Sunday, June 8, 2008

Howard Jarvis and Barack Obama.... together at last?


A belated Happy Birthday to one of the most significant pieces of legislation in California’s history. Proposition 13, which capped property tax rate increases and which saved countless families their homes turned 30 on Friday.

And knowing that Prop. 13 is a rallying cry for liberals who cite its enactment as ground zero for all the ills that we now currently face in this state is just icing on the cake.

The fear-mongering that attached itself to this ballot initiative included the possibility of scrapping summer school. And conincidentally, summer school was being pondered for the first time for a certain 5th grader whose idyllic 13 week golden summers had never been intruded upon by the mental gulag of summer school. This was our tipping point to becoming politically active. We canvassed our school mates out on the playgrounds of Golden Ave. Elementary educating them to the mutual parent-child benefits of this Proposition.

We will also note that Prop. 13 was, up until just very recently, one of three great grass-roots, populist rebellions of the past 30 years in this country and which also happened to originate out of conservative activism (not quite the acronym we all thought, eh?). Throw-in the sacking of California Governor Gray Davis and the great Rube Goldberg Amnesty Bill smackdown last summer as the other two crown jewels in the pantheon of angry white maledom. Heh.

As we alluded, though… up until very recently….? Possibly a fourth:


“But what I thought of when the friend sent the flash was something another friend told me months ago. It was the night Mr. Obama won Alabama. My friend was watching on TV, in his suburban den. His 10-year-old daughter walked in, looked, saw "Obama Wins" and "Alabama." She said, "Daddy, we saw a documentary on Martin Luther King Day in school." She said, "That's where they used the hoses." Suddenly my friend saw it new. That's the place they used the water hoses on the civil rights marchers crossing the bridge. And now look. The black man thanking Alabama for his victory.”

Political differences aside, it would be intellectually disingenuous to ignore what an amazing and monumental event in this nation’s history is the nomination of a black man to run for President of the United States some 40 years on a year that has come to symbolize both the height and nadir of the civil rights movement.

OK, but grassroots…? This may be a little bit of a stretch considering the press has been in the tank for Obama from Day One, but also from Day One there has been vast anecdotal and empirical evidence that Obama’s “ground game” was vastly superior to that of Clinton Inc.’s. To achieve that one needs a motivated and passionate backing of supporters at the deck-plate level.

Never mind that the passion and motivation was fueled by the “change” meme that is still vague as to the actual mechanics in which to achieve “change”, the man’s charisma, eloquence and effective placement of his campaign meme effected a groundswell of support among those who were not keen on the idea of 32 straight years of either a Bush or a Clinton working in the White House in some capacity. Beyond any specific criticisms Obama may have leveled at Bush, McCain or Hillary Clinton, this specter was at the core of “change”

Obama and his campaign beat a Corporation containing some of the most seasoned and effective campaign strategists of this generation. We’re sorry, this doesn’t happen just because the press adores you.

The rest of Peggy Noonan’s article from which the above quote was pulled is here. Noonan is laudatory of the Democrats’ selection of Obama whose Presidency (and McCain’s), she believes, may be a disaster but is wholly convinced that a Clinton Presidency most certainly would be a disaster.

Let us know if you think we've completely lost our bearings on this.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

We live in a world where the results of science are obvious and widespread. In the past few centuries western civilization has been revolutionized by breakthroughs in physics, chemistry, medicine, industrial engineering, and electronics to the point that day-to-day life would be virtually unrecognizable by even our great-grandparents.

So the 'Dawg has been beating the "throw out the playbook" drum. Barack has ridden a techno-wave, and fueled by agressive media 24 hour spin, and liberal white guilt.

Historic? Yes, but not only because a black man has the nomination. Historic in the arena of how he got there.

Don't think that planning and forethought, brilliance or understanding has anything to do with this empty suit acquiring the nomination.

The dude took the wave, and managed to hang on.

'Dawg

Anonymous said...

Hey, I like Prop. 13's benefit to property tax payers here in the Golden State as much as the next guy. But for every take, there should be a little bit of give. The practical effects of Prop. 13 are plain to see on both sides of the coin: Good for property owners; Awful for public schools.

What was once the flagship of public schooling in America has been decimated down to the point of being ranked near the bottom of all states as a result of Prop. 13. When I was in 4th grade at the time of the Prop. 13 debate, we were told how it was even written into the CA constitution that education was Priority 1 and that we had the class of the the school systems in America, and that America herself had the best schools in the world.

Flash forward to Graduation Day, 1986 -- 8 years or so after the prop passed. The phrase "Don't blame me, I'm a Prop. 13 student" had come into vogue for explaining lower test scores had crept in across the board and CA's standing had slipped significantly.

I'm not saying Prop. 13 was inherently bad. I'm just saying that there should have been a mechanism written into the measure by which the funding for public schools should have been replaced with another source. Lottery passage was supposed to have done something to that end, but it sure doesn't seem like it.

You can't take the fuel out of the engine and still expect the thing to run.

- Mongo's 10 Rules for Running A State School Budget