Thanks to all who supported my campaign. I look forward to working with Caroline and Mike Murphy, Bill Goodwin, Jack McKool and Chad Bockius this year.
The Long Voyage Home- Community Building
New York times
Op-Ed Columnist
The Long Voyage Home
By DAVID BROOKS
Published: May 4, 2009
Republicans generally like Westerns. They generally admire John Wayne-style heroes who are rugged, individualistic and brave. They like leaders — from Goldwater to Reagan to Bush to Palin — who play up their Western heritage. Republicans like the way Westerns seem to celebrate their core themes — freedom, individualism, opportunity and moral clarity.
But the greatest of all Western directors, John Ford, actually used Westerns to tell a different story. Ford’s movies didn’t really celebrate the rugged individual. They celebrated civic order.
For example, in Ford’s 1946 movie, “My Darling Clementine,” Henry Fonda plays Wyatt Earp, the marshal who tamed Tombstone. But the movie isn’t really about the gunfight and the lone bravery of a heroic man. It’s about how decent people build a town. Much of the movie is about how the townsfolk put up a church, hire a teacher, enjoy Shakespeare, get a surgeon and work to improve their manners.
The movie, in other words, is really about religion, education, science, culture, etiquette and rule of law — the pillars of community. In Ford’s movie, as in real life, the story of Western settlement is the story of community-building. Instead of celebrating untrammeled freedom and the lone pioneer, Ford’s movies dwell affectionately on the social customs that Americans cherish — the gatherings at the local barbershop and the church social, the gossip with the cop and the bartender and the hotel clerk.
Today, if Republicans had learned the right lessons from the Westerns, or at least John Ford Westerns, they would not be the party of untrammeled freedom and maximum individual choice. They would once again be the party of community and civic order.
They would begin every day by reminding themselves of the concrete ways people build orderly neighborhoods, and how those neighborhoods bind a nation. They would ask: What threatens Americans’ efforts to build orderly places to raise their kids? The answers would produce an agenda: the disruption caused by a boom and bust economy; the fragility of the American family; the explosion of public and private debt; the wild swings in energy costs; the fraying of the health care system; the segmentation of society and the way the ladders of social mobility seem to be dissolving.
But the Republican Party has mis-learned that history. The party sometimes seems cut off from the concrete relationships of neighborhood life. Republicans are so much the party of individualism and freedom these days that they are no longer the party of community and order. This puts them out of touch with the young, who are exceptionally community-oriented. It gives them nothing to say to the lower middle class, who fear that capitalism has gone haywire. It gives them little to say to the upper middle class, who are interested in the environment and other common concerns.
The Republicans talk more about the market than about society, more about income than quality of life. They celebrate capitalism, which is a means, and are inarticulate about the good life, which is the end. They take things like tax cuts, which are tactics that are good in some circumstances, and elevate them to holy principle, to be pursued in all circumstances.
The emphasis on freedom and individual choice may work in the sparsely populated parts of the country. People there naturally want to do whatever they want on their own land. But it doesn’t work in the densely populated parts of the country: the cities and suburbs where Republicans are getting slaughtered. People in these areas understand that their lives are profoundly influenced by other people’s individual choices. People there are used to worrying about the health of the communal order.
In these places, Democrats have been able to establish themselves as the safe and orderly party. President Obama has made responsibility his core theme and has emerged as a calm, reassuring presence (even as he runs up the debt and intervenes rashly in sector after sector).
If the Republicans are going to rebound, they will have to re-establish themselves as the party of civic order. First, they will have to stylistically decontaminate their brand. That means they will have to find a leader who is calm, prudent, reassuring and reasonable.
Then they will have to explain that there are two theories of civic order. There is the liberal theory, in which teams of experts draw up plans to engineer order wherever problems arise. And there is the more conservative vision in which government sets certain rules, but mostly empowers the complex web of institutions in which the market is embedded.
Both of these visions are now contained within the Democratic Party. The Republicans know they need to change but seem almost imprisoned by old themes that no longer resonate. The answer is to be found in devotion to community and order, and in the bonds that built the nation.
Early Voting Statistics
All:
As you are aware, election day is this Saturday and I am running for Bee Cave City Council. As such, I am asking for your vote. The polls are open this Saturday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at City Hall in the Hill Country Galleria. As we come down to the wire, let me assure you that EVERY VOTE COUNTS!
Thus far, through early voting, the neighborhood voting breakdown follows:
Falconhead: 98 votes out of 590 registered voters (17%)
Uplands: 122 votes out of 310 registered voters (39%)
Homestead and Bee Cave West: 89 votes out of 410 registered voters (21%)
There are 5 candidates running for 3 seats and voters may vote for 1, 2, or 3 candidates. The other candidates are Jack McKool (Uplands), Steven England (Uplands), Rusty Kilgo (Uplands) and Bill Goodwin (Homestead).
In the event you have questions for me or would like to know more about my history with the school, Falconhead or on city issues, I offer the following opportunities:
1) On Friday evening I will be walking the neighborhood talking to neighbors. You will recognize me in a white shirt with “Bob” on the front.
