Going back to yesterday, I have been disappointed that
the president has not stuck to his ideals as much as he could have. The fact
that he has been so persistent with some things, despite opposition, shows me
that he has not completely lost those ideals, and I believe he is a good man,
but I wanted more.
One thing I had not fully realized was how many obstacles
there are. I was reading something about the Guantanamo situation, and the
practical issues of moving the prisoners, and it is harder than you think it
would be. No, you can't send them here. No, you can't transport them this way.
It's not enough reason not to persist, especially when
you have real injustices happening, but when there are so many areas requiring
attention, and each one is involved, I do sympathize with not getting
everything done. I am constantly falling short of my own expectations, and they
are much more modest. For that reason, when you have people who criticize
anything and everything because of a single issue that is not addressed, I
don't think they are being realistic.
There is something else that is a new consideration for
me. Yesterday I wrote about how difficult it is to make changes that stick,
because things seem to keep working their way back to the original state. This
may be more than an unfortunate maintaining of equilibrium, but that the people
who are benefited by the status quo not only have a vested interest in
maintaining it, but also power to do it.
So even for an outsider coming into power, suddenly the
old ways have an attraction beyond being entrenched, because now they are
working in your favor.
It is interesting to me because I have been noticing
recently that even with music, a lot of things break down into whether you are
part of the establishment or anti-establishment. There are people for whom
being a rebel is a big part of their identity, and people who look at the
rebels and are personally offended beyond all reason.
There are some problems with this. First of all it
assumes an enemy, regardless of side. Also, it's kind of a stupid way of
looking at things. Not everything that comes from the establishment is bad. For
example, a basic agreement on appropriate behavior for traffic, enforced by
law, makes transportation practical and pretty safe. Even most of the times
when it is not safe, it's because someone is not following the law. So
rebelling against speed limits or traffic signals as an infringement on your personal liberty would be silly, and most people get that.
There are a lot of areas where the lines are less clearly
drawn, so there is room for disagreement. Decisions then should be based on
thinking about the effects: what do we get? what do we lose? If you are dead
set against conformity, you could reject something good, and if you are dead-set
against hippies you will reject different good things.
My tendency is to go with doing the right thing, but
there are so many different interpretations of that, and some of the worst
ideas out there are supported strictly because they seem so righteous. Being
right comes down to love though; I know that.
The establishment and the anti-establishment both have
room for a lot of awfulness, so no matter how different they may appear, there
can be some surprising similarities. However, there really is a pretty clear
distinction between loving and creating versus hating and destroying. That
one's fairly easy to tell. And in this case, there is only one right side.
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