Kirafa’s Revolt


Ummm, has anybody seen “Hope” lately?
April 7, 2009, 9:28 pm
Filed under: Barack Obama, Political, PUMA, Recession, Uncategorized

Random vehicle
“We the people who make under $30 to $50k per year deserve the bailout, not the CEO’s of corps and bankers that make and retire on $600,000,000!!! more than we do/Leaving us to starve and lose our homes”

I was driving down to see my daughter this past weekend and came across the car in the photo and couldn’t help thinking, “Where is ‘hope’ lately?” Has anyone seen it around?

We got the change (okay, so Obama is more of the same, but they did have to change the presidential monograms); however, hope has left the building.

I am in South Carolina and our newspapers are full of hopelessness.

Amy Goldstein of the Washington post recently wrote:

Columbia, SC – The scenes here are now familiar in places deeply bruised by the recession: The Salvation Army gets so many calls from people desperate for help with overdue utility bills that, one morning, its phone system crashed. The Family Service Center of South Carolina is deluged with clients seeking free counseling for delinquent mortgages. And the shelves at the Life Force food pantry run out of rice, canned stew meat and black-eyed peas in less than an hour.

Yet in few places is the nonprofit sphere being tested as profoundly as in this Southern city – the capital where, figures released this week show, the unemployment rate is now second-worst in the nation . . .

And from the Greenville News:

The recession is driving more and more people to seek mental health services, overwhelming agencies struggling with shrinking budgets.

At the Greenvile chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, attendance at a support group for caregivers is up 40 percent over last year, said executive director Kelly Troyer. And the weekly group for patients has seen a jump of nearly 400 percent, she said, from 65 last year to 318.

Job loss, home foreclosures and mounting bills are pushing people to the edge, she said.

South Carolina also happens to be the state where Oprah chose to tell us, “He is the ONE.”

So, all I can say is WHERE IS THE DAMN HOPE I WAS PROMISED?



It’s My Choice
September 12, 2008, 3:10 pm
Filed under: Barack Obama, Election, Hillary Clinton, Political, PUMA, Sarah Palin

Over and over in the Blogosphere and on television, we have seen demographics cited in various polls.  Two of the most prevalent, have been African-Americans and women.  It has been discussed that most African-Americans will vote for Barack Obama and it is expected.  No news there, it is what was expected and is therefore acceptable. 

 

Another predominant message is “Country First” or “Country Before Party”.  We see this on candidate’s signs, and some bloggers even close their postings with similar lines.  This is acceptable as well.  Most Americans are proud of being American, they are flag waving patriots and love their country.

 

I fit into the second category, I am a woman and I have decided that it is time for me to state that I am not an American first, and a democrat second;  I am a woman first and foremost.  I can move to another country and join another party, but I am still a woman.  Nothing can change that simple fact, I have to squat to pee and I cannot shake it off afterwards, if you find that offensive, so be it, it is the truth. 

 

I am a daughter, a mother, a sister, a friend, a lover and a wife.  I know what it is like to chose to have a child or not have a child.  I know what it is like to be paid less for the same job as a male coworker.  Almost all women have seen friends abused or have been abused themselves.  Abuse comes in many forms, from being pushed, slapped, kicked or having to listen to the off-color joke to keep a job, to getting someone’s coffee or being threatened with your right to chose to do what you damn well please with your uterus. 

 

We saw that abuse in various forms with Hillary Clinton and are seeing it now with Sarah Palin.   

 

Why is it considered perfectly okay to vote for a candidate because of race and not okay to vote for a candidate because she understands what it is like to be a woman?  Have you ever met a man who said he understood a woman?  If you have, please give him my number. 

 

I have heard many times from bloggers and pundits that you must vote for an African American if you are black, because he will work to right the many wrongs inflicted upon his race.  I disagree with that choice, because I don’t think Barack Obama has a clue as to the plight of any disadvantaged person, but we have the right to vote for whomever we please, unless, you are a Democrat.

 

Women in the Democratic Party have been told that they need to get with the program and vote for the candidate selected (yes, I said selected) by the Party.  Isn’t this just another form of abuse?  Am I not capable of deciding whom I want to vote for?  Should I vote for someone just because there is a “D” beside their name or should I vote for someone who understands me? Should I vote for someone who understands what it like to be asked if they have adequate childcare, when applying for a job? Or someone who understands what it is like to be called a bitch for almost any reason?  Or someone who understands what it is like to be in a bad mood and to be questioned if it is that time of the month?    

