One of the first things I learned about politics, sitting in Mr
Rupnow's current events class during my sophomore year of high school
at Kettle Moraine, is that America historically elects only
w.a.s.p's for president.
We just elected the first
African-American President of the United States of America, I said, as
I held my wife's hand watching Senator Obama's acceptance speech.
Amazing!
Yet,
during the night as I watched the returns, I held my breath until
enough states went blue and Obama could take a commanding electoral
lead. I could not forget the Kerry defeat of 2004. For the first 90
minutes, McCain lead with one southern state after another capitulating
red, beginning with Kentucky. Electorally, that was no problem if Obama
could eat into some of the states which have voted republican in the
past, like Ohio and Florida - which he did seemingly without effort.
When
Charlie Gibson called the election quietly and almost non-nonchalantly
for Obama, there was a moment of silence until my wife and I realized
what he just said.
My wife and I promptly celebrated with a $4.99 bottle of champagne.
While its fantastic that Obama did indeed win – by an electoral landslide no less, and McCain conceded as honorably as he did, there is still much work that liberals need to do in raising social consciousness of how we should regulate social policy administrated by our government..
On
that note, one the most evocative moments last night was watching the
interview with Congressmen Jim Sensensbrenner at the Ryan campaign –
who was re-elected over the less crazier choice of Constitution Party
candidate... what's his name... Raymond? To the interviewer,
Sensenbrenner stated something to the effect, that in order for
Republicans to once again lead, they had to return to a party of low
taxes and fiscal responsibly, good governance, and true social
conservative values.
I wonder what Sensensbrenner meant by "true
social conservative values." If "true social conservative values" is
legislating policy predicated upon a religious worldview - then I'm
afraid I won't be voting Republican anytime soon.
Presently, the
Republican party is largely a party of social conservatives. The
culture wars that social conservatives purposely engage in, like the
banning of gay marriage or civil unions, creationism versus evolution,
threatening a woman's health where abortion is concerned, religion over
science, drug policy, are really just a whole host of quasi-religious
or outright religious principles.
Republicans actively crusade
for these principles at the behest of churches or religious right
advocacy groups – forever negating the concept of small government by legislating these religious values and imposing them onto our collective freedom of conscious.
I do agree with the opinions of other pundits who state that this country is center-right, if not in economics and regulation, at least in the sphere of the social values I listed above. The banning of gay marriage in Arizona, Florida, and at time of writing this as returns trend, California – illustrates that liberals have much work to do in achieving equality for a class of citizens and restraining government off our bodies and in the choices that we make in our relationships, and the beliefs we wish to, or not, ascribe to.
This is why
I admired McCain when he stridently stood up to the religious right, a
key base of the GOP as the "agents of intolerance." If our democracy is
to survive, it must not function as camouflage for one religion over
another - even if that religion is one idiosyncratic variety of a
larger whole.
That is why liberals, in this regard, are
functionally libertarians – that is, more like true social
conservatives then social conservatives are. Liberals are more prone to maintain and fight for the boundaries between religion and secularity.
Personally,
my libertarianism expresses my social liberalism which in turn is
informed by Humanism and the secular nature of our Constitution.
Science, for me, illuminates reality, where religion only substitutes
superstition and unfounded and untestable notions on reality.
Where will the Republican party go after this? Where will the Democratic party go after this?
I do not know, but I do have hope.
But it is clear to me, that both parties have a long way to go on these social issues.
Democrats are closer, while Republicans are far from it.