Categories
News The Fly-By

What They Said

About “Candlelight Vigil for Teen Suicide Victims Tonight”:

“How many young, innocent lives must we lose before groups like Focus on the Family soften their hearts and work with us instead of against us to combat this horribly hypocritical and political issue of gay bullying and discrimination?” — Hoyle

About “Haslam Says He’d Do Away With Gun Permits”:

“Regarding the murder rate in California: Have you even seen one Schwarzenegger movie? It’s how we roll here.” — CL Mullins

About “Why I Like Yuengling” and the brewer’s plans to move into the former Coors facility here:

“What’s all this fuss about fluoride and chlorine in your water? Don’t be such weenies. Personally, I like my fluids as laden with heavy metals as possible. That’s one problem I have with Memphis. That vaunted artesian-well water is so lackluster.” — Mrs. Bartlebynna Beanblossom

Comment of the Week:

About “Stripped Down” and proposed new rules for topless-club owners:

“Let me see if I can get this right. First, we don’t want anyone to build a mosque. Second, we don’t want to guarantee equal rights to our LGBT neighbors. Third, we don’t want anyone looking at naked women. But, by God, we want everyone to carry a gun with them!! So just exactly how are the far-right wingnuts different from the Taliban???” — mad_merc

To share your thoughts, comments, concerns, and — maybe — get published, visit memphisflyer.com.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

Space Invader

Memphis-area stages have monstered up for the Halloween season. The Orpheum is showcasing the witches and flying monkeys of Wicked. Theatre Memphis pits Sherlock Holmes against the monstrously evil Professor Moriarty in Sherlock Holmes: The Last Adventure. But the funnest, funniest, scariest spook show in town has to be Little Shop of Horrors at Collierville’s Harrell Theatre.

Director Cecelia Wingate, who also founded the popular retro girl band the Bouffants, knows her way around Alan Menken and Howard Ashman’s doo-wop-inspired musical about a giant man-eating plant from outer space. Her 2006 production at Theatre Memphis took home several Ostrander Awards, and the current revival is, in many ways, even better. Or should I say worse?

Although the musical takes its name and story from a Roger Corman B-movie, Wingate is inspired by classic monster movies and slasher films. Some of these frightfully hammy gags interfere with the show’s pacing, but it’s all devilishly funny even when it’s too much.

Justin Willingham, best known for his fine dramatic performances in shows like The Importance of Being Earnest and The Violet Hour, is very nearly perfect as Seymour Krelborn, the down-on-his-luck amateur botanist whose fortunes change when he discovers a giant talking flytrap with a taste for fresh human blood. Rob Hanford plays Little Shop‘s sadistic dentist like a cross between Jim Carrey and Dennis Hopper. Audrey, Seymour’s ditzy love interest, is very nearly redefined by a fantastic Cassie Thompson, who honors Ellen Green’s original performance but still manages to make the part her own.

Little Shop of Horrors is a wickedly unsubtle study in dark irony. When the chorus sings, “The meek are going to get what’s coming to them,” they aren’t talking about the earth.

“Little Shop of Horrors” at Harrell Theatre through October 31st, with performances Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and

Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Tickets are $15 for adults and $12 for children, students, and senior citizens.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Letters to the editor Hate From the Pulpit?

I was discussing with a friend recently the fact that Memphis now has the dubious distinction of being named the most dangerous city in the U.S. (Fly on the Wall, October 21st issue). He commented on the irony of Memphis being known as both the most dangerous city and the city with a church on every street corner. I don’t find it ironic at all.

With preachers spewing hatred, bigotry, and divisiveness from hundreds of pulpits, is it any wonder we are a city of warring factions? A recent survey showed that atheists know far more about religion than supposedly religious people do. This comes as no surprise, either. Most so-called religious people operate purely from emotion and are blindly led by any forceful and charismatic preacher. They seldom bother to inform themselves about their own religion, let alone the beliefs of others. They regard science as a tool of the devil and logic as the enemy of their faith. In such an environment, how can tolerance and peaceful coexistence possibly happen?

Jim Brasfield

Memphis

It Takes a Van

Regarding editor Bruce VanWyngarden’s column (October 14th issue): Like his wife, “whose heart is bigger than her zip code,” I also mentor kids, particularly my neighborhood’s transient kids who rent one month and are gone the next, through no fault of their own. I have hooked up these kids with a number of Memphis organizations offering commendable, no-cost educational services to impoverished youth: the YMCA, the Boys & Girls Clubs, Caritas Village, etc.

The long list of Memphis-area mentoring organizations is bigger than my zip code. But the biggest challenge is transportation. I drive the kids wherever and whenever I can, but I can only do so much. Can some agency or individual provide our city’s children with safe, reliable transportation to the dozens of mentoring agencies? Raising a child not only takes a village, it takes a van!

