POLITICAL
CAMPAIGNS
By
Wilhelmina S. Orozco
Every
November used to be our election time patterned after Americans’. But now we
have ours every May. Yet November is still politically interesting because we
get to watch how the American people conduct their elections, who they vote
for, for what (now there is the why they vote for this and that
candiate) among so other hosts of reasons.
American
presidential elections are especially interesting for me because we suffer from
a deluge of things American, from Starbucks to American Idol on TV, up to Walt
Disney in comics, and Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts, question are they or aren’t
they married yet? I mean all the gossips, rumors, and news altogether are right
here on our soil. And everyday we get a dose of them, over print, radio, tv,
and the movies. And who is the Filipino woman or man who does not have a
glimpse or dose of these?
My particular interest in the elections hinges on how we could also strengthen our own love for our cultural products as the proliferation the above products reflects pride of Americans in them.
Today we
know that there are only two contenders for the American presidency, unlike
ours when we had four aspirants in the past. They are the Republican aspirants,
Mitt Romney with Paul Ryan as VP candidate, versus incumbents, Pres. Barack
Obama and VP Joe Biden. On Thursday evening, the Dems, Democrat for short, will
be officially announcing their candidates. The Republicans did their national
convention Thursday last week greatly criticized by some journalists. (But if you watch NBC, you would think Romney is winning already. The station devote 3/4 of its news images on the elections on the Reps. so better watch out for propaganda and its hidden messages. I had to surf the internet for other views in order to get a balanced picture.)
What is
interesting in the American campaigns is that the candidates focus on
substantial matters – what occurred during four years of the Obama
administration – his policies and programs, and to the Republicans, what new
things they can offer. Both also use name-recall media personalities who give
the campaigns great hurrah.
If you
listen or read the write-ups, they are in English, we can see the high level of
debates that are occurring with subtle innuendoes on who the writers are for.
But when you read their short bios, you would find out that they belong to
either the Dems or the Reps, or they have had direct dealings with the
candidate/s, like this professor who said that he knew a candidate personally
in the university years back. In other words, they speak from experience.
How do
they tackle the issues? The writers have a good grounding on facts based on
history. They know when Ryan is obfuscating the issue of Medicare; when Romney
is not clear, meaning specific, on what
his economic goals and when he is promoting his past economic achievements, but
fails to present how many jobs were lost during his heading that company.
I think we
need to read up on the American elections now because as we have said, America is
printed in our cultural psyche through its businesses here. We need to see how
the American people vote and listen to the candidates. Now, the people no
longer look at personalities but what they have to offer. I think that when
Obama won, he already turned the election color upside down. Voters look beyond
skin color (or majority do), but rather try to find ways of seeing something more
from the individual. Is the candidate articulate, honest, truthful, empathic?
Yes,
empathy is very important for a country that has suffered from the bombings of
its iconic World Trade Center and the Pentagon, from the hurricanes, and are
trying to be more savvy economically as they are deluged with Chinese and
Japanese goods that upset the dominance of American products, especially cars
and electronic gadgets,
Obama
seems to offer an empathy which is very difficult to cultivate actually in a
country steeped in rationalistic atmosphere and material pursuits. He comes out
as more approachable than Mitt Romney. I don’t know if all the Americans would
value that totally but for sure, the immigrants, like our own Filipino
Americans, would find that appealing. Having had to immigrate to America in
search of greener pastures, certainly they would search for an official who
would give them a listening ear to their woes, and who would move to make their
lives better. Reports show that Obama is winning the preferences of this
particular sector. But what is their percentage in the voting population?
The Filipino-Americans
have an edge over the other immigrants. We know the American psyche as our
country lived through 50 years of American rule and who gave us the education
(highly skewed to American ideals) and governing patterns. Thus if there is any
sector that can help Obama win, it is this sector, which by the way helped him
in 2008 as the National Fil-American Association headed by the departed
ex-priest Ernesto Ramos, brother of Luis Ramos who is now giving many jobs to
the Tondo poor through his magnetite business in Zambales. Brod Ernesto was
able to swing the Fil-Am votes to Obama’s favor so much so that upon his
urging, the latter signed the Filipino
veterans act right away upon his assumption into Oval Office.
snews.com/8301-503544_162-20027... -
In our
case, our economic problems stem from lack of export destinations, and possibly
lack of products too that could compete with other countries’. You see we have
rich soils that could possible be a good source of food crops; but our business
people, instead of turning them into profitable export products, they build
subdivisions which stop the fertility of the soil. It is really depressing when
I see candies made from vegetables which can be found here, yet they are
manufactured in Thailand, Malaysia or Indonesia. It is more depressing
when we see our relatives, friends and workers in general migrating to other
countries just to have jobs, like Singapore
and Canada.
Hence, we
look at American elections and try to see if we can reverse what is happening
to us economically, too, aside from being just a consumer of every product they
turn out. We need the winning party to give us more liberal access to American
markets.
For that,
we need to study as backgrounder, the record of each party in helping us rise
economically. As we say, when the Americans sneeze, the Filipino people catch
the colds, and we could even suffer from pneumonia. Luckily, we have not really
gone into that state, especially when recession hit the American economy. Our
OFWs served as buffers to that huge problem, but come to think of it at what
costs to family ties and social stability?
Changing
institutions and societies can be done through the ascension of sincere,
trustworthy (pro-people), and knowledgeable political officials. Let the
American elections serve as one of our reference points for judging our own.
(picture from canstock 1476 376)