[..]
Because Republicans have convinced people that government can’t make a difference in their lives, can’t solve their intractable problems, hence the only thing that matters are divisive social issues. The demands that government be ineffective has been a planned hallmark of the Bush administration. You don’t put a horse lawyer in charge of FEMA if you expect the agency to actually be effective in its mission. So as far as conservative ideology was concerned, Katrina was a resounding success.
[..]
There was one middle-aged woman working the operation that day, roughly 50 years old. The TV was on the background and I heard “Obama” and “Afghanistan” in the same sentence. I asked, “Oh, is Obama already in Afghanistan?” She shrugged. “I don’t know. I haven’t followed the news.”
I stayed quiet, because ill and desperate for sleep, I thought I might squeeze a quick catnap before my segment came on. But the woman continued on her own. “I’m really disenchanted with McCain.” Oh, I responded, was she an Obama person? “No, I don’t like him either. I don’t trust him. And my daughter, she hates him.”
I inquired further, why? “Because he’s not patriotic, with the flag pin and the pledge of allegiance and his wife!” So we determined that she wasn’t going to vote, which was disappointing to American democracy, but good for us because she had been a reliable Republican voter. My interest piqued, I dug a little further: given how the economy was going, people losing their homes, the cost of gas through the roof, none of that was as important as a flag pin?
“Well, they can’t do nothing about those things.” Aha. The Frank theory, of course. Well, I responded, what about health care, are you happy with your health care? She lit up, “I know no one who is happy with their health care!” and then segued into a rant about the disgraceful state of the health care system. Well, I responded, Democrats are working for universal healthcare, but Republicans have gotten in the way. But we’ll be able to do it next year.
“Ain’t no one who can fix that stuff,” she sighed, slumping. That brief expression of fire and brimstone snuffed out in an instant. She was adamant that it was all hopeless. Fair enough. She didn’t look like someone who’d had an easy life. Health care had touched a nerve, so who knows what sad story or stories she had to tell on that front. But Republicans had convinced her that government was powerless to do anything about it, so … flag pins!