In celebrating
Passover, there's a tradition of mixing sweet
charoset and bitter
horseradish to commemorate the sweetness of freedom combined with the bitterness of either slavery or the plagues that hurt innocent Egyptians in the process of escaping from Egypt. Last week, we had the incredible sweetness of Barack Obama's election and the awful
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I think learning to be grateful for what we have achieved, and knowing that we must always strive for more, is one of the roads to happiness. If we were perfectly satisfied, where would the impetus be for betterment?
(I know what you mean, though, and I agree completely. Sometimes platitudes spout out of my mouth unbidden. Forgive me? LOL)
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I'm terribly disappointed too, but I think that yes, we should take heart in Obama's election, despite our setbacks. I think what it tells us is that we're on the right road. What California tells us is, we're not there yet.
So I guess my answer is, maybe it's enough for today - enough to keep us going. We got out of Egypt, anyway. Tomorrow, let's work on that sea problem.
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Every once in a while I look at the statistics from just a few years ago and realize how far we actually have moved. Either people are changing their minds or conservative bigots are dying off.
Either way: one of these days.
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It was said that this presidential election would either empower or disenfranchise our generation for 40 years to come. I find the passover reference extremely fitting!
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"You can't always get what you want
You can't always get what you want
You can't always get what you want
But if you try sometimes you just might find
You just might find--you get what you need."
We need a man like Obama now. Gay marriage is an ongoing fight, far from being a closed issue. Lots of states have denied it in one way or another; California is just another one of the fifty, although of course it is an important symbol to the gay/lesbian community. It isn't the end of the world here. Even Gov. Schwarzenegger encourages the fight to continue.
And so it will. I'm certain that it will eventually become legal. But right now, yes--I believe that it is enough that we have someone who may be able to help the United States as a whole now. If the economic and social climate begins to turn around, if bipartisanship can be restored, then it becomes more likely that there will be better political support for the gay marriage issue to be reconsidered.
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