Friday, June 19, 2009

It can't be easy being a democratic politician. Too many powerful far left interests and creepy little groups to cater to all at once.




His Majesty's got PETA people beating him up for swatting a fly. He's got radical Nancy Pelosi, the ACLU and loony left editors at the New York Times trying to undermine his position opposing the immediate release of the detainee abuse photos. The gay rights groups are all over him for taking a position (opposition to legal recognition of gay marriage) that is in step with the majority of this country.

But for much the same reason, it likewise can't be easy being a republican politician. They similarly (only on the opposite extreme) must deal with powerful conservative interests and weird little right-wing groups.

And the problem is, so much of the money that funds these two parties comes from all of these right-wing and left-wing freaks. The result is a broken political system comprised of two parties controlled by their extremes and out of step with the majority of Americans. If you try to remain somewhat in-step with the 60-65% (or more) of this country which is neither far-right nor far-left, then the two powerful extremes will attempt to brand you (and are usually successful) as a mealy-mouthed moderate who is to be even more loathed than the opposite extreme.

That's the situation we have in this country right now, and I don't know that it will change any time soon. We have a firmly entrenched two-party system in our political culture, and it's very difficult for a third party to surplant one of the two dominant parties. But that doesn't change the fact that there's something very wrong and broken about our political system -- a system in which most of us folks aren't represented by much of anyone. I may not be able to do a damn thing to change it, but I'm going to keep pointing it out as loudly as I can until the damn cows come home. You've got my promise on that one.