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Something has gone seriously haywire with the Republican Party.
Once, it was the party of pragmatic Main Street businessmen in steel-rimmed
spectacles who decried profligacy and waste, were devoted to their
communities and supported the sort of prosperity that raises all
ships. They were good-hearted people who vanquished the gnarlier
elements of their party, the paranoid Roosevelt-haters, the flat
Earthers and Prohibitionists, the antipapist antiforeigner element.
The genial Eisenhower was their man, a genuine American hero of
D-Day, who made it OK for reasonable people to vote Republican.
He brought the Korean War to a stalemate, produced the Interstate
Highway System, declined to rescue the French colonial army in Vietnam,
and gave us a period of peace and prosperity, in which (oddly) American
arts and letters flourished and higher education burgeoned - and
there was a degree of plain decency in the country. Fifties Republicans
were giants compared to today's. Richard Nixon was the last Republican
leader to feel a Christian obligation toward the poor.
In the years between Nixon and Newt Gingrich, the party migrated
southward down the Twisting Trail of Rhetoric and sneered at the
idea of public service and became the Scourge of Liberalism, the
Great Crusade Against the Sixties, the Death Star of Government,
a gang of pirates that diverted and fascinated the media by their
sheer chutzpah, such as the misty-eyed flag-waving of Ronald Reagan
who, while George McGovern flew bombers in World War II, took a
pass and made training films in Long Beach. The Nixon moderate vanished
like the passenger pigeon, purged by a legion of angry white men
who rose to power on pure punk politics. "Bipartisanship is
another term of date rape," says Grover Norquist, the Sid Vicious
of the GOP. "I don't want to abolish government. I simply want
to reduce it to the size where I can drag it into the bathroom and
drown it in the bathtub." The boy has Oedipal problems and
government is his daddy.
The party of Lincoln and Liberty was transmogrified into the party
of hairy-backed swamp developers and corporate shills, faith-based
economists, fundamentalist bullies with Bibles, Christians of convenience,
freelance racists, misanthropic frat boys, shrieking midgets of
AM radio, tax cheats, nihilists in golf pants, brownshirts in pinstripes,
sweatshop tycoons, hacks, fakirs, aggressive dorks, Lamborghini
libertarians, people who believe Neil Armstrong's moonwalk was filmed
in Roswell, New Mexico, little honkers out to diminish the rest
of us, Newt's evil spawn and their Etch-A-Sketch president, a dull
and rigid man suspicious of the free flow of information and of
secular institutions, whose philosophy is a jumble of badly sutured
body parts trying to walk. Republicans: The No. 1 reason the rest
of the world thinks we're deaf, dumb and dangerous.
Rich ironies abound! Lies pop up like toadstools in the forest!
Wild swine crowd round the public trough! Outrageous gerrymandering!
Pocket lining on a massive scale! Paid lobbyists sit in committee
rooms and write legislation to alleviate the suffering of billionaires!
Hypocrisies shine like cat turds in the moonlight! O Mark Twain,
where art thou at this hour? Arise and behold the Gilded Age reincarnated
gaudier than ever, upholding great wealth as the sure sign of Divine
Grace.
Here in 2004, George W. Bush is running for reelection on a platform
of tragedy - the single greatest failure of national defense in
our history, the attacks of 9/11 in which 19 men with box cutters
put this nation into a tailspin, a failure the details of which
the White House fought to keep secret even as it ran the country
into hock up to the hubcaps, thanks to generous tax cuts for the
well-fixed, hoping to lead us into a box canyon of debt that will
render government impotent, even as we engage in a war against a
small country that was undertaken for the president's personal satisfaction
but sold to the American public on the basis of brazen misinformation,
a war whose purpose is to distract us from an enormous transfer
of wealth taking place in this country, flowing upward, and the
deception is working beautifully.
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The concentration of wealth and power in the hands of the few
is the death knell of democracy. No republic in the history of humanity
has survived this. The election of 2004 will say something about
what happens to ours. The omens are not good.
Our beloved land has been fogged with fear - fear, the greatest
political strategy ever. An ominous silence, distant sirens, a drumbeat
of whispered warnings and alarms to keep the public uneasy and silence
the opposition. And in a time of vague fear, you can appoint bullet-brained
judges, strip the bark off the Constitution, eviscerate federal
regulatory agencies, bring public education to a standstill, stupefy
the press, lavish gorgeous tax breaks on the rich.
There is a stink drifting through this election year. It isn't the
Florida recount or the Supreme Court decision. No, it's 9/11 that
we keep coming back to. It wasn't the "end of innocence,"
or a turning point in our history, or a cosmic occurrence, it was
an event, a lapse of security. And patriotism shouldn't prevent
people from asking hard questions of the man who was purportedly
in charge of national security at the time.
Whenever I think of those New Yorkers hurrying along Park Place
or getting off the No.1 Broadway local, hustling toward their office
on the 90th floor, the morning paper under their arms, I think of
that non-reader George W. Bush and how he hopes to exploit those
people with a little economic uptick, maybe the capture of Osama,
cruise to victory in November and proceed to get some serious nation-changing
done in his second term.
This year, as in the past, Republicans will portray us Democrats
as embittered academics, desiccated Unitarians, whacked-out hippies
and communards, people who talk to telephone poles, the party of
the Deadheads. They will wave enormous flags and wow over and over
the footage of firemen in the wreckage of the World Trade Center
and bodies being carried out and they will lie about their economic
policies with astonishing enthusiasm.
The Union is what needs defending this year. Government of Enron
and by Halliburton and for the Southern Baptists is not the same
as what Lincoln spoke of. This gang of Pithecanthropus Republicanii
has humbugged us to death on terrorism and tax cuts for the comfy
and school prayer and flag burning and claimed the right to know
what books we read and to dump their sewage upstream from the town
and clear-cut the forests and gut the IRS and mark up the constitution
on behalf of intolerance and promote the corporate takeover of the
public airwaves and to hell with anybody who opposes them.
This is a great country, and it wasn't made so by angry people.
We have a sacred duty to bequeath it to our grandchildren in better
shape than however we found it. We have a long way to go and we're
not getting any younger.
Dante said that the hottest place in Hell is reserved for those
who in time of crisis remain neutral, so I have spoken my piece,
and thank you, dear reader. It's a beautiful world, rain or shine,
and there is more to life than winning.
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