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MatthewG.

(362 posts)
Mon Nov 6, 2017, 09:55 PM Nov 2017

What I think of the Republican Party

Last edited Mon Nov 6, 2017, 11:23 PM - Edit history (1)

What do I think of today’s Republicans?

Today’s Republican Party is, at the national level anyway, the source of all of America’s political problems. Honest conservatives not in hock to the GOP’s institutions, like Norm Ornstein (of the American Enterprise Institute), will often admit this.

Reminiscent of Communist Parties of old, today’s Republicans evince blind, unswerving adherence to an ideology - movement conservatism - with reckless indifference to the truth. Since Party dogma holds that Conservatism cannot fail, it can only be failed, truth is usually the first casualty when Republican malefeasance or misdoing comes up. There’s probably about two hundred examples of this I could give, but the one which personally galls me the most is the bit of Republican rhetorical wizardry by which the Democratic Party is blamed for all America’s racial problems ; this is based in a partial historical truth (Southern Democrats indeed supported Jim Crow) and a willful, perverse blindness to the realities of Nixon’s Southern Strategy, the support for Civil Rights given by every liberal intellectual and institution of that era, and modern conservatism’s deliberate exploitation of White racial fears for the last several decades. Much like Communist propaganda which claimed Soviet efficiency led to prosperity, no one seriously believes that today’s Republican Party is the heir to the Civil Rights movement - everyone understands that the exact opposite is true, that they are the heirs of Bull Connor and his dogs - but the official propaganda line is touted at every opportunity. It’s utterly perverse and wicked - and simply accepted as normal Republican Party discourse. (Incidentally, as the LGBT community continues to move into the mainstream, expect future generations of American conservative hacks to claim that the Republican Party was always the party that supported same-sex marriage rights. “We were the party of personal freedom in the 1990’s and 2000’s”, the line will go, “with Republican leaders like Dick Cheney supporting same-sex marriage before Democratic leaders like Barack Obama.”)

Corrupt to the core - compare net indictments of Republican Presidents and Presidential appointees in the last 50 years to those of Democrats - the GOP holds power not through competent governance but by appealing to White ethnic and religious fears. (In this, I am slightly thankful for Trump, who has fully exposed this game to any sentient observer.) Contemptuous of their own base, their primary policy concern, beyond gerrymandering districts to ensure their own power, is keeping the tax burden on their donor class as low as possible. Offering no economic or policy strategy beyond tax cuts, the GOP is incapable of improving the lives of even the majority of their own supporters in any meaningful way.


One could reasonably argue that liberals - today’s liberals, anyway - hate conservatives, but they don’t generally view that rancor as a policy concern. Liberals want better health care for poor people, cleaner air and water, and fewer wars abroad ; not ideals always met in practice, but decent ideals nonetheless. Today’s conservatives see their own hatred of liberals as a core policy concern, perhaps the most important of all policy concerns. This is sadly not an exaggeration - two of my friends recently moved from being wholly apolitical to Trump supporters ; when I asked them why, their response was an endless series of tirades at his liberal critics. All this can be laid squarely at the feet of the Republican Party, which has aggressively demonized “liberals” for decades, the source of all our present levels of partisan discord. (Individual liberals certainly do hate conservatives, but the Democratic Party’s own institutions and spokespersons haven’t actively demonized “conservatives” or attempted to convince the public that “conservatives” are a subversive fifth column.)

European observers of American politics, even European conservatives, consistently remark upon the ideological rancor and unpleasantness of the Republican Party. No where in the industrialized world can one find anything remotely comparable to it ; a political party which encourages religious fundamentalism as a vehicle for its own political aspirations, a persistent institutional denier of scientific truths accepted by all educated persons in every country in the world, a body in a supposedly democratic country more reliant on a massive propaganda outlet than policy argumentation, and a facilitator of every conceivable form of bigotry in the service of nothing more than debt-financed tax cuts mainly benefitting the wealthiest citizens.

At best a parasite, at worst third-rate fascists, the modern Republican Party is everything wrong with America. It’s only positive feature is that - in its current manifestation anyway - it is surely doomed by demographics, though we may yet have to endure its yoke for a few more decades at least.

11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
What I think of the Republican Party (Original Post) MatthewG. Nov 2017 OP
I'll offer my 2cents...traitors, liars and hypocrites Va Lefty Nov 2017 #1
All that and worse. MatthewG. Nov 2017 #5
This message was self-deleted by its author WinkyDink Nov 2017 #2
Couldnt agree more. MatthewG. Nov 2017 #6
Well written and effectively expressed PJMcK Nov 2017 #3
Thank you. MatthewG. Nov 2017 #7
Conservatives / Republicans Serve Satan SeattlePop Nov 2017 #4
Hard to disagree MatthewG. Nov 2017 #8
And yes... MatthewG. Nov 2017 #9
The GOP is more in line with the right parties of the 2nd and 3rd world nations. Dawson Leery Nov 2017 #10
Theyre undoubtedly worse than any political party in the industrialized world MatthewG. Nov 2017 #11

MatthewG.

(362 posts)
5. All that and worse.
Mon Nov 6, 2017, 10:29 PM
Nov 2017

There really aren’t enough bad things to say about the contemporary GOP. The nicest thing I can come up with is that, as conservative parties go, they’re less awful than, say, South Africa’s National Party.

Response to MatthewG. (Original post)

PJMcK

(22,035 posts)
3. Well written and effectively expressed
Mon Nov 6, 2017, 10:03 PM
Nov 2017

Keep posting, MatthewG!

Republicans suck.

And Trump is an idiot.

MatthewG.

(362 posts)
8. Hard to disagree
Mon Nov 6, 2017, 10:38 PM
Nov 2017

Hard to disagree that they’ve sold their souls for cash and power. Politicians of all stripes are hacks, but i think it’s safe to say that no one in the know could honestly believe the GOP’s official party lines.

MatthewG.

(362 posts)
9. And yes...
Mon Nov 6, 2017, 11:08 PM
Nov 2017

And yes, I’d take honest Satanists - that is to say, people who honestly follow the philosophy of Anton Lavey or simply reject the Christian ethic for hedonism - over the huckster-fascists of today’s Republican Party.

Dawson Leery

(19,348 posts)
10. The GOP is more in line with the right parties of the 2nd and 3rd world nations.
Tue Nov 7, 2017, 12:25 AM
Nov 2017

The Republican Party is not in line with the free world.

MatthewG.

(362 posts)
11. Theyre undoubtedly worse than any political party in the industrialized world
Tue Nov 7, 2017, 10:19 AM
Nov 2017

I really dislike the rising far right parties in Europe like the French National Front and Germany’s AFD, and i equally dislike Israel’s Likud, but even those parties don’t try to actively prevent their own base from, say, getting affordable health care.

There are political institutions in 3rd world countries that play on religious fundamentalism and de facto support oligarchic rule, so I’d agree, that might be a fair comparison.

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