Monday, November 30, 2009

I Wonder...Are We Evolving?


See for me…I’m not a great thinker, I’m more like a guy that just wants things to be better…in the WORLD. It doesn’t take a thinker to see we have problems that have been fundamentally ignored.

So here I am watching The Day The Earth Stood Still and a question came in my head…


Why are we waiting for a crisis to change?


You see in the movie a scientist begged for humanity to be saved. He used the premise that we shouldn’t have our chance to change after a being on the precipice of total destruction taken from us. I wonder… are we evolved enough to avoid a crisis, considering we create so many of them.


Questions should be asked to solve a problem…


How can we have such a capacity for creating a crisis, yet cant have the same balanced effort for avoiding one?


The better question is do we have the ability to define what change or what type of change is?


Can we sit around and actually say I’m alright, so why should I help you?


Are we going to wait until something apocalyptic occurs for us to see its actually US?


I constantly read and hear about the fear of global dominance, yet nothing about global agendas. Cant we come together to see that we all “got it good”?


But there is a point that never gets its proper spotlight…change.


We cant afford our stagnant ways if we want progress, change is inevitable.


It happens without us…that is where crisis occurs, when we refuse to accept change.


There have been so many ineffective steps taken to address problems, but when seen as a failure, we don’t want change…we seek extreme.


We seek all or nothing, yet ignore the devil in the details. Evolution is in its most concentrated form is nuanced change, it doesn’t happen overnight.


It involves a slow process of thought and study, it is deliberate yet so very slow. But now because we are so against change, we have to resort to crisis management…the all or nothing.


We had better start analyzing our problems…they are many.


We had better rise above the petty and childish back and forth or crisis will be unmanageable.


We had better start taking advantage of our first chances…second might not be as easy.


We had better become humane…real soon…humanity is counting on us.


The Earth will not stand still, just because we have.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Teaching is Fundamental

Dwayne Michael Carter, Jr. (born September 27, 1982),

Radric Davis (born February 2, 1980)

Jordan Michael Houston

(born April 5, 1975)

 

 

I mean really if these men were your teachers and they came in dressed with some saggy underwear showing jeans…you would laugh them out the class even if they had the ability to spit like they were the last def jam poet winner.

They would be called old and a joke. Then lets ask of you to buy their clothes, drink, and their album…LYAROTFP!

But hey these old men are…LIL WAYNE, GUCCI MANE, AND JUICY J OF 3 6 MAFIA!

But hey 3-6 won an Oscar...yeah and Jethro Tull won a best heavy metal Grammy!

Are you kidding! Old ass men rappin to our youth as if they are cool, but are they? Or are they capitalist that are manipulating you for your money, then they count it and laugh all the way to the bank…to them you are not little brothers on da hustle…you are the hustle!

When you see them go to jail, they are not doin the time you would, they have the money and an image to pay for street cred in jail. You cant get anything from them…

So allow me to make a suggestion…your teachers have something for you, you have very little to offer them. Most want to teach, if you want to learn. If you don’t go to school they still get paid…can LIL WEEZY show up at a concert and have an empty place and get paid…hell no. That young world…is cool. They can give you information and knowledge that can get you a job…A LEGAL ONE!

So the next time you think teachers are lames…ask this…Johnny can you read?

If you can, thank a teacher and yourself for putting your future ahead of your image.

If not, don’t blame a teacher, he didn’t do tha Carter 4,5,6, or 7.

My Challenge To Bloggers


I would love some pro-blogs.

Not anti this and anti that.

I would love to see some minds come together to make understanding and logic prevail.

I would love to see some anti Israel posters say something pro for their cause.

I would love to see some 2nd amendment posters talk about pro peace policies.

I would love to see some emotional people be for something and not walk through blogs with pitch forks and fire.

I would love to see differences of opinion not agree to disagree, but agree that something must be done…try a solution instead of deny a solution.

I would love for just once to know that someone is black or a woman by celebration and not by blame.

