Hello, Uranus? Got any room?
Date: Friday, November 05 @ 10:08:41 EST
Must. Move. Away. Cannot endure more Bush. Soul about to
implode. Right? Not so fast.
By Mark Morford, San Francisco Chronicle
I said it, you said it, pretty much anyone with a brain larger
than a grape or a soul more nimble than a rock said it maybe
a thousand times over.
And you probably weren't even all that drunk when you said it
and maybe you were even a little more than half serious and
maybe you said it just like this: If Bush somehow snags another
election, if the unthinkable comes to pass and the Dubya neocon
nightmare refuses to end, well, that's it. I'm outta here.
Done. Over. Gone. Moving away. To Canada. Or France. Latvia.
Uranus. Anywhere, really, that doesn't have Bush as leader and
that doesn't make me openly ashamed to be a citizen and that
doesn't make me feel like a sickened disillusioned ulcerated
outcast in my own happily divisive country every damn day including
Sunday.
You want a place, you say, that doesn't right this minute
seem to be working heroically to make homophobia and born-again
fundamentalism and pre-emptive isolationist warmongering and
environmental ignorance a national religion. A place where
SUVs aren't considered minor deities and where gay people
aren't loathed for wanting to slice a wedding cake and where
brazen heavily narcotized denial in the face of a veritable
mountain of presidential lies isn't the national pastime.
Tempting, isn't it? To just move away to a sunnier, clothing-optional
utopia and wait for it all to be over, for the dark days to
pass and the Shrub era to sink into the tar pits of history
and the fog to finally lift?
After all, most all of us on the progressive Left feel we
truly faced the dragon this election, and we put up a valiant
fight and marshaled as potent an army of dissenters and intellectuals
and moderates and liberal crusaders and feminists and enlightened
activists as possible, considering.
And we supposedly had more of the youth vote and the disenfranchised
single-female vote and the "Daily Show" vote and
the Eminem vote and the celebrity vote and the humanitarian
vote and the antiwar vote and the gay vote and the pro-choice
vote and the Howard Stern vote and the immigrant vote, and
still the dragon just sneered and hacked up another fireball
of bogus fear and evangelical Christian self-righteousness
and torched our glimmering sword of juicy hope into a smoking
cinder.
And now, this. The nation has officially, stupefyingly handed
the world's worst president a blank check to do whatever he
and his cronies like, without fear of major repercussions
or voter disillusionment or damage to an imminent re-election
campaign, because there won't be one.
Which is to say, Bush now has no one to worry about now but
his true constituents (hint: it ain't mainstream Repubs, or
even the born-agains), no one to answer to but the CEOs and
the energy barons and the military-supply corporations co-owned
by his father, and nothing to guide him but his own deeply
regressive, monosyllabic moral compass. Hell, why stick around
for more of that?
But here's the catch. Here's the tough part to accept. Here's
what everyone who's right now on the brink of packing their
bags and checking the real estate prices in Vancouver has
to know and has to have drilled into their disconsolate hope-crushed
souls right this minute, before it's too late:
You cannot leave. You cannot drop the armor now. Why? Because
you are needed, more than ever. You are mandatory to keep
the energy flowing, the karmic vibrator buzzing, to keep the
progressive and lucid half of the nation breathing and healthy
and awake and ever reaching out to the half that's wallowing
in fear and violence and homophobia and sexual dread, hoping
to find harmony instead of cacophony, common ground instead
of civil war, some sort of a shared love of a country so messy
and internationally disrespected and openly confused its own
president can't even speak the language.
After all, you don't hand over all your children the first
time the flying monkeys bang on your door. You don't give
up your dream house just because a bunch of gangbangers moved
in down the block. You become a bit more wary and alert and
you stock up on the superlative porn and the expensive wine
and the deepened sense of true beauty and sex and love and
hope and you hunker down and grit your teeth and dig in for
the long haul, and you work on making your own goddamn garden
more beautiful than even you could have imagined, because,
well, the neighborhood -- and the world -- needs it, more
than ever.
Look. No one said it was gonna be easy. No one said it was
gonna be painless. And no one said it was gonna be quick.
As I've noted before, the neocons have been planning this
takeover for decades. The Bush regime, despite feeling like
a massive indigestible incomprehensible fluke, is no accident.
The GOP is deeply entrenched and the razor wire is all around
their compound and they are masterful at working the angles
of fear and manipulation and of kowtowing to the least tolerant
and least morally flexible segments of the population -- this
is, after all, how Bush won a second term -- and hence they
aren't about to just roll over at the first sign of outcry
or dissent or a snowboarding senator, even if he's 10 times
the man and a thousand times the intellect of the smirking
lunk currently in office.
And besides, most hardcore Republicans would, of course, love
it if you'd leave the country, and take your gul-dang gay-lovin'
tofu-eatin' tree-huggin' pierced-labia values with you. They
would love it, furthermore, if the libs in the morally shredded
red states would split for the coastal cities and the major
metropolises of America, all those godless heathen places
where the neighbors won't yank the Kerry/Edwards sign outta
your front lawn and chase you down and beat you with it and
call it patriotism. Remember: bullies never deserve to own
the playground.
And one of the most stirring e-mails I received during the
outpouring of grief the day after the election was from a
young female reader, "an artist, an intellectual and
a Jew" who's been living in Mexico and who now says she's
so enraged and saddened by the election's ugly outcome that
she's preparing to return to the States ASAP, just so she
can help, so she can join the resistance, keep the right-wingers
from coming after our souls. Now, that's patriotism.
The bottom line: Don't disband the newfound army just because
one ugly battle was lost. Mourn, commiserate, lick wounds,
lick each other, drink heavily, spit out your stale gum of
disappointment and pop in a fresh clove of laughter and spiritual
heat and then regroup and sober up and take an even deeper
breath and watch in hot wet spiritually emboldened amusement
as the cosmic circus unfolds.
It's far from over. The tunnel is just a little darker --
and longer -- than we imagined.
©2006 San Francisco Chronicle
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