Frances Taylor

Memphis

Cut NPR Funds

After the firing of liberal commentator Juan Williams by NPR for simply saying the truth about those in Muslim garb at airports, it is time to cut taxpayer funding to this left-wing public radio outlet.

Recently, billionaire George Soros gave NPR $1.8 million and is the principle backer of anticonservative, anti-American organizations MoveOn.org and Media Watch, whose only goal is to destroy conservative causes and the Fox News channel. It is now clear NPR only exists to promote extreme left-wing viewpoints, and taxpayers should not bear the burden anymore.

John Jacobs

Memphis

Fincher

I believe voters should send Stephen Fincher to Congress. For far too long, the voters have sent college-educated lawyers, doctors, engineers, and economists to Washington, and look at the mess these over-educated folks have created.

Stephen Fincher is a graduate of the renowned Crockett County High School and is unencumbered by all the crazy stuff they teach in college. He will bring a high school graduate’s clear thinking to Congress. Contrary to published reports, Fincher has held elective office. According to his website, he was elected president of his men’s Bible study group in Frog Jump.

In a representative democracy, all voices have an equal right to be heard. For too long, the voices of the uneducated have been drowned out by politicians with college diplomas. Fincher will speak for the millions of Americans who are either too poor, too stupid, or too lazy to get an education.

Robert T. Koenig

Bartlett

Stripped

I was ticked off after I read Bianca Phillips’ article, “Stripped Down” (October 21st issue). I didn’t think the Supreme Court would let the County Commission’s resolution stand.

I hadn’t been to a strip club in years, until two weeks ago, when a friend had his bachelor party at the newly reopened Gold Club. Our party probably spent $700 over the course of a couple of hours, and I’m certain that some of that has found its way into the county coffers. If the new laws come into effect, these clubs will close and remove not only an important source of tax revenue for the city and county but also a source of employment for several hundred people. If you don’t like strip clubs, just stay at home and keep your morals to yourself.

Paul Morris

Memphis

Corrections: In last week’s “Stripped Down” story, the names of U.S. District Court judge Bernice Donald and Gary Veasey were misspelled.

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Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

Devilish Dancing

Okay, so it’s autumn, not midsummer. But Shakespeare’s beloved comedy A Midsummer Night’s Dream, about mixed-up lovers running about in an enchanted forest, is filled with allusions to ghouls and goblins. So it’s perfect for Halloween too. Ballet Memphis, which spent its midsummer performing to critical acclaim at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., opens their new interpretation of this sprawling fantasy at Playhouse on the Square on Saturday, October 30th. (Kendall Britt Jr. as Puck pictured right.)

And that’s not the weekend’s only exciting dance event. There’s also ReNEWal, a retrospective of modern works by Project: Motion at the Evergreen Theatre, and Abandon-Salvation-Grace, a concert and performance at the Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s Episcopal School by Collage Dance Collective, an exciting new company blending classical ballet and modern dance.

“We want to produce great dance, but we want it to be accessible to people who aren’t dance aficionados,” says Collage’s managing director Marcellus Harper. “This is an opportunity to show people what we do; to share our point of view.”

Abandon-Salvation-Grace is a 90-minute concert featuring a variety of short pieces including “The Dying Swans,” a dance created by Collage’s artistic director Kevin Thomas. Inspired by the iconic performances of Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova, “The Dying Swan” asks the question, “Where did all the black swans go?”

“A Midsummer Night’s Dream” at Playhouse on the Square, October 30th-November 7th (balletmemphis.org)

“ReNEWal” at Evergreen Theatre, through October 31st (projectmotiondance.org)

“Abandon-Salvation-Grace” at Buckman Arts Center, October 30th-31st (collagedance.org)

Categories
Book Features Books

Chances Are

Case study #1: A white boy grows up a military brat in the rapidly changing, mid-20th-century South. His father, a Marine Corps fighter pilot from Chicago with a hair-trigger temper, regularly beats up on the boy and his mother too. But that mother, a daughter of the South, adores reading. The boy grows up an avid reader as well. He, in fact, takes refuge in it. But for college, he becomes a cadet at the Citadel in Charleston. The boy’s chances of becoming a military man like his father or a writer, one of America’s most popular, are what?

Case study #2: A black girl grows up in the racially charged, mid-20th-century South. Her father is a minister, athletic coach, guidance counselor, and later university dean; her mother is a public-school teacher and lover of classical music. Both instill in their daughter (and only child) a determination to be twice as good as any child, black or white. The girl’s chances of becoming an authority on U.S.-Soviet relations, the provost of Stanford University, and America’s 66th secretary of state (and the first black woman to hold that office) are what?