I would love to see that Martin, Malcolm, and Gandhi did not die in vain.

I would love to see freedom of speech be real and not a freedom of convenience.

I would love to see truth and not opinions be the only reason you want to respond.

I would love to see a group come together, not have one or two tear it apart.

I would love just once, just once for us to…choose love before we choose hate.

Peace before war. Thought before emotion.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Jesse Ventura Is The Man

Universal love symbol

Jesse Ventura Schools Pat Buchanan on Gay Marriage


Civil Rights are rights for everyone...love is bigger than Government!



On "Verdict" last night, former Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura made the perfect case as to why same-sex marriage is a civil rights issue and that the federal government has no right to tell you "who you can fall in love with." I was just waiting for Buchanan's head to explode.



VENTURA: "Well, first of all, I made a statement when I was governor and stand by it today. Love is bigger than government. Who the hell are we as a government to tell people who you can fall in love with? I think it‘s absurd that fact it‘s even being debated. "


I couldn't have put it better myself, Governor.


Full transcript below the fold:


ABRAMS: Pat Buchanan does this become an issue in 2008?


BUCHANAN: Yes, I think it will because of the California Supreme Court decision which was a foolish decision, frankly, from the standpoint of the Democrats. The Massachusetts Supreme Court decision in 2003-2004 put the thing on the ballot in 13 states and homosexual marriage lost by 58 percent to 85 percent in Mississippi in all 13 and it killed Kerry. It won‘t be as big but it‘s an issue Barack Obama will say, “Marriage should be between a man and woman.” He will run away from it.


ABRAMS: Jesse, you‘re shaking your head.


VENTURA: Well, first of all, I made a statement when I was governor and stand by it today. Love is bigger than government. Who the hell are we as a government to tell people who you can fall in love with? I think it‘s absurd that fact it‘s even being debated.


We can solve the problem simply. Government only acknowledges civil unions then you don‘t have to put your sex down. Let the churches acknowledge marriage. They are the private sectors. If they don‘t want to acknowledge it, they have every right to do so. How on earth can we even entertain the fact that government should have the ability to tell you as an individual who you can fall in love with? Ridiculous.


ABRAMS: Jonathan, real quick. Is this going to be an issue?


ALTER: Let me disagree with Jesse.


ABRAMS: I want to - Let me say, get Jonathan, because I want to move on. I mean in 2008, this is going to become an issue.


ALTER: I think it‘s not going to be like 2004 because it‘s not going to be on the ballot in nearly as many states and in California where obviously it‘s going to get very hot.


ABRAMS: Because there‘s an economy to worry about and -


ALTER: There are a lot of more important things. But I did think it was interesting that, you know, John McCain looked here like he had taken a trip to Ellen the orthodontist - very, very uncomfortable. Even though his position is the same as Obama and Clinton‘s, but they are just more fluent in discussing it in ways that sort of bridge the gaps on this.


ABRAMS: Pat, final thought?


BUCHANAN: Well, (UNINTELLIGIBLE) marriage is a cinderblock of society. Historically, it‘s between a man and a woman. It ought to be set aside for a man and a woman. If government wants to set up civil unions and benefits for people like that, it ought to be done by elected legislators and not by un-anointed judges who are behaving more like tyrants imposing their values on us.


VENTURA: Let me throw something out. You can‘t take a civil rights issue and put it up to a vote. If you did that, we might still have slavery if it was allowed to be voted on.


BUCHANAN: Jesse what about -


(CROSS TALK)


VENTURA: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) civil rights and let people vote on it.


BUCHANAN: Well, Jesse, what are you talking about? The Civil Rights Act 1964 was voted on. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 voted on by congress.


The Open Housing Act of 1968 was done by LBJ, first went to demonstrations


by Martin Luther King. These were done by representatives -


VENTURA: Exactly.


BUCHANAN: Not by these un-elected judges.


