There is a faction in America that will never be satisfied with anything President Obama does. This is why it has been so easy for the GOP leaders to get so many people to disrupt the town hall meetings. Healthcare reform has very little to do with it. If you watch closely, you'll see that most of the rabblerousers are older and on Medicare, even though they rale against "government run healthcare." Don't try to tell me they don't know that their Medicare comes from the government. It's just an excuse.
So, what is the real reason? When you look at those ugly, distorted faces, you realize that racism has reared its ugly head. That's where all the anger is coming from. The media's got it wrong. This is nothing like what happened in Florida in 2000, when the GOP sent in the Brooks Brothers Brigade to stop the vote count. Those people were having fun. Pranksters. Dirty-tricksters. The people at the rallys are haters.
And, so, I believe the town hall meetings should be canceled and other venues used to answer the legitimate questions about healthcare reform from legitimate constituents. Local television programming is one way for the Congressmen to explain their views. They already know the questions, if they've paid any attention to their e-mails, faxes, snail mail and phone calls. Or, failing that, if they just turn on CNN or the Nightly News or any of the other news programs.
The main reason I believe the town hall meetings should be canceled, though, is because if not, someone is going to be seriously injured or killed. It seems inevitable.
It's the anger. The hatred. The racism.
Stay tuned.
Showing posts with label violence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label violence. Show all posts
Sunday, August 09, 2009
Thursday, March 20, 2008
James Lee Burke-a-thon

With my recent activities, you might think that all I've done is run around, but you'd be wrong. I have managed to make time in my busy schedule for reading.
On the recommendation of the lovely Newt, I read "Electric Mist With the Confedrate Dead", by James Lee Burke, and enjoyed it. As I always tend to do with an author I "discover", I wanted to read everything he has written. This turned out to be a tall order, as he has written LOTS of books. At any rate, I have immersed myself in them, and have worked my way through eight or nine of them.
He has two series'. In one, his main character is Dave Robichaux, sometime New Orleans cop, sometimes ex-cop. Mostly, the books are set in New Iberia, the town in which he grew up. In the second series, his main character is Billy Bob Holland, a lawyer and ex-Texas Ranger, who lives in Montana sometimes and in Texas sometimes.
The more books I have read, the more my interest has waned, I'm afraid. The books are formulaic in the extreme. Every Robichaux book follows the same plot, with only the names changed. Robichaux is in his 60s, and his past seems to be littered with broken hearts all the way back to his teens, and in each book, so far, there is at least one female character who is STILL carrying a torch for the great swordsman, and longs for another crack at him. In each book, Robichaux decides someone is a bad guy, and then sets out to pin the crime(s) on him and/or her. And, in each book, he turns out to be wrong to one degree or another. I blame this on the obvious location of his brain.
Robichaux is also skating on thin ethical ice as a cop. His violent nature sometimes makes him cross the line and he is either fired or suspended, but they always seem to take him back because he's just a damn good cop.
In the other series, Billy Bob Holland is a kinder, gentler, younger version of Robichaux, but he's no wuss, either. He has the same history with women who keep popping up with regularity from his past. Burke has applied the same basic formula with these books that he uses with the Robichaux books, changing the names and geography as needed. Billy Bob is slightly more likeable, but I have to admit, he would turn me off completely.
Why, oh why do the men who write these mysteries have to endow their main characters with almost super-virility? Is it for the same reason that they drive fancy sportscars and big hummers?
These books are entertaining enough, though I think I should have read something else between each one. I'm not saying I won't read another one, but it will be a while.
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