The answers to those questions go without saying if your name is Pat Conroy or Condoleezza Rice, and both of them have new books: Conroy’s My Reading Life (Doubleday) and Rice’s Extraordinary, Ordinary People: A Memoir of Family (Crown).

“Unwitnesses to our own history”: That’s how Conroy describes himself and six brothers and sisters after his mother would tell the children that they did not see what their father had just done, which was Donald Conroy backhanding his wife Peg to bring an argument to a close.

Witness to his own history is, however, exactly what Conroy is in the 15 chapters that make up My Reading Life, and those chapters cover more than Conroy’s beleaguered early home life. See him, already “word-haunted,” entering Gene Norris’ high school English class in 1961, just the man and mentor Conroy needed. Watch Conroy’s “deliverance” inside a used book shop in Atlanta. And cringe as Norman Berg, a book rep, teaches an innocent Conroy the realities of the book business and gives the young author the time and space to finish his novel The Great Santini (a portrait of that dastardly father, Donald). A first book conference got Conroy booed for being a man (inside a roomful of arch-feminists). The city of Paris taught him how to respond to a guy on the street and, shockingly, in flames. And Thomas Wolfe, Leo Tolstoy, and James Dickey gave Conroy the models to write and live by.

“I have built a city from the books I’ve read,” Conroy writes. My Reading Life makes of that city a heartfelt grand tour.

No need to go into Condoleezza Rice’s memoir hunting for scenes of childhood beatings. The one time she received a spanking from her dad, according to Extraordinary, Ordinary People, was the time she ignored her parents’ order that she not get to her Halloween costume on the top shelf of a closet. Her parents normally knew better than to resort to physical disciplining. All they had to say to the young Condoleezza was that they were “disappointed” in her, and their daughter was back on track: studying hard and practicing hard, whether it be at the piano (though she admits to a later liking of Led Zeppelin) or figure skating or anything she put her mind to.

What she’s made of herself in the past decade, history (and another memoir?) will say. For now, Rice is saying that it was her immediate family and extended family who gave much and expected much from this well-educated daughter of Republican parents and a Republican herself — a daughter who defends affirmative action but who bristles at identity politics, victimhood, and patronizing Democrats. Self-sufficiency: That was the watchword in this household, a household that owed everything to the example set by the author’s parents, John and Angelena Rice.

Pat Conroy and Condoleezza Rice will be in Memphis in the coming week for events at Davis-Kidd Booksellers. Conroy will discuss and sign copies of My Reading Life on Tuesday, November 2nd, at 6 p.m.

Rice will discuss and sign copies of Extraordinary, Ordinary People (along with the children’s version of her memoir, Condoleezza Rice) on Wednesday, November 3rd. (Line ticket required; ticket issued at time of book purchase.) The signing will begin at approximately 6:40 p.m. But at 6 p.m., be on hand when Memphis mayor A C Wharton and Shelby County mayor Mark Luttrell put some questions to Condoleezza Rice.

Categories
News The Fly-By

New Math

In late 2005, I tromped out to a mushy field decorated with blue and gold balloons for the groundbreaking of the new Manassas High School.

Construction was questionable, even at the time. Memphis City Schools (MCS) had approved $40 million to rebuild Manassas and Douglass High School, two historic schools in North Memphis.

The year before, still housed in the 1936 building, Manassas had 358 students enrolled, and the school being built was going to be able to accommodate 800.

But the school had a past as the city’s first accredited four-year high school for African Americans, as well as dedicated, and notable, alumni such as Isaac Hayes and former school board commissioner Sara Lewis.

“We’re bringing the old with the new, so it won’t feel like a brand-new building,” then Superintendent Carol Johnson said at the time. “It will feel like coming home.”

Now, the history lesson has become a math problem. And a somewhat complex one, at that. The administration is looking at what it’s calling “right-sizing” the district and closing the quarter of its schools that are underutilized.

“We want to be good stewards of our public dollars,” says Hitesh Haria, deputy superintendent of business operations at MCS. “We want to utilize the resources we have and focus them on priorities as we move forward and get student achievement where we want it.”

The district plans to meet with business leaders, city officials, and local nonprofits early next month to determine the criteria for the closures. MCS officials cannot reiterate enough that they have not yet compiled a list of possible school closures.

“We want the community to help us,” Haria says. “At the end of the day, we’re trying to educate kids. We want what’s in their best interest.”

Haria suggests they’ll look at factors other than enrollment — academic performance, utilization of the buildings, among others — but there are certain efficiencies of scale with buildings at capacity.

“If we lose students that go to a school, we still have to heat and cool the entire building,” Haria says. “There are fixed costs.”

If they weren’t virtually brand-new, Manassas and Douglass would seem to be good candidates for closure. Data from the 2009 Tennessee state report card puts Manassas’ enrollment at 569.

