Booman Tribune

RIP, GOP (An Exhortation)

by kingubu
Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 08:49:08 PM EST

I honestly believe that we are witnessing the beginning of the end of the so-called conservative movement, and the Republican Party that it currently inhabits. The slow-motion horror that the nation is witnessing on the flooded streets of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast is the final, irrefutable evidence that the GOP is not fit to govern this great nation. There is no amount of spin and slime that can erase what millions of Americans are seeing for themselves on the evening news.

But it is not merely Bush's obvious crocodile tears or the Feds' dithering while a city drowns that will be their undoing. It is something much larger. Something that strikes at the very soul of America.

Please follow me over the flip for more.

Democrats and liberals have watched in apoplectic horror as Republicans have gained ground at all levels of government despite hard evidence of corruption, incompetence, and failure. Foolishly, we, navel-gazers that we often are, have thought that the trend was about us; something that we were doing wrong. We have had meeting after meeting to discuss where and how we went off-track.

Well, we have erred, but not in the way that we usually think. We have failed because we let doubt get the better of us. We have let America down by thinking there was something wrong with what we were doing in the first place. We lost our voice because we blinked when we should have advanced.

The Republicans haven't been winning because they have a better plan or sounder policies. They have been winning because they have spent billions of dollars on a coordinated media campaign to make a slim majority of voting America feel good about the worst aspects of their natures. They have succeeded, not by providing a national vision that inspires us to a higher nobility, but by telling us that giving in to our basest instincts is what's best for us as individuals and as a nation.

The product the GOP has been selling is absolution-- not the old-fashioned kind, purchased through self-sacrifice and dedication-- but a cheap, outsourced knock-off kind of absolution that says, "its okay, we do it, too. We won't tell."

How hard is it really to convince people that being selfish is the way to go? Where is the higher calling in predatory greed? What invention is required to pander to the lust for revenge?. Where is the challenge in stoking people's fears about personal safety, or in feeding the flames of prejudice?

Its not hard to aim for the lowest common denominator and that is exactly what the GOP has been doing. Rather than hatching a plan to make America a better place then convincing the public to support it, they have instead made a science of putting lipstick on a pig. They package greed and avarice and sell it as "sound market policy." They bind up cruelty and fear and slap on a label marked "national security." They take bigotry and hatred and push it out the door in a glossy package marked "traditional family values." There are no new ideas; only our darkest human frailties made bland with double scoop of political weasel-words and sexed up with Madison Ave. sizzle.

Empathy is a uniquely human skill. We must be taught to play fair, to share, to think of others, to give without expecting something in return. We all, liberals and conservatives alike, teach our kids these basic human ethics; and we define their maturity based on the degree to which they internalize them. Yet those in the GOP who presume to lead us make a mockery of human civilization by denigrating those very principles.

Fairness? Equality? Shared interest? Working for a common good? These are ridiculed by Republican operatives as passe, bleeding-heart Hippie-speak, or worse, as insane and treasonous. They cry about their self-made straw-man of a "Democratic nanny state" but infantilize the nation by pushing aside or punishing those who would dare to advance policies that reach beyond the instinctual primitive obsessions of "I, me, and mine."

The litany of short-sighted GOP-authored legislation over the last several years-- the gutting of public works, tax cuts in the face of mounting debt, the single-minded redistribution of wealth to those with plenty, the blatant cronyism-- reveal the truth: the Republican Party has no plan and no vision for governing this nation. All they have is a strategy for getting elected-- and then redirecting public funds to campaign donors to get re-elected. It a strategy to snuff out our public institutions through attrition while making their supporters feel warm and fuzzy about being greedy, selfish, bigoted, cruel, and wasteful.

The Republicans encourage the worst elements of our society by creating a morality-free zone behind a painted facade of piety and strict morality but once you are inside, there is nothing to see. There is no show. They are there to trash the place and slink off with the loot, not to build or to work.

When faced with a crisis they run in front of the cameras with focus group-tested slogans and happy talk because that is all they have. Everything they do and are is bound up in their marketing scheme. Their only skill is in trying to make what's wrong seem right just long enough for the the check to clear. There is no substance, no deeper resources to draw from, no greater ideals to act as pole-star. There is only spin, counter-spin, and smear. Every problem is a PR problem.

