Write About Now

gray matters

I’m still catching up from my trip, so last week I finally read the Time magazine from May 9 with a cover story about the FBI’s progress (or lack of) in the last ten years. In addition to an overview of director Mueller’s operating style, the agency’s old-school culture, and the ways its agents are learning to work together, the article describes Mueller’s almost-resignation in 2004.

“At issue was a highly classified surveillance program, called Stellar Wind, that President Bush approved after 9/11. For the first time since Congress forbade the practice in 1978, the National Security Agency was spying on domestic communications traffic without a warrant. In the second week of March 2004, Attorney General John Ashcroft’s Justice Department ruled that Stellar Wind was illegal. The next day, Ashcroft fell gravely ill with acute pancreatitis. Bush sent two top aides to George Washington University Hospital, where the Attorney General lay in critical condition. White House counsel Alberto Gonzales and chief of staff Andrew Card Jr. asked the semiconscious Ashcroft to sign a document reversing the Justice Department’s ruling. Mueller arrived at the hospital just after Card and Gonzales retreated in defeat. His notes described Ashcroft as ‘feeble, barely articulate.’”

Bush then reauthorized Stellar Wind despite the Justice Department’s decision, and Mueller tells the president he will quit before carrying out this order. “Bush pulled back from the brink,” the story ends, “submitting to the Justice Department’s legal ruling.”


This anecdote wasn’t the point of the article; it was included as a comment on Mueller’s character, not the former president’s lack of it. But it left me wondering: why do we ignore the bad things our favorite political party does and trumpet the errors of the other party?

Many of my Facebook friends lean Republican, so I routinely see rants against Obama. Even this weekend there were angry comments because he golfed on Memorial Day after visiting Arlington, as if everyone else in the country spent the entire day leaving flowers on graves instead of grilling hamburgers and watching people in Indianapolis drive too fast.

I see unquestioning approval of Dubya. I see adoration of Palin and her book. Never, ever have any of my conservative friends ever commented on anything positive or helpful Obama has done.

I’m not the president’s PR committee, but I think it’s telling. If Obama’s administration tried to illegally spy on American citizens, trick a sick public official into reversing a ruling on the constitutionality of it and then ignore his decision, that’s all I’d read on Facebook for a week (and rightly so). Strangely, none of my friends have linked to the May 9 issue of Time.


Both presidents have major faults. They’ve both made decisions to disagree with. What I don’t understand is why we can’t be honest about that.

Bush banned partial-birth abortion, signed legislation to protect our forests and lakes, and changed the Medicare program to benefit seniors. He also lied about weapons of mass destruction, mishandled Hurricane Katrina and doubled the national debt. Obama has continued raising the deficit, he gambled considerable political capital and time on the health care reform issue, and he’s undercut Israel’s position with Palestine more than once. He also got us out of Iraq, expanded laws against hate crimes, and made a gutsy call that led to bin Laden’s capture.

Black and white positions are always more comfortable because they are both easy to understand and efficient to argue. (“The Bible says it, I believe it, and that’s that.”) Trouble is, the black and white perspective is almost always incomplete. Few issues are clear-cut. Few arguments can be blamed on just one participant. And few politicians are all bad or all good.


I’m sorry to my fundamentalist friends, religious, political or otherwise. I’m sorry to everyone who scores an off-the-chart “J” on the Myers Briggs. I’m sorry to those impatient with nuance. I’m sorry to both the reds and the blues who don’t want to think. But it is intellectually dishonest and just plain lazy to vilify one party and venerate the other.

June 1, 2011 - Posted by | life, opinions | , , , , , , , , , , ,

7 Comments »

  1. Amen Jen! Great points here. Every vote I have ever cast has been for Republicans. I have listened to Limbaugh for years and I have a FoxNews app on my phone, but I do not believe that the GOP is above reproach in all things. While I am not a fan of our current President, I agree with you that he receives criticism over things that seem rather petty (I shared your view about the Mem. Day golf). He did honor the dead at Arlington. I also thought his speech in Joplin on Sunday was great.

    Comment by Mike Kjergaard | June 1, 2011 | Reply

    • Absolutely–nothing wrong with affiliating with a party, as long as you think. :) The speech Sunday was wonderful and I appreciated the Joplin crowd’s appreciation of both the president and the MO governor.

      Comment by Jennifer | June 1, 2011 | Reply

  2. Well said, Jen! I’ve been advocating and pushing for this kind of honesty for a long time.

    A friend and I had a “discussion” recently about claims she was making about Obama that were demonstrably and verifiably false. I pointed that out and linked directly to the source documentation, and she disagreed and then said, “I know what facts I know, and the only “feeling” I get mixed into the thoughts I have about Obama is the anger I FEEL due to the FACTS I KNOW.” The “facts” were false, but she stood by her position and refused to acknowledge that the person she disliked might have done something good, or that the person she loved might be fallible. Very disappointing.

    I would love to see more people with the approach that you have, and have written about here.

    Comment by Randy Crane | June 1, 2011 | Reply

  3. a-freaking-men

    And that pretty much sums up my reaction :-)

    Comment by lora | June 1, 2011 | Reply

  4. Watch out Jen… no attacking Gods Own Party…

    Comment by kyle | June 1, 2011 | Reply

  5. LOVE THIS!!! thanks for sharing it!

    And I always say, you couldn’t pay me enough to be the president.

    Comment by mattbortmess | June 2, 2011 | Reply

  6. Totally agree! I find it sad that many Christians put their politics ahead of their Savior. And this happens on BOTH sides. I tend conservative, and I have rarely if ever spoken a bad word about President Obama. In fact, my view of him greatly improved after the Osama bin Laden killing, despite the fact that many conservatives I know dissected the Presidents address to point out how “self-centered” Obama was in his actions. Funny how we criticize the “other guy” for taking a vacation, but give “our guy” a pass when he does likewise.

    Comment by Dan from Newnan, GA | June 3, 2011 | Reply


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