(In a somewhat telling, though unsurprising, anecdote, district staff were unable to pull current high school enrollment and capacity numbers by press time.)

Northside High is less than two miles from Manassas and has 672 students. Douglass High, which reopened in 2008, is five miles from Manassas and four miles from Northside. It has 325 students. All told, there are only 1,500 students between the three schools.

The average high school in the system has a capacity around 1,000, though ones in the eastern part of the city accommodate closer to 1,500 students.

“There’s been a geographical shift to where people live,” Haria says. “Unfortunately, we can’t just lift the buildings and move them.”

Just using high schools as an indicator of the student population, it seems many of the district’s schools in the urban core and western parts of the city, such as Booker T. Washington or Westwood, are ripe for closure.

Booker T. Washington, located on South Lauderdale, has around 600 students and a capacity of 800. Cleaborn Homes is literally across the street from the school, but when it comes in December to make way for a new Hope VI development, how many students will be left at the high school?

Westwood, the district’s southwest-most high school, has only 434 students.

Overall, the district can serve at least 31,000 high school students, but the total number of students currently attending classes is closer to 28,300. Taking geography out of the equation, that gap is large enough to close two of the medium-sized schools — say, a Melrose and an East — or several smaller ones.

But closing schools, even ones vastly underutilized, is a complicated business. Closing a school is seen as cutting the heart out of the community, and residents — even ones who themselves have left the community — will turn out in droves to make sure it doesn’t happen.

While the district says it will probably look at academic performance as well as enrollment numbers, the truth is that those factors are linked.

According to the state report card, Manassas has a graduation rate of 55 percent. Booker T. Washington has a 60 percent graduation rate. Westwood also has a 60 percent graduation rate.

It’s not surprising that schools with high graduation rates have higher enrollments. Central, by definition a school in the urban core, has more students enrolled than it was built for and a graduation rate of 84 percent. (The overall graduation rate systemwide was 62 percent in 2009.)

Whitehaven is located in the south central part of the city and has 2,000 students and a graduation rate of 81 percent.

Community meetings will begin in early November and the board will make a final decision next February.

“We implore the community to come out and give us feedback,” Haria says. “This is something that impacts an entire community. These are really sensitive issues. We don’t take that lightly.”

To read more about this and other topics, visit Mary Cashiola’s In the Bluff blog at memphisflyer.com/blogs/InTheBluff

Categories
News The Fly-By

Safe Schools?

Memphian Trevor Rush wasn’t even “out” when he was targeted by bullies at Craigmont Middle School. Now 24 years old, Rush was punched and kicked and had wet toilet paper thrown at him repeatedly in middle school.

“One time, this guy was yelling at me and calling me faggot, and I wouldn’t answer him, so he squirted a mayonnaise packet in my face. The teachers wouldn’t even do anything about it,” said Rush, who eventually left the school system in the eighth grade after being beaten for appearing gay.

Rush’s case is not an isolated one.

After a recent rash of suicides nationwide by gay teens who have been bullied, the Memphis Gay & Lesbian Community Center held a public forum last week about the ongoing problem of anti-gay bullying in city, county, and private schools.

At the forum, Lynda Sagrestano, director of the University of Memphis’ Center for Research on Women, said 26 percent of the almost 600 local middle and high school students surveyed in 2007 and 2008 reported having been called gay or lesbian by another student.

“The ultimate insult is to question somebody’s masculinity. Boys and girls are doing this as an insult, and it doesn’t even matter whether or not they think someone is gay,” Sagrestano said.

Memphian Diane Thornton spoke at the forum about her son William who was bullied at a charter school, which Thornton did not name, when he was 14 and 15 years old. Thornton said her son experienced “a series of small events,” such as name-calling or pulling on his backpack, that added up over time. Before he left that school, another student slammed him against a table.

Like Rush, William transferred from that school. William had not identified himself as gay, but Thornton said kids picked on him because “he’s not a real macho guy and he’s very respectful. He was perceived as an outsider.”

“When a kid comes home and says, ‘I hate school and I’m not going back, because they’re all mean to me,’ it means that school is not safe, and the child may not be able to express what’s going on,” Thornton said.

According to Memphis City Schools policy, reported incidents of harassment are fully investigated, and MCS provides counseling to students free of charge. Rush and Diane Thornton both said the administrators at the schools were not helpful or responsive when approached about the bullying.

At least one Memphis school — Kingsbury High School — is hoping to do a better job at curbing anti-gay bullying. Last February, English teacher Ian Smith founded a gay-straight alliance for students at Kingsbury.

“I’ve seen kids show up to meetings that I’ve never seen before. We’ve even had straight-identified basketball players come to multiple meetings,” Smith said. “If we can do this at Kingsbury, there’s no reason another school can’t do it.”

