Ryan Henry Cox is a musician. He’s also a sports trainer,
teacher, intermediate philosopher, tutor, and a father; he’s many things. But
he’s also running for Governor of Michigan this year. I’ve written about Ryan
in the past, regarding his band, the Good Things. The Good Things are/is just
Cox, at least in the compositional/creation/recording stages. If and when (and
emphasis on “if”) The Good Things ever perform, he assembles a capable crew of
versatile musicians to help bring his clattery-but-charismatic “fractured pop”
stories of melody and melodrama to life.
In fact, while Ryan
is busying himself with an ambitious run for the Governorship, he’s getting
ready to release an epic, (and emphasis on epic) album called Defeats The Porpoise, an intricately realized
serial-adventure style concept album pop opera imbued heavily with spaghetti
western grit, compelling magical realism and polychromatic comic book whimsy…
That being said, I’m talking about an album of songs, but it
is, as you’ll hear later on this summer, so much more. A fleet of
unconventional or eccentric instruments, some of them underutilized in the
“indie-rock” realms and some of them actually invented or fused together out of
necessity, so it’ll wind up sounding like a sun-splashed baroque-pop album of
chimes, strings, hums, croons and various other characterful intonations.
But about a month ago, I picked Ryan’s brain as he gets
ready to dig in for four considerably intense months of his DIY campaign. As
you can see by his poster, he has no intention to actually win or even make his
way into pack with other frontrunners. For him, it’s about creating a unique
kind of impact. Or sort of an inception, if you will…, a change of the
narrative.
Do you know if this
is going to be worth it?
I don’t know that it will be worth it. I only know that it
COULD be worth it, and that is enough to try for…But you’re going to notice
that some themes in Defeats The Porpoise connect
directly to my campaign. The idea of taking something on that’s way bigger than
you, out of concern for others, and not caring if I’m likely to ‘fail.’
I wonder if you chose
to name your band “The Good Things” because you, as a candidate, have this
drive to bridge disparate and entrenched factions and see “the good in
everyone…”
I wear my brain on my sleeve, I guess…It’s not
optimism—optimism can be easily deluded. I’m more of a realist. There is good
in everyone. That isn’t optimistic, it’s real. I don’t need optimism to find
good things. ‘What matters in the end’ is a guiding principal in my life, now.
How will I feel about myself based on my
history, while living in my ‘death bed.’ If I were reading my biography, would
I see myself as someone worth being, someone worth having in the world?
And things are still
going alright, running as an Independent?
Of course! Running for a party would ‘defeat the porpoise…’
as it were…. But that is bittersweet. Because it’s kind of incredible how many
people of how many different backgrounds have found me and are reaching out
with their stories and worries…But, after starting this campaign, it’s much
clearer to me now how badly our state wants to keep Independents out of office.
The laces are a bit double-knotted, in terms of parties entrenched against each other. You’re one
voice entering a big room of two warring sides yelling at each other.
Yep, that’s why I shut up and listen, first and foremost.
People tend to be more patient and their minds a bit more open when you
carefully and courteously listen to them first, listen to them sincerely, and
then respond. I can’t come out swinging, or people just hide behind party lines
and assumptions. But even more fundamental to the system, our campaign laws are
stacked against Independents, and promote candidates of the major parites. I have no chance of winning in
“traditional terms,” but I’ll still “win….” I already am winning, in a sense.
And we would presume
to ask the Independent what their goal or end-game is, or whether they think
they even have a chance, and if not, why bother….People might read a paragraph
about you and make premature conclusions about you.
That’s politics in a nutshell. Try to change minds that are
certain they won’t change in attempt to influence society. Entering politics at
this level and standing
apart from the parties has a sort of an emotionally masochistic aspect to it—I
know I’ll mostly just get beat down and pushed around or ignored in all of
this. But sacrifice is key to worthy achievements.
Is the goal to shift the collective mindset?
Change the conversation? Open minds to the overlooked issues?
Definitely. But far from the
main goal. That's more of a theme, I suppose. A politician better have some
practical goals to pair with any conceptual/inspiration/general intentions. Anyone
can say, "I stand with everyone. I stand for [insert anything and everything.]"
But that doesn’t mean anything if they can't tell you the solution that they
are standing behind.
How do you approach the beast of cynicism? The presupposition that every
politician wants something to gain with the job
My slogan is "Don't
Vote for Ryan Cox"… Kind of knocks presuppositions off balance. And the
question I ask most is, "What do you think we should do?" Then I shut
up and listen again. That usually sets up a pretty level playing field for a
deeper, friendlier, and more productive conversation.
Do you feel a kinship with the wave of ...for lack of any other
word...progressive... candidates that we've seen rise in a post Bernie/Trump
era? I'm thinking of the percentage of
women, persons of color and even Trans candidates coming to the fore….did it
spring from that, similarly, for you? This calling? This cultural moment? This
imperative, of sorts
Yes, but not because they are progressive...The kinship comes from their
willingness to accept the (often incredibly ironic) challenges that come with
trying to help others who are suspicious of your intentions; the willingness to
be insulted and despised in order to help those same people. To be honest, I am
quite miserable much of the time during this campaign. This is emotionally
tumultuous, isolating and lonely, straining mentally and physically, stretching
my intelligence and waking hours to my limits.
Seeing others take the same stand knowing they cannot "win" but still
may do great things to better the lives of others...yeah, there is kinship
there? Or what about just breaking down a platform? You’ll often see candidates
whittle their platform down to a catchy motto… But it never suggests why they’re
running. Why are you running?
I'm running because I don't
feel I am doing enough to achieve my life goals. If you know me personally, you
know that I've been making massive strides to improve all aspects that I think
are subpar in myself in order to achieve my most desired goals. One of those is
to dedicate my life to helping others and leaving the world in a better state
than I came into it. Yes, trying to engage with people at differing interest
levels, differing perspectives, and differing attention spans has been tricky!
You’ve got a website up….
Yes, and you can see that
all of my Policy Reports are written in 3 ways:
1. a simple breakdown at the
top of the page of the basic concepts and suggested solutions regarding an
issue or issue set (for those who just want a quick overview of that platform
perspective and for those who are interested enough to stop at the website, but
not about to read a 5 page report!)
2. A more substantial summarization section that brings up more explanations, solutions, and context
3. A full report on a legislative idea with sources and comprehensive explanations (this is more for journalists, political researchers, nerds like myself, other politicians to steal, etc)
2. A more substantial summarization section that brings up more explanations, solutions, and context
3. A full report on a legislative idea with sources and comprehensive explanations (this is more for journalists, political researchers, nerds like myself, other politicians to steal, etc)
And each one has a catch phrase….
You can find out more about Ryan Henry Cox’s run for Governor of Michigan
HERE
Follow The Good Things on Facebook, here.
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