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The Deciders


Contrary to President Bush's assurance, he is not the Decider. We the People are the Deciders. Mr. Bush is a temporary employee to whom we have granted provisional authority to govern on our behalf. We the People make such Decisions infrequently but regularly--every four years. And now it is again time for us to Decide.

Sometimes the Decision may seem inconsequential, a choice between equals, but the consequences of our Decisions inevitably prove that the differences were starker than we imagined. The authority that we grant to these individuals is of such magnitude that even the small choices that they make--the words they choose, the people they hire, the favors they grant, the priorities that they pursue--have great consequences. However much Mr. Bush seemed like Mr. Gore eight years ago, he has led the nation down a very different path than Mr. Gore would have done. The difference cannot be measured by any single policy or historical event. It consists in the accumulation of policies, priorities, appointments, speeches, favors, initiatives, and other actions that Mr. Bush has executed under the authority that we have twice granted him.

The Decision is always a gamble. We can never know how a person will exercise the authority we grant to him or her. The best candidate may be the worst president. Like poker players, we can only make educated choices based on the hands we've been dealt. A low pair will sometimes win; four aces will sometimes lose. But we can play the odds, and we can maximize our chances. What we must not do, if we value the welfare our nation, is to Decide for the wrong reasons. We are not choosing a policy, a friend, a hero, a judge, or an entertainer. We are choosing to hire someone who will make innumerable decisions on our behalf, someone who will affect the lives of billions of people in our country and around the world.

We can perhaps forgive ourselves for the poor choice that we made in 2000. True, we underestimated the consequences of that Decision, but we had little way of knowing that the man we selected would lead us into a disastrous war, cripple the effectiveness of our government, and enact policies that would so drastically undermine our interests and welfare. But we have no excuse for 2004. Knowing full well what Mr. Bush had wrought in his first four years, we extended his authority for another four. We chose him because we liked him more than Mr. Kerry, because he said the words that we wanted to hear, because we allowed him to exploit our fears. We have paid dearly for that Decision and will continue to pay for years to come.

This year, we must do better. We cannot know for certain whether Mr. Obama will be a more capable leader than Mr. McCain, but we have many reasons to believe so. Over the course of his career and in this campaign, Mr. Obama has demonstrated solid temperament, sound judgment, a deep and nuanced intelligence, strong leadership, and broad appeal. He aims to right the errors produced by Mr. Bush's incompetence: the imprudent war that killed millions, cost trillions, and produced little; the tax cuts for the richest among us that have exploded our deficit and amplified the economic inequalities that divide us; the politicization of our government; and the secrecy meant to hide choices we abhor.

In contrast to Mr. Obama, Mr. McCain has been erratic, often confused, prone to anger, and out of touch. The policies that he has favored committed us to the terrible war, bankrupt our government, and undermined the "fundamentals" of our economy. The people that he has hired, most notably Ms. Palin, have exhibited notable incompetence. He has belied a reputation for integrity and substance with a campaign that has exploited our worst instincts and sought to distract us from matters of importance.

It is time to Decide. We can be guided by our fears and prejudices and bet the weak hand. Or we can place our bet on the man who has given us so many reasons to believe that he will work effectively on our behalf to improve our lives and make our nation greater. We the People are responsible for our future. We are the Deciders.

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For those in the New York area, I will be hosting an election party at the Village Lantern, 167 Bleecker at Sullivan St. In D.C., TPM member IIOOII will be watching the results at Bar 1331 on Pennsylvania Ave.. For those of you who are watching from home, tune in to dagblog.com to see Articleman live blog the results with his usual wit and insight.


31 Comments

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I have decided this post of yours is more than worthy of a title.

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Better late than never. I didn't know it was possible to post sans title.

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I wasn't 100% sure you hadn't done it intentionally. Kind of gave it a cool, "yeah, that's right, Bitch... I don't even NEED titles" feel to it.

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Good idea for another post, but I think it makes it hard to click.

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Yes, this one is too good to risk under-exposure. Which is why I deemed it necessary to bring the lack-o-title to your attention (in case it was unintentional). Anyhoo, enough space wasted. Back to the topic at hand: Great post! Thanks.

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Seems that you and I are the only ones who think so. Oh well.

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If I was forced to choose between your humorous posts or your deep ones, I would choose your deep ones... okay, maybe not. But at least I thought about it! ;D

In all seriousness, it is a real loss this one seems destined to die.