VENTURA: Well, and not by populace itself, Pat. If the elected officials stand up for what‘s right and do what‘s right for civil rights like they did back then, I fully agree with you. But you can‘t put a civil rights issue on the general ballot in a state and let people vote on it because if do you that, in the southern states before you can bet, they would have voted to continue slavery.







How Soon Is Now?



You know I was intrigued by Obama getting a Nobel Peace Prize…for nothing but hope.


What I found very funny is Americans still don’t know why he got it…he didn’t get it, they gave it to us he was the proxy.


America the world is watching us, some are hopeful, others are now just frustrated. They have watched you botch the health care project, screw up the two wars, and allow ‘patriots” define you.


Where is the hope you were waiting for? That is what Obama said…we are the change we were waiting for!


So have we changed? Have we forced Obama to change our existence? Have we pressured our Representatives or Senators to change? Did we do anything different than we did before the election?



Now keep in mind I have been asking the question about making our public officials to sign contracts. The response has given me a perspective that made me understand why Obama doesn’t want to serve more than one term. The oath is the contract!? No it isn’t, its never been honored, why should it now? Socialism for the rich, capitalism for the poor! Kickbacks, lobbyists, and more campaign money than you or I could imagine!



But hey, don’t worry America Obama is probably done…why…would you want to lead sheep to slaughter by their own creation.? Would you defend people who still cry foul when they have the majority?



America, let me be frank…the world is questioning your metal, your strength, your will. They didn’t give him the Peace Prize…they gave it to us…hoping we would finally under a president that not only appears to be intelligent but benevolent, act right, do right, and above all stand up to the right. Show your might, show your anger, not your defeated slouched shoulders.



This is the time for independents and democrats who for what ever reason voted for change to “force” the change. Hell as he said we are the change we have been waiting for…we are also the change the rest of the world has been expecting, needing, and soon will be demanding.



Maybe we need to fight Fox News…they are not real news. Maybe we need to steal the Conservative’s playbook. Maybe we need to march in the streets…and invite every left leaning cameraman there with Olberman, Matthews, and Maddow. Tell them we are mad as hell and we are not going to take this shit sitting down crying like pussies!



Obama is just one man, taking hits from everyone and everywhere…STAND THE FUCK UP AND LETS TAKE SOME HITS FOR HIM…FOR US!

Friday, November 6, 2009

I just wonder...do we want ANY CHANGE?



Institutional Racism Ignored
More feelings than facts in coverage of inequality

By Janine Jackson





After a tour of the country last year, a United Nations special rapporteur (4/28/09) urged Washington to do more to address “the depth of racism [that] still permeates all dimensions of life of American society.” Not “questions of race,” not “past racism,” not “personal biases”—but present-day, institutional racism, as expressed in, for example, “racial bias in conviction rates and length of sentences of both juvenile and criminal courts,” “direct discriminatory practices in housing…as well as in mortgage lending,” and in the educational system, “racial bias in the type of disciplinary action given to white or minority students.”

Restrained and conciliatory in tone, the report nevertheless went leagues beyond most corporate news reporting simply by recognizing racism as a demonstrable reality—not uncomplicated (laws and policies may have racially disparate impacts though non-discriminatory on their face; there is overlap with issues of class) but not reducible, either, to matters of personal sentiment or individual interactions.

Corporate media don’t just fail to seek out stories of structural inequality; they run from them when they’re offered, as seen recently in the widespread effort to dissolve questions of racial profiling, raised by the controversial arrest of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, into a matter of differing perceptions (“The Great Divide: He Said, He Said,” Boston Herald, 7/26/09) or some people’s feelings (“Suspicions of Police Bias Haunt Black Men,” Baltimore Sun, 7/26/09).

The arrest of a high-status black man, mistaken for an intruder in his own home by a white officer, was covered above all in terms of President Barack Obama’s reaction, whether his initial criticism of the officers went “overboard” (Kansas City Star, 7/23/09) or whether the story would “sidetrack his healthcare agenda” (L.A. Times, 7/25/09). But in the context of a conversation about whether racial profiling may have occurred in a specific case, wouldn’t it be relevant to explore the reality of profiling? Most outlets decided not.