Tragedy has a way of revealing character. The constant drumbeat of death from the war in Iraq, and now the cascading nightmare that is the Gulf Coast flood has peeled away the veneer and we can see the GOP leadership and the larger conservative movement for what it is: a sham. They have nothing. They offer nothing. They come to destroy, not to build. They have no vision for a greater public good because, for them, the very notion of a public good is anathema.

Make no mistake: as we watch our fellow citizens drown, starve, and die in the street in New Orleans, its not incompetence or lack of planning that is killing them. It is willful neglect. It is the direct result of reducing the government "down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub." This is what "starving the beast" looks like.

For some 30 years the Republican party has packaged humanity's darkest and most craven weaknesses and pawned them off as its greatest virtues. Well, the reckoning is here and the conservatives are found wanting. When the chips are down we are a nation that cares for our citizens and we expect our government to be strong enough, capable enough, and compassionate enough to do the same.

As Democrats, we call upon and support the nobler aspects of human nature. The time has come to put aside our doubts, get back on track, and inspire our brothers and sisters with our vision for a better nation and a better world.

Rest in peace, Grand Old Party. America can no longer afford the drag that your self-delusions and cheap justifications put on our spirit. For those who are willing to turn back from pandering to the lowest common denominator and who choose to join us lifting up the better angels of our nature, we offer the hand of friendship. For the the rest: may the God whose name you have scandalized and used as cover for your lack of humanity have mercy on your degenerate souls.

(Cross-posted from DailyKos by request)



Display:
Thank you for posting this here.  This was fantastic.  As I said in a comment here earlier, I could imagine JFK, RFK or MLK, jr delivering this as a speech - it had that kind of power to it.

You should be sending this to every media outlet in the known universe.

I thought his title was president of the United States, not of Iraq. -- Patrick Maunder, Seattle

by mlk19569 (mlk19569nospam@comcast.net) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 09:08:30 PM EST

I was reluctant to cross-post it since so many people here also read and contribute there and have probably seen it; but seems to really strike a chord.



As long as the prerequisite for that shining Paradise is ignorance, bigotry, and hate... I say the Hell with it. --Inherit the Wind
by kingubu (kingubu@totalcinema.com) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 09:14:47 PM EST
[ Parent ]
If I were you, I'd cross post this whereever you can.  Make this diary viral.  Everyone needs to read this.

I thought his title was president of the United States, not of Iraq. -- Patrick Maunder, Seattle
by mlk19569 (mlk19569nospam@comcast.net) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 09:17:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Just seconding the thanks for crossposting this here.  This is an excellent piece; I'm emailing out the link to non-bloggers now.
by CabinGirl on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 09:21:15 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I very rarely read Dkos, so I want to thank you for posting this here.
by catnip (llamg88 at hotmail.com) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 10:37:34 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Hammer, nail, head.

Democratic leaders need to stand up and shout out that what they stand for is human decency.

9/11 changed nothing. The cabal in charge merely used that tragedy as an excuse to go ahead with nefarious plans they would have found a way to carry out anyway.

Katrina changes everything. It has to. This country can no longer be run as one big plantation. I think a lot more people understand now that the folks up in the big house don't give a rat's ass about the rest of us.

"As a woman, I have no country. . . . As a woman, my country is the whole world." --Virginia Woolf

by Raging Hippie (raginghippie at comcast dot net) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 09:17:44 PM EST

Even their best tool (the Great Automatic Spin-Slime Machine) is backfiring now. Its like the scene in 12 Angry Men when the bigoted juror finally snaps and goes on a racist tirade that reveals the true motive for his guilty vote. Everyone that had been listening to his tough-guy law-and-order act suddenly turns away in shame and he is left alone, ranting into the air. So it is now with Bush. Every time he sticks his mug in the camera with another pile of fake-down-home happy talk the more he reveals his indifference and cruelty.



As long as the prerequisite for that shining Paradise is ignorance, bigotry, and hate... I say the Hell with it. --Inherit the Wind
by kingubu (kingubu@totalcinema.com) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 09:47:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I wish I could give you an extra 4 just for the "Inherit the Wind" quote.

