A Global President

Samhain                                                Fallowturn Moon

Got this from my sister, Mary, a long time resident of Singapore:

“Most Americans would not understand or appreciate Obama’s influence overseas-he is admired here in Asia & I have spoken to many Singaporeans who are very happy he has been reelected he’s like a global president.”

Somewhat by accident I was in Singapore in 2004 on election day.  Mary and I went to the American Club and watched the returns live over breakfast.  Dismal.  If you recall.

I still remember talking with a taxi-driver who worried out loud about the effect of a Bush presidency.  “You just can’t imagine how it feels to have your life so impacted by someone faraway, whom you don’t choose.”  No, but I can imagine how it feels close up when I do choose them.

OK, Quick Studies. What Did You Learn From the Election?

Samhain                                                               Fallowturn Moon

You wanna know the lessons from the Democratic win?  And the Republican loss?  So do I.  Hard to figure.  The handwringing and the moaning and the posturing in the Red locker room has only just begun.  See the new conservative blogs I just added under Politics:  ConservativeHQ, Redstate and The Weekly Standard.

This one will repay a good deal more thought and attention.  The self-critiques of the Republican party will provide important information to the Democrats.  I’ve already picked up two that reinforce current Democratic strategy, at least in part.  The first?  Republicans believe they have to change their attitudes on immigration.

Why?  Because there are, they’ve discovered, just so damn many Americans of Latin descent, immigrants or children of immigrants.  They vote, too.  Democrat for the most part.  The real bugger here for the Republicans?  They have lots of babies.

It may be true these Americans, focused on family values and the Roman Catholic church, are, as Ronald Reagan said, “…conservative, they just don’t know it yet.”  History though can trump instinct and memories of who treated you well early on linger in the minds of the electorate.  Not forever.  But for a good while.  This one means the Democrats will have to pay attention as well.  A good thing.

Second self-critique.  “We’ve got to stop being a regional party of old white men.”  Hmmm. You think?  This happens to lace into the first one.  It turns out whites are a shrinking part of the electorate and those pesky women (a part of the equation for sure, but I’ve not seen anything on this yet among Republican self-critiques), many of whom are white, also vote Democrat in large numbers.  So, if you’re primary appeal is to wealthy older white men and folks who believe female bodies self-heal after the rape that God intended, well then…

Even so.  Any of these insights has to be chastened with the fact that this was a close, very close election.  That’s why the Democrats had better notice what the Republicans notice and work out their own strategies.  This bumpy ride, in a time of rapid political transition, is far from over.

Tour Introduction

Samhain                                                          Fallowturn Moon

Introduction to a tour of the Terra Cotta Warriors exhibit:

In the 2002 movie, Hero, directed by Yimou Zhang, Sky, an assassin from the state of Zhao confronted Qin Shi Huang Di in sword play; yet, when the decisive moment came, sheathed his sword and fled.  Later, he tries to dissuade Nameless, played by Jet Li, who has trained 10 years to assassinate Qin Shi Huang.

“Why,” Nameless asks, “Do you try to stop me?”

“Two words,” says Sky.

He writes two characters in the sand of the desert with his sword.

When Nameless, too, lets Qin Shi Huang Di live; the king of Qin, soon to become the first emperor, asks him, ‘What were the two words?”

“Our land.”

Hero continues an ongoing campaign, begun under Mao’s leadership, to rehabilitate the image of Qin Shi Huang Di, whose early representations in Chinese history, especially in the Records of The Grand Historian, written by Han historian Sima Qian, were of a cruel, heartless ruler.

Now, we see Qin Shi Huang Di compared to George Washington as the father of his country.  The bit from Hero supports this view.

The terra cotta figures themselves, unique and special as they are artistically, have the primary function now of pointing to the achievements of Qin Shi Huang Di and, by extension, to the story of the Qin state, a story that begins in 771 b.c. with the Zhou dynasty, once secure in the areas inhabited by the early Qin, fleeing to the east as nomads, barbarians from the steppes and grasslands invade.

A Qin armed escort saw the fleeing royals of the Zhou dynasty safely to their new capital, now well to the east.  In gratitude the Zhou gave the Qin leadership a title approximating Duke with a large land grant which became both the Qin state and the western border of Zhou dynasty.  The Qin had had land out there on the frontier previously, but this they held not as rulers, but as horse breeders, a skill for which they were prized.

The 771 bc invasion breaks the Zhou dynasty’s reign, begun in 1100 bc, into an Eastern Zhou realm, nominally controlled by the Zhou kings, and a Western realm, now under the control of warlords like the Duke of Qin.  Thus begins the Spring and Autumn period of Chinese history, running from 770 bc to 476 bc.  During this time there were numerous small states, perhaps as many as 200, each with a king or a duke.  This period ends with the inevitable consolidation of these states into 7 larger ones:  Qin, Zhao, Qi, Chu, Han, Wei and Yan.

