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Whirlpool of Crazy: A Letter to European Friends
By Bernard Weiner
Co-Editor, The Crisis Papers
July 30, 2011 (slightly revised)
Dear Wolfgang and Jacqueline:
Always nice to hear from you and to get your queries
about politics in the U.S. of A. To make it easier, I'll copy-and-paste your
five inquiries in italics, with my responses below that. My answers will be
in the way of informed speculations, since many of us progressive Americans
can't believe what we're seeing either. It's like we're caught in a
Republican-created whirlpool of crazy: spinning around and around with no
way the raging flow can be turned off in time to save the country -- or our
battered minds.
Here we go:
1. A MAD VIDEO GAME
So what the f--- is going on? American politics is always a bit weird,
but these days it seems even more bi-polar and demented. It's more like a
mad video game, points being given for especially ruthless, ignorant, and
violent denunciations directed at your perceived opponents. No wonder so
many of your citizens stay home on election day. What's the American
saying?: "Why should I vote? It only encourages them."
Indeed, the extreme right-wing of the GOP is dedicated to
its Manichean, no-compromise ideology, one that could push the country's
economy and social structures off a cliff. These HardRightists have gone so
far the off the reasonable radar that more and more traditional, stalwart
conservatives are coming to realize the likely electoral consequences in
2012: a second term for Obama, and a broken GOP and an intra-party civil
war.
Among that growing Republican cohort worried about the
ramifications of the party's intransigent positions: conservative NY Times
columnist David Brooks, Governor Hayley Barbour of Mississippi, conservative
Senator Lindsay Graham of South Carolina, mostly conservative Senators
Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins, even ultra-conservative insider David Frum
and Bushite Karl Rove, et al. (Rove agrees with the positions taken by the
extremist GOP leaders but more important than that, he wants to return the
Republicans to power in the White House in 2012 and behaving like
tantrum-prone children, he suggests, ain't gonna make it).
2. RISKING A 2nd GREAT DEPRESSION?<
We don't understand why the Republicans are risking
your country's vaunted credit-rating. Do they really not understand the
horrific ramifications of what they're doing, how their approach could lead
to a worldwide Great Depression?
Of course they understand it. They simply don't care. The
Republican-leaning business community certainly cares, but the extremist GOP
tail that is wagging the dog has only two goals: to stop any new taxes and
to defeat Obama in 2012. Therefore, the President must be denied any
possible victory. If Obama were to introduce a bill saying that the sun
rises in the east and sets in the West, the extremist GOP would work to
defeat it, claiming it's a liberal plot to propagandize the citizenry and
that Obama is the "SocialistNaziMuslimStalinistAnti-Christ." If the American
and world economies go swirling down the tank, that's just the price we'll
all have to pay for them remaining ideologically pure.
In some ways, the Tea Partiers/extremist-Republicans seem
to be afflicted with a kind of Tourette's Syndrome. When they hear the word
"Obama" they begin twitching and jerking and saying dirty things. If they
were to see him coming down the street carrying a legislative idea they
originated, they would immediately disown their proposal, make a 180-degree
turn and begin flinging clods of mud at him over their shoulders.
You're right: Anything can be said in the U.S. these days
by noted public figures, no matter how crazy. Nearly 80 young Labour Party
campers get slaughtered by a rightwing fanatic in Norway, and American
rightwing pundit Glenn Beck compares those kids to "Hitler Youth,"
suggesting they got what they deserved since they were liberals.
No doubt much of this nonsensical, rabble-rousing
behaviour will subside in America at some point -- perhaps if the
Republicans are badly defeated in the 2012 election -- but, as you well
know, every country in times of great stress seems to go through periods of
mass derangement, and afterwards reasonable leaders re-emerge and socially
responsible democracy takes root once again. Right now, America is going
through its loony, anti-democratic phase. In all likelihood, you Europeans
will have to deal with your own outbursts of crazy in the near-future -- the
anti-foreigner, anti-Muslim Norway tragedy may be just the tip of the
iceberg: politicians and parties who agree with those sentiments are being
elected to various countries' legislatures across Europe, from England to
France to Denmark and beyond.
3. THE CLOWN SHOW
Does Obama really have to worry about being
re-elected? The Republican candidates we see on TV over here look like
little more than a bunch of uneducated, pandering clowns.
Obama is still popular in America, but his numbers are
going down a bit as the economy remains stuck in the jobless doldrums and
he's doing little or nothing to help create jobs. I don't think Obama
ordinarily would have much to fear from any of those "clowns," as you call
them. After all, only about one third of the U.S. population -- many from
the fundamentalist, anti-science, anti-reality world -- share their
extremist views. But Obama has thoroughly pissed off a good share of his own
Democratic base by behaving more like a Republican than the centrist
pragmatist he pretends to be.
Like Clinton before him, Obama, unwilling to fight for
traditional Democratic principles, seems so hungry for any little reform he
can call a "victory" that he compromises before any battle has been joined,
or else offers some GOP-friendly compromise for free without using it for
political leverage in negotiations. Necessarily, then, he constantly gets
rolled by the Republicans, and then is hammered by liberals and progressives
for his timidity and naïveté. That base worked so hard and gave so much
money to get Obama elected in 2008 only to see the policies of Cheney and
Bush show up again in the White House (unwinnable imperialist wars abroad,
civil liberties ignored, corporations favored over the middle class,
jobs-creation forgotten, etc. etc.). He seems to suggest that he only backs
down because of political pressures, but he's the one who initiates and
pushes for the so-called "compromises."
