About Me
- MichelleBright, brightwriter4hire
- Muses have been haunting me since I was 7-years-old. Unfortunately, in 21 years, I have not yet learned to speak or interpret their language. Many times, to my regret, I ignore them. Other times I rage at them. "I want my life back!" I scream. Even though, I cannot yet understand them, they all too well understand me. When they've had enough of being ignored, they leave me. Sometimes it is years before they come back. That is when I am most miserable.
Monday, September 29, 2008
The Debate
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Economic Review/ Debate Response
I like Obama. I find him scholarly, charming, handsome, and well-spoken.
I like his website. It’s prettier and more navigable than McCain’s. As my friend Noah said, “Obama definitely has the branding down in this election.” There are few things we agree on, but that is most certainly one of them. If I were going to vote based on who has the cuter graphic tees and hotter wife, I’d certainly be pulling the lever (if we still voted that way) for the “half-honky, all donkey.” Not politically correct, but you gotta admit, that's funny.
Other friends described the site johnmccain. com as “stodgy and old-mannish much like his moratorium of a campaign headquarters.”
But I loved McCain in 2000, though. You know, when he really was a Maverick. No matter how sexier Obama is, I don’t think those are necessarily the right reasons to vote for him. (BTW, the military pic of McCain circa 196…hot)
But we’re not facing a potential economic recession or depression because Bush is ineloquent and unattractive.
It really is about the issues, despite the media hype of underlying racism, sexism, and elitism that has dominated the news prior to the current crises.
Obama wants to build the economy from the ground-up. McCain wants to continue the Raegan- style trickle-down economics that Bush has used for two administrations. Of course my economic professors, who tend to be predominantly Republican, have assured me over the years that it takes a decade or more to see the effects of economic stimuli. That’s how they explain the wealth and prosperity of the Clinton era and the slow and steady decline since Bush’s first inauguration. Granted it was a lifetime ago, but I seem to remember the economy slipping even before 9/11.
There are a few points that I culled last night from the toddler-esque quibbling that I witnessed live from the tip-top of the Ford Center balcony. (Not that I’m complaining despite what News Channel 3 edited me as saying). All right actually, I wasn’t on the last row or anything. More like front-row balcony, right above Katie Couric, who btw waved at me when I was peering over the edge like a star-struck goober. (You would’ve done it, too, don’t lie.)
Anyway, this is what I got: Obama says McCain wants to give tax breaks to corporations.
McCain says, no, he wants to give tax incentives to the corps, who are currently paying the second highest tax in the world, in order to prevent them from outsourcing to country’s with lower regulations. Sensible.
Obama’s rebuttal: They’d [big companies] would find loopholes anyway, so tax breaks for the top three percent is pointless. Alright-y.
Obama said that giving money back to 95% of Americans, so they can “buy computers for their kids homework and gas for their cars” is the better way to stimulate the economy. Not so sure.
McCain wants to increase the rebates and child credits because he thinks Americans could use the money to fund their own health care plans and cover the cost of daycare. Is it surprising that a man who does not know how many houses he owns or who has a ceiling fan installed in his trees would think that Americans could seriously pay health care premiums and day-care rates for an entire year with tax rebates. It wouldn’t cover one month, which is why I, as a single-parent in school have neither health insurance nor daycare and can be found frequently schlepping my kid to class with me as needed, much to some of my classmates dissatisfaction I’m sure.
McCain said that keeping taxes low and cutting spending for government programs is the way to pull us out of this financial crisis, which is direct opposition to Obama’s plan to increase spending.
But some of Obama’s spending is meant to create more jobs. Can’t argue there.
So, who wins? You’d think after I had the honor to sit in the same room as both candidates, I’d be able to make that call.
Yet, I’m chronically indecisive anyway and throw in brain-wrinklers like this economic catastrophe and it’s hard to judge whose policies would work and which are “pie in the sky” rhetoric.
All I know for certain is that I don’t want to be as shallow of a voter as I was at age 7. I voted for Dukakis in our Weekly Reader mock election because he was more attractive than Bush, Sr. (Of course, I don’t know which is worse, the fact that I changed the vote after I peeked at my boyfriend’s choice or that I voted for a Bush.
But maybe this time the prettier candidate is the better choice. There again, I’m torn. Young McCain or current Obama. Hopefully, I can make that crucial decision by November 4.
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Blues' Music as Protest
Sunday, September 7, 2008
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
It’s commonly known that the gap between Expectations and Reality is Depression because it is inevitable to feel really low if expectations are not met that were really high.
That’s why one must beware of hype, whether it’s surrounding a musician, artist, writer, filmmaker, etc. One exception that I have found to this recently is “The Dark Knight”. I waited awhile after the film opened (mostly because of monetary reasons) before I saw it and I was not disappointed in the least. Heath Ledger’s performance still turns my stomach a bit if I think about it because he embodied evil in his performance as the Joker.
Normally I’m not that affected by films, much to my chagrin. Usually I feel jaded about many artists attempts at expressing misery, degradation, or inherent evil, but “The Dark Knight” got in my head and crawled around and wouldn’t let me alone, much like my first exposures to M. Night Shyalaman’s work.
William Christenberry’s work did not.
I appreciated the statement he was trying to make. I appreciated the macabre beauty of the sketching, paintings, sculptures, etc. I appreciated the educational value of the exhibit. I even saw great value in having such an exhibit at our University at such a pivotal time in Ole Miss’s history, right before the 2008 presidential debate turns the eyes of the nation onto our campus.
It sets a great example to the student body that the University isn’t just giving lip service to freedom of speech, but instead allows such a controversial exhibit at the University Museum at a time when Ole Miss would likely rather focus only on positive press.
Yet, for all that, the exhibit still did not “creep me out” as many of my classmates commented. Maybe it was the hype that ruined the experience. Maybe it was the curator/babysitter that chattered all through the tour so that I felt incapable of silently taking in the images and the enormity of the imagery. I hate to think that because of my white, rural, and relatively prosperous background that I am jaded to the suffering of others.
Obviously I have known pain and misery, albeit of a different sort. I try to find comfort in the fact that other artistic media has affected my psyche, just not the Site/Possession exhibition.