Thursday, August 7, 2008

Monday, August 4, 2008

WE are the change we have been waiting for.

I understood, when I saw McCain's "The One" online ad, with the out-of-context sentence fragments from Obama and the image of Charlton Heston as Moses parting the waters, that the McCain campaign was issuing a coded message to the religious right:  Obama is the antichrist.  This is all over the blogs now, and is an attempt to rally the religious base, which is starting to understand in some corners that their faith has been co-opted as a political tool by those who do not necessarily share their core values.  The shame and the irony of the McCain campaign is that he's attempting to sell an image of a moral change-agent and maverick, while employing all of the same ugly, venemous, slanderous and immoral tricks of his predecessor.  The out-of-context statement--of Obama saying that "We are the change that we have been waiting for"--is in reality an echo of Ghandi's statement that "You must be the change you wish to see in the world."  The operative word, which the commentators and pundits pointedly ignore, is WE.  Obama is talking not about his personal ambition, but about a movement.  Here is the community organizer rallying us to empowerment and action.  The right sees so much of politics in terms of black and white, and ascribes motives to Obama's actions which do not match his rhetoric.  I don't think Obama is the messiah, nor do I agree with him on every position, but what he is asserting, and what I believe is the most compelling reason to vote for him, is that the people will accomplish vital changes, work for peace, and break the stranglehold of the corporatocracy only by the power of our democracy, by the strength and conviction of our collective voices.  We need someone who can put a face to that movement for change, not one who claims the monarchical mantle to enforce it by fiat.  It is our responsibility to hold him, as President, to this high standard.  WE THE PEOPLE; this is the WE to whom he speaks.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Elephant Seals & Math Students


In just 2-1/2 weeks I return to work, and in 3 weeks I will encounter my new batch of students. This is what they will look like when I gaze fondly at them from my podium and try to teach them math.