There was a time when American's valued "class"
with a small "c." I'm not
talking about economic "class" or social "class" but a
genuine understanding that it's not all about me and the ability to congratulate
an successful opponent with grace and dignity, understanding that there is a tomorrow
and that in politics (and sports) today's adversary may be tomorrow’s ally or
team mate. Among the classless moments of my memory was Nixon's "You won't
have Nixon" to kick around any more" and Roger Maris's comment after
the Yankees lost to Pittsburg in the 1960 World Series: "We all know who
the best team was. It's too bad it didn't win."
Right up there is Bill Clinton's Fred Thomasesque speech in Missouri Saturday night.
It was all about Bill and not much about Hillary. The anchors at CNN and MSNBC
didn't make that up. It was there on the screen.
There's empathy and there is false empathy. There is the
empathy of one who truly feels your pain and the pseudo-empathy of a narcissist
who adopts empathy as a mask for his or her self involvement.
In Missouri
after Hillary's lost Bill Clinton by talking about himself and his administration
settled the score for me. His empathy has all the sincerity of Mitt Romney's
smile.
Maybe it's time that the Clintonistas started reviewing the great
accomplishments of the Clinton
administration. Was he better on the environment than Bush - by a million millions.
Was he better on the economy: Remember NAFTA? Clinton rode the Wall Street wave
and left office just before the deluge.
NAFTA was his, remember? Not to denigrate his entire administration.
To me, the most pressing issue for electing almost any Democrat will be, and remains,
the reactionary packing of the Supreme Court. We lose this one and the Court
may be gone for a generation.
In 2000 I played a minor role in helping Hillary get her the
Sierra Club endorsement. I have no regrets. I wish her a long, long productive
career in the United States Senate. I think she will have one.
Johnklotz.blogspot.com