2) On Saturday morning, beginning around 7:30, I will be in the front of Falconhead with coffee and doughnuts for the kids. Please stop on the way to games, work, workout, etc., grab a coffee and some doughnuts for the little ones and say hello. I will answer any questions you may have.
3) The remainder of Saturday I will be in front of Falconhead cooking out and enjoying the day. Please stop by and say hello. I would love the opportunity to speak with you if we haven’t met or if you would like to discuss the election issues.
4) Finally, if we can’t meet on Friday or Saturday in front of Falconhead, please refer to my election blog at www.robertdorsett.com for more information.
I have a substantial history in Bee Cave/Lake Travis and am eager to share my experience as an elected representative. As you can tell by the early voting results, a large voter turnout on election day is necessary for me to keep up with the other candidates. City Hall is nearby and voting only takes a matter of minutes. Please forward this email to anyone on your list as my distribution is limited. Thank you for your support and patience throughout this election period and I plan to have all of my signs off the streets before you wake Sunday morning.
Bob
Candidate Forum- Lake Travis View
Endorsement by Mandy and Neale Van Streepen
Bob Dorsett is a Falconhead Resident and attorney with offices here in Lakeway. Bob Dorsett is a fabulous resident who organizes the Halloween hay ride each year and carts a bunch of kids around the neighborhood on the trailer. He has organized the Parade of Champions the last two years at the Galleria when the Lake Travis High School football team won State. He is very involved in the community and specifically in Falconhead and all the issue that we all face living here. Neale and I are giving Bob Dorsett our full support for a seat on the Bee Cave City Council as we feel he will represent us and the issues important to us in the best possible way.
Endorsement by Steve Braasch, Mayor Pro Tem
” I have worked with Bob Dorsett on many issues in Bee Cave, he is an organized solutions-oriented community supporter who works to find the best outcome for Bee Cave and its residents. He stands out as a candidate I highly endorse and will provide the homegrown leadership we need.”
City Council Meeting- March 24, 2009
The primary issue discussed in this meeting was whether or not the Shops at the Galleria should be allowed to have general signage on the back of the stores that back up to Highway 71. Technically, the signs would be on the towers of the Shops. The “Shops” argue that the Galleria stores that back to Highway 71 are allowed to have small signs indicating the store’s location and therefore the “Shops” stores should have the same competitive edge. The issue appears to rest in the original agreement between the council and the Shops that precludes such signs. The council passed a comprehensive sign plan to be allowed within the interior of the Shops. Take a look at the signs on the back of the stores at the Galleria and let me know what you think.
Another item was the hotel occupancy tax and its application to hotels in the ETJ or extra territorial jurisdiction of Bee Cave. Mountain Star Lodge argued that the tax should not be enforced because it places them in a competitive disadvantage to the Lakeway hotels that do not have a tax. The Chamber of Commerce argued to “table” the matter while they seek to have Lakeway pass a similar tax. The council voted against enforcing the tax at this time, but to raise it again when the Falconhead Hotel is built.
Finally, Judy Fry, a Falconhead resident and member of the HOA steering committee was appointed to Planning & Zoning by the committee. Congratulations.
Bee Cave, Texas Election. Homestead Questionnaire
Bee Cave Road Tax
For those of you with questions about the road tax on the Bee Cave ballot this election, my understanding is the purpose of the 1/4cent local sales tax is as follows:
The tax is 1/4 cent of the total sales tax collected in Bee Cave, it is for use only in Bee Cave and its purpose is to provide maintenance, upkeep, repair and safety of the city roads and streets. It has to be approved periodically by the Bee Cave voters. If Bee Cave does not collect this for the stated purpose then it will be taken away from Bee Cave by the county ESD. The caveat is that if Bee Cave does not claim it by voter approval then the county ESD can take it without a vote and institute it as a permanent county tax. The funds are better served staying in Bee Cave and therefore it is of great benefit for Bee Cave voters to have the control of the tax versus the county stepping in and permanently claiming it and taking the money away from Bee Cave.
Proposed HOA Legislation- No Foreclosures
A Dallas-area lawmaker recently proposed an amendment to the state constitution that would prohibit community associations in Texas from foreclosing on individual members for nonpayment of dues and other fees. According to the Rep. Burt Solomons, “Things have gotten out of control with homeowners associations.” Solomons has stated that the plight of many Texans in associations has been illustrated in news stories, such as last August when a homeowner was threatened with fines by his association for parking his pickup truck in his driveway. HOA rules there required that nonluxury trucks be kept in the garage. Solomons’ proposal, which is expected to be opposed by HOA groups, would submit a constitutional amendment to Texas voters that would prohibit foreclosures by associations on homesteads within their jurisdiction. The amendment states that a homestead within an HOA would be “protected from forced sale for the payment of a debt” to the association. It would allow an association to place a lien on the property, which would entitle it to payment once the house is voluntarily sold by the owner. His bill also would take aim at associations that prohibit use of solar panels by homeowners. I expect that there will be substantial push-back on this bill, however, he may receive support based on the continued lien approach.