Tim Smith, a former Marine kicked out of the military under the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy, announced that the University of Memphis is starting a Safe Zone project to help university faculty and staff respond to bullying on campus.

“We think that once kids turn 17 they’re safe, but these highly publicized suicides have shown that [bullying] is a danger to college kids as well,” Tim Smith said, referring to the September suicide of Rutgers University freshman Tyler Clementi.

Rush considered suicide after being assaulted in eighth grade, but his life improved dramatically after he began home-schooling.

“Things really did get better after I left that environment,” Rush said. “If bullying were squashed, there’d be a lot more happy people in school.”

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

On the Move

Circa is moving to Regalia Shopping Center, and the current location on South Main will slip into something a little more comfortable.

“The new place is going to be [like] the one downtown,” says John Bragg, owner of Circa. And the downtown location?

“It’s loosely defined at this moment, but let’s call it a casual wine bar and lounge. We’re going to have affordable and fun gourmet food and drink but hold the reservations. It’s not so much a formal dining experience.”

The downtown Circa will eventually be renamed. Expect to see a larger bar and more space for gathering, as well as more wines by the glass and a lot of seasonal and local food items. Bragg is still sorting out the specifics, but the project will be under way once the new Circa in Regalia is open, sometime in early December.

The menu at the new Circa location will have a similar seasonal and local mien.

“There will be changes to the menu but in the same vein as the Circa we have now,” Bragg says. “There will be some upgrades to the dessert menu with homemade ice creams and sorbets and specialized pastry items. More local items are going to find their way on there. But that’s as far as I’ve decided on. There are certain core items we’ll keep up with, like our sorghum-cured rack of lamb with sweet potato flan, our bananas Foster soufflé, and crawfish beignets.”

Beer and wine offerings will be more or less similar at both locations, with just a few items catering specifically to each location.

“The wine list is going to be more global with a lot of Italian and Spanish wines by the glass. You’ll probably see more big-name California Cabs at Circa, and we’ll have an assortment of domestic and craft-type beers, probably with more draught beers downtown.”

Circa, 119 S. Main (522-1488)

circamemphis.com

Loyal patrons are already aware that Jim’s Place East, a staple in Memphis’ restaurant industry for almost 90 years, will be leaving its Shelby Oaks Drive location for a new space at Poplar and Perkins.

“We felt like moving to a better location with more traffic,” says Costa Taras, who co-owns the restaurant with Dimitri Taras and will bring on his son Bill to help run the new location.

“We had to make a move. We hate leaving here; we’ve been here since 1976. But we felt for the best interest of the business, we should close this one down.”

Taras says that 90 percent of the menu will stay the same: “We might add a few items here and there, some more Greek and Mediterranean, but it will basically be the same menu we’ve had all these years.”

The restaurant won’t have the same “old-world” feel as before, as Taras plans on leaving the antiques behind. But a more modern Jim’s Place is something he hopes will bolster the restaurant’s appeal for younger people. “We’ll keep the same client base, but I think we’ll pick up some new, younger customers in that location.”

The old Jim’s Place East location closed on Saturday, and the new location should open the week of November 15th. “It’s going to be a change, but we feel like it’s a change for the better,” Taras says.

Jim’s Place East will be moving to 518 S. Perkins Ext.

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

The Rant

I just can’t get overly concerned about the 138 or so candidates running for Congress under the auspices of the various Tea Parties. I understand the electorate is mad, but it’s not insane. I’m sure the pundits are correct that Democrats will lose seats in the upcoming election, but this plethora of extremists running as Republicans are the true inheritors of the nativist “Know Nothing Party” of the 1850s.

Like the Tea Party, the Know Nothings exploited fear of immigrants — Catholics instead of Latinos — to fuel the resentment of white male Protestants. In fact, that was a qualifier for joining the party. They had minor successes, especially in Maryland and Massachusetts, but their base of wealthy white guys was not sufficient to compete with the Democrats, and they were eclipsed by the anti-slavery Republican Party before the Civil War. Their national agenda, however, sounds eerily familiar to the corporate-sponsored, grass-roots confederacy of pissed-off white people who intend to “take our country back” in the coming days.

The Know Nothings earned their nickname after being instructed to reply, “I know nothing,” when asked about the party’s platform. With good reason, since it consisted of restricting immigration, especially from Catholic countries, demanding all public officeholders to be American-born Protestants, mandating daily Bible readings in public schools, and requiring immigrants already in the country to wait 21 years before applying for citizenship.

