The Political Minefield: My Opinions

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By Anna Marie Bowman

In Response

I felt the need to write this in response to some of the comments I got regarding a hub I posted about why I thought Barack Obama was wrong for the United States. I got a number of comments, some of them agreeing with me, some of them thanking me for the information I provided, and a great number of them telling me I was wrong. I appreciate all comments, even if someone is disagreeing with me. However, Some of these had little to do with the actual issue of Barack Obama or the election. I approved every comment I received. I will not deny someone's comment just because they don't agree with me; even when they call me names.

My Political Views

I am neither Republican nor Democrat. I am not a Libertarian or a member of the Green Party, either. I really have no political affiliation. I do not agree with any one party on every issue. I am very liberal when it comes to certain issues, and very conservative when it comes to other issues. I define things more in terms of leanings between liberal and conservative, than I do along strict party lines. In fact, I am not a huge fan of the two party system at all. I feel that it forces the American public to take a "lesser-of-the-two-evils" stance on things. We end up asking ourselves, "Who is less scary? Who do we feel less worried about?" I don't like that.

I also have a problem with the current voting system as a whole. The electoral college is kind of a weird thing. We vote for who we want, but it's really up to them? It hardly seems fair. Who are these people that make up this electoral college? I don't entirely understand the system, and therefore, I am wary of it. But, since I don't understand it entirely, I am not going to say it is right or wrong, just that it concerns me.

I don't like Barack Obama. I watched a lot of news coverage on both of the major candidates, I have researched several of the candidates to see where they stand on issues that really matter to me, and have read, and seen, a lot about both John McCain and Barack Obama. There is very little information out there about any of the third party or the independent candidates, which I see as a little unfair. It gives the whole system a strong two-party bias. In response to that, I had done a series of hubs on all of the candidates, and may do so again, for the 2012 election. I gave an overview of who they are, where they stood on a variety of issues, that sort of thing. I had set it aside, and almost decided not to do it. Considering the attention that I got for that one Hub about Obama, I reconsidered it. I figured it would be a good way to get information out there for everyone to see about who ALL the candidates are, and where they stand.

-Since originally publishing this, I have gone ahead with my original idea of covering every candidate, including a brief biography and their stance on a variety of issues. It was a lot of work, but I feel that it was worthwhile, especially for me.

I don't like Congress. I feel that there should be term limits on Congress. I feel that it should be the way that it was originally intended in the very beginning. We should elect someone from the states and areas we live in, to represent us, and they should go to Washington and actually represent us and our wants and needs, instead of their own. I don't feel they should be able to vote themselves raises again and again, while taking months and months to accomplish anything that would do real good for this country. After serving their time, representing the people, they should return to their lives and let someone else have a crack at it. This helps to end the problem of lobbyists, career politicians, and a lot of the problems we have in this country. Of course, that will never happen, because Congress would have to vote on it. Who would voluntarily vote themselves out of a cushy job?

Racism occurs on both sides, it's not just a white thing.
Racism occurs on both sides, it's not just a white thing.

Racism???

In one comment, someone said I was hiding my true racial hatred behind my long speeches. I am not racist. Why does this person think I am racist? I have no idea. The only thing I can think of is because I was attacking Barack Obama. The issue of his race never came up, except to talk about Rev. Wright, and the culture of African-American churches. I never said anything bad about African-American churches. I said that they were more than just a place you went on a Sunday. I said that it was a culture all its own, and that people go for community and social interaction. Isn't community a good thing?

Am I racist just because I brought up actual facts about Barack Obama that someone didn't want to hear? Am I racist just because he happens to be black? I don't care what race he is. I don't agree with a lot of things the man has to say, and I don't trust him because of the associations that he has had. The biggest thing I don't like about him has to do with the Tony Rezko scandal. It has to do with corruption in Chicago politics (corruption in Chicago politics? For those from Illinois, this comes as no surprise), and a majority of the people involved in the political scandal involving Tony Rezko are white!!! How does that make me racist?? I really don't know.

I honestly don't know what else to say about this. I am not racist. I could say all the usual things, but it wouldn't matter. I could fight back, and argue until my fingers fall off, but unless you actually know me, you may never believe what I have to say. I have never said anything remotely racist to anyone, and I don't feel that there is one racist comment in anything I have published here on HubPages.

It is true, when two people are running for the same office, and one of them is of a different race, the issue always comes up in one way or another. So far, the only person to bring up the issue of race in this election has been Barack Obama himself. He made a comment about not looking like the other guys on the dollar bills. McCain has never said one word about his race, or that we should be afraid of Obama because he isn't white. Who cares what race he is? Can he do a good job serving as President? That is the only question that matters to me.

