For what it’s worth . . .

I feel morally obligated at this point to first of all encourage everybody who’s registered to go out tomorrow and vote, regardless of who or what you vote for.  The bedrock of a democratic and free society is the ballot box.

Secondly, I’d like to strongly encourage everyone to vote for Barack Obama, as the best option that America has for meeting the challenges of the immediate and distant future.  To quote from the New York Times:

The differences are profound.

Mr. McCain offers more of the Republican every-man-for-himself ideology, now lying in shards on Wall Street and in Americans’ bank accounts. Mr. Obama has another vision of government’s role and responsibilities.

In his convention speech in Denver, Mr. Obama said, “Government cannot solve all our problems, but what it should do is that which we cannot do for ourselves: protect us from harm and provide every child a decent education; keep our water clean and our toys safe; invest in new schools and new roads and new science and technology.”

In every aspect of the candidates’ ideologies, Obama represents more that will benefit the average American; more that will improve the economy; more that will repair our pitiful foreign relations and our standing in the world.

Thirdly, the editors of Faraway also strongly recommend that California voters vote No on Proposition 8.  Proposition 8 is an attempt to segregate and discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation.  It represents a huge step backward for civil rights and for the American concept of equal rights for all.  The government of California and the United States, and the citizens of the same, have no business deciding how people should live out their social and marital lives.  The Constitutions of California and the U.S. are clear that liberty and justice are values to be enjoyed by all, not just some.  This proposed constitutional amendment would fundamentally alter what it means to be American and Californian.  It would mean that we no longer live in a free, equal, and just society, but in a society that is free, equal, and just for some.  We would be living on George Orwell’s Animal Farm, where all people are equal, but some are more equal than others.  Take a long, hard look at what values should be enshrined in political documents as sacred as constitutions, and vote No on Proposition 8.

Orwell in Spain!

I‘m excited to update an earlier post on the digital publication of the George Orwell diaries 70 years to the day after they were written.  As of a few days ago, George Orwell arrived in Spain on a collision course that will soon see him fighting on the side of communist forces against Franco’s fascists, experiences that would later be recounted in Homage to Catalonia.

Today he’s in Gibraltar, commenting on barbary apes among other things.  There is even a Google Map to show you exactly where he was on each date

Orwell for the Digital Generation

George Orwell has long been one of my favorite writers, and I think his works stand the test of time in terms of pertinence and relevance more than most other classic writers.  Animal Farm, 1984, and Homage to Catalonia are all timeless works that help us better understand not only governments and revolutions of the 1930s and 1940s, but governments today.  In an effort to make Orwell more prominent amongst the younger generation, The Orwell Prize is publishing George Orwell’s diary entries in blog form seventy years to the day after he wrote them, beginning with his entries for August, 1938.  You can find the blog here: http://orwelldiaries.wordpress.com/.

I heard about this a few weeks ago on NPR and wanted to check it out.  The diary entries are categorized as “domestic” or “political.”  It looks at the moment as if most of the stuff on the site is on the domestic side, and the entries read a lot like letters from my grandmother: “Many blackberries now ripe, very large & fairly sweet.”  There is commentary on the weather and on animals that Orwell comes across.  Apparently the “political” side of the diary begins in early September, so bookmark the site and keep your eyes peeled.  I await with interest his original diary entries on the Spanish Civil War and World War II (still a year off, in diary time!).