Dead Wrong…
…and proud of it
By Robin Meyers
The world wept for joy; Oklahoma spat defiantly.
The glory train of history pulled out of the station; Oklahoma waved goodbye and said “good riddance.”
Dr. King’s dream came true; Oklahoma slumbered on, curled up on the hearth of racism and addicted to the mind-numbing power of the word
“conservative.”
Whatever the rest of the country is up to, it must be wrong. If the American
voter wants to send five new Democratic senators and 19 representatives
to Washington, Oklahomans will respond by not electing a single Democrat
running in a statewide election. If Obama wants to redraw the electoral map,
turning red states blue, we will hunker down and become the reddest of all
red states - the only state in which not a single county went for Obama.
The candidate that Gen. Colin Powell called “transformational” did not
transform the Sooners - he made us even more recalcitrant. The opportunity
to break down old walls instead of propping them up again passed us by.
The chance to prove that race has nothing to do with it passed us by. The
chance to support the next generation of young people, born again to a passion for politics, passed us by.
While almost everyone in the world celebrated this stunning about-face
in the image of our tarnished nation, the majority of Okies proved once
again that nothing has to make sense to make us proud, and God must find
something endearing about ignorance.
Jim Inhofe’s campaign unleashed the hounds of hell against Andrew Rice
and then claimed “Jim Inhofe is Oklahoma.” Are those conservative values?
The gay card was played against Jim Roth and Dana Murphy won a narrow victory. Are those family values?
End-time Oklahoma preachers spread rumors about Obama being Muslim or the Antichrist and did it in the name of Jesus. Are those Christian values?
We may be thumping our suspenders and smiling over our red-blooded
patriotic Oklahoma values, but the sad fact is we have become a national
embarrassment, again. We are addicted to words that nobody can define without committing a grand fallacy:
The “moral” presidential candidate is the divorced man who met his billionaire bombshell second wife in a bar.
The “socialist” candidate is the one who wants to stop redistributing all the wealth to the already wealthy.
The man you can “trust” in the White House was a member of the Keating
Five, but the one you can’t was, like Jesus, a community organizer (Pontius
Pilate was the governor).
The “crazy” preacher is the one who dared to say that America’s actions of late have been damnable, but not the one who speaks in tongues and casts the demons of witchcraft out of a woman who would be vice-president.
For the life of me, I can’t figure out how we are supposed to impress upon
our kids the importance of education when we consistently vote for intellectual mediocrity over someone who graduated Harvard at the top of
his class. As for “Joe Six-Pack,” why would we confuse someone we’d like to
drink beer with someone we’d want to be president? As for being an elitist,
what is more condescending than the supposed moral superiority of the
Christian Right?
Standing in line to vote, I met an elderly black woman who had her eyes
on the prize. She said, “Rosa Parks sat down so that Martin Luther King Jr.
could walk. Martin walked so that Obama could run. Obama ran so that our
children could fly.”
Meanwhile, back at the red-dirt ranch, Oklahoma fell flat on its face. We
are on the wrong side of history again, and we’re damn proud of it.
Meyers is minister of Mayflower UCC Church of OKC, and professor of
rhetoric in the philosophy department at Oklahoma City University.

November 24th, 2008 at 4:07 pm
So Mr. Fair in his commentary “Point: Great Time for GOP” (Nov. 19, 2008, Oklahoma Gazette) thinks his GOP recruited principled, ethical candidates for the November General Election.
Consider this rouges’s gallery: How about the principles of Randy Terill who hid $11,000 from the bankruptcy court?
Or Mike Christian who has a police record of spousal abuse and child endangerment?
And last but not least, what’s Fair’s opinion of Dana Murphy who admitted in a court deposition that she forged a signature and then notarized the forgery as genuine?
Is this the Palin effect wherein “values voters” recognized that with Palin’s pregnant unwed daughter, the GOPer candidates come closer to reflecting the voters’s own problems?
So do these Oklahoma “values voters” identify with embezzlement, spousal abuse, and ethics violations?
What a great tradition the GOP has to fulfill.
December 20th, 2009 at 9:10 pm
Life is unfair