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Republicans only pretend to be patriots

  1. #1
    8stringflinG African Astronaut
    Republicans have spent the past half-century portraying themselves as more patriotic, more committed to national security than Democrats. Richard Nixon’s victory in 1972, Ronald Reagan’s victory in 1980 and George W. Bush’s victory in 2004 (the only presidential election out of the past seven in which the Republican won the popular vote) all depended in part on posing as the candidate more prepared to confront menacing foreigners.

    And Barack Obama faced constant, scurrilous accusations of being too deferential to foreign rulers. Remember the “apology tour,” or the assertions that he had bowed to overseas leaders?

    But now we have a president who really is unpatriotic to the point of betraying American values and interests. We don’t know the full extent of Donald Trump’s malfeasance — we don’t know, for example, how much his policies have been shaped by the money foreign governments have been lavishing on his businesses. But even what we do know — his admitted solicitation of foreign help in digging up dirt on political rivals, his praise for brutal autocrats — would have had Republicans howling about treason if a Democrat had done it.

    Yet almost all G.O.P. politicians seem perfectly fine with Trump’s behavior. Which means that it’s time to call Republican superpatriotism what it was long before Trump appeared on the scene: a fraud.

    After all, a true patriot is willing to make some sacrifice, to give up some personal or policy goal, in the national interest. Can anyone point to any prominent figure in the modern Republican Party who has done that?

    In fact, the periods in which Republicans worked hardest to wrap themselves in the flag and question Democrats’ loyalty were also periods in which the G.O.P. doubled down on its usual domestic agenda of making the rich richer. Even as George W. Bush’s administration was hyping the war on terrorism and leading America to war on false pretenses, the party was pushing for tax cuts: “Nothing,” declared Tom DeLay, the House Republican leader at the time, “is more important in the face of a war than cutting taxes.”

    But if Republican superpatriotism has always been a fraud, why were so many Americans taken in? After all, polling suggests that except for a brief period after the extent of the Iraq debacle became clear, the public has consistently viewed the G.O.P. as stronger than Democrats on national security.

    My guess, although I’d love to see some serious research from political scientists, is that for most of the past half-century the G.O.P.’s patriotic posturing dovetailed with its domestic political strategy, which centered on hostility to the Other.

    Republicans positioned themselves as the champions of white, small-town America against people of color and cosmopolitan urban elites; they also posed as the nation’s defenders against international Communism and Islamic extremism, which in reality had nothing to do either with each other or with domestic racial tensions, but somehow fit psychologically because they involved strange people with funny names.

    The irony is that in the past few years this paranoid fantasy, in which a major U.S. political party is de facto allied with an international movement hostile to American values, has actually become true. But the party in question is the G.O.P., which under Trump has effectively become part of a cross-national coalition of authoritarian white nationalists. Republicans were never the patriots they pretended to be, but at this point they’ve pretty much crossed the line into being foreign agents.

    And why have both professional Republicans and the party’s base gone along with this? You need to think of Trump’s foreign entanglements in the context of a G.O.P. establishment that realizes that its domestic agenda is deeply unpopular, and a rank-and-file that sees itself on the losing side of demographic and social change. The result is a party that is increasingly willing to play dirty, violating democratic norms, to hold on to power.

    And once a party has decided to do whatever it takes to prevail politically, there’s no reason to expect the foul play to stop at the water’s edge. If a party is willing to rig political outcomes by preventing minorities from voting, if it’s willing to use extreme gerrymandering to retain power even when voters reject it, why won’t it be equally willing to encourage foreign powers to subvert U.S. elections? A bit of treason is just part of the package.

    Which brings me to the political question of the moment: Should Democrats begin an impeachment inquiry? Such an inquiry almost certainly wouldn’t remove Trump from office, because Republicans in the Senate wouldn’t vote to convict. But that misses the point.

    What an impeachment process would do now is get the truth about who really cares about defending America and its values — and who doesn’t — out into the open. By forcing Republicans to explicitly condone behavior they would have called treason if a Democrat did it, Nancy Pelosi and her colleagues can finally put an end to the G.O.P.’s long pretense of being more patriotic than its opponents.
  2. #2
    Jackrabbitpsych African Astronaut
    Republicans and Democrats are a label...each label has varied views. You can't put the entire party in one big bucket of all the same ...as a liberal you should understand that, no?
  3. #3
    kroz weak whyte, frothy cuck, and former twink
    Yeah but you have yards like tort wearing sketchers when Obama was president chanting 0bama Obama obama! Marching around his community college campus picking his butt and sniffing his finger.

