By Shawn Macomber on 5.1.06 @ 12:08AM
Master Edwards remains unctuously benevolent and beyond hypocrisy.
PORTSMOUTH, New Hampshire -- Halfway through his speech, perfect
bone structure complemented by the soft light of the bar as he
stood aloft the crowd on a stuffed chair, one leg manfully perched
on the arm as he motioned grandly to friends, Romans, and
countrymen alike, John Edwards put a finger to his lip and
paused.
"This is controversial, but I believe it so strongly," America's
foremost class war enthusiast intoned darkly. "I get mixed
reactions to it, so I warn you in advance." A hush fell over the
rapt crowd. "I think we have a fundamental question to ask
ourselves as Americans," Edwards said finally. "Do we really
believe in an America where all of us have equal worth? Because I
believe it to my soul. I believe every single person in this room
is equal value."
Hold on a second...Did this beautifully coiffed one-term
Senator-slash-ex-vice-presidential candidate really just
pick a fight with America's vast and ever-burgeoning inequality
lobby?
"This is personal to me," Edwards added. "My father never went
to college, worked in mills all his life. He's worth every bit as
much as any President of the United States...more than the one
we've got right now, actually."
That's better. The room erupted into huge cheers for...for
inequality!
"If we believe it, when are we going to start living together?"
Edwards demanded of the gathered upper middle class whites whose
interaction with people of both color and lesser means in this city
is almost entirely facilitated by cable television. A cheekier
skeptic might have shouted, "Who? Presidents and mill workers?" but
instead the question lingered in the air, unanswered, awaiting the
explication it soon received.
"A flood of whites move out to the suburbs, send their kids to
private schools," he continued. "Or they move into the richest
areas of town. This is so unhealthy. It is unhealthy for our
democracy. It is unhealthy for our country."
It's a fascinating argument from someone who bought a 100-acre
plot in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, last year, which he has
presumably not adapted into a refugee camp for the Other Americans.
Faster than
you can say "Plantation!" Master John is living on one, but
he'd apparently really like to see the rest of the riffraff
integrated. Still, even in the torrents of applause that followed,
the class warrior refused to back down, adding several minutes
later, "There's a basic question" -- Edwards self-identifies almost
every question he asks as "basic" -- "we have got to ask ourselves:
Do we want families to earn a decent living to help strengthen the
middle class and have health-care coverage or do we want them to
live in poverty?"
Shockingly, no one from the pro-poverty, Let Them Eat Cake
contingent spoke up. Maybe they were downstairs getting a drink
with the aforementioned scions of the inequality lobby.
WHATEVER THE DRAWBACKS OF neo-plantation life -- it's a good thing
his mill worker father taught him "the value of a hard day's work,"
because even with shrubs, that is a lot of lawn to mow -- there are
clearly political benefits as well.
As a newly minted "outsider," Edwards is now able to begin
sentences with phrases such as, "I'll tell you something that crowd
of politicians in Washington does not know..." Like a mobster with
several degrees of separation between himself and his hit man,
Edwards can gloat Democratic Party needs to "show some backbone and
strength" without being personally tainted by association. He can
rail he's "not interested in being in a Democratic Party that is a
party of incrementalism," as if he wasn't perfectly happy to be
just that two years ago.
"We need to quit listening to the consultants, quit listening to
the pollsters," he said, firing a shot over the bow of the S.S.
Kerry-Shrum. "Listen, if you're looking at yesterday's poll to
figure out what you're supposed to say you're not leading. You're
following."
His wariness is understandable. The last time Edwards followed
somebody he, in his own words, "ended up with some time on my
hands, not by choice." Yet if his appearance at a Democracy for New
Hampshire fundraiser -- a nonpartisan group that, like most
nonpartisan groups in the post-campaign finance era is strictly
partisan -- is any indication, Edwards should be a much more
formidable candidate this time around. Drawing 150 people to a week
night event is nothing to frown at this early in the cycle, but
that each attendee also paid $25 at the door is downright
impressive.
Edwards' stumping abilities have improved exponentially even if
his prescription for societal ills remains spoon-deep -- hence all
the "very basic" questions, "very simple" ideas, and "let me say
this in the simplest way I know how" bromides festooning his
speeches. To his credit he's dropped "two Americas" as a rhetorical
device even if the overall song remains the same. Hence, the
ineffectiveness of Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty as "a lie." It
is America's role to end poverty worldwide. He wants to
see more unions organized and cited Boston, where hotel workers
"are organized because the mayor requires it," as a model. (I
wonder when there will be Democracy for Massachusetts.) Exxon
profits and Katrina response were major hubs in his speech.
The former senator, never a
heavyweight on foreign policy, ignored most international
issues but did bring up genocide in Sudan, lamenting, "Where is
America? That's exactly right, we're in Iraq." Right...we're in
Iraq -- "mired down in that God-awful mess," as Edwards described
it -- where...they're still uncovering mass graves...from
genocide.
"THERE IS A HUNGER IN AMERICA; a hunger to be inspired again,"
Edwards said.
And come to think of it, I could feel a palpable hunger in the
room that night, rising up around me like a thick mist: The hunger
of 150 people who paid $25 to get into an event catered by someone
with a true blue dedication to cracker diversity and only a cash
bar to wash it down.
But, then, most come not for the wafers, but to hear what
wonders they are doing for the Other America. Who knew it was as
easy as eating some cheese and crackers?
topics:
Foreign Policy, Television, Law, Iraq, NATO, Unions