Thanks for one damn fine diary!

"As a woman, I have no country. . . . As a woman, my country is the whole world." --Virginia Woolf

by Raging Hippie (raginghippie at comcast dot net) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 09:56:26 PM EST
[ Parent ]
and read it at dKos and urged you to cross-post (I am aka deepintheheartoftx) and i just read it again and have the same reaction:

Damn that's good.

No one desrves to miss this.

Write on, my firend, write on!!

I want something else, to get me through this, semi-charmed kinda life..
Third Eye Blind

by brinnainne on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 10:28:48 PM EST

Thanks for the nudge of encouragement.



As long as the prerequisite for that shining Paradise is ignorance, bigotry, and hate... I say the Hell with it. --Inherit the Wind
by kingubu (kingubu@totalcinema.com) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 10:37:08 PM EST
[ Parent ]
First of all, let me thank you for writing such a truthful expose of the GOP. I agree with others that you've captured the crux of the political situation that has now so affected millions who are suffering as a result. However, and I do have a "however", I wrote my most recent diary as a warning because I believe it's vitally important that Democrats not all rush to stand on the moral high ground because anyone who does ultimately falls.

This must be a time of accountability and the GOP must be made to pay, but let us not blind ourselves by believing that we on the left are free of blame - we're not. We do fight hard and we have for a very, very long time, but we must take this opportunity to also look at where we fall short. If we don't, we will also have failed all of the victims. This is the time for everyone to understand what being truly human is all about and we cannot measure that simply by pointing out the inhumanity of others. We must take this as a call to action to clean up our own mess, to move to a place where we can have a clear conscience and the knowledge that we have all done everything possible to reach out to the least among us.

We can walk and chew gum at the same time. We can criticize and place blame where it belongs right now, but we can also work hard to ensure this type of deprivation never happens again. We have an obligation to do that. It will require tremendous humility and strength, but that's what being human is all about.

by catnip (llamg88 at hotmail.com) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 10:36:25 PM EST

And well said.

The dark strategy I pointed to was able to flourish because we (Dems and Liberals) started to view our fellow citizens who need help as "causes" to support and "programs" to fund, rather than as our brothers and sisters. Abstract categories rather than people. We stopped listening. We traded empathy for its dehumanizing shadow: pity.

My point wasn't to waggle my finger from some imagined higher ground. Far from it. It was a grasp at hope; and a trumpet call to rise up (as much for myself as anyone).

As long as the prerequisite for that shining Paradise is ignorance, bigotry, and hate... I say the Hell with it. --Inherit the Wind

by kingubu (kingubu@totalcinema.com) on Sat Sep 3rd, 2005 at 11:05:34 PM EST
[ Parent ]
"Well, we have erred, but not in the way that we usually think. We have failed because we let doubt get the better of us. We have let America down by thinking there was something wrong with what we were doing in the first place. We lost our voice because we blinked when we should have advanced."

This said so much to me. When we started becoming ashamed to be labeled a liberal we started losing. When we allowed Rove and company to define who we were, what we stood for, calling us immoral, bleeding heart hippies we should have stood up and yelled, "Damn straight and that what a truly compassionate person is. NO MORE> I am an American citizen that believes in equality, belives that this country is/was for the people, by the people. It is time to STOP being so damn "politically correct" and be who we are.

This was the best damn peice of writing I have read in I don't know how long. Please start sending it NOW to every Dem rep in the country. Thank you for your brillant insight.

Frodo failed...Bush has got the ring.

by alohaleezy on Sun Sep 4th, 2005 at 07:57:49 AM EST
And beautifully said - I agree, publish it far and wide.  But I cringe at the RIP, my own sentiment would be "die a horrible death!" as some are.

Thanks for helping me understand my world.

by Alice on Sun Sep 4th, 2005 at 08:33:24 AM EST


Display:
Go to: [ Booman Tribune Homepage : Top of page : Top of comments ]
Menu
Login
. Make a new account
. Reset password





Find textbooks at Alibris!

NOTE: Overstock bests Amazon's prices and is "blue."

