Right. Indeed, politics now is a lot like my wrestling show in that whilst one is trying to fix what's broken (for McCain, it's the weakened Republican Party & for McMahon, it's the WWE's annual buyrates and overall product), the other is demanding "change" in a similar domineering fashion (i.e. inmates running the asylum; think The Clique--that is, nWo & DX members unified--and all those who [by association] are a part of that unified group).
Unfortunately, merely trying to fix what's broken (McCain) or simply reconstructing a
"new world order" out of a crumbling nation by choosing to further
"break it down" (Obama) isn't doing us average Joe's any favors, as either choice leaves us with pretty much
"no chance in h-e-ll" of having things return to the happily oblivious glory days of old.
It's like Vince attempting to fix what's broken by trying to relive
The Attitude Era, only to have The Clique usher in new people with their own views of how things should be run, given how the Attitude has died off with most of the Attitude guys being either retired, fired, or on their last legs.
Or better yet, it's like the Street now in that we classic fans could do without Elmo's World--or at least, the annoying parts of it--and yet, we know that fans of today couldn't live without every aspect of Elmo's World.
What we need is a balance: In Vince's case, using the talent in ways that would make most Attitude fans want to return, but yet, doing so with new-school flare (like they're doing with
Kane in possibly remasking him, but yet, giving him a new-school edge [or how
they merged the themes from every version of RAW together for the XV anniversary of the show]); In the Street's case, using Elmo's World only when Elmo's not the central character in the show's regular Street scene (like as was seen in a few of this season's first few episodes); In the world's case, fixing those things that need fixing, reworking those things that could be reworked, and nixing those things that--for the common public--ought to be nixed.