That lack of serious reporting didn’t leave a void so much as fill it—with the inaccurate idea that racial profiling is a matter on which the jury is out. Instead of exploration of specific practices which include “in addition to racially or ethnically discriminatory acts, discriminatory omissions on the part of law enforcement” (ACLU statement, 11/23/05), we got talk of “the historically uneasy relationship between blacks and law enforcement” (Orlando Sentinel, 7/25/09) or “the wariness of a population that feels singled out and mistreated” (Washington Post, 8/2/09).

The fact that profiling is illustrated not by anecdote, but by repeated patterns over time, was obscured by articles ending on the notion that “‘the cop probably had a bad day, and the professor had a bad day. It could have been a black cop and a white professor’” (Boston Herald, 7/24/09), or stressing that “the line of when to put on handcuffs is a personal and blurry one, varying among officers in the same city, the same precinct, even the same patrol car” (New York Times, 7/25/09).

Fundamental misunderstanding was also betrayed by pieces like the L.A. Times’ July 25 “Status Doesn’t Allay Fears of Race Profiling,” which first evinced implicit surprise that racial profiling affects people by race, as opposed to class, and then went on to treat the illegal practice as more regrettable than redressable, with an emphasis on how black people should react: “For some black men, the solution is to try to avoid the possibility of confrontation altogether,” the paper explained, citing the story of one man who sends his wife to the front gate to meet police if the house alarm goes off, fearing “if he goes instead, they will mistake him for an intruder,” and another who, on seeing a line of cars with black drivers pulled to the side of the road, pulled over himself, “figuring that was expected of black men.” It’s unstated whether the L.A. Times sees such “solutions” as broadly acceptable for a democratic society.


There’s no mystery to the appeal of disaggregating problems of widespread bias into a million unique incidents in which victims “happen to be black”: If racism is reduced to the personal and situational, the responsibility for overcoming its effects can be spread around, with black people themselves carrying the brunt. Certainly it’s not appropriate to call on institutions to do anything about some people’s “feelings.”

Corporate media underscore this message in part by not hearing messages to the contrary, as when they extracted the “bootstraps” elements of Obama’s July 16 NAACP speech, characterized in the New York Times (7/23/09) as “warning black Americans not to make excuses for their failure to achieve.” (See also, e.g., “Obama Boldly Challenges Blacks in NAACP Speech,” Kansas City Star, 7/17/09; “Obama Delivers Tough Talk on the Black Family,” Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 7/21/09.)

That Obama himself sometimes emphasizes blacks’ “personal responsibility” is true, but that’s not the source of elite media’s fascination. Jesse Jackson got the same treatment in 1994 for comments in which he appealed to African-Americans to “take the lead” in helping their communities fight crime. Jackson presented blacks’ responsibilities to help themselves alongside government’s obligation to remove racist barriers; “Blacks Are Urged to Take Responsibility for Violence” (Washington Post, 1/17/94) was a typical rendering (Extra!, 5–6/94).

The idea that racism is a personal problem about which society can do nothing but soul-search serves a status quo that disadvantages people of color, but it’s by no means exclusive to white people. In fact, the message was spelled out most clearly in a Washington Post editorial (7/26/09) written by an African-American. Referring to Bill Clinton’s description of racism as a “cancer of the soul,” the Post’s Jonathan Capeheart wrote: “The cure for this corrosive cancer won’t come through a government program or the courts.…This is a matter of the heart, an intensely personal exercise that demands we talk to each other—one on one, face to face. Perhaps over a beer.…”

The report from the U.N. special rapporteur recommended increased federal and state funding for those displaced by Hurricane Katrina, congressional investigation of resegregation in the nation’s schools and housing, and “as a matter of urgency,” vigorous clarification of the illegality of racial profiling, including congressional passage of the End Racial Profiling Act. Beer did not come up.

http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3913

WTF! Where are YOU!?