Observing Tea Party candidates in action, from Rand Paul, whose libertarian philosophy is so inflexible as to be closer to anarchy than democracy, to Colorado gubernatorial candidate Dan Maes, who called the Denver bike-sharing program a “socialist plot organized by the United Nations,” is like looking at sideshow oddities. Add Delaware’s non-masturbating witch, Christine O’Donnell, Alaska’s man with the handcuffs and a 10 o’clock shadow, Joe Miller, and a few more, and you could film a remake of Tod Browning’s 1932 horror classic, Freaks. The single difference is that in the original movie, the pinheads, Zip and Pip, were far more lovable than microcephalics like Carl Paladino or John Raese, who advocates abolishing the minimum wage while his wife lives in Palm Beach, Florida.

On the other side of the demilitarized zone known as the aisle, the spineless Democrats are acting like the Mugwumps. Historian David Tucker wrote, “The Mugwumps embodied the liberalism of the 19th century,” and their writings are “testament to a high-minded civic morality.” The problem was their grievances lasted only as long as Grover Cleveland’s campaign, when most were absorbed into the Democratic Party. That’s why the term “mugwump” has also come to mean a fence-sitter, like the passive, timid Democrats who can’t even manage a counterattack in the face of the ugliest campaign in modern history.

Analysts have compared this year’s election to the disastrous 1994 mid-terms and to the Reagan revolution of 1980, but I have yet to hear anyone correlate the correct period, so allow me: When the Democrats imploded after the 1968 convention in Chicago, voters were horrified by what seemed to be a takeover of the party by leftist radicals. During the 1972 convention, which nominated anti-war hope George McGovern, the televised images proved it. Party discipline had acquiesced to the demands of activists for every imaginable cause. Betty Friedan and Gloria Steinem bitterly clashed over the feminist agenda. Shirley Chisholm became the first African-American woman to be nominated for president. Abortion rights and gay rights were not just discussed openly from the podium for the first time, there were floor fights over whether the issues should be included in the party platform. When McGovern was finally nominated, his acceptance speech came so early in the morning, most viewers had gone to bed. What my young eyes witnessed was contentious progress for civil rights. What the American people saw was a small group of fire-breathing extremists carrying the party over a cliff. Nixon won reelection by a landslide.

What happened on the left in1972 is happening to the right in 2010. The rhetoric is just as inflammatory and the loudest voices are those on the fringes, purging Republican establishment candidates and replacing them with the wildest bunch of ideologues since the days of the Yippies. The Tea Party folks say they’re mad? Well, I’m mad too.

I’m mad about candidates for office referring to the president as a “committed socialist” or a “secret Muslim.” I’m angry that so many people’s minds have been twisted by right-wing propaganda that they believe Obama is working against the interests of this country. I’m sick of GOP lackeys blaming Obama for Bush’s disaster while refusing to work with him on anything and everything. And I’m particularly weary of the Tea Party “patriots” who have screamed for two years without managing to form a coherent message — other than antipathy toward Obama. I believe sanity will win out on Election Day but only if Democratic voters are motivated to protect what gains they’ve made. If the threat of a Congress full of Tea Party mini-despots with subpoena power isn’t enough motivation to go out and vote, nothing is.

Randy Haspel writes the blog Born-Again Hippies, where a version of this column first appeared.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Going National

Much of the story of the 2010 political season — and of the various races and causes to be resolved locally on Tuesday, November 2nd — can be focused on the dramatic rise of Republican hopes nationally and the simultaneous demise of Democratic ones.

There was an overriding irony to it all, in that neither party had especially altered their rhetorical formulas of 2006 and 2008, resurgent years for the Democrats and difficult ones for Republicans.

On the GOP side of the line, there was no acknowledgment that Republican policies might have led directly to the huge deficit, the housing bust, or the economy’s dramatic crash — all factors that had led to Democratic control of the White House and both houses of Congress for the first time in almost a generation.

National spokespersons for the Republican Party pooh-poohed their losses in 2006 and 2008 with the explanation that “we got fired” for spending too much. That nobody can remember such recriminations would seem to be beside the point. Something had to be adduced as the reason for the shift (temporary, it would now seem) to the Democrats.

As for the Democrats, their rapid fall from the nation’s good graces seems to be due to an inability, once in power, to fully understand the ongoing crisis, or to develop adequate policies to deal with it, or to explain such limited successes as they may have achieved. Or to all of the above.

In any case, the election of 2010 is widely regarded as having reversed a long-standing political dictum attributed to the late Democratic speaker of the House Tip O’Neill, who is alleged to have said, “All politics is local.”

To an unprecedented degree, all politics in 2010 is almost indisputably national, with the trendlines evident in local races everywhere, especially in Tennessee, which had begun its turn against the Democrats even in the 2008 Year of Obama, when the GOP took over control of both houses of the Tennessee legislature.

The formula for Republican success in 2010 would seem to be based on confidence on voter amnesia (which became more pronounced the longer a strangely distanced Obama struggled unsuccessfully with his inherited problems), coupled with ritual incantations of two mantras: “Pelosi” and “Obamacare.”

