Wednesday, September 7, 2022

Saving democracy without succumbing to panic -- controlling those e-mail pleas that it's all up to me

The most important election of our time is coming -- again.

At stake is -- everything, just like in 2020, and the midterms of 2018, and so on back in the timeline of our 365-day-a-year election cycles.

The iPad has become an anxiety device.
And there is a lot at stake in the results of Nov. 8's general elections. They will determine whether the Democrats hold or lose their de facto majority in the U.S. Senate, or even gain a seat to go up 51-49. And that means the difference between Federal Court and any Supreme Court openings in the next two years being filled by Biden nominees, or blocked by boss Koch and his sock-puppet Senate Republican leader.

The outcome of these midterms also will show whether Republican jitteriness over the end of Roe v. Wade proves justified or just a bump in the road on their strategy of igniting their far right base by taking extremist positions.

So, yes, we should all be involved and stay informed -- even if that means lying awake a few nights until November.

But do I, a resident of Louisville, Ky., need to be made to feel personally responsible for who wins in Wisconsin, a state I've only been to one time?

"BREAKING POLL -- Barnes is up on Johnson in Wisc!" an email headline imposed on me as I was quietly scrolling the other night. I didn't know who either Barnes or Johnson were, but five minutes later, I certainly did.

Democrat Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes had expanded his lead to 7 points on Republican U.S. Senate incumbent Ron Johnson, according to a Marquette University Law School poll.

Other equally impassioned emails tell me Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock is statistically tied with Republican Herschel Walker, the former football star who has written that he has Dissociative Identity Disorder. Walker was described in a 2001 police report as "volatile" and having "violent tendencies," and he has fathered three out-of-wedlock children, along with one with his then-wife, who told police Walker once held a gun to her head and threatened to pull the trigger. The candidate has not denied that allegation.

Unqualified, unstable and dishonest -- the perfect
GOP credentials of Herschel Walker

Walker is being treated for his mental illness by a theologically but not medically trained counselor who believes in demonic possession and touts methods debunked as pseudo-therapy.

The patient insists his DID is under control, but he has recently falsely claimed he had been a member of Georgia law enforcement, and said he graduated from the college he actually left after his junior year.

It gets worse: Walker, a critic of black men who are absentee fathers, also at first said he had just one out of wedlock child, but later was found to have three. When asked about this, he insisted he somehow had not failed to disclose their existence.

And this person is tied with Senator Raphael Warnock, a recognized scholar, theologian, and family man who has stood in the shoes of Martin Luther King Jr. by serving as pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church.

MSNBC explains exactly who has McConnell fretting over "candidate quality."

Back to the nightly e-mails, Georgia democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, who is one of my favorite Americans today, isn't behind right wing incumbent Brian Kemp. No, no, let us say she is within the polling margin of striking distance and solidifying her hold on key voter groups, which is something like the kind of chin-up e-mail headlines I see on her race.

I love what Abrams is doing for voter access and fervently hope she wins, but when I see all these emails at once, it's like the internet is holding me personally responsible for Georgia's outcome as well as Wisconsin's -- oh, and Pennsylvania's, where populist liberal John Fetterman has an 8-point lead over TV doctor/huckster Mehmet Oz in a race to replace retiring Republican Pat Toomey. Still, lots of negativity by pro-Oz groups are ripping at Fetterman on many fronts, so I'll have to check nightly to see how that lead holds up.

As the U.S. leans Blue,
the GOP leader feels blue.
I want to be kept up on these races, but I'd rather not be kept up by them as I learn via nightly scrolling that the future of the U.S. will be either progressive or fascist, depending on the whim of people I will never know in states 500 miles away.

So I'm going to give another round of support to my candidates (note: as a federal employee, I need to make clear I am not urging anyone to give money) and shift those nightly grabber alarmist e-mails into the - as misnamed as this term is - junk bin.

I still love the progressives Raphael, Stacey, and John, but I'll enjoy a proper amount of sleep not having to drop off to fears that our democracy depends on precisely how many voters in places three states away from my home fall for a football star who can't seem to keep it straight how many children he has.

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Brian Arbenz lives in Louisville, Ky. USA, just a few blocks from - would you believe it, Mitch McConnell's house.

10 comments:

  1. So easy to feel personally responsible for a collective thing but I think you're doing the right thing. Decide the bus you want to get on and only worry if it's clearly not going in the direction you want AND the other bus IS going on that direction. It's hard to be a knowledgeable voter in the face of bad choices (not that your choices are really bad at all)

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  2. Thank you for the comment, Cass. Your perspective is always valuable on my political posts. And let me pass on my condolences on the death of Queen Elizabeth II, which happened about two hours ago. I have learned from conversing online with several of my Canadian friends that she and the monarchy mean much to your country.

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  3. I know this feeling.... constantly barraged with emails from all the various campaigns on a daily basis. I think I get something like 100-150 emails related to the upcoming election each week, not to mention all the organizations involved.

    I'd have to be a millionaire to donate enough money to meet all their requests for funding etc. rather than someone who is medically retired and on a fixed income.

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  4. Thanks for your comment, my dear anonymous reader. It's ironic that those who most depend on public sector social services have among the smallest amounts to give to candidates who make the public policies that shape those services.
    Perhaps we should measure the size of our contributions from what percentage of our means they are. A dollar from me equals a hundred from a CEO. Of course, that smacks of democracy, which is affront to the oligarchs.

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  5. Well said and spot on, with one quibble. I’m rooting for 52 Dem Senate seats on Nov. 9th so the likes of Manchin and Sinema can no longer play the role of President with their single vote.

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  6. Totally agree, Roy. Let's push it across that threshold to send a message to obstructionists like those two. No more putting your careers and your big funders over the well being of the nation!

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    1. UPDATE: Roy may, to a great extent, get his wish. If Raphael Warnock can equal his performance between now Dec. 6 (five days from now), we'll have 51 out of the hands of the pro-fascist thugs! Go Warnock!

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    2. And, as of last night, it happened. (I'm adding this for the sake of future anthropologists who uncover this blog).

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  7. There is only one campaign I followed that I really invested both attention and donations, and that was Senator Bernie Sanders' run for president. I was quite disappointed when he bowed out, just as I was disappointed when Lieberwitz bowed out in favor of Bill Clinton. Rarely do I actually pick the winner, but I was glad my pick became the current president. I Spent 2019 and 2020 biting my nails as my patience was severely tried.

    I AM grateful that Cory Boiler won his election. Pete Buttigiege didn't win his but was appointed to head of Department of Transportation. Nice plum.

    Yes, I like to be informed, too, but rarely can I stand to loom at the emails they send.

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    1. Thanks for your observations, Ginny. I am gradually learning to not let the barrage of panic headlined e-mails get to me. They always over emote to bring more money faster.

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