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17 February 2010The Castration of American DemocracyOver the last two centuries, members of congress from across the political spectrum have forged compromises that elevated our civil debate, moved our country forward, and gave the world a model for democracy. Sure, at times we did not live up to our highest ideals, but never in my lifetime have I seen such a sustained effort to undermine the function of our government. Government doesn't possess all the answers, but to say that a government has no answers is to fundamentally misunderstand the definition of democracy. When Americans work and sacrifice together in the battle for a better future, we solve tremendous problems. CONSERVATIVE GRUMBLINGS Led at its core by the vociferous anti-government rantings of conservative politicians and pundits, Americans' distrust of Washington has hardened the fringe elements of both parties, obliterating comity. What remains in the crater of goodwill is a depression of courage. We, the American people--not the Republican people or the Democrat people--have systematically hacked off our head and limbs. No longer have we hands for the shaking or legs for the crossing of aisles. No longer have we a head filled with reasoned thought, engaged spirited debate. All that remains is a thrashing stump drenching the public discourse with venomous hate. CHANGE IS NIGH What will the U.S. Senate and House resemble after the 2010 mid-term elections? Vultures looking to amplify their stature in order to secure lucrative post-congressional lobbying positions are likely to vastly increase their numbers. These creatures are not interested in serving the greater good; the louder the voice the more lucrative the offers that come their way. Tea baggers and their allies have such a fundamental distrust of government institutions that they will proudly elect vultures incapable of compromise, and vote out the few members with proven bipartisan track records. The coming change is the final death blow to reality. Already hardened political lines will be pushed further to the fringes, offering more peril than reward for defying base ideology. The coming change is an even less productive congress, a more feckless administration, and a further weakened trust in public institutions. WHERE DID WE GO WRONG? I have worked for the last four years as an independent political strategist serving mostly Republican candidates. Although I am proudly a registered Democrat, I see value in productive and constructive opposition. I maintain a dim hope that sensible forces within the American right will survive the coming congressional massacre to help guide America through our time of national crisis. When I was 15 I was really excited about the '96 Dole-Kemp campaign--yes, I was excited about Bob Dole and Jack Kemp--my political philosophy guided by a sense that government entitlements desperately needed reform, and in some cases, elimination. Social Security needed massive changes, preferably with full privatization for young workers like myself. In 2000 I enthusiastically supported Sen. John McCain in his Republican presidential primary bid. He demonstrated that bipartisanship was a badge of honor, earned with decades of honorable service to our country. I worked for "McCain Youth 2000" in Long Island, New York, making signs, organizing rallies, handing out palm cards, and performing hundreds of other tasks. John McCain was the first presidential candidate to use the internet as a grassroots organizing tool, a fact for which he receives little credit. The forces of hate and political destruction now afoot are using tactics learned from this and subsequent campaigns to mount their attacks. McCain was indeed a maverick in 2000. He rightly voiced his opinion and fought for comprehensive reforms that helped remove special-interest money from political campaigns. Yet McCain now faces the toughest reelection battle in his political career simply because we was willing to make hard compromises and work with Democrats. That is the poison of the tea bag. POLITICAL GROWTH SPURT Even though I had been leaning in the direction for some time, in 2003 I officially changed my registration to Democrat from Republican because the Democratic Party best represents core American values of hard work, justice for all and courage in the face of tyranny. Seven years later, America is at a dangerous crossroads with peril lurking down every road. With the election of Barack Obama, I, like many Americans, believed that we were entering a period of broad cultural healing, and that he was the one leader who could successfully navigate the ship of state on its treacherous journey. I am not so naive to think that rainbows and unicorns were going to descend from the heavens and sprinkle fairy dust over Washington, replacing distrust and division with peace and cupcakes. However, what I did not expect was that the anti-government movement would be so successful in carrying their message of intolerance to facts and ignorance of history to the forefront of American debate. Civil discourse is as lost an art form as the hand-written letter. Sure, people still write with their hands, but eloquent words on stationery are replaced with incoherent messages on poster board. The ingenuity and tenacity of the tea party forces has deeply confounded educated progressives, producing victories for dubious agents of change. This clearly presents the fundamental flaws of progressive political strategy. The right responds most effectively to emotional messages which pull at their heartstrings. (This is why I enjoy working for Republican candidates.) The left, on the other hand, seeks to engage in a professorial debate of the facts. Throughout our history, Americans have never been concerned first and foremost with facts because facts ignore the notion of faith. The most direct route to winning the mind of a voter is through the heart. Barack Obama wasn't elected