Blue State Musings From A Red State Woman - Page 2

There's a political elitism at work when someone says that liberals should somehow infiltrate red areas, and, like so many religious missionaries, convert the heathens. I learned long ago that this is the wrong tactic to take, that instead, one must realize that our states, our towns, our very streets are not segregated ideologically. While attending a Catholic university, I organized a group of students to participate in the pro-choice March for Women's Lives. My 13-year period of vegetarianism began not in the comfort of a college town known for its vegetarian restaurants but while living in a small burg near a military base in the Midwest, where the best I could hope for, culinarily speaking, were bean burritos at Taco Bell. I was inspired by my best friend at the time, a girl who grew up there and had developed a fierce animal rights mindset more or less on her own.

This year, my one local candidate pick who didn't win, Marcia McCraw, is a Republican. But not so fast: She favors gay marriage, is pro-choice, and wanted to promote renewable energy. I'm not the only one who voted for her; our dependably lefty weekly for teens and twentysomethings, the Stranger, endorsed her, and not just to cast a protest vote against our incumbent lieutenant governor, who makes a sort of mockery out of an easy public office, his knighthood notwithstanding. Furthermore, he was one of few Democrats to receive endorsement by the Building Industry Association of Washington, which viciously attacked Democratic Gov. Christine Gregoire.

Lest you chalk up my one Republican vote in this year's election to serendipity, here's more evidence that those red states have colored my world purple: a certain right-wing popularity among readers. Furthermore, I'm not a fan of Seattle's sanctimonious liberal coterie. There's the grant-writer who blames TV for the Iraq War. There are the people who give me trouble for owning an "SUV," even after I point out that my Honda CRV is a mini-ute that gets better gas mileage than their hand-me-down grandma sedans. (Contrary to popular belief among Seattleites, a Kucinich bumper sticker does not translate into higher MPGs.) On the extreme end of this trend are the ecoterrorists who torched the University of Washington's Center for Urban Horticulture.

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Article Author: Lisa Albers

Lisa Albers' writing has appeared in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Seattle Woman, Poets & Writers, scores of literary magazines, and elsewhere. One of her Blogcritics book reviews was picked up for syndication by the Boston Globe last year. She is deputy editor for Crosscut.

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  • 1 - Glenn Contrarian

    Dec 01, 2008 at 7:49 pm

    Lisa -

    Greetings from Kitsap County across the water!

    You're not the only Dem who voted for Marcia McCraw. I did too (and convinced my wife and mother-in-law to do so)...and I was an alternate state delegate for Hillary (to show my liberal street cred, as it were).

    In my experience, a liberal is substantially more likely to vote for a Republican than conservatives are to vote for Democrats - and this is evinced by the tendency of Republican administrations to be more dogmatic in their nominations than Democrats. That, and I'm sure you're well aware of the conservative tendency to see things as us-vs-them, and how well the cons tend to stick together even when all the evidence and provable facts are against them.

    Whereas we liberals, as you well know by our shared voting choice, are much more likely to try to 'get along' with each other, to work with others, to reach a consensus agreeable to all. Don't you think?

  • 2 - Glenn Contrarian

    Dec 01, 2008 at 7:57 pm

    Oh yeah -

    IMO to call The Stranger a "dependably lefty weekly"...is sorta like calling Ichiro a 'pretty good baseball player'.... The Stranger is so far left that to them, Ellen DeGeneres is a political twin to Charlton Heston...

    ...yeah, I like the magazine, too....

  • 3 - Baronius

    Dec 01, 2008 at 8:52 pm

    Such a great city.

    You're right about its preening liberalism. There are more leftward places, but I don't think I've ever been anywhere that was so vocal about it. Of course, if Seattle thought that monarchy was hip, they'd build a throne.

  • 4 - Lisa Albers

    Dec 01, 2008 at 11:14 pm

    Glenn Contrarian:

    Yes, I'm inclined to agree with you, at least anecdotally, though I have no hard data to suggest that Republicans aren't as likely to switch teams, as it were, as Democrats are. Funny comment about the Stranger. I find them somewhat libertarian-minded on some subjects, such as the porn industry, so I'm not sure that fits the far-left Seattle nanny state mold.

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