November 04, 2004

GeneralThe sun came up this morning.

This will be the last of my political "rants" for a while... again, not directed at anyone specifically, but feelings I keep getting in general. We'll be back to normal tomorrow.

The most irrational hate I keep hearing is from people who had so little to lose with the election. I'm a registered democrat. I lean ideologically towards the left. I wanted a change yesterday, personally. However, to lash out with irrational hate-mongering ideals at the outcome yesterday is so asinine as to border on stupidity. What good comes from hating the so-called "red" states? What good comes from bad mouthing the voters in these other places? All they did was exercise the same basic right that you did. They're different from you: know a different way of life, have their own vision of reality. I tend to see most of my friends in an "elite" class of Americans: college educated (or in college) from comfortable, middle class families. We're not the majority - we instead factor into the minority. We can hope for our own version of the "best", and act to educate others as to why we think our "best" is what's best for the country, but if we force our version of the "best" on people because we "know" it to be "right" then we ourselves become the tyrants denying the freedom of expression and choice that is the most fundamental tenet of our system.

I still have to concede that the decision yesterday reinforces my faith in the system, and my own liberal ideals: the people have spoken within the confines of the system and have made a choice. It's not the choice that I wanted, but the system worked.

This isn't to say that change can't still be worked for. The Constitutional checks are still present in the system for the most part. One can still run for local (or national) office and work to effect change.

It sucks. But the sun came up again this morning, and chances are good that the same will happen tomorrow morning as well.

--
And that's all. For some reason, that's been bothering me the most all day: moreso than the result itself.

In other news, I got "drafted" into working on "The Visit", running lights for all but one show. In 2 weeks, I'll have 2 of the 3 practicums done that I need to graduate, and theoretically could then spend more time devoted to classes coming up. The cast is huge too, (25?) and most of the rest of my class is in it. It's good to be back with them in a non-classroom setting.

Although, it's gonna be tough. "Art" was an hour and a half, no intermission. "Visit" currently runs 3 hours even (with the hope to get it down to 2:40.) "Art" - cast of 3, crew of 5. "Visit" - cast of 25, crew of 10(ish).

So if you need me before Thanksgiving, I'll be at 'Nova, in Vasey, somewhere in the theatre...

I searched for a quote for this entry, and came up empty...I really wanted something from Emerson, Thoreau, Dewey, Rorty, Moynihan that I could work in, but I couldn't find anything specifically by them, so I leave with:


Let us not look back in anger or forward in fear, but around in awareness. - James Thurber

If you lose hope, somehow you lose the vitality that keeps life moving, you lose that courage to be, that quality that helps you go on in spite of it all. And so today I still have a dream. - Martin Luther King, Jr.

[Listening to: "Deja Vu (All Over Again)", by John Fogerty from the album "Deja Vu All Over Again"]

Posted by Matthew at November 4, 2004 02:04 AM
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