I have chosen not to "follow" you because 1) you are so prolific, you'd bury everyone else I follow and 2) there is no need - your posts always make the recommended list, so I can always find them. It disturbs me that I might have missed this one, and forces me to reexamine my decision.

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You're reasoning is sound, and I take no offense at not being followed. But my output will likely trail off for a time after the election, at least at TPM, as I'd like to take a little hiatus from political posts.

This post may yet squeak in, but whatever. There's plenty of good stuff on the board already, and there's little original content in this piece. I just needed to express a summation of my feelings on the election. It's not like there are many undecided readers in these parts in any case.

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Your reasoning

I hate it when I do that. I see the error as the comment is submitting and I can hear myself shouting NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO in my head in slo-mo, but then it's too late, and my grammatical idiocy has been saved for eternity or until the internet explodes, whichever comes first.

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Fear not, dude. I'm gonna Rec you as long as you got that pic of yours. Beheaded? On a yellow playground toy?

You're the dada KING, man. Big respect.

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I'll be exhibiting at the MoMa in January. The show is called AVATAR.

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Or "how to get your head up your ass steps 1-4" (steps 5-7 censored by the taste police)

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If we get rid of Bush, are we unDecidereds?

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Bush? You mean he's still there?

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Genghis: I always enjoy your snark, but your serious posts are better, imho. Thank you for this one, which resonates.
How I wish I could join your party at the Village Lantern; unfortunately, the round-trip train time makes that impossible with the Wednesday schedule I have. But please, a toast to Obama on my behalf, as well as a well-deserved one to you.

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Thank you, I appreciate it. Sorry that you can't make it tomorrow. I accept your toast and respond in kind.

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I agree - your serious ones are better. Perhaps that's because I lack any sense of humor to speak of.

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You should get one. They can be handy. I have several.

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Take the humor test

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True, we underestimated the consequences of that Decision, but we had little way of knowing that the man we selected would lead us into a disastrous war, cripple the effectiveness of our government, and enact policies that would so drastically undermine our interests and welfare.

It is not my wish to sound prescient, but I knew he would take us into war. Of course, at the time, I was not living in America. From the other side of the planet, it was apparent to those who wanted to see, his intentions. What I did not see is the towers coming down and that happened after I came back.

Perhaps the last 8 years taught us something about Deciding and it's responsibilities? Then again, perhaps not.

On ot -- I was rude to you yesterday. Please believe that it was unintentional. I was punning and playing but it obviously came out wrong. Apologies.

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That was prescient. I confess to not having the slightest clue and was completely taken aback when they started talking about Iraq after 9/11.

As for the rudeness, I'm sure that I would have been extremely offended, perhaps even deeply wounded, had I been aware of it. Since I was unaware, I will credit you with a one apology which you may apply at a future date (expiration: one year).

PS When are you going to come talk to us at dag?

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The Deciders in VA, I hope, will pay no heed to the advert McCain is airing right now. The night before the election and McCain is airing ads tying Obama to Wright with snippets of Wright's sermons and images of Obama with Wright, smiling. In the last hour I've seen MSNBC run it 5 times. Hell. I've canvassed every evening for 2 weeks! McCain is an asshat!

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PS -- yes, I know I've been much diminished in size, indeed, halved of my former glory.

*shaking fist at TPM*

I will return!!!

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I feel your pain

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Linked you here. Good stuff.

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Cool, thanks. Glad you liked it.

BTW I showed your excellent hoax debunking piece a few weeks ago to a friend of mine who lives in Pittsburgh. She liked the piece but thought that your notions of Pittsburgh were dated. Big black guys don't get beat up in Bloomfield anymore.

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I accept that - it's been a while since I've been up that way. Good thing my instincts were still on while being a bit off on the facts...

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You made a lot more good points besides that one. And you were right that it was an unlikely place to be mugged.

I lived in Squirrel Hill for a couple of years. Pittsburgh is a great town in many ways, and it's come a long way.

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A well-written post, Genghis.

But I, for one, never "decided" on GWB. I never gave him any right to decide for me. I view 2000 as stolen for one reason and 2004 for another. But neither time did I want this man.

So while you're correct in way, I share no sense of responsibility whatsoever for hiring GWB.

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We the People are responsible, not you a person. It's true that as a majority, we Decided otherwise in 2000, but it was close in any case.

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This entire thread makes me think of Mozart's Requiem. Enough already. The bonds formed will endure per their depth.

Time is short.

I understand now why certain traditions pitch boundless love as a key precept. Every moment must be loved freely - for it too shall pass.

One Love

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☠enghis

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