Of all the unhealthy developments in this country, I think the following is the most depressing:
As partisan divisions solidify, the [Democratic] party’s electoral chances increasingly depend on turning out its core supporters—racial minorities, young voters and unmarried women, among others. That’s much of the reason for the big drop in the party’s recent performances in midterm cycles compared to presidential years.
It’s a reality the GOP understands just as well—hence the party’s efforts to make voting harder. As DNC spokesman Mo Elleithee put it while speaking to reporters in March, Republicans “know that when the electorate is large, they lose, when the electorate is smaller, they win.”
In announcing the Arbor Project, the Democrats are demonstrating their focus on increasing voter participation. This is certainly in their self-interest, but it’s also wholly consistent with traditional American values about both the right of everyone to vote and the importance of citizen involvement in politics. There is no corresponding effort to prevent likely Republican voters from registering to vote or to kick registered Republicans off the voter rolls.
The Republicans have concluded, as Mo Elleithee said, that the path to electoral victory isn’t to craft the better campaign or come up with the most broadly appealing policies, but to control the shape of the electorate by making it smaller. This puts their entire political party at odds with the cherished ideals of representative government. It also has an inevitable racial component, since the best visual predictor of how someone will vote is the color of their skin.
Part of this is explained by the fact that the GOP has a lot of rotten people in it, but I understand that if you are socially or fiscally conservative you want to have your views prevail, and you’ll begin to devalue other objectives like determining the true will of the people. If everything I cared about was at risk because my party couldn’t win elections, I might start to waver on this whole democracy thing, too.
I understand that it’s easy to be for the broadest possible electorate when that clearly advances your political goals, and that it becomes hard when it doesn’t. But what’s so depressing about this is that this country has sorted itself into a political alignment where one party sees disenfranchisement and disengagement as their best hope.
I also see this as a consequence of the Conservative Movement’s fervent desire not to have to change their core beliefs about anything. They don’t want to moderate their positions on gay marriage or abortion or immigration, and as those positions become giant liabilities they feel that their only option is to turn against individual voters and try to keep them from casting their votes.
This is related to all the calls for secession, for example, in the rural areas of Colorado and California. It’s really taking on an ugly tone, with expressions of racism and xenophobia combined with a growing disdain for our democratic system of government. When you combine it with the libertarian strain in the GOP, it really begins to resemble fascism, because it’s nationalistic, race-based, often pro-corporate (although it has populist anti-corporate elements, too), anti-immigrant, and basically revolutionary in its opposition to the central government. Add in its attraction to pseudoscience and creating their own facts, its basic anti-intellectualism, its source of strength with the “job-creating” small entrepreneurs (anti-communist bourgeoisie) and you begin to see too many parallels with the fascists of old.
Admittedly, it more closely resembles the fascism of Franco or Mussolini than the death-camp fascism of the Nazis, but it’s a strain of politics that had to be destroyed once at great cost. And it’s growing right here in our neighborhoods and metastasizing throughout our legislatures.
Only real difference between then and now is that they are desperate enough to have become wholly disinterested in hiding what has been just beneath the surface. They only needed something to trigger them, and November 2008 was it.
You’re right about one thing though – they must be politically destroyed, because if they aren’t, they will wind up having to be literally destroyed if the United States is to survive in any recognizable way. Don’t kid yourself, one way or the other it’s going to be them or us.
“I don’t want everybody to vote. Elections are not won by a majority of the people. They never have been from the beginning of our country and they are not now. As a matter of fact, our leverage in the elections quite candidly goes up as the voting populace goes down.”
This quote is often played on Thom Hartmann’s show, and summarizes the (accurate and truthful) priorities of a large segment of the GOP. Also accurate and truthful is how anti-American the concept is.
Looking back at the three fifths compromise I wouldn’t call it anti-American per set.
Well, fair enough — the Constitution could have been better. Fortunately we have an amendment process, though I think in today’s climate it would be nearly impossible to actually pass a Constitutional amendment. However, there was a group of influential, wealthy Republicans who have wanted to suppress the vote during our recent past — and Weyrich was right there at the front of the line in the early 1970’s (when I believe this quote came from).
Of course, but even they were operating within a set of traditions no less American. You can see similar groups emerge through out US history. Its one of the reasons such things are so hard to expunge.
Part of this is explained by the fact that the GOP has a lot of rotten people in it, but I understand that if you are socially or fiscally conservative you want to have your views prevail http://sooboos.com/asuransi/unit-link-terbaik-di-indonesia-commonwealth-life-investra-link.php
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They can only “win” by cheating.
That is all.
I failed at War
Don’t leave out apathy.
“too many parallels with the fascists of old…”
Excellent catalogue of the many, many points of commonality; don’t forget the love of militarism and generals, and the embrace of military violence. Also, the Rightwing authoritarianism, hatred of legislatures and love of the Strong Man will return to prominence as soon as one of their white males is back in the WH. Right now we have the libertarian “don’t tread on me” wing doing most of the talking, but that’s a strategic charade.
