OPINION

Jesse's Sensible Political Program

Written by Jesse Miksic
Published June 25, 2007
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LEVEL 2: Figure out what your principles are

Once you’ve fought down the urge to disapprove, critique, and complain, you can move on to a new phase of consciousness (yay theory cred). The first step was a pathway to becoming politically aware... this second step is a way to establish a political identity. To do this, you have to figure out what you believe, and you have to defend it in conversation and vote on it at the booth.

Granted, this is tough. It requires listening to both sides of each hot-button issue (information and perspectives are plentiful), and possibly doing some research on the less sensational issues. It requires that you take a moment of your Internet time... whether it’s in the evening, or during your lunch break, or at a friend’s house... and do some reading.  It also requires you to drop your preconceptions and stop taking your political impulses for granted. It may require you to ask yourself, "Do I think homosexuality is (im)moral just because my parents told me that when I was five?" It requires that you ask where your beliefs come from, and that you set some standards of legitimacy for yourself.

I hate to keep dividing by party, but there’s something to be said here about the left versus the right. The right wing has made a strong showing of unity at LEVEL 2... security, traditionalism, and economic liberalism have become their core principles, and the public has responded well to this cohesion. The left has struggled with this a bit in the last decade or so, losing track of their common ground in favor of a good deal of special-interest pandering and media sniping, both across the bipartisan divide and within their own territory. Arguably, the schizophrenic left has a stronger philosophical base for its commitments, but it’s hard to see that foundation when there doesn’t seem to be any consensus built on it.

But note: the left never lost its principles completely, and at the tail end of the Bush dynasty, we’re starting to find them again. Check out the candidate pages on MySpace: MySpace Democrats (scroll to the bottom for the individual candidates). Believe it or not, even on a forum as fluffy as MySpace, there are lists of issues on each candidate’s page, and they’re described in reasonable detail. These candidates are aware that to make their politics work, they have to make affirmative statements and productive commitments.

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Jesse's Sensible Political Program
Published: June 25, 2007
Type: Opinion
Section: Politics
Filed Under: Culture: Media, Politics: Elections and Candidates
Writer: Jesse Miksic
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Comments

#1 — June 25, 2007 @ 16:04PM — Lumpy [URL]

Or...you could just stop being a leftist tool and develop some common sense.

#2 — June 25, 2007 @ 17:14PM — Jesse [URL]

Woah. I wrote "Mythbusters" instead of "Adbusters." Wonder if I can fix that? Or keep anybody else from noticing?

#3 — June 26, 2007 @ 04:04AM — Ruvy in Jerusalem

Jesse,

Nice job in laying the groundwork for an intelligent discussion.

Your post is terribly Amero-centered - which keeps me from commenting too much, because much of what I would say is based on the reality about me in Israel rather than the one in which you attempt to survive.

But much of what you say could well be applied to the leftist press here. Unfortunately, since most of what they write is in the character of ignoramuses spouting their "wisdom" around a kiddush table while half drunk on schnapps and wine, it would leave pages and pages of blank space in the leftist vehicles here like Ha'aretz, Ma'ariv and Yediot AHronot, not to mention the Jerusalem Post and Jerusalem Report, Unfortunately this also includes the scads of right wingers who have nothing to say and think they know it all...

Your advice about "stop bitching" is sound but impractical in this country. The only way to get a politician to pay any attention to you here is to resort to violence (if he is pushing your cause, it means he already agrees with it and you are the useful idiot standing in the hot sun making his points for him - or he has paid you to stand in the hot sun to make his points for him).

This is why the "pride parade" in Jerusalem last year was reduced from a parade of orgy celebrators to a "rally" in the Giv'at Ram campus of the Hebrew U., and this year, it went on almost as scheduled. The angry Hareidi "men in black" were called off by their rebbes, who instructed them to stay away. The thing that impressed the national government (including the police commissioner) last year was the threat that hundreds of police would wind up in hospital in protests and riots. This year, the government and Open House, not facing this threat, felt free to give most of us the middle finger and shove this travesty down our throats.

Your advice about defining one's ideas is also very practical. If you look at my articles here, you will see that many of them are devoted to just that. You don't have to like what I stand for, but I've followed your ideas - even before you set them out.

#4 — June 26, 2007 @ 12:05PM — Treff

I agree with Ruvy that this analysis is America-centric. In Russia, my former home-away-from-home, the trouble was to get people to care in the first place.

Yet lets look at this from an American perspective. I think it poses a good framework from which to approach political issues. Keep in mind, there are different types of "bitching" each with different ends. There can be beneficial bitching, but that has many caveats which I will bring up a little later.

First, I would like to thank Lumpy for providing a perfect example of Jesse's first point. It serves no purpose other than to abase the frame of the debate. It offers nothing new, only allowing Lumpy to massage his various complexes under warm fuzzy anonymity.

The "bitching" that can be beneficial can only be the beginning of the paragraph. Saying "x sucks!" contributes nothing. Saying "x sucks because of these well reasoned arguments" provides a little more insight, but still doesn't live up to its potential. Saying "x sucks for these good reasons, and HERE'S what we should do about it" is the way to go. The very concept of a suggestion implies that there is something that isnt great or could be better. I imagine Jesse has that in mind in his steps 2 and 3.

But that is hard. It requires people to figure out what they really think is important and go out on a limb by suggesting something that might not work. Destroying is easy; building is hard. But if we are going to fix the state of political discourse (especially on the web, Mr. Lumpy), we need to start offering solutions as well as problems.

#5 — June 26, 2007 @ 12:25PM — Jesse [URL]

It's true, this is pretty America-centric. I'm currently concerned, more or less, with the media climate and the changes of "democratic discourse" that have been shaping my own experience of politics, here in Washington and NYC.

I guess there are both benefits and drawbacks to this approach. On one hand, I think it cuts through a lot of the bias and cynicism and sensationalism and partisanism you get from mass media and popular preconceptions. On the other hand, it leaves me a little ideologically isolated, as both Ruvy and Treff have pointed out.

I think you can see that in my thinking, too... these suggestions are framed by the ubiquity of mass media and the Intarweb.

Re: bitching... I think the main thrust of that point was to advocate for a more positive (shall I even say progressive?) climate in America. It's awesome to be enthusiastic about your political principles, but that doesn't necessitate partisan hatred. Of course, there has to be some clash over these fundamental differences, but I'm tired of our bad collective habits of discourse.

I'm sure you're right, Ruvy, that your posts are constructive, because this comment was obviously coming from a constructive place. Thanks for the contributions, Ruvy and Treff.

#6 — June 26, 2007 @ 19:28PM — Zedd

Jesse

Great article. Start a cult and I'll join :o)

I would substitute #2 for #1 and place them in that order.

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