    It's two sides to the same coin.

    Like when Trump one ut was tagged by the students with a bunch of graffiti saying fuck Trump and he's a racist.. guess who had to clean it up immagrints

    College kids are so fucking stupid
  4. #4
    Jackrabbitpsych African Astronaut
    No matter it's all a huge hypocrisy so I care little
  5. #5
    8stringflinG African Astronaut
    Originally posted by Bill Krozby Yeah but you have yards like tort wearing sketchers when Obama was president chanting 0bama Obama obama! Marching around his community college campus picking his butt and sniffing his finger.

    It's two sides to the same coin.

    Like when Trump one ut was tagged by the students with a bunch of graffiti saying fuck Trump and he's a racist.. guess who had to clean it up immagrints

    College kids are so fucking stupid

    R u drunk
  6. #6
    kroz weak whyte, frothy cuck, and former twink
    Originally posted by 8stringflinG R u drunk

    Of course! You small ho
  7. #7
    Jackrabbitpsych African Astronaut
    I don't remember Obama's butt smelling chant but really sounds like a partying time. Wish I were there
  8. #8
    kroz weak whyte, frothy cuck, and former twink
    Originally posted by Jackrabbitpsych I don't remember Obama's butt smelling chant but really sounds like a partying time. Wish I were there

    I'll let you suck my ass
  9. #9
    Jackrabbitpsych African Astronaut
    Originally posted by Bill Krozby I'll let you suck my ass

    Thought that sounds enlightening....and all. I may have to pass on your ass lol
  10. #10
    Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    OP is so stupid he believes there is a two party system.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  11. #11
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Democrats want:

    - wide open borders so all the third-world countries around the world can pour in unimpeded with no checks
    - abolish ICE
    - Muslim Sharia Law "no-go zone" communities
    - homosexual/gay sex education for kindergarten children
    - men in little girls' bathrooms
    - abortion after birth
    - book burnings/statue defacement
    - street violence to gain political objectives
    - the illegal spying on Americans
    - pay-for-play
    - relationships and transactions with hostile foreign governments
    - the use of government agencies to attack political opponents
    - ban cows

    ^ and there's lots more!
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  12. #12
    8stringflinG African Astronaut
    Originally posted by -SpectraL Democrats want:

    - wide open borders so all the third-world countries around the world can pour in unimpeded with no checks
    - abolish ICE
    - Muslim Sharia Law "no-go zone" communities
    - homosexual/gay sex education for kindergarten children
    - men in little girls' bathrooms
    - abortion after birth
    - book burnings/statue defacement
    - street violence to gain political objectives
    - the illegal spying on Americans
    - pay-for-play
    - relationships and transactions with hostile foreign governments
    - the use of government agencies to attack political opponents
    - ban cows

    ^ and there's lots more!

  13. #13
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Then again Republics are almost as bad, just in different ways. They're the ones heavily involved in all the false flag attacks and mass murders and illegal invasions and major thefts and travesties against the poor. They're a bunch of parasitic shitbags, too, just in a whole other sense.
  14. #14
    larrylegend8383 Naturally Camouflaged
    Spectral drunk on the internet
  15. #15
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Speedy Parker and the others are exactly right. They only give people two parties to create the illusion that they have a choice. They don't. No matter who you vote for, you're getting fucked, and you're getting fucked royally. It's Us vs Them. Literally. The elite aren't held to any laws whatsoever, while the little people will be nailed to the wall and have their lives destroyed for even the least infraction. Justice doesn't exist; she died a long time ago. Everything you see is a mirage. A manufactured lie. An illusion that many people today are finally starting to see through.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  16. #16
    8stringflinG African Astronaut
    Good. Don't vote then.
  17. #17
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    "What if they gave a war and no one came?"
  18. #18
    Sudo Black Hole [my hereto riemannian peach]
    Originally posted by -SpectraL - ban cows

    Nothing about guns or taxation but you have sharia law and banning cows.

    Your credibility just skyrocketed
  19. #19
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by Sudo Nothing about guns or taxation but you have sharia law and banning cows.

