In order to separate comments about Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan,
and their priorities and positions (legitimate topics in an election) from odd
comments made by supporters in odd contexts, I am putting these comments in a
separate location. Policy issues, such
as my disagreements with privatizing Medicare, privatizing Social Security,
increasing overseas military use in a time of large budget deficits, et cetera,
will be handled elsewhere. Right here, I
will address some things that I consider morally inconsistent and odd about a biography/hagiography
of Paul Ryan floating around on the web.
Parts of this biography will be included in brackets and handled in the
same order as written. there will be
some removal of material I do not directly touch on for the sake of space. The non-inclusion of a part of the original
set of claims should not be taken to mean agreement.
<He's not a graduate of Columbia University . He's not a
graduate of Harvard. He wasn't selected as the President of the Harvard Law
Review.>
To a certain extent, this reflects a strain in American
populism; especially when used to refer to someone who has had a fortunate
start in life. It also is part of a
strain of anti-intellectualism in American life: “How dare this person get into
one of them fancy schools!” What makes
this discordant here is that George W Bush, whom Obama replaced, got into Yale
and Harvard as a legacy, and because his father was then running the CIA and
had been a US Representative, and his grandfather had been a US Senator.
< He didn't get a special free quota scholarship ride to
any prestigious university> and later, < No one offered him a "token
honor" position at the University of Chicago>
Obviously, simply disagreeing with Barack Obama, or
supporting a different candidate, is not racist. These, however, cross that line.
<One morning when Paul Ryan was sixteen years old he went in to wake his father up and found him dead of a heart attack.>
This is extraordinarily unfortunate. My father died when I was forty, and it still
affected me strongly. How Barack Obama
had it easier by never knowing his father (meeting him once, and he died when
Obama was 21) is not explained.
<He didn't write two books about that experience.>
Why is this bad?
Seriously, why is this a bad thing?
<Instead, he assumed the role of adult at an early age,
never having the luxury to pursue youthful drug use and the art of socialist
revolution.>
This person is using the Democratic definition of “youthful
drug use” (~teenage) as opposed to the Republican definition of “youthful drug
use” (~until you are forty – cf ‘George W Bush’). Oh, and “socialist” is cheap name calling. Yawn.
<His grandma wasn't the Vice President of the Bank of Hawaii so she could offer nothing in return, except the element of "need".>
<His grandma wasn't the Vice President of the Bank of Hawaii so she could offer nothing in return, except the element of "need".>
But Obama’s grandmother worked her way from a B-29 assembly
plant to become the first female vice-president of the Bank of Hawai’i without
a college degree. I thought that would
be the self-made Republican ideal. What did I miss?
<When a still young Paul Ryan returned to Wisconsin to run for Congress he didn't demonize his opponent and dig up dirt to shovel against him.>
<When a still young Paul Ryan returned to Wisconsin to run for Congress he didn't demonize his opponent and dig up dirt to shovel against him.>
It was not Barack Obama that knocked out the previous
senator, it was for an open seat. It was
not Obama who knocked Jack Ryan out of the race, it was revelations that Jack
and his wife actress Jeri Ryan (Star Trek: Voyager, NYPD Blue) had gotten
divorced in part because he was trying to get her to take part in public sex in
Chicago sex clubs. Although if
mud-slinging was at one point not part of Ryan’s toolbox, I wish that he had
kept it so.
<He waited until the standing Congressman vacated the office
before seeking the office.>
This implies that it is a good thing to have Congressmen who
reach office, and then stay there until they die. Almost as odd as using this when Obama’s
entry in Congress also came while running for an open seat.
Here I skip some “Wow, what a good ol’ boy our candidate is.”
<No, I don't know if we can vote for a guy like this. He
doesn't have a regal pedigree; he's Irish for God's sake!>
Because the Irish have had it so much harder in America than
mixed ethnicity African-Americans …
(That was sarcasm. I really that
sarcasm does not come across well in text, so I am telling you, just to make it
clear.)
< He's is brazen and heartless …>
Agreed. Oh wait,
there’s more …
<… in advocating in that budget for a $5 trillion dollar
reduction in federal spending over the next ten years!>
It is the manner of cuts and the assumptions that he makes
about their effects that I oppose. as a
policy statement, I am writing this to free myself up to respond to other
statements.
< … without ever proposing a budget of their own.>
While not necessary, I will agree that the Democratic
Congressional Leadership should put forward a budget to illustrate their goals
and priorities.
<I don't know. Paul Ryan seems heartless to me.>
I agree again. Oh, wait,
still more …
< He keeps wanting to cut government waste,>
Only if you define government waste as “everything except
for defense.” I do not.
<… worse, he keeps trying to make people look at that
$16.7 trillion dollar deficit! >
That is not the deficit, that is the debt, and we have not
reached that number yet. Also, we had a
debt of $12 trillion before Barack Obama signed his first budget. A discussion of priorities, why I strongly
disagree cutting spending in a recession and slow recovery, can go in a
substantive discussion that I am trying to make room for by addressing this
stuff here. Hint : It did not work so
well when Herbert Hoover tried it.
<Who wants a numbers cruncher?>
As long as it is an honest number cruncher. Paul Ryan’s reputation as a numbers-savvy
deficit hawk is tremendously undeserved.