president because he presented logical reasons for his election--though he did. He was elected president because the idea of a black president with a soft, palatable, progressive message fundamentally appealed to the hearts of Americans who wanted to believe that racism and segregation were ghosts of the past. While Obama was by far the best choice in 2008, America needed to seat 535 more Barack Obamas in desks at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue to effect real change in Washington. Sadly, there is only one Barack Obama. MR. SMITH RUNS FROM WASHINGTON As radical elements dip their tea bags in the well of America's future, they sit on the face of moderate members of congress with the solitary goal of preventing progress. These fundamentalists chase away the few good men and women left in our government. As retiring Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana said in his surprise retirement announcement Monday, "I do not love congress." How could anyone love congress when every day is an election, and no real work can commence? Mr. Bayh is not the first politician, nor will he be the last, to run from the poisoned game of congressional politics. SIMPLE SOLUTIONS For years I have advocated change in how we elect our representatives in Washington and how they perform their duties. Unfortunately, the current system prevents real progress from occurring because no congressional majority would vote to change the rules of the game. Here are a few common sense solutions that would truly change the way Washington works:
GET GOVERNMENT OUT OF MY SOCIAL SECURITY Since 1995 I have paid into this broken system--and likely will continue to do so for another 60-70 years--to receive a sharply negative return on my investment. By contrast, the de facto 0% interest rate I receive for any overpayment in my income taxes (tax refund) is a far more sound investment than any contribution to Social Security. Why should anyone have such an outrageous return on investment forced on them for a program that will eat up the largest share of our GDP in the decades to come? As a long-time self-employed individual, I have paid a significantly higher percentage of my income to the federal government when compared to salaried individuals with similar compensation, but I don't have the benefit of social safety nets. There is no unemployment insurance for me to collect when business dries up; I can't afford health insurance premiums for myself or my employee-contractors; and my access to credit started shrinking in 2007 and early 2008 before the economy took a complete nose-dive. Like many other casualties of our broken system, I was forced to close my business and lay-off workers. Where was my bailout? These sentiments are a large part of what is fueling the harsh rhetoric of the tea party movement. My greatest concern with the tea baggers is not that they are thoughtfully voicing the concerns of people like me, but that they are supporting candidates who have no interest in actually improving the function of government. These candidates engage in public temper tantrums reminiscent of the ineffectual anti-Iraq war movement, rather than debate the specifics of an issue. This repulsion of civil discourse is not going to usher in an age of better government; it will only make rational citizens less inclined to tune in to their message. CHANGE WE CAN'T BELIEVE IN With no end in sight to the perverted dialog, these are among the many changes we shouldn't expect to see in the future:
Justin Schuck is an independent political media strategist, and served as a senior policy adviser to the 2006 Scott Rolle for Attorney General campaign in Maryland. He was the founding editor of PoliticsAside.net and the executive director of The Center for Independent Dialog in Washington D.C. JUSTIN A. SCHUCK - Since 1980 Subscribe to the RSS feed JustinSchuck.com / Blog / Facebook / Flickr / Twitter LinkedIn / Myspace / YouTube / Vimeo Guerrilla Photo Shoots / JustinSchuck.com/Haiti ![]() Labels: Barack Obama, Budget, Democratic Party, Editorial, Evan Bayh, Government, John McCain, politics, Republican Party, washington dc 20 December 2008VIDEO: Political Foundations (from McCain to Obama)
I'm really proud to announce the release of a little video from the election. I've been wanting to get this out here. Working with that org this spring/summer—the one that screwed me—I didn't have time for much else.
In 2000 I was the volunteer coordinator with McCain Youth 2000. It was a great experience and he ran an honorable campaign. But something was different this time around. Here's a little ditty I put together that *should have* aired before the election. (But then there was a death in the family just before the election, and then I got sidetracked with a work backlog.) So, to the tune of Kate Nash's "Foundations" here's "Political Foundations." I purchased the instrumental tracks without the voices, but I felt that unless you knew the song you wouldn't get the flow without context. If there are any female vocalists with a similar range out there, please call or email me! Please visit my page at: YouTube.com/JASchuck and leave a comment and a rating. Thank you so much. (If I had more time I could have done a more well-produced sample but my Final Cut Pro HD crapped out on me!) Labels: Advertising, America, Art, Barack Obama, Big News, Blog, business, Democrat, design, John McCain, JSDS, Justin Schuck, Obama-Biden, President-elect, Video 06 August 2008Now it's getting funnySee more funny videos at Funny or Die I never thought I would hear myself say these words: "Thank you Paris Hilton." Labels: 2008 Election, Barack Obama, Energy Policy, John McCain, Justin Schuck 29 July 2008Regardless, the polls still don't matter
As I said in my article [Regardless, the polls won't matter] I am not convinced that any amount of science can be applied to politics and polling, yet there are many profitable firms that deign to know the heart of America.