In any event, there really isn’t any doubt that the American “conservative” movement has morphed into a (more and more) bold and overt American fascism. The family resemblance is unmistakable for all with eyes to see.
We will have an extremely difficult time combating and defeating it, especially as it correctly understands it must rig the elections/voting game to seize and maintain power, just as Hitler understood he had to end all democracy in Germany. These nationalist rightwing movements are always anti-democratic, even in completely homogenous societies.
American fascism already has nationwide cable and radio networks and a “mainstream” media controlled by sympathetic corporate powers/CEOs who are delighted to do bizness with laize faire fascism. Hitler didn’t have these media asserts before 1933 and actually had responsible, professional journalist and media opponents—these don’t exist to actually oppose the ongoing American fascist movement and describe what it really is all about and what it is doing.
Importantly, we have developed a rule of debate that no American political party can ever be compared to fascism, which is exceptionally convenient for a Rightwing militarist, nationalist, authoritarian anti-democratic party. We also have no elected national figure who could (or would) even start to draw the (inescapable) parallels. So no direct elected or media opposition is possible, at least until the American fascist movement has likely advanced to an undefeatable stage. Then any opposition will be too little, too late.
Whoever will sound the alarm? The internets? A pretty weak reed, indeed….
It even more closely resembles the fascism of John C. Calhoun and Jefferson Davis.
this is no “turn away from”. this is baked into the republican cake and has been since Buckley in the 60s put white minority rule is a fine thing.
Or maybe around 1814 when the former rulers of France found that they could manipulate public opinion get some of that ancien régime power back.
Self-determination hasn’t got a friend left.
The lesson of the 20th Century is the failure of self-determination. It would have depended upon a level of universal education that has not only never been attained, not only never been attempted, but not even seriously proposed.
The questions that now remain: what are the alternatives and how might they be chosen among?
The Right, for its only alternative, brings tribalism, which definitionally ends in genocide.
What we can and must bring to the table is the understanding that there are alternatives to tribalism.
But any future polity is going to have to be coercive, if only because our educational system has been destroyed (with the concurrence, for different reasons, of both factions) and the American body politic has regressed into infantilism.
Taboo to say it, but all Empires shrink from their largest size to smaller states that are more “homogeneous”. Always have, always will.
The same will happen to our Empire, eventually.
Actually, the path pushed by the Republicans isn’t even close to Franco or Mussolini, who were both mass murderers on a vast scale. The Republicans want Fascist policies like unlimited business power, crippled labor, and muzzled public discourse but they aren’t, as yet, willing to embrace the truly horrendous brutality the Fascists needed to get and/or hold on to power.
We need a catchy word for people like the Republicans who want Fascist policies but try to get it via media manipulation and voter fraud. Neofascist? Quasifascist? Fascisette?
Diet Fascism?
Fascism Lite?
Maybe it needs a hashtag…
#TeamFatCat
#OrderOverEverything
Just give them a little time. They already favor mass deportation of one hated racial group. And have no shortage of armed conserva-cogs who espouse domestic violence for political ends. They celebrate private armed militias and have for some time.
Their savior will appear with his Mein Kampf…
It’s really not the lite-ness of the GOP that saves us from full-out fascism. I think it’s the Constitution, for real, that doesn’t stop us from doing really dreadful things from time to time but does stop us from turning to a systematic dictatorship. George W. Bush couldn’t be Hitler but he could easily have been, say, V.V. Putin if the democratic structure hadn’t hemmed him in just enough.
The Constitution sure didn’t save people from previous manifestations of eliminationist id like the atrocities of the aftermath of the Philippine War or the American Indian Genocide or Jim Crow or the KKK or Japanese-American internment.
Didn’t mean to suggest otherwise. Worse than fascism perhaps, just not fascism.
It is also like newborn democracies in the Middle East.
There and here people come to expect less from their democracies when it isn’t producing minimal living standards in terms of income, security, health, and upward mobility.
What “minimal” is can vary with place and time but when it is not met the people will elect dictators if they think it will help. Or get very violent.
That’s what happened in Europe in the 30s, it’s what FDR avoided with the New Deal and it is why Syria and Egypt and Iran and Iraq are messes.
Right now we are close or past the situation the US was in at the turn of the 20th century in terms of inequity that compelled unions and anarchists to be blowing up capital assets and murdering capitalist. I hope it doesn’t come to that but the representative government process is so broken and corrupt and stupid I feel for how this will end
I think one needs to look at the theocratic tendencies that have been creeping in lately, and how they interact with these fascist tendencies. To me, the combination is very scary. I’m not sure what one would even call this combination, but I see more of it on a regular basis in Republican-controlled state legislatures. I also see it creeping into the Republican-controlled U.S. House.
