You are currently browsing the No Puffin Perspective™ weblog archives for the day February 18, 2008.
- About Me (4)
- Arts (5)
- Banking (9)
- Big Thoughts (33)
- Birthday (2)
- Books (1)
- Business (43)
- Cars (13)
- Charity (1)
- Community (6)
- Contact Me (1)
- Death (4)
- Dick's Desserts (4)
- Dick's Dumps (14)
- Extras! (6)
- Funny (1)
- Geekery (3)
- Global Warming (6)
- Government Motors (15)
- Grumpery (10)
- Guest Posts (9)
- Heating Issues (4)
- History (7)
- Holidays (3)
- Licensing (2)
- Lists (1)
- Lusty Links (1)
- Marketing (9)
- Media (21)
- National Debt (3)
- News (3)
- Newspaper "Science" (13)
- ObamaCare (23)
- PC (39)
- Photography (2)
- Politics & News (134)
- Quickies (33)
- Random Access (188)
- Recycling (1)
- Science (not-so-real) (6)
- Science (real) (9)
- Seasonal (9)
- Sex (2)
- Society (76)
- Sociology (16)
- Stupidity (8)
- Taxed Again (1)
- Teaching (4)
- Tech Toys (2)
- Throw Da Bums Out (44)
- Unbelievable (3)
- Welcome (1)
- What? Are They Nuts? (13)
- Wordless (4)
- Writing (6)
- July 28, 2010: Wordless Wednesday
- July 26, 2010: Short. Not Sweet.
- July 21, 2010: Wordless Wednesday
- July 19, 2010: Buttons
- July 19, 2010: Gulf. Seawater. Explodes.
- July 14, 2010: Wordless Wednesday
- July 13, 2010: Pravda
- July 12, 2010: Paranoia
- July 12, 2010: I.R.V.
- July 11, 2010: Guest Post: George says This May Not Be Bloggable
alpha
Arts
Blogroll
Business
Photography
Tech Stuff
Ze Rest
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
Archive for February 18, 2008
Big Thoughts, Part I
February 18, 2008 by Dick.
I had a (lower case) epiphany.
This is neither the user friendly GNOME web browser nor the Christian feast. It is not a revelatory manifestation of a divine being. It is, however, a sudden intuitive realization that gave me a little flash of political reality.
I’ve been reading Maslow today because I’ve been thinking Big Thoughts. The readings reminded me that our political candidates always, always, always promise to provide health and well-being to every living American; to secure our borders and stamp out crime; to bring the Financial markets back under control when they are not or boost them even more when they are; and to improve the safety net we expect from our gummint against illness and accidents and the impact of hurricanes. The promissory order depends on their polls.
We are affluent and relatively safe. Most of our physiological and safety needs are met. So why would a political candidate promise us this stuff?
- It is safe to promise what we mostly have
- They figure to motivate us to choose them because they can scare us into thinking we aren’t fed and housed and safe.
- They aren’t smart enough to promise what we really want.
What do we really want? Really?
I already have a chicken in my pot. In fact I have more than one. The army got it right; I want to “be the best that I can be.”
John F. Kennedy didn’t electrify two generations of Americans because he delivered universal health care. After all, he promised the Moon but didn’t actually accomplish much here on Earth. He electrified two generations of Americans because he showed us Camelot.
Can John McCain deliver that passion? Can Barack Obama?
If that wasn’t clear enough, my friend Bob reminds me that the election year question I asked is this: what do we voters really want? What new goal will captivate two generations or three? Have we settled for smaller and fancier widgets and lost our passion for inventioneering on a grand scale?
We make grand choices when we have great passion.
And vice versa.
Posted in Politics & News, Big Thoughts, Dick's Desserts, Random Access | 3 Comments »


