Thursday, August 9, 2012

An Idea


“If we took away the minimum wage-if conceivably it was gone we could potentially virtually wipe out unemployment completely because we would be able to offer jobs at whatever level.” Congresswoman Michelle Bachman

 I am not a Rhodes Scholar; I went to a community college and then Penn State, it took me 9 years to get through college and I struggled with the economics courses but that makes no sense what so ever.

Does the Congresswoman think that companies would hire more people if they didn’t have to pay them the minimum wage?  They would keep the same staff just pay them less.

Has anyone considered slavery; unemployment in the slave holding states was pretty low in the first half of the 19 century.

#justsayin 

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Who are you going to believe? Sarah Palin or John Adams


Sarah Palin recently said this: “Go back to what our founders and our founding documents meant-they’re quite clear-that we would create law based on the God of the bible and the Ten Commandments”

John Adams wrote this; “The government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion.”

So, who are you going to believe?

Thomas Jefferson called John Adams the “colossus of the revolution”

John Adams so believed in justice that he served as the defense attorney for British soldiers involved in the wrong end of the Boston Tea Party.

John Adams served on the committee to write the Declaration of Independence.

John Adams along with Jefferson brought France to the American side during the American Revolution.

John Adams helped negotiate the peace treaty with Great Britain

John Adams was the first Vice President of the United States

John Adams was the second President of the United States

Sarah Palin served a half a term as Governor of Alaska; she resigned because being famous was much more lucrative than fulfilling her commitment to the people who elected her to high office

Sarah Palin had a reality show that so few people watched it was cancelled

Sarah Palin thought that the Queen actually ruled Great Britain

Sarah Palin was unable to name a newspaper she read

Sarah Palin promoted her daughter as a teenage celibacy advocate after she had a child out of wedlock and they both profited from a national tour that the great journalist Matt Lauer helped to promote

Sarah Palin’s husband is on a reality show that cheapens and mocks the brave men and women who serve in our military. (More on that later)

Sarah Palin’s husband once complained that it took her all morning to write a Facebook post.

John Adams vs. Sarah Palin – I’ll take my chances with a man who died on July 4, 1826.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Gore Vidal


When I saw a tweet late last night that Gore Vidal had died, I gasped.  Not because I was surprised; he had been sick for awhile and he never really seemed to have recovered from the death of Howard Austen, the man he shared his life with. 

His grandfather was the first man Oklahoma sent to the US Senate.  His father was West Point nobility, went on to found what would become Eastern, TWA and Northwest airlines and had a tempestuous affair with Amelia Earhart, was a two time Olympian and served in the Roosevelt administration.  His mother was a socialite who had a long term affair with Clark Gable.  His step father would then go onto to become the step father of Jackie Kennedy. 

He attended the most prestigious private schools in the country, Sidwell Friends, St. Albans, left to study in France, came home during the war went to the Los Alamos Ranch School and finally  Phillip Exeter.  When the rest of his class was heading to Harvard or Columbia he enlisted in the US Navy.  This smartest most clever of men, this literary icon never attended college.

He had his first novel Williwaw published in 1946 when he was 19. This novel based on his experience in the Navy burst him onto the national literary scene. 

His third novel The City and the Pillar was published in 1948.  This book would prove to change his life forever and many years later would have an enormous impact on mine.  It was one of the first novels to deal with homosexuality in a manner that was not sleazy, negative.  The gay and bisexual characters were not ashamed, were not sick, they were everyday men going about the course of their lives.  This story line so scandalized and offended the book critic of the New York Times that the paper would not review another work by Gore Vidal for 5 more years.

When I was a young man trying to figure things out I took The City and the Pillar out of the community college library for some downtime reading and I was transformed.  I learned that what I wanted, what I was feeling, what I was sensing about myself was not all that strange.  I learned that I was not dirty, or emotionally stunted or mentally ill.  I learned that I was normal.  I learned all of this from a work of fiction.  A few weeks later I read Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room, some pretty intense reading for a 19 year old.

After reading The City and the Pillar I was hooked.  His historical novels helped me to understand this nation’s history better but his more odd fiction gave me the most pleasure.
Myra Breckinridge; about a transsexual and so much more
Creation; his spin on the how the world started
Duluth; he makes up a city in the upper Midwest where people die and end up on TV
Live from Golgotha; Jesus is not really crucified and he is in fact a fat slob and Tom Brokaw and NBC news are transported back in time to cover this major event
Palimpsest; His memoirs that he could not guarantee were completely accurate but it was how he remembered things

His essays and social commentary were often scathing but never far from the truth, his TV debate with William F. Buckley is legendary; look it up you will be transformed.  His play The Best Man may be the best play about American politics ever writen and he was not above mocking himself through his many appearances on television comedies.

Gore Vidal was the last of the great literary figures that emerged as media superstars after World War II.  Norman Mailer, John Updike, Truman Capote, William F. Buckley and James Baldwin all died years before.

I’m not sure I read everything he has written but I came pretty damn close.

But, if I had not read anything other than The City and the Pillar I would still be mourning Gore Vidal.
I gasped when I learned of Gore Vidal’s death because for a brief moment I realized that another of the post war “Best and the Brightest” would no longer be here.  I would no longer be able to learn from him, I would no longer be able to be provoked by him and I would no longer be inspired by him.

Thank you Gore Vidal.  Thank you for making our lives much fuller our culture more interesting and for the positive and meaningful impact on my life.  You are sitting on the pedestal next to Reinhold Niebuhr.