But here are a just a few of the inappropriate observations which should be noted but which were not included in the New York Times's wrap-ups of the dreary takeaways.
I want to know if those were real tears in Obama's eyes, designed to augment the long-perfected catch in the voice for the projection of performative sincerity. Or, whether the shiny moisture was really a drop of glycerin expertly applied just before filming by a Hollywood special effects person. Color me suspicious.The desired message seemed to be that if the legendarily stoic former president - so annoyingly hyped as No Drama Obama throughout his tenure - is feeling this rattled and upset about Trump and the post office, then the rest of us should be having a complete nervous breakdown. If we're not crying and gnashing our teeth, then we are not patriotic. But don't demand guaranteed mental health care for all, though. Get out there and vote, ya lousy bunch of cynics!
How about the symbolism of that bug landing on billionaire Michael Bloomberg's smug mug - not once,but twice - during his own stentorian speech? It first alit below his stone-dry right eye before perching just above his curled sneer-hole. Like most of the dog-whistled reassurances to Wall Street and war profiteers sprinkled throughout the jingoistic Democratic festivities, this has a double meaning. It first proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the poor people-hating - but environmentally conscious - Stop and and Frisk mayor really is a two-faced phony. But here's the really scary part. The fact that the bug finally flew away on its own. without the stoic Bloomberg even having to flick it away with that perennially wagging finger of his, proved beyond all doubt that he is also the Lord of the Flies. This feat of Bloombergian strength was probably enough to bring real envious tears to the eyes of fellow finger-wagger Obama, who needed vast fleets of unmanned predator drones to achieve his own bug-splat.
Everybody who's anybody is weeping real crocodile tears of admiration for 13-year-old Brayden Harrington, who attested that fellow stutterer Joe Biden inspired him enough to talk publicly about his disability. Young Brayden, you might remember, was originally selected by the vice president's staff on the pre-Covid campaign trail to ask a question for an utterly spontaneous campaign photo-op.
The New York Time's Wajit Ali's gushing was typical of the reactions: "Brayden stood up last night, and he gave us the best reason to vote for Biden. Trump has no response to this, because it would require him to have empathy and kindness."
The co-optation of Brayden Harrington serves two purposes. First, the emphasis on Biden's own history of speech impairment deflects from the glaring evidence that his often disjointed remarks are also symptomatic of early-stage dementia. Secondly, it provides another point of contrast to Trump, who is either too stupid or too self-sabotaging to co-opt the trials and tribulations of individuals in order to enhance his own political fortunes.
So, my own main wrapped up takeaway from the four nights (two of which I deliberately missed, because mental health) is that Joe Biden is being sold as a warm, fuzzy security blanket covering an entire planet that is currently writhing in pain on a bed of Trumpian nails. We'll finally feel so safe huddling beneath his platitudes, his gaffes, his gropes, his empathy, his decency, his bereavements, his humanity, that we won't even realize that Blankie Biden is smothering us with all that warmth. If you lost a loved one prematurely or have untreated medical issues yourself because of lack of health insurance, you'll forget all about Uncle Joe's adamant opposition to Medicare For All. Because he'll always give you a pat on the head or get your phone number in an elevator while you suffocate to death under all that folksy, toxic warmth. At least you'll find comfort in the fact that, as you turn blue in the face, you'll have Voted Blue, No Matter Who.
The New York Times approvingly headlines Biden's vow that "I will draw on the best of us" as though it wasn't a threat to continue extracting the toil, sweat and blood of the poor on behalf of the rich.
If that prospect isn't macabre enough for you, then you can always bask in the horror of Donald Trump inappropriately transforming the East Room of the White House into a funeral parlor for his deceased younger brother Robert. I wonder if the eulogy will include fond memories of Donald teasing and torturing his sibling throughout their childhood and anecdotes of his habit of stealing and hiding young Bobby's prized toy cars in the attic, and how Old Man Trump used to punish and berate the younger boy for losing his stuff all the time.
Without Robert to kick around, Trump never would have gotten the head start in bullying and grifting he needed in order to get where he is today.
Maybe he can continue his eulogy into next week's GOP convention, and milk his brother's death at least half as much as Joe Biden grotesquely milks the loss of his son Beau at every opportunity.
Of possible interest (with regard to manipulatory technique, not the Democrats' political motivations):
ReplyDeleteThe Democrats pulled off a brilliant psychological maneuver at the convention.
The Democratic National Convention this year was strange, but also scientifically effective.
https://www.fastcompany.com/90542174/the-democrats-pulled-off-a-brilliant-psychological-maneuver-at-the-convention
Karen,
ReplyDeleteI know you don't need it, but you have my blessing to vote for Steve Greenfield this time around.
