Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Post Election Thoughts: After the Election - Now What?

After the Election… Now what?

A big congratulation goes out to both candidates, President Obama and Governor Mitt Romney for a job well done.  Special shoutout goes to President Obama for being our incumbent 44th President of the United States. 

But now that the election is over, now what?

Really – during the election, what was the issue?  Really if you think about it – what issues were on the platform? 

·        The LGBT community was appeased by the Obama camp saying that the president supports gay rights.  Be it clear, he did not say that he supported the lifestyle or embraced it – he just supported the rights.  Romney kept hush about that – although we know that his religious fervor as a devout Mormon prevents him from supporting homosexuality in any facet, as it is a “sinful behavior”.

·       The economy – perhaps the most talked about situation in the campaigning season – is the result of policies that are passed.  Policies are developed by all political affiliations and elected leaders.  Inasmuch as the presidential candidates talked about it, the real thing is this: the President does not control policy, and thus not the economy. Although the president supports certain legislation – it is impossible for him to control either.  Furthermore, the economy has seasons: season of plenty, season of not enough, and season of just enough. If we were conscious of that, we wouldn’t get so bent out of shape about the economy.  Regardless of the presidential nominee for this season, we still have to develop policies that encourage growth both in the public and private sector.

·       Taxes – (which is directly effects the economy) – were a much talked about subject area.  Taxes help the economy keep social programs.  The only issue is that the public has not been presented an accurate view of what social programs do. Furthermore, people do not understand what their tax dollars are spent, and how taxes support our nation-building projects.  Instead, people get a view tax lawyers and firms that help us get our money back, because we don’t understand the values that it really has. Therefore, we base our opinions off of hearsay rather than comprehension

·        Healthcare has been on the ballot for years.  However, during the Obama administration we were introduced to a universal healthcare system.  Most developing nations have already have a system in place that are even better than the proposed Obamacare.  As to why it became an issue, I have no idea.  Why not use ambassador skills to partner with the European Union to develop a healthcare plan that works and is tailored specific to the United States’ needs?  That was a bipartisan initiative anyway; it did not matter who proposed it, it just needed to have happened.

·       The War on Terror is “over”- in a manner of speaking, or at least on its way to being over.  But let’s talk about why we went in the first place and how America portrays itself as a self-righteous super power that interjects its way into issues that don’t concern its interest(s).  When terror happens, we should be concerned and we should defeat it with all of our might.   In no way does our interference warrant an attack on our soils.  However, we must come to grips that America has had a nasty problem of being passively-aggressive with a globalization message for quite some time.  It often puts us at odds with other countries and portrays us poorly in global media. We should be more focused into nation building and infrastructure repair than we do of creating more problems or being overly assertive.

So now what?

We have evaded talking about the major issues that have cracked our national substructure: education and skills building, lack of integral government, racial and cultural inequalities, systematic oppression and depression of the now majority, the pervasive and omnipresent entertainment machine, and the bipartisan collaboration across all social and political platforms.  We lack the ability to come together because the pieces haven’t been laid right.  If we want to be all the way honest, the United States of America has deflected the essential homeland concerns on to lesser important things. 

More importantly, my question is for my people… black people.  What is our agenda?  Every interest group has an agenda, a focus, and a necessary cause worth fighting socially, politically and physically for – if necessary.  The spirit in which my grandmother and her peers desperately fought to attain rights of any kind is nonexistent in today’s youth.  It is as if we have settled for living in the “right now” that we haven’t even begun to think of the “not yet”.  In fact, I am convinced that the black agenda is concerned with the right now, and predominantly with assistance.  Whether its public assistance or restitution (in act and deed), the vast majority of our black agenda is filled with personal goals instead of professional development for the entire race of black people focused on collaboration within a multicultural nation.  What do we even stand for? Who are we impacting? What needs to be done in our community and how do we collectively push toward that to achieve results?

No comments:

Post a Comment