 

Maybe, 2008 will be the year that a woman breaks through that glass ceiling that Hillary put so many cracks in, and just maybe 2012, will be the year we see two capable women from both major parties as the front-runners.  I will be able to choose which woman I like best and who best represents me and my ideals. 

 

If that sounds like it is all about me, maybe it is.  I have never been able to say that it is all about me. You see, because I am a woman, it has never been about me.  It has been about my children, my spouse or significant other, or my job or just being able to keep a roof over my head or insurance and keeping those that I love safe, because that’s what a woman does. 

 

Get over it, get past it and get used to it. 

 

 

 

 



Let’s Get This Party Started!

 

Okay, let’s get the party started.  I have joined HireHeels, JustSayNoDeal, PumaPac, Puma Facebook and I have blogged til my fingers are sore.  The problem is we are still being portrayed as tired, old, angry women. 

 

I am not angry, I am resolved.  I am not old, I am 50.  I am not tired, I am puma-roaring and ready to fight this battle.

 

Can we send out mass mailings all on one day designed to deluge the DNC and the SD’s?  Can we chose a day to call and make our voices heard?  Can we email the MSM until all they have are PUMA emails?  Can we meet at our state’s Democratic Headquarters on a chosen date?

 

I am a fixture at the Confluence, Riverdaughter’s writings are beautiful and it is the birthplace of PUMA (Party Unity My Ass).  Garychapelhill and Mawninnc post there and have taken their time, money and effort to attend the DNC/RBC meeting in DC and are now at the Unity Rally in Untiy, New Hampshire.  I am so proud to say that I know them, if only in the blogosphere, but they are only two, who are outraged enough to do something to make a change.

 

So, are we outraged enough, if so, why aren’t we doing something? 

 

Let’s Go Pumas!

Puma\'s Roar



For Me it Wasn’t Kool Aid, It was Guilt
June 23, 2008, 2:02 pm
Filed under: Barack Obama, Election, Hillary Clinton, Political, PUMA

I haven’t been writing long, so forgive me if my style isn’t pulitzer prize winning, but this post is for me, heart wrenching though it may be.  Many of you who have responded to posts or something I have written, have said they were interested in what exactly threw me aboard the Obama train and later, what caused me to jump off, bruised and battered.

Well, for what it is worth, here it is . . .

I began my life as a southern, republican, conservative girl, my parents were conservative republicans and as such, so was I. However, for some reason, I was also a very inquisitive young lady and have been told by my family, that after every question they answered, I asked, why? I suppose some of us are wired differently and a pat answer is not enough.

We were not an extremely wealthy family, if I needed new shoes, I got them, but there were occasions, when I had to wait until the next week to get them.  I suppose that made us normal, albeit, lower middle class, but still, middle class. 

I remember, when I was about 5 years old, a man was shot riding in a parade.  My grandmother said he was a good man, even though our family didn’t vote for him.  I wondered why we didn’t vote for the good man, when I saw his little boy salute his father at his funeral.

In second grade, there were new people in my school.  People who looked diferent than me, but who were kids, just like me.  Older people were going crazy over it, but they were just children and some of them became my friends.  I wondered why the older people didn’t understand, that for me, these were just kids whose hair was maybe not blonde, or whose eyes weren’t blue.  I know that later on a man tried to make a difference for my new friends and he too, was shot. 

I was watching tv the next year when another man was shot.  My  mother told me that he was running for president and his brother was the man I has seen shot when I was five.  She told me that he too, was a good man.

I also remember seeing images of a war on tv in a country far away from me.  By my 11th or 12th birthday, these images were much scarier.  Young men were dying, families were sitting around their tv screens waiting on a lottery of some type and afterwards the families would cry. 

At thirteen, I decided I had seen enough good men dying and announced to my family, I was a democrat.  I am not sure I understood the difference, but it made sense to me.  My family laughed and thought it was really cute.  They stopped laughing, when I starting hanging posters up and wearing peace symbols.  I was too young to be involved with this whole hippie movement, it had to be just teenage rebellion.

I grew up, went to school, learned the difference between a democrat and a republican, and stayed a democrat.  I got married, bought a house, had children, and stayed true to my beliefs.  The images from my childhood had a very lasting impression on me and the things that mattered to me.  I cared about civil rights, equal rights for womenand wanted no more wars that scarred, maimed or killed young men.

My children were raised to believe that bigotry and racism was wrong, we were all alike.  My husband and I had friends of every nationality, race, religion and sexual orientation.  However, we still lived in the south and there were constantly questions.  How on earth could I let a gay woman babysit my children and why in the world, would I allow a black man to drop my daughters off to cheerleading practice?  I never knew that someday, my children would put me to the test on my beliefs.