What was the left side of the Democratic Party expected to make of that parade of Republicans? They lost their own party to Trump, and now they are here to take ours. Them, their policies, their ideas. Not ours, theirs.
ReplyDeleteWhere were our ideas? They got about 90 seconds in the middle of the night, when they were used only to "nominate" Bernie for ritual slaughter in prime time.
They have one great idea: everything stays as it is. They differentiate not through their ideas but through their purported values. They use nicer words and comport themselves with a greater dignity.
DeleteWhat problems are they are trying to solve? Twofold. Maintain power. Maintain current socioeconomic structure. That's it.
Insofar as they seek change, it is style rather than sibastamce: the restoration of some mythic cordial past, the great Obama Years, when everyone was nice and happy to be in their places and we Respected Minortites, not like this bumbling fool Trump.
ReplyDeleteExceedingly well put, Stephen. If on November 3 the Democratic Gang inherits the disarray of the Trump Gang, here's the best we can hope for: the Dems striving to re-establish the status quo ante of the tidy Obama Years. Donald the Buffoon surrounded by his shameless pillagers will have been replaced by Hollow Joe the Marionette dangled by dignified criminals. Inept management will be replaced by able management dishing out the same old bad deal.
The choices once again will be:
-- Don't vote (it only encourages them)
-- Write in 'Mickey' (you're such a badass)
-- Vote Green (and join the other 1%)
-- Vote for the Lesser-of-Two-Evils (so strategic)
I think the write-in ticket should be Assange/Manning. They looked The Beast in the Eyes and didn't flinch.
ReplyDeleteMaybe someone could sell some posters, bumper stickers, mugs and tee shirts and give the profits to their respective defense funds.
How about a flag, with the bars vertical, hands wrapped around them and dollars signs for the stars. "Vote your conscience, don't sell your soul."
Assange/Manning 20/20
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/climate/trump-environment-rollbacks.html
ReplyDeletehttps://www.epi.org/publication/unprecedented-the-trump-nlrbs-attack-on-workers-rights/
https://www.vox.com/2020/8/18/21366388/osha-worker-safety-trump
https://www.prwatch.org/news/2017/01/13198/seema-verma-trump-pick-medicaid-and-medicare
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/08/10/social-security-payroll-tax-cut/
https://www.nrdc.org/onearth/shrinking-bears-ears-and-grand-staircase-escalante-trumps-monumental-mistake
Sounds like enough substance to me. I cannot imagine the larger recession looming under Trump. At least in the last recession, UI was extended to 99 weeks and aid was given to the cities and states. The entire stimulus was not in the form of tax cuts, but that is what the Republicans would want.
Maybe it is time to lose the Messianism. No presidential vote is going to dismantle empire and until we get rid of the electoral college (at the very least) and first past the post, winner take all presidential elections third parties are not going to be worth squat.
I'll be selling my soul, btw. That is some serious hero worship of Julian Assange.
ReplyDeleteAnd I don't know how you get any legislation of worth to stand up Once the entire federal judiciary has been stocked by McConnell/Trump.
ReplyDeleteKat,
ReplyDeleteMore like frying pan into the fire. He does represent a serious effort to stand up to the military industrial complex, that has a stranglehold on the political life of this country and the financial sector feeding off it.
Ask yourself a moment, if Wall St. could function, without the government siphoning up trillions in surplus money? Where would it go otherwise? Derivatives? Apple stock? Ferraris? The secret sauce of capitalism is that public debt backs private wealth, but that is effectively ignored.
You will find it only really matters to the oligarchs, whether Trump or Biden win, as to which ones get preference.
I bought the Hope and Change bs once and Hope and History is leftovers put in the microwave a little too long.
As for the electoral college, it does give the rural states some advantage over the more urban ones, but we are in the position of the Soviet Union, late 80's. The question our kids will be facing isn't which side of whatever Middle East conflict we are pouring money, but whether the US remains one nation, or several. I suspect the Electoral college will be done away with, at some stage, but it will be one more factor pulling the states apart. Kansas=Kazakhstan.
ReplyDeleteI don't buy the premise that he represents a serious effort to stand up to the military industrial complex. That is quite an extraordinary statement. I don't believe it is in the power of any one person to kneecap the MIC even if they wanted to. You clearly believe in the idea of a heroic man saving us all.
ReplyDelete"Secondly, it provides another point of contrast to Trump, who is either too stupid or too self-sabotaging to co-opt the trials and tribulations of individuals in order to enhance his own political fortunes."
ReplyDeleteIs this a joke?
Mp siree, he has never done that.