Though much of the odium attached to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, as it was officially called, was based on misinformation (and much else on well-funded disinformation), there was a legitimate case to be made against the act.

It further enshrined insurance companies as the ultimate arbiters of health care, and the nation’s governors dreaded its ultimate impact on their Medicaid budgets. (Tennessee Democrat Phil Bredesen‘s description of the act as “the mother of unfunded mandates” was quoted early on by nearly every Republican in the land.)

Still, the act contained enough genuine advances for most citizens — an immediate end to prior medical conditions as a basis for denying coverage, for example — that its immediate unpopularity remained mysterious, except, perhaps, as a symbolic instance of how widely suspect government in general had become.

And it remained an open question how much of the odium directed at Nancy Pelosi, the first woman ever to serve as speaker of the House, was the result not of the policies she favored but of her gender, her ethnic name, and her point of origin in San Francisco.

Among area Democrats, only Steve Cohen in the party’s unchallengeable bastion of the 9th District would confidently embrace both the Democratic House leader and the president’s signature policy initiative.

Others — notably Dresden state senator Roy Herron in Tennessee’s 8th District and Travis Childers, the incumbent in Mississippi’s 1st District — not only avoided trumpeting their party colors and took their own shots at the health-care plan, they tried to sound as Republican as possible.

Pelosi? Late in the game, Herron, who had campaigned on “fiscal solvency” and labeled himself “a truck-driving, shotgun-shooting, Bible-reading, crime-fighting, family-loving country boy,” was moved to throw her under the bus, labeling both her and her Republican counterpart, House GOP leader John Boehner of Ohio, as “too extreme” and vowing to vote for neither one as speaker if elected. (In a chicken-and-egg scenario, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee was meanwhile cutting off ads for Herron’s race, which it deemed unwinnable.)

Childers went Herron one better, claiming nearly 300 instances of disobedience to his leader, who was — what else? — not only extreme but “out of touch.” Childers slammed his Republican opponent, Alan Nunnelee, for raising taxes and boasted his own endorsements by the NRA, Right to Life, and a slew of conservative business organizations that normally go only for Republicans.

While Nunnelee did a ritual denunciation of “Obamacare,” he did at least pay lip service to Medicare and Social Security, which was more than Blue Dog Childers could bring himself to do.

For all of this inversion, the polls had a relentless answer. Nunnelee, who was boosted toward the end by a visit from Boehner himself (campaigning district by district for the speakership), nursed a five-point lead. Herron’s Republican foe Stephen Fincher, a newcomer to politics and a member of a prosperous Crockett County farming family locally famous for its gospel singing, led by nearly 10 points despite some questions regarding his campaign financing (significantly infused with national GOP money and with an apparently uncollateralized $250,000 bank loan) and his disinclination to face either the news media or his opponent directly.

There were — and are — arguments as to what extent the Tea Party phenomenon was midwifed into being in early 2009 by a conservative media (notably Fox News) and by Republicans determined to offset what was then still presumed to be a Democratic wave. But there was little doubt that by mid-2010 the Tea Party movement, helped along by fears of continuing unemployment and unending economic stagnation, had become a real force in Tennessee and elsewhere, with measurable grass roots sprouting amidst the Astroturf.

And, though its leaders and cadres alike pronounced calumny against both major parties, the movement’s aversion to government per se made it a de facto ally, even an adjunct, of the GOP (which, ironically, it had begun to transform with primary challenges to traditional Republican candidates in state after state).

The bottom line, again, was that Republicans were ahead almost everywhere — certainly in Tennessee, which had been turning progressively redder over the last decade.

Even in Middle Tennessee’s 4th congressional district, Democratic incumbent Lincoln Davis, arguably his party’s most conservative member, who once famously vowed to let no opponent “out-gun me, out-pray me, or out-family me,” was in a life-or-death race with a previously unknown physician, an émigré from the Dakotas named Scott DesJarlais.

Of Tennessee’s congressional candidates, only Cohen, who both disdained and ignored his Republican opponent, an African-American Tea Partier named Charlotte Bergmann, seemed totally home free, and even Memphian Cohen has seen a mild surge for his opponent in the campaign’s final weeks.

The tony thoroughfare of Walnut Grove, which had been dominated by Cohen yard signs during his summer primary romp over Willie Herenton, now boasts a mini-flood of Bergmann signs with the seemingly implausible slogan “Charlotte Bergmann Can Win.”