THE BOOKS WITH "BUZZ":
______________

Learn the real story behind the WMD in Iraq:

The Way of the World: A Story of Truth and Hope in an Age of Extremism
by Ron Suskind

Read Barack Obama's vision for America:

The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream
by Barack Obama

DaveW recommends:

I Am a Strange Loop
by Douglas Hofstadter

Need some laughs?

I Am America (and So Can You!)
by Stephen Colbert

rae recommends:

Dark Ages America: The Final Phase of Empire
by Morris Berman.

On BooMan’s shelf:

Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
by Doris Kearns Goodwin

This looks interesting:

Adventure Divas
by Holly Morris

Here’s a good one from
Elizabeth Gilbert:

Eat Pray Love
by Elizabeth Gilbert

"Crash" * Best Motion Picture, Academy Awards * Only $11.79 at Overstock * 2006 SAG Winner, Best Ensemble

Check out
Powell's new section:
NEW FAVORITES

Selected new arrivals at 30% off

Recommended by Indianadem and ejmw:
The Conscience of a Liberal
by Paul Wellstone

From northcountry’s bookshelf:

The New Golden Age:
The Coming Revolution Against
Political Corruption and Economic Chaos
by Ravi Batra

A novel about contractors in Iraq from the woman that runs The Spy That Billed Me:

Outsourced: A Novel
from RJ Hillhouse.


SOTW-120x90
Download Sleeper Cell on iTunes (Better than "24") Download Weeds on iTunes (Hilarious 1/2-hour adult comedy starring Mary-Louise Parker) Download Late Nite with Conan O'Brien on iTunes
John Belushi - SNL
Download South Park on iTunes
Verve Vault

James Hunter - People Gonna Talk:
James Hunter - People Gonna Talk
icon


Great Deals
----- * ^ * -----

Find mystery novels by Nancy Pickard ("Kansas")



Challenging Empire: How People, Governments, and the UN Defy US Power by Phyllis Bennis (interviewed on DN!)


Featured by Keith Olbermann, New (Powell's Sale): Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower by William Blum (whose other books merit serious consideration)


"Explosive" State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration
by James Risen


The book the CIA doesn't want you to read: Jawbreaker: The Attack on Bin Laden and Al Qaeda: A Personal Account by the CIA's Key Field Commander
Larry Johnson's review


BT's all-time best seller:

PERMACULTURE:
A Designers' Manual

$79.95 * Sale: $59.95


Unequal Sisters: A Multicultural Reader in U.S. Women's History (Third Edition)


The Undercover Economist: Exposing Why the Rich Are Rich, the Poor Are Poor And Why You Can Never Buy a Decent Used Car!


The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl
by Timothy Egan


Green Press Initiative
----- * ^ * -----


Journalistas: 100 Years of the Best Writing and Reporting by Women Journalists by Eleanor Mills * NYT review


Bury Me Standing: the Gypsies & Their Journey


1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus



Brokeback Mountain
by Annie Proulx
----- * ^ * -----
Check out Powell's
"At The Movies"


Imperial Ambitions: Conversations on the Post-9/11 World by Noam Chomsky (Power & Terror: Post 9-11 Talks)


The Price of Privilege:

How Parental Pressure and
Material Advantage Are Creating a Generation of
Disconnected and Unhappy Kids

by Madeline Levine


Save 35-70% on
name brand clothing,
footwear, and outdoor gear
at SierraTradingPost.com

:





We listened to PEN American Center's "State of Emergency" and found 1940s books by Curzio Malaparte only at Alibris. (Selection (MP3) excerpted from "The Skin.")

Alibris - Books You Thought You'd Never Find
Banned Books * Are you a fan of Film Noir, Art House, Documentaries or Hong Kong Action? * Searching for a long-lost children's book or a first printing of Miles Davis' Kind of Blue on vinyl? Find it at Alibris!

:
:
www.Patagonia.com



Booman Tribune Homepage
admin@boomantribune.com
powered by Scoop

A-List Blogger

Blogarama - The Blog Directory

More blogs about Blogs at Technorati.

Listed on BlogShares

© 2007 Booman Tribune