Vote Like a Transcendentalist
Vote Like a Transcendentalist Like many Americans, I have been thinking a lot about this election and my place in the historic nature of it. As a modern day Transcendentalist, I turned to the likes of Thoreau and Emerson for their thoughts. Thoreau, who famously marched to the beat of his own drummer, quoted the motto, “the government is best which governs least” in his essay, “On Civil Disobediance,” calling government “a sort of wooden gun to the people themselves.” This is the man who famously spent the night in jail for failure to pay a local tax because he did not want to support the American government’s war with Mexico. However, contrary to popular belief, Thoreau did not call for the abolishment of government: But, to speak practically and as a citizen, unlike those who call themselves no-government men, I ask for, not at once no government, but at once a better government. Let every man make known what kind of government would command his respect, and that will be one step toward obtaining it. In following this call, I am making known what kind of government will command my respect: one that will weigh many options before deciding what might be best for the majority of the world’s citizens, not just Americans; one that recognizes that we are merely temporary inhabitants of this earth and not owners of it; and one that will seek to erase the divides and injustices that separate us from each other and not seek to institutionalize them. That, for me, is best represented by the candidacy of Barack Obama, and I urge all of you to get out and vote.
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Rosy Cole says:
Small beginnings
Vote like a Transcendentalist is an excellent motto. But I wonder whether all governments, even with the best of intentions, end up institutionalising the divides and injustices you speak of. However idealistic, it remains a truth that change starts at the bottom, within the heart and will of every person as he goes about his daily life. No government can do better than create a climate in which that can thrive.We must hope and pray that the next world leader will preside over such an assembly.
Sadly, one way or another, we get the leaders we deserve.
Robert Todd Felton says:
Transcendental Moment
Rosy,
I think Thoreau would agree with your statement that we get the leaders we deserve. The fact the elections were even close in 2000 and 2004 continues to astonish me. And I agree that after a number of years, it is perhaps inevitable that governments of the left or the right will succumb to narrow interests and self-preservation. However, I think the swing from left to right and left again is detrimental. That's why we need multiple parties in this country -- to insure that politicians need to form collaborations and seek the middle rather than divide and face off. Even the curmudgeonly Thoreau believed in balance.
robert todd felton www.rtoddfelton.com
Rosy Cole says:
Thanks, Robert, for
Thanks, Robert, for explaining. The pendulum effect sometimes seems to spare the worst, but gains no real ground. Yes, I certainly agree about the 'balance'. One of the aphorisms I reckon to have coined years ago (although it's no doubt attributable to sundry ancient Greeks!) is :All Life is a delicate balance.
Robert Todd Felton says:
blance
That is indeed a wonderful aphorism and one I try to live my life by (as did Thoreau). Thanks for the conversation.
PS - I snuck a look at your author page -- your work looks interesting. My next book is literary guide to the Lake District of Wordsworth (the same Roaring Forties Press series as my first two books). I like what you say about Obama being for the world -- he seems to acknowledge that in a way his predecessor was oblivious to.
robert todd felton www.rtoddfelton.com