The race in the adjoining 7th congressional district, a Republican bastion stretching from suburban Memphis to suburban Nashville, ran parallel — if inversely — to developments in the 9th. Incumbent GOP congresswoman Marsha Blackburn enjoyed a comfortable lead and mounted only a pro forma campaign against her Democratic opponent, Austin Peay political science professor Greg Rabidoux, who managed a plucky low-budget campaign and might have reaped something of a last-minute bounce, à la Bergmann in the 9th.

The real giveaway — in more senses than one — was the gubernatorial race, in which the winnowing down of a once-flourishing Democratic primary race from five candidates to one solitary sacrificial lamb, Jackson businessman Mike McWherter, son of former Democratic governor Ned McWherter, had roughly paralleled the plummeting reputation of Democrats nationwide.

Bill Haslam, the attractive, likable, and hard-working two-term mayor of Knoxville, would have been a formidable candidate even in one of Tennessee’s roughly balanced bellwether years. Wealthy himself and a scion of the powerful and prosperous Pilot Corporation, a bona fide international conglomerate, he had turned back two strong GOP opponents, Lieutenant Governor Ron Ramsey of the Tri-Cities area and Chattanooga congressman Zach Wamp, and was an odds-on favorite in what was so clearly shaping up as a Republican year.

Though a decent man with good intentions, McWherter was a lackluster candidate — an elusive persona who, even as the campaign neared its end, was still making promises that Shelby County would get sick of seeing him so much when it had barely seen him at all.

And there was the question of disproportionate financing. Haslam, who has augmented record fund-raising receipts of nearly $10 million with significant cash outlays from his own fortune, could outspend McWherter at least five to one, totally dominating the state’s media markets with what seemed a nonstop series of sunny, hagiographic TV ads.

Almost unnoticed was the fact that in three televised debates with Haslam, McWherter had at the very least held his own. Moreover, he had specific, if modest, ideas. Whereas the genial Haslam’s platform seemed largely made of air, McWherter offered a plan, based on an Illinois precedent, of targeted tax breaks for small businesses.

Only once had the race shown signs of being possibly competitive. That was toward the end, when Haslam, a moderate on the 2nd Amendment issue (as on much else), let himself be bullied by a gun-rights group into indicating he would sign a bill abolishing carry permits in Tennessee if the legislature should pass one. Given its track record in the last two sessions, when it overwhelmingly legalized guns in bars and other public places, the General Assembly was likely to do just that.

Aside from the merits of the issue itself, the problem with Haslam’s acquiescence was that it suggested a go-along-to-get-along fecklessness on his part, recalling primary foe Wamp’s assertion that, while he could control the increasingly unruly Tennessee legislature, Haslam could not.

Even so, Haslam went into the final week of campaigning with a massive lead, reckoned in some quarters as nearing 20 points.

• Just as the hard-fought GOP gubernatorial primary, coupled with Republican crossover in the Cohen-Herenton race, had whetted the Republican vote in Shelby County in August, so now were Republican prospects bolstered by suburban resistance to a consolidation referendum on the county’s November 2nd ballot.

The case for consolidation, meanwhile, was being made mainly by local business group interests concerned about competition elsewhere from what they saw as centralized and better organized metropolitan communities. They were aided by local advocacy groups and by such tireless activists for urban modernization as inveterate Smart City blogger Tom Jones.

The advocates of consolidation promised greater attention to ethics, equable taxation, a fair distribution of elective power countywide, and even a guarantee of continued sovereignty to the outer municipalities. Unconvinced suburbanites sniffed and called it spinach and were clearly determined to say the hell with it.

Worsening the Metro Charter’s prospects was a revolt against consolidation by inner-city blacks — concerned, like people in the suburbs, about a diminution of their political power in an enlarged government. In part a natural development, the urban backlash was further fueled by the anger of disappointed African-American Democrats, who saw the impetus to consolidation in the same suspicious way in which they viewed the party’s wipeout in the summer’s county elections (though Chancellor Arnold Goldin had dismissed a lawsuit against an admittedly bumblesome Election Commission).

The status quo seemed undisturbed in down-ballot races. There were challenges on the ballot to legislative candidates here and there but none was likely to displace an incumbent, either Republican or Democratic. In municipal elections going on in Bartlett, Collierville, and Germantown, the incumbents seemed equally well protected — especially insofar as they had used their positions to fight consolidation.

Two contested Memphis school board races attracted interest. Controversial incumbent Kenneth T. Whalum Jr. seemed capable of fending off challenges from Bob Morgan and a comeback-minded Richard Fields in the At Large, Position 2 race. And the District 6 race featured a six-candidate free-for-all, with former member Sara Lewis and longtime Democratic activist Cherry Davis hoping to wrest control from incumbent Sharon Webb.

Two ballot initiatives — one to restore non-staggered City Council terms and another toallow city employees to live within the boundaries of greater Shelby County — will resolve long-standing arguments in Memphis city government. So something will get settled on Tuesday!