It would seem that Obama's 2012 election strategy rests
on winning over moderate Republicans (those appalled by what their party has
turned into) and independents in the middle. He knows he'll never win that
third of the population dedicated to Republican Know-Nothingism, and he's
willing to continue antagonizing his liberal base because he figures: 1)
doing so gives him more only-adult-in-the-room street cred; and 2) because
enough of his disgruntled base eventually will hold their nose and vote for
him because the Republican candidate will be so off-puttingly awful that
they'll have little choice. Of course, this strategy could be thrown off if
the economy gets worse (which, as the GOP certainly realizes, it certainly
would do if the debt-ceiling is not lifted), or if, say, Senator Bernie
Sanders or someone else (Russ Feingold?) decides to challenge Obama from the
left.
4. "AUSTERITY" & THE MISSING LEFT
The Right-created Great Recession has led to huge
budget problems not only for you Americans, but also for those of us across
the globe and for the policies of "austerity" being forced upon us because
of those shrunken budgets. Those "austerity" policies come down hardest on
the middle-class and poor and so there have been massive demonstrations
against those policies -- and the wealthy and corporations who benefit --
all over Europe, most graphically in Greece, Spain, France and so on. Those
same shock-doctrine "austerity" policies are being implemented in the
various states in America, but we don't see massive protests against them.
What's happening? Is there no real Left anymore in America? Do those being
hurt by these policies just not care?
I share your sense of puzzlement. But I can offer a few
speculations.
I think part of that seeming calm here is that Americans
have been led to believe that we are not a class- based society. In short,
if you're not doing well right now, that can change and you can become a
millionaire someday. So the "system" is permitted to remain in place without
major reforms. If you point out the fact that the middle-class has not moved
up economically since the 1970s, and that the wealthy have only grown
geometrically more wealthy and less interested in helping those below them
as the income gap widens, you are lambasted as preaching "class warfare,"
which is held to be a bad thing. (You're not supposed to notice that
protecting the status quo is "class warfare" against the great majority of
Americans.)
Your instinct is correct: There is not a viable, united,
effective Left in the United States these days. The culture over the past
few decades has been shifted ever rightward. Indeed, what used to be the
Right is now the Center. Thanks to incitement by right-wing commentators and
media outlets, it's risky to be a liberal -- or, God forbid! -- a
progressive in many places in the U.S.
But there are some signs that the tectonic political
plates may be shifting. What has led to this potential shift are the
reckless, extremist policies of far-right Republicans. The 2010 election
brought those types into power in so many states (and, of course, into the
majority in the House of Representatives in D.C.), and the extremist
governors and legislators decided to push the envelope way beyond the
traditional political parameters. They are going after unions, workers
(including firefighters, nurses, teachers, police), they openly are
attacking the gains from the New Deal and Great Society (Social Security,
Medicare, Medicaid), even the government itself, cutting off all sorts of
social services and benefits.
If the Republicans had continued to do this in increments
over the years on the low-down, probably nobody would have been too riled
up. But the extreme conservatives are so greedy for money and power, they
felt this was their best chance in generations to go for it all, in the
open. And this has led to a significant liberal backlash as ordinary
citizens, openly attacked by the GOP, decided to fight back to protect their
unions, their jobs, their rights -- in Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan and so on.
Whether this fledgling movement will coalesce into an active, effective
national Left is not clear, but at least the building blocks are there.
5. LOONY TUNES & DEMAGOGUES
Who are the most popular, dangerous rightwing
fear&hate-mongers in the U.S. today? Are their ranks growing or shrinking?
Three who are certifiable: Pamela Geller, Michael Savage,
and Glenn Beck -- unadulterated, frothing loons. Next tier: Rush Limbaugh,
Ann Coulter, almost anyone on Fox "News," Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, et
al.
Those are among the most obvious candidates -- easy
targets for satire and criticism. The more dangerous are those in the
Republican mainstream who enable these demagogues by encouraging them and
often offering endorsements of their bigoted, hate-filled screeds, folks
like Newt Gingrich, Pat Buchanan, Senator James Inhofe, Speaker John
Boehner, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Governor Jan Brewer, Sharron
Angle, Rep. Paul Ryan, Michele Bachmann, Sarah Palin, et al. They create the
stew of "respectable" cultural parameters; the extremist wackos add the
explosive spices.
As for popularity, these politicians and pundits become
the media darlings of the right, and then, inevitably, they start to lose
their lustre and a new goofy hero appears to be fawned over. Glenn Beck is a
good example: amazingly popular with the Know-Nothing crowd, and then he got
wackier and wackier, and his star dimmed. Let it be so for the rest of them.
Hope all is well with you two and the kids. I miss
hanging out with you all. Maybe next year. Thanks again for writing.
Warmly, Bernie
Bernard Weiner, Ph.D. in government & international
relations, has taught at universities in California and Washington, worked
as a writer/editor for the San Francisco Chronicle for two decades, and
currently serves as co-editor of The Crisis Papers ( www.crisispapers.org).
To comment:
crisispapers@comcast.net .
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