(Okay...Maybe this is a little "burp" after digesting all the news of the last couple of weeks. But I'm trying to synthesize what is happening, in my opinion, of course. Plus this was a response in an excellent thread by Tom Rinaldo, which you all should look at.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=433&topic_id=163063&mesg_id=163063 )
Frankly, I think DU reflects a basic problem that has infected all politics and the public discourse. We yap back and forth at each other whether Obama is a great guy or not, or how awful republicans are or whether we need to be "pragmatic and moderate" or "go left" blah,blah.
All of that crap misses the larger points -- which is the need to totally change our thinking from the set of economic and political and social assumptions that have become embedded since Reagan. It's no longer a matter of "right and left" or liberal and conservative or even republican and democrat.
What I believe we need at this point is to actually strip away the stupid labels that are used to divide the populace, and get back to looking at these things in terms of common sense and decent values.
I don't mean we cave in. Just the opposite. Rather it means getting back to an assumption that honest liberals and honest conservatives may disagree on strategies, but that we all need to reassert decent human values and realistic assumptions again.
I also don't mean we need some some kind of radical utopia socialist paradise. But we need to get back to moderate common sense and common decency. Unfortunately, that has been so overshadowed by the "magical thinking" of the 80's and 90's that it seems radical today.
In that sense I agree with Obama. My major disagreement with him is that he is too "centrist" (a code word for corporate conservative) which actually perpetuates the nasty personal side of politics. I think politics might actually become more workable if he took the same desire for bipartisanship -- but actually stood for a clear liberal alternative. I think that politics would actually get MORE civil of D's and R's were actually contesting over real policies. I read someone who made a really good point. When the real differences in ideology becomes too blurred, the personal aspect of partisan politics becomes nastier, and compromise becomes LESS possible.
Maybe that sounds too idealistic and politically naive. But I think that part of what is needed is to get back to a sense of shared basic values instead of this "my team versus your team" approach that politics has devolved into.
Believe it or not, honest moderate republicans actually may have more in common with a DU progressive than either would recognize or acknowledge....I don't mean they would necessarily agree on every issue -- But they might share a lot of similar basic values and ultimate goals.
I think of my father, who could be labeled a republican moderate conservative, but who was also very decent and open minded. He died in the mid-1980's, but he was appalled by the excesses of Reaganism and Jack Welch Corporatism because it offended his sense of decency and it was an insult to his intelligence. He actually said at the time that he basically agreed with everything Jesse Jackson said regarding social and economic justice.
What do I mean by Magical Thinking? In my opinion, the US bought into a set of assumptions that were based on conservative fantasy and the magical thinking of supply-side economics and Chicago School Right Wing Conservatism. Do you remember all the nonsense that was being promulgated back on the 1990's? "The end of history" and the notion that there would no longer be economic cycles because the economy would just continue to grow forever, and we would all benefit.
In that environment, there was a feeling that liberalism was dead because it was no longer relevant or necessary. After all, the economy would be generating wealth that would spread to everyone, and government was merely an impediment. Democrats helped to spread this pixie dust as much as republicans did.
Oooops. Turned out we were wrong. Homes that we thought were money machines suddenly lost their value. We kept shipping jobs overseas and then -- ooops, now we're biothching that there are no more jobs.
Those benevolent corporations and financiers that we allowed to do whether they wanted. Ooops. Turns out they were immoral and greedy and, in many cases, stupid and reckless. And they gained far too much control over the economy. And they almost singlehandedly wrecked the economy. Ooops.
This may sound muddled. It's hard to boil it all down, but I hope to see more discussions here and elsewhere that actually acknowledge that we all have to cast off the stale stereotypes on all sides.