Its funny I have seen evils that I wish I could be unseen.
I just wonder if its God or is it us?
Are we the Evil Gods that made the crimes of man, by man?
Where is God to stop man, to save man, from himself?
I am like Samuel Clemens...You have some explaining to do.
Enjoy the link at the bottom.
XTC-DEAR GOD

Dear God,
Hope you got the letter,
And I pray you can make it better down here.
I don't mean a big reduction in the price of beer,
But all the people that you made in your image,
See them starving on their feet,
'Cause they don't get enough to eat

From God,
I can't believe in you.

Dear God,
sorry to disturb you,
but I feel that I should be heard loud and clear.
We all need a big reduction in amount of tears,
And all the people that you made in your image,
See them fighting in the street,
'Cause they can't make opinions meet,
About God,
I can't believe in you.

Did you make disease, and the diamond blue?
Did you make mankind after we made you?
And the devil too!

Dear God,
Don't know if you noticed,
But your name is on a lot of quotes in this book.
Us crazy humans wrote it, you should take a look,
And all the people that you made in your image,
Still believing that junk is true.
Well I know it ain't and so do you,
Dear God,
I can't believe in,
I don't believe in,

I won't believe in heaven and hell.
No saints, no sinners,
No Devil as well.
No pearly gates, no thorny crown.
You're always letting us humans down.
The wars you bring, the babes you drown.
Those lost at sea and never found,
And it's the same the whole world 'round.
The hurt I see helps to compound,
that the Father, Son and Holy Ghost,
Is just somebody's unholy hoax,
And if you're up there you'll perceive,
That my heart's here upon my sleeve.
If there's one thing I don't believe in...

It's you,
Dear God.

Your Mind Is Controlled!

I have always wondered why I knew the answer to most of the worlds problems...EDUCATION!
Then as I have learned that most people believe the same I started to become angry. Then it hit me, that is what is wrong with all of us. We do have the answer, we don't know the nuances to implement the answers. We don't know because we are not educated and the rich and powerful wants to keep it that way.

Do you think that Oprah wants us to be educated? She put a school in AFRICA!
Magic Johnson has not opened a college for students to go for free...he opened movie theatres!
Air Jordans?
Do Something? As long as it is not think or continue the path of education.

As long as we don't know...whatever it is...we are powerless.
We need to know what we don't...we cant know.
There is no money, consistent money, in education.
Educated people are cautious and think their way through things.
They don't quickly come to decisions based on the auspices of fear.
They fear not knowing...
I fear what I don't know...I fear we don't know enough.
THEY KNOW THAT.

I know that many of us would say, screw you, I'm very educated.

But I ask has our "incompetent" government ever not accomplished their goals? They are not incompetent, they are deliberate. Don't believe me?
Ask how can 51 people blame 49 people in a democracy for not having a bill with no Nationalized Insurance.
THEY KNOW YOU KNOW JUST ENOUGH TO BE SLAVES!
So are you as mad as hell?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0PE7VHDLnYw

The New Bill Of Rights

So let me get this straight...

1. Right to a job...gotta move to Mexico for that.

2. Right to earn enough for food, clothing, and recreation...Damn gotta be a CEO to do that.

3. Farming for a decent living...well we know how that will work out.

4. A small businessman to trade without the domination of monopolies...will the corporation sit down so that the American people can stop crawling.

5. Right to a decent home...HOME we dont have a home, we have a mortgage and bills, cant take pride in something you cant spend ten minutes to enjoy. Im working to damn hard for the money.

6. Right to adequate health care...to quote Bulworth"SOCIALISM"!

7. Right to a good education...wanna know why Johnny cant read...the teacher cant read either, or is too damn afraid of Johnny's gang affiliation or his "trench coat mafia" to help the little overprotected thug.

8. Economic protection of the sick, unemployed, and the elderly...you will not see a dime from social security when you are watching your tax dollars get sent to Blackwater for private corporation's protection.