    Your credibility just skyrocketed

    I said there was lots more. Was that not enough for you? I never mentioned shipping off the last of the American jobs overseas and abroad for cheap slave labor either, or murdering off all old white people.
  20. #20
    Originally posted by 8stringflinG Republicans have spent the past half-century portraying themselves as more patriotic, more committed to national security than Democrats. Richard Nixon’s victory in 1972, Ronald Reagan’s victory in 1980 and George W. Bush’s victory in 2004 (the only presidential election out of the past seven in which the Republican won the popular vote) all depended in part on posing as the candidate more prepared to confront menacing foreigners.

    And Barack Obama faced constant, scurrilous accusations of being too deferential to foreign rulers. Remember the “apology tour,” or the assertions that he had bowed to overseas leaders?

    But now we have a president who really is unpatriotic to the point of betraying American values and interests. We don’t know the full extent of Donald Trump’s malfeasance — we don’t know, for example, how much his policies have been shaped by the money foreign governments have been lavishing on his businesses. But even what we do know — his admitted solicitation of foreign help in digging up dirt on political rivals, his praise for brutal autocrats — would have had Republicans howling about treason if a Democrat had done it.

    Yet almost all G.O.P. politicians seem perfectly fine with Trump’s behavior. Which means that it’s time to call Republican superpatriotism what it was long before Trump appeared on the scene: a fraud.

    After all, a true patriot is willing to make some sacrifice, to give up some personal or policy goal, in the national interest. Can anyone point to any prominent figure in the modern Republican Party who has done that?

    In fact, the periods in which Republicans worked hardest to wrap themselves in the flag and question Democrats’ loyalty were also periods in which the G.O.P. doubled down on its usual domestic agenda of making the rich richer. Even as George W. Bush’s administration was hyping the war on terrorism and leading America to war on false pretenses, the party was pushing for tax cuts: “Nothing,” declared Tom DeLay, the House Republican leader at the time, “is more important in the face of a war than cutting taxes.”

    But if Republican superpatriotism has always been a fraud, why were so many Americans taken in? After all, polling suggests that except for a brief period after the extent of the Iraq debacle became clear, the public has consistently viewed the G.O.P. as stronger than Democrats on national security.

    My guess, although I’d love to see some serious research from political scientists, is that for most of the past half-century the G.O.P.’s patriotic posturing dovetailed with its domestic political strategy, which centered on hostility to the Other.

    Republicans positioned themselves as the champions of white, small-town America against people of color and cosmopolitan urban elites; they also posed as the nation’s defenders against international Communism and Islamic extremism, which in reality had nothing to do either with each other or with domestic racial tensions, but somehow fit psychologically because they involved strange people with funny names.

    The irony is that in the past few years this paranoid fantasy, in which a major U.S. political party is de facto allied with an international movement hostile to American values, has actually become true. But the party in question is the G.O.P., which under Trump has effectively become part of a cross-national coalition of authoritarian white nationalists. Republicans were never the patriots they pretended to be, but at this point they’ve pretty much crossed the line into being foreign agents.

    And why have both professional Republicans and the party’s base gone along with this? You need to think of Trump’s foreign entanglements in the context of a G.O.P. establishment that realizes that its domestic agenda is deeply unpopular, and a rank-and-file that sees itself on the losing side of demographic and social change. The result is a party that is increasingly willing to play dirty, violating democratic norms, to hold on to power.

    And once a party has decided to do whatever it takes to prevail politically, there’s no reason to expect the foul play to stop at the water’s edge. If a party is willing to rig political outcomes by preventing minorities from voting, if it’s willing to use extreme gerrymandering to retain power even when voters reject it, why won’t it be equally willing to encourage foreign powers to subvert U.S. elections? A bit of treason is just part of the package.

    Which brings me to the political question of the moment: Should Democrats begin an impeachment inquiry? Such an inquiry almost certainly wouldn’t remove Trump from office, because Republicans in the Senate wouldn’t vote to convict. But that misses the point.

    What an impeachment process would do now is get the truth about who really cares about defending America and its values — and who doesn’t — out into the open. By forcing Republicans to explicitly condone behavior they would have called treason if a Democrat did it, Nancy Pelosi and her colleagues can finally put an end to the G.O.P.’s long pretense of being more patriotic than its opponents.

    too lengthly, did not read.
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