Ruminations, May 3, 2009:
Ruminations, May 3, 2009
Politics
and poker
In
the opening act of the 1959 Musical Fiorello!, Republican Party leaders
lament their prospects in the song “Politics and Poker”:
Gentlemen,
here we are, and one thing is clear:
We gotta pick a candidate for Congress
this year.
Gentlemen,
how about some names we can use?
Some qualified Republican who's willing to
lose.
With
the defection of Arlen Specter to the Democrats, the prospects for present-day
Republicans look as bleak as they did to the stage Republicans in the musical.
According to the latest Washington
Post-ABC News poll, 21 percent of voters consider themselves to be Republicans.
That’s down from 29 percent a year ago. In
Things
do look bleak for Republicans and many are predicting that they will get worse.
But, informed prognosticators don’t always get it right. The late historian
Theodore Paulin told me that after the
Republicans
can, however, take heart from another statistic: even fewer people identified
themselves as Republicans in 1983: 19 percent. The next year, Ronald Reagan
carried 49 states, Republicans maintained control of the Senate and they gained
16 seats in the House of Representatives. Of course, as the political cronies of
Fiorello!
remind
us in “Politics and Poker”:
Bless
the nominee, and give him our regards
And watch while he learns that in poker
and politics
Brother, you've gotta have … the cards!
Chavez’s
book of the month club
Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez presented President Barack Obama with a book at the
Some
people think that Obama should not have accepted the book. Practically speaking,
under the circumstances Obama had no other choices except for throwing a temper
tantrum and storming out – not very presidential.
Chavez’s
presentation was loaded with symbolism. He knows that Obama does not read
Spanish and yet Chavez made a point of giving him a book written in Spanish. The
message was that the predominant language
of the
What
is the reality represented by the book,
Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a
Continent?
Eduardo Galeano, the author, is
definitely anti-American, anti-capitalist and firmly believes that Latin
Americans are losers while North Americans are winners. You don’t have to read
far into the book to get Galeano’s perspective. The second sentence reads: “Our
part of the world, known today as
Galeano’s
winner-loser take is interesting. In
More
a student of polemics than of economics, Galeano equates capitalism with slavery
– another reason to be against capitalism, if you accept his premise. Without a
foundation in economics, Galeano cannot see that slavery is antithetical to
capitalism; without labor being free to sell their services or to begin new
enterprises, capitalism falters.
He
attributes the “Great Depression of 1929” solely to the
Galeano
quotes Che Guevara (a doctor by training and a revolutionary by experience) on
economics: “The nation that buys, commands. The nation that sells, serves.” This
simplistic aphorism ignores the supply demand price curve but is consistent with
the notion that capitalism and the
Is
the book worth reading? It depends on why you read it. If you read it for a
historical construct of
Mea
culpa
My
mother told me that when you do something wrong, admit it, apologize for it and
go on. She never told me to do what politicians seem to be
doing.
More
and more, American politicians seem to be traveling the world and apologizing.
Have you noticed, though, they never apologize for what they have done; they apologize for what
someone else has done.
When
you admit no culpability for anything but point to what others have done as
wrong and apologize for them, isn’t this a form of self-aggrandizement? Of
making yourself look good in comparison with others whose acts require
apologies?
Mom
never told me to apologize for others and never told me to engage in
self-aggrandizement. Of course, Mom was not a politician.
Quote
without comment
Comedian
Rita Rudner: “Thanks to the baby boomers, 30 million women are now going through
menopause; that’s a billion hot flashes a day. Do you think that could be the
cause of global warming?”
Robert
J. Kulak



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