When my oldest daughter was twenty, she announced that she was getting married and that her husband to be was black.  She had not yet finished school and furthermore, she was pregnant.  To this day, I don’t know if I objected so strongly because she was too young, not yet through with school or because we were southern and knew they would face so many obstacles.  I threw out every reason to her for this marriage to fail.  When I look back, I have to ask myself if I contributed to it’s ultimate demise.  Her fiance’s family was opposed to the marriage as well, their main objection was race.

Besides the obvious reasons for the marriage to fail; their age, lack of education and complete financial insecurity; our society was not going to openly validate their relationship.  I have often wondered if parents of GLBT feel the same way.  That it is not opposition to the lifestyle, but simply knowing, that this is not going to be easy and we want our children’s lives to be easy.  I love my daughter and wanted her to have everything; love, children, a good marriage and society’s blessing.

The marriage took place and I paid for it, but my daughter and I had a strained relationship for years.  The divorce took place three years later, I paid for it as well; and out of it, I have two beautiful bi-racial grandchildren and I think I want more for them, than I wanted for their mother.

In 2004, I watched the democrat convention, and watched a young man take the stage.  He started to speak and I was mesmerized.  By the time he was through with his speech, I was openly crying.  Who was this man?  My wow factor was in overdrive, did everybody see him, did they feel like I did, could he change the world; I was almost stuttering with glee.  This man could be president, he could lead the way for others, he could unite our country, he could do it all; my loyalty was unquestioning.

Months passed and the presidential election season was approaching; knowing that I was such an avid political junkie, friends and acquaintances would ask who I thought should run, my response was always an emphatic-Barack Obama.  They would say things like, he has no experience, he is too young or he is just a junior senator.  This did not sway me at all, I wanted my grandchildren to see that there were no limitations for them, the sky was the limit.  I was asked by the same friends and acquaintances, “Well, what about Hillary Clinton?” I would say, “She’s old-school, been there, done that.”

When Barack Obama announced his candidacy, I was on board immediately.  What could I do to help?  Just tell me where you need me, no questions asked. I started out phone banking, I had done this before, so I didn’t need much help.  I started making the calls and although this may sound racist, it did not take me long to figure out, I was only calling African Americans.  This surprised me, because I thought this campaign was all about UNITY; not black, not white, nor red or blue, but coming together.  My loyalty was true though, so I blocked it out and kept on calling. 

Several months passed and I was given new call sheets.  These call sheets were to white registered democrats.  I won’t go into detail, but the responses I was getting were not what I had expected.  Most were hateful, vile, mean and cruel.  The more calls I made, the more depressed I became.  Were we still bigots and racist here in the South?  After a month or so, I completely withdrew from the campaign.  I wanted nothing more to do with politics. 

But, I had been a political junkie and activist too long and I needed to get out of this funk.  I started working with the HuffingtonPost “Off the Bus” citizen journalist project.  I had to know if the rest of the world felt like so many I had spoken with, while phone banking for Obama.  Soon enough I got my answer. 

I had met many Obama supporters while I campaigned for him and they had an almost blind loyalty to him. There had been some, I had spoken with while phone banking, that mentioned backgeound issues.  I knew nothing of these things they mentioned and decided to do some investigating of my own.  I had always looked at a candidate’s history, their previous policies and experience, evertime, except this time.  I started looking into his background and history and saw there wasn’t much there, it was almost a blank.  On important issues, he had voted present and sometimes voted the wrong way, and then claimed that he had flubbed and pushed the wrong button.   He had some dubious affiliations and friends that had questionable backgrounds.  He did not have a great resume, because, no sooner did he land one position or seat,  than he was out campaigning for another.  Was it possible that I had let my emotions control me and had jumped on a bandwagon for someone who could do more harm than good?  Could his candidacy be more for his own ego, than the good of the country? 

The primary in my state was gearing up and I was determined to check out the rest of the candidates.  I went to hear John Edwards and he was okay, but I was still looking for the thrill factor.  Hillary and Bill were making the rounds, but I wasn’t paying a lot of attention to them.  The day of our primary came and I still did not know who I was voting for when I walked into the booth.  I voted for Sen. Clinton, it wasn’t the Bradley effect, it wasn’t because I was a woman; it was her experience and nothing more.  I wasn’t ecstatic about my choice, but just very comfortable with it.  It wasn’t until the New Hampshire primary that I got my wow factor, Senator Clinton found her voice and I found my goosebumps. 

