Change Is Hard

…but change is certain.

Honey, Bill Clinton is on the phone for you.

12 Comments

Bill Clinton called last night.  His was one of several calls we received that evening asking us to vote one way or another on a proposal or for a candidate.  Yes he was recorded, and no he didn’t ask for my husband by name.  But still, to pick up the phone and hear a former president say “This is Bill Clinton and I’m asking you to vote yes on proposal two”  did seem a little surreal.

Here in Michigan, aside from the race for President, Senator, Representative, university regents, judges, assorted local officials and a tax millage we also have six proposals to vote on.  Five of them are proposals to amend the state constitution.  This is serious business that should take serious consideration.

People are being inundated with information on both sides of every issue.  The advertisements range from sensitive and seemingly thoughtful, playing on our sympathy, to strident and threatening, playing on our fears.  How do we know what to believe?  We can’t even tell from the names of the organizations funding the ads.  One evening I listed to three adds in a row regarding proposal four which revolves around home health care providers.  Two of the ads were asking us to support the proposal.  The ad in the middle asked us not to support it.  Two of the ads said the other ad was an outright lie.  It’s patently obvious someone is lying,  but who?

Each issue is the same; a barrage of ads, phone calls, mailers and editorials.   And though I understand both sides must tell their story, with so much on the ballot the end result of this avalanche of information appears to be confusion and frustration.  I’m tired of it.  I wish we could all have a calm discussion about what each of these proposals would really do, and then brainstorm together about what each of them might do unintentionally, be it good or bad.  Because I don’t think any of these proposals have been thought out thoroughly.  Every piece of legislation and each constitutional amendment has the potential for unintentional consequences.  Each piece of propaganda we receive tells only one side of the story.

Tonight as we’re listening to the latest robo call and sifting through the mailbox’s latest deposit I am counting the days until November 6th.  I’m not sure which way I’ll vote on these proposals, but I don’t want any more help, thank you very much.  I’ll figure it out on my own with the information I already have.

Don’t call again, Mr. President.  It was nice talking to you but we’re all good here.  A little bit of peace and time to think is what we need now.

Please.

Author: dawnkinster

I'm a long time banker having worked in banks since the age of 17. I took a break when I turned 50 and went back to school. I graduated right when the economy took a turn for the worst and after a year of library work found myself unemployed. I was lucky that my previous bank employer wanted me back. So here I am again, a long time banker. Change is hard.

12 thoughts on “Honey, Bill Clinton is on the phone for you.

  1. YES!
    Thank you!

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  2. All the campaign literature that shows up in my mailbox goes right into the recycling bin. I’ll get my information from less biased sources, thank you very much. P.S. Bill Clinton obviously recognizes you for your keen intelligence and that’s why he called you specifically. A recording only because he has laryngitis.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Amen!

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  4. Oh boy am I ever on your side! I do understand the importance of sharing information, but I wish I could place a personal moratorium on political garbage being dropped in my mailbox. I think that if I can opt-out of phone calls, and companies around the country are required to maintain email opt-out lists, then I ought to be able to save a few trees, garbage bags, and frustrations. I know lots of people feel exactly the same way, with mail delivery personnel apologizing at what they’re dropping off. Perhaps it will be different in four years?
    Also, you make a great point about trying to think through to unintended consequences. I think that far too often people only see what’s immediately obvious and don’t get to things that might have been different otherwise. /rant (You must have really touched a nerve!)

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  5. Barack Obama (and Michelle and Joe) send me at least 2 emails a day. I rarely read them before deleting them.

    We got rid of our home phone, and now we never get those obnoxious political calls! For some reason, they haven’t figured out my cell phone number yet.

    I really think the campaign managers think americans are stupid, and that we’ll believe everything they tell us.

    Only a few more days…..

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  6. Oh Election!!! One of the dreary things in life!

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  7. Dawn, you have said this soooo well — and politely. I’m afraid I’ve angrily hung up on more than one unsolicited phone call from these robots purporting to “help” voters make the right decisions! Yes, I think we’re all just sick of the entire nasty campaign, regardless of which side we’re on!

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  8. My goodness, if Bill Clinton calls us I’d never know because I hang up before the second word! But you said this very well. It’s a hard time of year. We humans can be so challenging.

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  9. I would like to receive but one thing in my mail in an election year, and that would be a listing of the people and the issues, and an intelligent description of each, with intended and unintended consequences all given by a neutral third party. Because we no longer have a land line, because we rarely watch network television (I tend towards channels like HGTV and Amazon instant videos), we have not been bombarded. But still, there is one issue in particular on our ballot that confuses me, and I’m having a difficult time deciding which way to go.
    I will be ever so happy when November 7 is here.

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  10. That would be weird hearing the president on the phone. Could you imagine if it was really Clinton on the phone and it wasn’t a recorded message — that would be even weirder (if that’s at all possible.)

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  11. At least with former President Clinton’s message you knew who was giving you the pitch and why. I’d like to end all robo-calls, but my particular ire is reserved for the ones that do not tell you who is saying this or who paid for it or why they might want you to vote their way – it’s just anonymous hate mail. I think we will only work our way out of this miasma of muck when we start sitting down together as citizens, talking quietly about what really matters to us. And you are so right about looking at the possible unintended consequences of various proposals.

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