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Green Party’s penchant for picking the worse cadidates: Cynthia McKinney being considered for Presidential Ticket

April 18, 2008 3:04 pm

When will the Green Party ever learn?

When, finally, will the Green Party accrue the wisdom necessary for it to recognize the false prophets that come under the pretenses that they can transform the Party from its presently obscure and politically inconsequential status. Such charlatans publicly pronounce their affinity for Green Values. However, more times than not, the opaque agenda of such aspiring politicos incorporates the Green Party as merely a vehicle for personal political aggrandizement.

As it stands now, the Green Party suffers from a lustful wish to become a competitor in mainstream politics. As a result, the Green Party is always seeking to run candidates for high level governmental positions; political offices that any Green Candidate possesses a less than negligible chance for winning; or, for that matter, to even marginally compete with the candidates nominated by the two major business parties; and, more likely, the Green Candidate will either fail to acquire a slot on the ballot, or, under the remarkable condition that ballot access is obtained, the Green’s electoral success in the election will fail to pass the threshold for the Party’s automatic entry onto the ballot for forthcoming elections.

This impetuous disposition on the part of the Greens - whereby they shoot for the stars; a strategy reflecting their considerable lack of sociopolitical farsightedness - has engendered a condition were possible Green candidates who possess some notoriety are either courted by High Standing Party Members, or, contrarily, the Greens acquiesce to the prominent newcomer’s desire for the spot on the Green Party ticket.

As we observe the latest inner-organizational events occurring within the Green Party, as the Nation moves closer to a new Presidential Election, it appears that the impending quasi-celebrity to be embraced by the Greens will be no other than the former Georgia Representative, Cynthia McKinney. The only difference, however, between McKinney and other quasi-celebs who have used the Green Party in order to advance their own political aspirations is the fact that McKinney’s public persona - albeit recognized widely - is, more often than not, associated with feelings of contempt and annoyance.

McKinney’s public conduct has been one characterized by somewhat of a paradox. On the one hand, she advocates important issues about social problems that impact the most vulnerable members of American Society. In fact, she is one of the few politicians to publicly admit that the crisis in the Middle-East is primarily attributable to the Israelis and their violations of international law as the Israeli colonists strive to usurp more and more territory from the subjugated Palestinians.

Nevertheless, whatever goodwill might be garnered from McKinney’s tenacity for speaking forthright is obfuscated by her supreme arrogance and elitism. She is, of course, the Representative who assaulted a police officer, who had stopped her because she stormed through a corridor when entering the Capital Building that was reserved for members of Congress. McKinney’s reaction was to strike the police officer, as if he was out of line and he had no business even approaching her.

What is important to remember about this event is that McKinney was not wearing her Congressional Pin - which would have identified her as a Member of Congress - therefore, for her to suspect not to be stopped seems to rest upon an inflated ego that instructs her to presume she is pervasively known and recognizable to everyone, and therefore should not be subject to the same inconveniences as the rest of us, even if she neglects to have the alacrity of mind to wear appropriate identification.

This rather minor incident, however, could have been quickly resolved if McKinney simply apologized and explained her actions as being kneejerk and quite clearly inappropriate. Nevertheless, McKinney’s hyperbolic ego got in the way, and she elected to cry bigotry, going so far as to accuse the Officer, whom she had struck, as being motivated out of racism when stopping this Congresswoman who had decided not to wear the lapel required for her to be recognized as a Member of Congress. In other words, McKinney - overestimating her self-importance - was willing to ruthlessly attack the civil servant, who, in this context, was the actually vulnerable, underpowered party in the dispute; not the other way around, as McKinney suggested.

So, considering all of this, why does the Green Party - or, at least, quite a few of its notable members and supporters - seem to embrace McKinney and her decision to run for the Green Party’s ticket for the Presidency? I suspect the answer to this question rests in the fact that she has acquired national recognition, and among the leftist extremes in American political culture she is still looked upon with credibility and respect. Nevertheless, from my own vantage point, I am prepared to denounce McKinney as just another self-absorbed false prophet, who is less concerned with the incremental growth of the Green Party as she is obsessed with herself and her own ascendency to higher offices.

Russell Cole