Just before the end of the Spring and Autumn Period comes China’s 100 schools of thought.  In this era Chinese intellectuals tried to limn a a way out of the awful, ongoing violence.  In this period Confucius, Lao Tze, the Mohists and the Legalists among many others present different models for a peaceful state.  Confucius suggests a harmonious state based on harmonious relations:  ruler to people, husband to wife, father to son, older brother to younger brother, friend to friend.  He also developed rituals to bind the whole together.  Lao Tze, the Taoist school, sought to retire from action, to live with the flow of events and the natural world.  The Mohists spoke of unconditional love and actively tried to intercede in violent confrontations.  The Legalists, like Qin Shi Huang Di’s advisor Han Fei, believed in strong, clear laws applied equally to all and in harsh, certain punishment when the laws were broken.

This was, globally, the Axial age, the time of the Buddha, the Hebrew Prophets,  Upanishads, Lao Tzu, Homer, Socrates, Parmenides, Heraclitus, Thucydides, Archimedes, Elijah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Deutero-Isaiah as well as  Socrates, Confucius and Zoroaster.

The 100 schools did not end the violence.  Mutual warfare continues from 476 bc to 221 bc, the Warring States period in Chinese history.  The Warring States Period ends when Qin defeats and absorbs the last of the seven.  This is Qin Shi Huang Di’s most visible accomplishment, the unification of China, and the one for which he earns the designation, the George Washington of China.

It is not, however, his most important accomplishment.  His dynasty lasts only 14 years, followed by the rise of another of the Warring States, the Han.  His most lasting legacy lies in the centralization of rule and his rejection of the old method of allowing warlords to become kings, which lead to the Spring and Autumn period.  Qin Shi Huang Di standardized currency, chariot axle-widths, script, weights and measures and he tried to standardize the interpretation of the past.

It was, however, his creation of a court supported by highly trained officials and ruling directly through appointed positions that became the Chinese model for governance, a model still in place today.

 

 

 

Wow.

Samhain                                                        Fallowturn Moon

Amendments – MN 100% reporting

For Against
Marriage 48% 52%
Photo ID 46% 53%

Source: AP and MN Secretary of State

Wow.  Just wow.  Most hopeful sign to me of the evening?  The return of the Minnesota legislature to DFL hands.  Second most hopeful.  Apparent defeat of the constitutional amendments.  Third.  Senate gains by the Dems.  Fourth.  Obama did win.

In the first instance I’d felt the Minnesota I adopted in the early 1970’s had begun to slip away, headed toward a cold Tennessee or Nebraska.  After 8 years of Pawlenty and the no new taxes madness, after four years of Jesse Ventura who made automobile license fees safe for owners of Porsches, it seemed that the compassionate, communal, progressive state I immigrated to in 1971 had signed up with the go it alone, free market (as long as they work for us), flag-wavers.  It made me feel isolated.

Now, I’m happy to say we’ve gone for Obama, re-elected a DFL senator, come close to unseating Michelle Bachmann and, it seems right now, defeated two fearful, ideological amendments to our constitution:  voter id and marriage limited to a man and a woman.  I’m most proud of the defeats of the amendments, if the vote counts hold, because they have been victorious in most places (voter id) and in every place (marriage) they’ve been put forward.  This is Minnesota showing it will not be captive to the fear moguls.  Yes!

The Senate gains by the Democrats, apposite to the predicted Senate capture by the Republicans, mean we’re closer than ever to cloture vote totals.  If only a handful of Republican senators can stiff arm the extremists in their party, we may be able to get something done in the Senate.

Finally, Obama’s win.  He will get to name Supreme Court justices. A very big deal.  Hopefully he will become more active in naming other Federal judges.  The Affordable Healthcare Act will now move toward full implementation.  Beyond that, I’m not sure what we’ll see.  Obama’s proven a more pragmatic president on many of my issues: environment, foreign policy, aid to those ravaged by the greed of the big banks and wall street.  I hope he will grow some spine and front the Republicans on these issues.

But you say.  He has to govern.  Yes, he does.  And that comes first.  Still, I believe he can do better.

Ralph’s Perspective

Samhain                                                             Fallowturn Moon

A Nation’s Strength

What makes a nation’s pillars high
And it’s foundations strong?
What makes it mighty to defy
The foes that round it throng?

It is not gold. Its kingdoms grand
Go down in battle shock;
Its shafts are laid on sinking sand,
Not on abiding rock.

Is it the sword? Ask the red dust
Of empires passed away;
The blood has turned their stones to rust,
Their glory to decay.

And is it pride? Ah, that bright crown
Has seemed to nations sweet;
But God has struck its luster down
In ashes at his feet.

Not gold but only men can make
A people great and strong;
Men who for truth and honor’s sake
Stand fast and suffer long.

Brave men who work while others sleep,
Who dare while others fly…
They build a nation’s pillars deep
And lift them to the sky.