I never lived a life in which I worried about a police officer's knee on my neck, or whether I'd have to choose among paying rent, buying food, or affording medical care. But many of our fellow citizens did ... and still do.

Should I have backed away from the GOP sooner? In retrospect, yes. But, like it probably does for all of us, the recognition of a need to change came slowly and took a lot of self-reflection and experience of the world outside my own personal sphere.

The Republican Party drove me away, but it took time. While I today vote almost entirely Democratic, I have problems with that party on some issues as well. But whatever my issues with the Democrats, I find them far preferable to a GOP that every day becomes more xenophobic, racist, economically illiterate, scientifically ignorant, religiously repulsive, and politically antidemocratic.

I've changed. I wish more people could.

Have a good day. More thoughts coming.

Bilbo

* The writer actually left this comment on the following day's Cartoon Saturday post, so if you want to read it in situ, go there.

** I'm assuming the writer is a man because I've never met a woman who wrote like this.

*** It's been credited, in various forms, to Winston Churchill, John Adams, and Georges Clemenceau, among others.

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

"Calculated Misery"


In the wake of the moral, economic, and public relations disaster that resulted from the beating and forcible removal of a paying customer from a United Airlines flight last week, there's been a lot of discussion of exactly why such a monstrous thing could happen. Many reasons have been put forward, ranging from the morality of capitalism to devaluation of individual rights and dignity in a me-first culture. Another interesting explanation comes in this article by Alex Abad-Santos, writing in Vox - “Calculated Misery”: How Airlines Profit from Your Miserable Flying Experience.

The bottom line is this: because we are always seeking to pay the lowest price for the goods and services we buy,

"... (the) airlines ... use “calculated misery” to make their baseline products and services so low-quality and unpleasant that lots of people will be willing to pay more to avoid them."

Think of all the things about flying that used to be included in the cost of your ticket: your luggage, the seat of your choice (when it was available), snacks (on short flights) or meals (on longer ones), and enough leg room that your knees didn't prevent you from wearing a headset. Now, of course, you may pay a relatively low price for your ticket, but you are nickel-and-dimed to death for all the things that used to be included. The article points out that although the calculated misery model is used to some degree in other businesses (you pay extra for bacon and cheese on your basic hamburger, for instance), the airlines have taken it to new heights* (when you go into a restaurant, you don't pay extra for all the members of your family to sit together at the same table).

If, to get the lowest possible fare, you are willing to be miserable for the length of a flight, jammed into a middle seat with no legroom and hoping you can board early enough to put your too-large "carry-on" bag into an overhead bin before they're all full, that's fine. But the airlines are working hard to make sure that the level of misery you are willing to accept will be exceeded by a margin large enough that you'll swallow all the extra fees for the things that used to be included.

The calculated misery model may be the wave of the future as businesses intent on maximizing profits try to attract customers who have less and less disposable income ... or even jobs. And the ability and willingness to pay for improved levels of service will be a new marker of class distinction in society.

And who knows how far it will go? As far back as 1997, the satirical online newspaper The Onion ran this story: U.S. Offers PlatinumPlus Preferred Citizenship:

"By becoming a PlatinumPlus citizen, you join an exclusive club of elite Americans ... And as part of that club, you'll be eligible for many special benefits, including tax breaks, excusal from jury duty, and vacations at special PlatinumPlus Caribbean resorts, which are off-limits to ordinary, EconoBudget citizenry. It's our way of saying thank you to our best customers ... And, of course, there are never any annual fees ... PlatinumPlus citizens—selected according to a number of demographic factors, including age, race and socio-economic status—will enjoy a wide variety of other benefits, including immunity from speeding tickets; separate, no-wait lines at over 50,000 post-office locations nationwide; and wider, more comfortable window seating ... After just one year in the club, members can also begin earning extra votes for elections. 'Wouldn't you like to earn up to five bonus votes for the next presidential election?' said U.S. Rep. Roger Wicker (R-MS), a co-sponsor of the measure. 'With your new PlatinumPlus citizenship, you can.' According to Wicker, those at the highest level of the new program, or "Diamond Club" citizens, will enjoy additional rewards, including a pass good for acquittal from one crime (misdemeanor or felony), a no-interest credit line of up to $500,000 and, for able-bodied male PlatinumPlus members between ages 18 and 35, excusal from the draft should a foreign war arise."

I can see the Trump administration jumping on this like a hobo on a hot ham sandwich.

So ... are you okay with calculated misery as a way of keeping prices down? Are you okay with the PlatinumPlus Preferred Citizenship that - in many ways - is available to the top 1% today? If so, I'm happy for you.

But, whiner that I am, I'd be happier if we could just go back to the quaint concept of equality of opportunity as the basis for getting that aisle seat. Or a tax break.

Have a good day. More thoughts tomorrow.

Bilbo

* Sorry.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Dear Santa ...


Well, what could it hurt ... ?


Who knows? Some Christmas wishes come true!

Have a good day. Come back tomorrow to help me celebrate Christmas Eve. More thoughts then.

Bilbo