Tag Archives: buttigieg

Priming for Pete . . . California’s Primary Is Days Away

26 Feb

It’s less than a week until California holds its presidential primary. I’m excited to be casting my vote for Pete Buttigieg.

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Sometimes, I find it hard to reclaim the enthusiasm I once had for the possibilities of the America ahead. Instead, cynicism, indifference and disgust too often fuel my political outlook.

But guess what?  Intelligence still excites me. Compassion engages me. Realism is reassuring. Integrity counts. And I want a leader I can be proud of.

A year ago, I never thought that I would find those qualities in the young mayor of a small Midwestern city.  When a friend first mentioned Mayor Pete, I had no idea who he was.  After googling the candidate, I thought my friend was only intrigued by Pete because he was gay.

A few months later, I heard about this amazing interaction between a Norwegian journalist and Pete at last year’s South by Southwest festival. He started talking to her in Norwegian (with a Midwest accent, according to her).  That’s when I learned he speaks 8 languages, including English.  A Harvard grad, a Rhodes scholar, a former military intelligence officer . . .  Imagine! Someone who might actually be able to think and reason.

The next time I was in our local Barnes & Noble, I picked up his campaign book, Shortest Way Home: One Mayor’s Challenge and a Model for America’s Future. It was a good read, and it gave me a sense of how he approached problems and worked with people. As a liberal arts grad, I believe strongly that people’s approach to learning and solving problems is a key indicator of their potential. Still, South Bend isn’t America. I remained skeptical

Nevertheless, I wanted to hear more. I started paying attention when he appeared on talk shows and town halls—even when it was on Fox.  In those early days, I was impressed by how he really listened to questions and actually answered them.

Maybe it helped that I worked my whole life in technology. I know people can be the catalyst to lead change and transform the world without requiring decades of achievements. Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg are names everyone knows.  People may not know the names of two people I actually encountered in my early days of Xerox who died this past year:  Larry Tessler who in his ‘30s helped invent the modern graphical user interface at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, and Gary Starkweather who at 31 invented laser printing at the Xerox Webster Research Center. They, too, changed the world at a young age.

In short, I want to be open to vision and genius when it appears.

I know I’m not alone. I am often surprised by the number and variety of people who admire Pete Buttigieg, even as they worry that he may be too young or too unlikely a candidate.  I overcame that concern months ago. I have to vote for someone that I not only am willing to support but who I also want to follow.

So, yes, I’m going to vote for Mayor Pete. Wherever the primary season takes him, I feel this vote is one way I can fight back to restore a world where truth matters, where decency counts, and where the rule of law will once again be respected.

I still have hope for America’s future.

 

Please check out all my novels in paperback or Kindle format, including:  Tales from the Loon Town Cafe, The Finnish Girl, The Devil’s Analyst—and my latest, The Long Table Dinner.

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Up, Up and Away: ‘Tis the Season for Fake Outrage

21 Dec

Does anyone truly believe that the chattering commentator class—as well as our presidential candidates—have truly never heard of a wine cave? Or have never attended a fundraiser in a lavish and unique setting?

Rising Santa

Is it time for holiday hot air?

Just for the record, I have at least three times been in a true wine cave for a catered fete—in fact, if my memory serves me right one of them was at the very Hall Rutherford winery in question.  (Also, by the way, that winery doesn’t even sell a $900 bottle of wine, and nothing anywhere in that price range was served at Mayor Pete’s event.)

In the last election cycle, I actually went to a fundraiser for our local congressman at a local winery’s tasting room.  Thank God, he hadn’t hosted it at another nearby winery that does sport a wine cave. We would all go to hell.

If you’re in California wine country, a wine cave is not that different than going into a festively decorated faux barn in Iowa. But, here’s the thing (to use a favorite phrase of Elizabeth Warren), Elizabeth Warren, Politico, MSNBC and Fox News people all know that. It’s just their talking point of the moment—and a way to take down Pete Buttigieg.

Just like a different class of people want to claim that Christianity Today is a leftist, progressive magazine—as a way to dismiss an uncomfortable rejection of the President

Or all those progressives who bemoan the lack of diversity in the remaining slate of Democratic candidates: two women, one 78-year-old Jew, a 37-year-old married gay man, an Asian millionaire, an unable-to-blink California billionaire, and a former vice-president.

I don’t recall a slate like that in my lifetime—but it’s just a way to dismiss the fact that some 20 other candidates couldn’t find a way to break through and connect to the voters. And I say that as someone who really wanted Kamala Harris to go the distance.

Nevertheless, the increasing set of hurdles seem an entirely logical and appropriate way to winnow a field. If you can’t reach a modest level of donors and poll ratings, how would you ever win the national election? (Plus, locally, it’s how we approach narrowing over 3,000 entries in the Cambria Film Festival down to 65 official selections.)

Sure. In every one of these situations, there are biases, injustices, tropes, and memes that work against someone. But still. Let’s stay focused on the bigger fish to fry.

Because it’s the holiday season, I’ll say no more. Except this.  Peace on Earth.  Good Will to All!

 

Buy a book for the new year. Please check out all my novels in paperback or Kindle format, including:  Tales from the Loon Town Cafe, The Finnish Girl, The Devil’s Analyst—and my latest, The Long Table Dinner.

www.amazon.com/author/dennisfrahmann