2008: Year of Hope, Year of Fear. Essay 4
Bringing the spirit of Obama to the City Council
My comments are about hope.
Having seen a few more election cycles than many, I was becoming rather jaded. I believed there was very little chance to move this nation of ours in a different direction. And then came Barack Obama running on the theme of hope. Still the skeptic I had long ago given up hope that our leadership would give up their partisanship and deeply held ideologies and begin to think of all the people who live in this nation.
I’m delighted that Obama sold hope to the nation’s young people and many others who felt disenfranchised, but even he will never be able to accomplish a fraction of the things he promised. I wish we had an electorate that would have been satisfied with campaign promises that said “I will do my best, but don’t expect me to do it all.” He can’t of course. Critics will attack and undermine what little hope he does generate. I hope they give him the space and time to be human and screw up a few things as we all do.
If he does nothing else, but give us the motivation to each do our best to get through these next few years with some degree of pride he will have done much.
I don’t think even Obama can do much to teach us that we can’t have it all — or to inoculate us from the greedy. If we are to learn from this recession it will be that maybe for the first time we will have to set aside money to pay for what we want rather than putting everything on plastic.
I would hope this includes our cities like Seattle which still fails to manage its budget so that we can maintain our roads, bridges, and public works without asking for special levies to pay for it.
And last I hope that maybe Obama will set a new example for local government. A government that will invite opposing viewpoints and vigorously debate public policy decisions. Instead we have vote after vote 9-0 or 8-1. Our City Council hears presentations from City departments, but gives no equal time for opposing views to debate the issues. We can’t forget it’s “We the People.” It is we who hire our elected officials.
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Comments:
Posted Mon, Dec 29, 10 p.m. inappropriate
Seattle NC, where in the hell are you wrt to the International District ??
Drugs are dealt nightly on the streets of China town.
China town is overrun with the homeless alcoholics.
Gang pimps cruise the streets in their escalades looking for business.
The current mayor/council throw down a thin layer of asphalt on one street and expect blind obedience !
Is that your 'heighborhood office' on Jackson, that has NO real access ( look at the posted sked for hours open ) and does not return emails ???
Posted Tue, Dec 30, 8:24 a.m. inappropriate
I think you are confusing the official Seattle Department of Neighborhoods, the department "pro-neighborhood" Nickels kneecapped in one of his first official acts as Mayor with Kent's SNC -- a breakfast club of concerned citizens around the city who meets to hear from electeds and policymakers once per month.
Posted Tue, Dec 30, 10:14 a.m. inappropriate
Obama should be viewed not as a savior, but as an opportunity.
One person does not a nation make, for that matter not even a neighborhood.
Democracy is broken in America and it will take individuals stepping up and working to build it - and doing a better job at it then the corporate-government branch of the military industrial complex.
While building networks of diverse integrity to run our communities we also need to take out the problem folks. The law is in place to do this, we need to just insist it be enforced.
Doing this in balance with the positive is necessary - if you can be a team playing leader in your neighborhood while taking out a corrupt scumbag, well, things would get one whole hell of a lot better.