Little Changes

Re-reading through this, I have come to believe that little has changed in the political landscape. There is still an abundant amount of name-calling, mud-slinging and terrible behavior. It comes from politicians, pundants and ordinary people, alike. The race card is still being thrown around in regards to Obama, no matter what the real issue is. "I don't like Obamacare!"..."Oh, you're just a racist!" It really makes no sense.

Why can't we get past the petty, surface BS, and get down to the real issues? Why is Congress spending more time trying to make our lives more difficult, and less time trying to fix the problems we have? It falls on both sides of the aisle, and also on the head of the President, himself, no matter who he chooses to blame. That is a part of leadership; taking responsibility. That is something that Obama seems opposed to.

I don't see the major issues with the political system changing any time soon. It makes me sad to see how far down we have dragged ourselves, but I do hope we start to claw our way back up to the top.

Comments

Anna Marie Bowman profile image

Anna Marie Bowman Hub Author 3 years ago

bobgnote, the cartoon was put up to show that racism can go both ways. Racism is not perpetrated by whites alone, and that racism in any form is just wrong.

agvulpes, I do understand that a lot of what happens here has an effect on the rest of the world. I wish there was more I could do to make that impact a better one. There are others running on Third Party tickets and as independents, but you would never know that watching the news, even here in the US.

agvulpes profile image

agvulpes Level 3 Commenter 3 years ago

G'day from down under,

I will not comment on who I believe will win the election (none of my business) only to say that generally you get the government you deserve, and I hope and pray that you are delivered the right one.

I'm not quite sure that the people of America realise just how much events happening in America effect the rest of the World.

Another observation: I wasn't aware that this was not a 2 horse race.

bobgnote 3 years ago

What is with the cartoon, showing a smear, of Louis Farrakhan and Rev. Jeremiah Wright?  That is the sort of jingoist-distortion, as starts wars, if it gets around.

The Klan and its gear are a take-off on BHUDDISM.  Fat, aren't they.

John, Jeremiah, and Isaiah are the hottest prophets in The Bible.  Rev. Wright is a demogogue, within the context of his own preaching domain, ONLY.  Why pile on him?

Louis Farrakhan happens to know JEWS ARE FROM ETHIOPIA, as does Rev. Wright, SO WHAT ARE WHITE-TRASH RUSSIANS DOING FLYING F-16s FOR THE IDF, and threatening Iran, with these?

Gosh, don't get into a fat tunic over THAT, but hey, WHAT IS BARACK OBAMA DOING WALTZING HILLARY AROUND FOR TWO YEARS, AND THEN HE SHOWS UP WITH AIPAC AND SIGNS FISA, with an exemption for any company which steals IP over the phone?

Obama might get elected, for all his dubious campaigning, with dubious supporters. Consider the alternative.

We might have to live with McCain-Palin, you know? And do it, FASTER. Only 50 days left, until decision time.

glassvisage profile image

glassvisage Level 5 Commenter 3 years ago

Good for you for not affiliating yourself with any particular party and being open politically. I guess we are all racist, technically, but I wouldn't go so far as to accuse you of such a thing because you don't support Obama :P

Ananta65 3 years ago

I very much agree with your objection to the two party system. It divides people into two camps. Even though the situation in the Netherlands is somewhat better, here too true democracy is a utopia. Well written hub!

myway720 profile image

myway720 3 years ago

Great hub! A lot of people today do react in a knee-jerk fashion and make often erronious assumptions when talking politics. I find that if you agree with one of hteir points, they tend to think you agree with them on all things, and if you disagree on one point, they tend to think you disagree with them on everything. I find that the more I get to know someone, the more they turn out to cross the spectrum in their views, depending on the subject. Again, great hub!

Aya Katz profile image

Aya Katz Level 4 Commenter 3 years ago

Anna Marie, great hub!

I, too, have the problem that when I say something that offends liberals, they think I am a conservative, and when I offend conservatives, they think I'm a liberal. When people learn I'm not a Democrat, they tend to assume I'm a Republican, and vice versa. I hope that you will write that profile of each of the candidates running in the presidential election, just so that more people will realize there are other choices.

However, I disagree with your feelings about the electoral college. I think it serves a function. It allows a choice to be made without forcing people to compromise too much, even though individually we each have our own opinions that conflict with each other. In other countries, where a majority coalition is required in order to elect a president or prime minister, fanatical minorities get to ram their agendas down people's throats.

The best thing about the American political system is that everybody can vote their conscience, and eventually we support the winner. The winner does not necessarily represent the convictions of every citizen, but it's better than forcing the candidates to compromise their own beliefs for the sake of forming a coalition.

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