People you cant be so emotionally deficient to need a marketing strategy to make you feel good about something that is good...

If you do....

Try this... humanity...EVEN A CAVEMAN CAN DO IT!

Im done!

The Tone MUST Change!


I have wondered when will I see change…not from Obama…from the Dems. Where is the Swagger? Where is the I’m winning bravado? You won the House, Senate, and the White House…NO ONE CAN TELL!

I watch the “left leaning” program and I get confused. For eight years, complaints and whining…Bush did this…Bush did that. You have control of the government…what are you doing? Complaining and whining? I cant understand how you expect to do anything forward moving when the tone you had as the minority reflects the present tone you have as the majority.


Where is the lets get things done tone, not the “why are they doing this” tone. There is political acumen, then there is political apathy. You seem to expect the dissenters to defeat you. I remember when Clinton became president, the chants of “Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow” were every where. Then you stopped thinking about tomorrow. Health Care…what happened? I saw a party that lost its membership of power and control in a blink of an eye. His support came and went, he was defined by the opposition. Then the crying happened…“what is happening“…why are they doing this?


I remember watching Obama say during one of his victories…WE ARE THE CHANGE WE HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR!


I felt like laughing, I knew he was in trouble at that moment, I knew he had a hard road to travel. “WE” cant do anything until the tone changes…


It just seems that the people that have been elected reflect their constituents. Whiners, helpless, crying...these are not good signs people. Maybe we need to be the CHANGE they dont see coming...


That means becoming a true tea bagger…guns not included. Knowing who is in office, what they are doing and sending them correspondence to let them know…WE ARE WATCHING YOU. Getting involved beyond the tone. Support your candidate, by showing support. Let them know that taxes pay the salaries of all of them, make them earn it. Hell, find a replacement locally if you have to or if you can.


I truly need to see a change in tone before I can expect a change in anything else.

I wish we had paid more attention


How ironic...JFK.

The man who is the poster child and academic example of how the media can dictate what we see and how we see it wrote this.



A Force That Has Changed
The Political
Scene
By Sen. John F. Kennedy
Democrat, Massachusetts

The wonders of science and technology have revolutionized the modern American political campaign. Giant electronic brains project results on the basis of carefully conducted polls. Automatic typewriters prepare thousands of personally addressed letters, individually signed by automatic pens. Jet planes make possible a coast-to-coast speaking schedule no observation-car back platform could ever meet.


Even wash-and-wear fabrics permit the wilted nonstop candidate to travel lighter, farther and faster.


But nothing compares with the revolutionary impact of television. TV has altered drastically the nature of our political campaigns, conventions, constituents, candidates and costs. Some politicians regard it with suspicion, others with pleasure. Some candidates have benefited by using it-others have been advised to avoid it. To the voter and vote-getter alike, TV offers new opportunities, new challenges and new problems.


But for better or worse-and I side with those who feel its net effect can definitely be for the better-the impact of TV on politics is tremendous. Just 40 years ago Woodrow Wilson exhausted his body and mind in an intensive cross-country tour to plead the cause of the League of Nations. Three weeks of hard travel and 40 speeches brought on a stroke before had finished "taking his case to the people" in the only way then available. Today, President Dwight Eisenhower, taking his case to the people on the labor situation, is able to reach several million in one 15-minute period without ever leaving his office.


To cite another example: The most dramatic political trial in our history was the Impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson in 1868, avidly followed by all the Nation. Newspaper accounts were decidedly partisan- those who wished to see and judge for themselves flocked to Washington by carriage and train. But even if every seat in the Senate galleries had been occupied by a different person every day for the two months of trial, no more than 3000 people could have witnessed that historic event. But In the month of May 1954, an estimated 70 million TV viewers watched part or all of the Army-McCarthy hearings.