Yes, the American Taliban (Christian version) is a very important component of the new American “conservatism”. Another big element of the “Traditional American” tribe seeking to “take our country back”.
The American Right has no problem declaring Islamist theocracy as fascist, but can’t quite see the family resemblance governing OUR bible belt today….
My tribe, right or wrong.
They don’t hate Islamic fundamentalism because fundamentalism is a massively inefficient government structure which commits all sorts of atrocities and indignities in the name of masturbating to its inane cultural delusions. No no, conservatism aimed at the non-rich is all about that part.
Their grievance is that Wahhabists wear blue and this is a red-only neighborhood.
Not to go all both-sider, because that would be David Brooks level stupid, but there is a serious problem on the left with people rejecting representative democracy because they don’t believe that elected officials can be trusted. Over at the rats’ nests of FireDogLake and the Daily Kos, the Snowden/Greenwald/NSA claques are about ready to start shooting people in despair because no reform of the NSA could possible satisfy them. What they expect the government to do, and just what legitimate paths might be open, are serious unanswered questions.
The only moral thing to do is to run — you have to run, and get elected, to prove your point that there are tens of silent millions out there who don’t participate simply because they’re never given a sufficiently-left choice on election day, or that America will vote for a person of color, or an atheist, or someone LGBT, or a Yankees fan — but then immediately resign.
Each resignee then needs to decide for themselves whether to withdraw into a monastery and perform penance for the rest of their lives for their complicity, or choose a mountain range into which to withdraw and form their guerrilla band.
That’s going too far, what, with supporting taking part in the system.
First, we have to stop voting en masse, or vote for the Unicorn/Rainbow 2016 ticket.
Then, something something mass social uprising, something something utopian social democracy!
If it means anything, FireDogLake and DailyKos definitely skew older than most of the Internet. And liberals who came of age from the 70s to the mid-00s know nothing but failure and disappointment. Every policy success was a black swan or came about from cultural inertia. Liberals had to scrape and kowtow to conservatives just to stop society from decaying as quickly as the right-wingers wanted it to. The natural response to these relentlessly bleak decades is to denigrate the whole structure of the United States and cry sour grapes.
I’m feeling pretty jazzed about liberal chances these days, but for people who still haven’t been able to accept, let alone see, a new era in which we don’t have to kowtow to Wall Street -OR- the social conservatives to get quarter-loaf measures passed it’s unsurprising that they get so bitter that they turn to radicalism.
(Note: I deliberately left out gains from the feminist and LGBT movements, because most of these bitter liberals tend to be of the ‘who gives a shit about gay rights when the corporate bootheel is pressing down on our necks’ types)
American conservatism has always had an undisguised contempt for representative democracy. And I mean the actual expressions of American conservatism like Calhoun’s creed to the Know Nothings and the tyranny of the post-ACW to Dixiecrat Democratic Party and the 2nd and 3rd wave of the KKK to the Goldwater/Buckley prolefeed. Not liberal feel-good revisionist versions of American conservatism we project onto them using props like Roosevelt.
From the drafting of the constitution to the current day, when have American conservatives (or right-wingers if you want to maintain the comforting fiction of self-described conservatives not being a cancer on the body politic) ever not obstructed an advance in egalitarianism? Just a quick recap of post-ACW conservative struggles against democracy:
Let’s face it. The voting restrictions is disgusting but not particularly unusual. Same old shit, different day. It’s like getting surprised that a Wahabbist supports the deportation of Hindus, Shiites, and Christians.
So long as Democrats continue to embrace the failure of our two-party system, then they deserve the just as much blame.
Oh? And just what would be the alternative to the two-party system?
A three party system? A multi-party system like many in Europe (and Canada and New York)? A single Democratic Party that subsequently fissions like the original Democratic-Republican Party did when the Whig Party disappeared?
For this to be effective:
I support both, but which one is more likely to happen. That is the one to work towards.
Point 1 is more likely. They are racing down the road to self-destruction. The money Republicans are trying to stop them but some of the biggest money Republicans are also Mad as a Hatter.
Regarding point2, California and others are leaning that way with top two runoffs, but no one is going for the simpler Australian system which is extremely simple for a computer based system such as we have now.
I still don’t get it. Do you support an electoral system that allows for multiple political parties to exist without a spectacular Egypt-style collapse, do you want the Democratic Party not to exist in its current form, or do you want both?
1 and 3 are really, really hard. Your best bet would be to try to agitate for a Constitutional Convention and hope for the best. 2 is much easier and has in fact undergone about four significant shifts since FDR — New Deal Coalition, American Civil Rights party, Third Way, and the New New Left.
I support just about anything except a Soviet style one Party system or the present Tweedlededee-Tweedlededum Two Party system with the same economic and foreign policy.