When I look back on my time on this election season, I have come to a few realiziations.  The Presidency of the United States is a job and a damn hard one.  We as citizens, need to know this.  As President, we expect you to make the right decisions, because they affect us, the constituency.  We need to base our decision on which candidate to vote for based on their experience, not our emotions.  It should not be a popularity contest, but rather an interview process.  We should check references and do a thorough background search.

I didn’t do these things, when I jumped on the Obama bus.  My past experiences made me think this was the right choice, the things I had experienced as a child and as a parent.  I wanted to show the world that we had come a long way and that I was on board.  Some of my reasoning was right, but I know now that my choice was wrong. 

I thought that when I told my children I could no longer support Barack Obama, I would get some backlash from this decision, after all, he was the hip, young candidate that most of the young people adored.  They just looked at me and said, “Well mom, he really isn’t qualified.”

I guess there were some some things I did right after all.

 



Heal Thyself!
June 21, 2008, 5:37 pm
Filed under: Barack Obama, Election, Hillary Clinton, Political, PUMA

During a recent meeting with the Black Caucus , our presumptuous nominee,  Sen. Barack Obama was asked how he was going to mend the discord in the democratic party, particularly amongst women.  Sen. Obama was quoted as saying,

“ I need to make a decision in the next few months as to how I manage that since I’m running against John McCain, which takes a lot of time. If women take a moment to realize that on every issue important to women, John McCain is not in their corner, that would help them get over it.”

Please note the last three words, “Get over it.”

So, exactly what is it, that Obama wants us to get over?  Does he want us to get over the fact that the the more capable candidate, that had more experience, did not win the nomination?  In my opinion, she did, in fact, win and the DNC handed you the nomination; despite the fact that you do not have the experience necessary to become the President of the United States.

 But, should my opinion really matter to Sen. Obama?  After all, who am I? 

I guess my friends and acquaintances consider me to be “likeable enough”.  I have  been married, so I suppose some may have considered me to be  “just a wife”.  I am a democrat, which means I may have “hollered at republicans”.  I don’t think I have ever “looked like a dancer”, but I have been told I am “gorgeous”.   And lastly, because I am a woman, “periodically, I launch attacks” and “let my claws come out” but I know, that does not “boost my appeal” nor does it make me a “sweetie”.

But, Senator Obama, rather than trying to heal myself of all these terrrible afflictions you have reputed women to have, I think I would prefer to lie under the bus.  After all, I would have excellent company with your white granny, Hazel Johnson, Alice Palmer, 51% of the American population, the GLBT population of the United States, Geraldine Ferraro and Senator Hillary Clinton.

Hey, Senator Clinton, pass me the whiskey.  I am so happy to know that they do not serve kool-aid under this bus.

 

 

 

 



Requiem For Democracy
June 14, 2008, 2:59 am
Filed under: Barack Obama, Election, Hillary Clinton, Political, PUMA | Tags: ,

I have just got home from my second job.  Yes, I am one of the women who have children in college, a mortgage to pay, a car payment and rarely enough money to go around.  But I am not complaining, I have come into contact with people today who have no insurance, who have no money for gas, who have no jobs and no prospects. 

I was taught by wise grandparents that we do not complain about our lot in life, if we are not doing anything to rectify the situation. 

I came home and logged on to my favorite website and there was a sort of memorial going on there for Tim Russert.  I turned on my TV and the same was being shown on TV.  While I am sorry for his wife and son, I did not know Tim Russert and do not feel I need to mourn for him.  If that sounds selfish, I am sorry, perhaps I am selfish.  I am sure Mr. Russert’s family will be well taken care of and there are so many atrocities going on in the world, I cannot and will not stop for the passing of someone who lived a full life and rose to the greatness that is presently being endowed upon him.

As we are praising Tim Russert, there are young men in Iraq and Afghanistan who have not seen their families in months.  Yet, we see nothing of their loss on TV.  We see very little of the unnecessary deaths caused by the fact that people cannot get adequate health care, because they have no insurance.  We see nothing of the young people whose lives are slowly drifting away, they want more, but cannot afford an education.

We had an opportunity in the past few months to rectify all of this, but it was taken from us; taken by the Washington elite; taken by mainstream media, of which Russert was a part of; and taken by people who pretend to care.  So, excuse me if I feel that I don’t have time to mourn the loss of a stranger.

I will mourn the loss of my democratic rights as an American citizen.  I mourn the loss of my vote for the candidate of my choice. I mourn the loss of my party.  I will mourn that, as a woman, I am insignificant.

So forgive me, if I seem cold and uncaring, but I have lost democracy as I know it and I don’t have time to mourn a stranger.