These hearings, the Kefauver crime hearings, the McClellan rackets hearings, the conventions of 1952 and 1956-these and other "political TV spectaculars" have given the American public new ideas, new attitudes, new heroes and new villains. Less dramatic but also important have been the televised panel press conferences, the debates, interviews, campaign speeches and even the political commercials. Many new political reputations have been made on TV-and many old ones have been broken.


The searching eye of the television camera scrutinizes the candidates-and the way they are picked. Party leaders are less willing to run roughshod over the voters' wishes and hand-pick an unknown, unappealing or unpopular in the traditional "smoke-filled room" when millions of voters are watching, comparing and remembering.


The slick or bombastic orator, pounding the table and ringing the rafters, is not as welcome in the family living room as he was in the town square or party hail. In the old days, many a seasoned politician counted among his most highly developed and useful talents his ability to dodge a reporter's question, evade a "hot" Issue and avoid a definite stand. But today a vast viewing public is able to detect such deception and, in my opinion, willing to respect political honesty.


Honesty, vigor, compassion, intelligence-the presence or lack of these and other qualities make up what is called the candidate's "image." While some intellectuals and politicians may scoff at these "images"-and while they may in fact be based only on a candidate's TV impression, ignoring his record, views and other appearances-my own conviction is that these images or impressions are likely to be uncannily correct. I think, no matter what their defenders or detractors may say, that the television public has a fairly good idea of what Dwight D. Eisenhower is really like-or Jimmy Hoffa-or John McClellan- or Vice President Nixon-or countless others.


This is why a new breed of candidates has sprung up on both the state and national levels. Republican Governors Rockefeller (New York) and Hatfield (Oregon) successfully countered the Democratic trend in 1958 with particular reliance on TV appeal. The list of fresh Democratic faces who understood-and scored on--this medium in 1958 is almost endless: including new governors such as Edmondson of Oklahoma and Patterson of Alabama, new senators such as McGee of Wyoming and Hart of Michigan, new mayors such as Gracy of Baltimore (1959)-as well as a host of others, elected or reelected in 1958 or earlier.


Most of these men are comparatively young. Their youth may still be a handicap in the eyes of the older politicians-but it is definitely an asset in creating a television image people like and (most difficult of all) remember.


This is not to say that all the politicians of yesteryear would nave been failures in the Age of Television. The rugged vigor of Teddy Roosevelt, the determined sincerity of Woodrow Wilson, the quiet dignity of Lincoln and the confidence-inspiring calm of FDR-all would have been tremendously effective on TV.


Can you imagine the effect of televising FDR's "Fireside Chats"? How different history might have been had a nationwide TV network carried Bryan's Cross of Gold speech-or the Teapot Dome investigation-or Lincoln's First Inaugural Address.


But political success on television is not, unfortunately, limited only to those who deserve it. It is a medium which lends itself to manipulation, exploitation and gimmicks. It can be abused by demagogs, by appeals to emotion and prejudice and ignorance.


Political campaigns can be actually taken over by the "public relations" experts, who tell the candidate not only how to use TV but what to say, what to stand for and what "kind of person" to be. Political shows, like quiz shows, can be fixed-and sometimes are.


The other great problem TV presents for politics is the item of financial cost. It is no small item. In the 1956 campaign, the Republican National Committee, according to the Gore report, spent over $3,000,000 for television-and the Democratic National Committee, just under $2,800,000 on television broadcasting.


If all candidates and parties are to have equal access to this essential and decisive campaign medium, without becoming deeply obligated to the big financial contributors from the worlds of business, labor or other major lobbies, then the time has come when a solution must be found to this problem of TV costs.


This is not the place to discuss alternative remedies. But the basic point is this: Whether TV improves or worsens our political system, whether it serves the purpose of political education or deception, whether it gives us better or poorer candidates, more intelligent or more prejudiced campaigns-the answers to all this are up to you, the viewing public.


It is in your power to perceive deception, to shut off gimmickry, to reward honesty, to demand legislation where needed. Without your approval, no TV show is worthwhile and no politician can exist.


That is the way it always has been and will continue to be-and that is the way it should be.