The latest two polls from Gallup/USA Today prove my point. They both say the exact same thing. Nothing. The Friday-Sunday poll of likely voters shows McCain up by 4 points at 49% to Obama's 45%. The same poll was conducted of registered voters still has McCain trailing by 3 points with the split at 47% to 44%. Again, this poll means and tells us nothing. No poll should even be thought to matter until one month after the Republican convention comes to a close in September. The American electorate needs time to digest the candidate's vice presidential running mates, finish watching the Olympics, and be really ready to focus on the November election. Americans still don't know what they want because they haven't seen what the final model looks like and the big shows are still a month away. Labels: 2008 Election, Barack Obama, John McCain, Polling 28 January 2008Regardless, the polls won't matter
I could draw my explanation out, but regardless of who wins the Democratic nomination fight, and I still predict Sen. Barack Obama, the polls between the Democratic nominee and the John McCain will be close. They'll be close right through to election day.
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say it's because Clinton is a woman, because Obama is black and because McCain is old. Call me crazy, but it's going to be a battle of the lesser-risks for most Americans, and no poll regardless of the science or the sample behind it will ever accurately show what the actual electorate is thinking. I get calls all the time, usually for free vacations or herbal supplements, but I think that polling is inherently flawed. Polling that takes place in a market research firm in front of a double-sided mirror isn't any more accurate, no matter how many cameras are recording the participants' reactions. There are two things in life that have no science, love and politics. Any attempt to apply scientific methods to either yields nothing but enlarged egos and broken hearts. Labels: 2008 Election, Barack Obama, Editorial, Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, John McCain, Politics Aside, Polling, Primary, Republican Party 12 August 2006On the Trail with Scott Rolle
In late July I was hired by the Committee to Elect Scott Rolle to document the campaign on its quest for the Attorney General's office in Maryland. It is little secret that I am a registered Democrat and an outspoken advocate of individual rights and freedoms, but I've often found my loyalties lie with no single party. Rather my loyalties lie in truly American principles of governing and honesty that no party can claim solely as their own.
I have worked on national and local campaigns for both parties, most notably Sen. John McCain's unsuccessful presidential bid in 2000. Even as a young boy I found excitement and joy in learning about and participating the political process. ![]() The image that you see above was captured after a luncheon in Hagerstown, MD with Lt. Gov. Michael Steele. I caught Scott literally in a moving car speeding on his way to the next community event. It's certainly one of my favorite images of the year, not so much because it's Scott Rolle (who is a handsome gentleman), but because this one image conveys so much more than it might let on. In looking at this image, I'm struck by his measured expression and strong posture. It conveys warmth, heart and vigor all in one. I've been lucky enough to capture the essence of a man before, and I've been lucky once again with Scott Rolle. Interestingly enough, the folks on the campaign loved this image so much that they used in on the banner of his website: ScottRolle.com. Check it out! I think it looks fantastic. And hopefully soon you'll see all of the other images I've taken for the campaign. I'm excited to be working with Scott Rolle and his staff. Of all the campaigns I have worked with over the years, this campaign seems to put forth a youthful optimism and sense of duty that I've never seen before. Of the leading candidates, Scott Rolle strikes me to be the least affected by partisan bickering. It is refreshing to know that he surrounds himself with trusted advisers whose base ideology may be different than his own. I've watched him take counsel from everyone -- from me down to the 16-year-old volunteers and everyday citizens on the street. I am glad to see real democracy in action with Scott Rolle. While I may have initially said that I wouldn't vote for a Republican for Attorney General, Scott has proven himself to be a Republican of a different stripe. His ears and his heart are open to everyone and I hope he wins come November. It would be a tremendous win for the State of Maryland and a warning for sexual predators and violent offenders. I guess you could say I'm a bit of a convert. But that's okay, I'm voting for integrity and justice, not by the tired party line. Stay tuned here for my perspective on Scott Rolle, the campaign and his journey to become the next Attorney General for the State of Maryland, now occupied by the retiring Attorney General Joseph Curran. Labels: Attorney General, Democrat, Doug Gansler, Frederick County, Hagerstown, John McCain, Justin Schuck, Maryland, Michael Steele, Montgomery County, photography, Republican, Robert Ehrlich, Scott Rolle Subscribe to Posts [Atom]
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