What's that you say? Oh. David Berkowitz. Yeah, well, things did turn out rather awkward in that case. So name another occasion.
Update: Time to talk seriously. Yes, Obama has governed, will govern, as a Republican. I will always despise him for that. But Romney will govern as a Tea Party Republican, even if he doesn't want to. And that, my friends, will be much worse.
Jonathan Alter puts it well:
Romney has flip-flopped so much that he now has little room to back away from what he said during the primaries. The “lamestream media” would crucify him for it; so would conservative base voters. Their “meh” on Mitt would quickly morph into a sense of betrayal. (The same logic explains why Romney, whatever his background, can’t possibly govern as a moderate.)
He has so lashed himself to Ryan, an Ayn Rand libertarian, that there’s talk of Ryan going on the ticket. The Ryan-Romney plan -- from slashing federally funded scientific research to forcing seniors from nursing homes because of draconian Medicaid cuts -- will be wildly unpopular if Obama and his team find the resonant language to exploit it.
Even if one argues that fudging the Ryan plan was impractical (after all, Republicans in Congress overwhelmingly approved it), on two other critical issues -- women’s health and immigration -- Romney clearly went further than was necessary to claim the nomination.It's tempting to say that Romney Etch-a-Sketched himself into a corner. But the sketching was done by the Tea Partiers. They took control of their party and of the national dialogue -- and thus, they now control Mitt Romney.
Instead of complaining, perhaps we should thank the baggers, because they have shown us the way to make things happen. What they did to the GOP is what True Blue liberals ought to do vis-a-vis the Democrats. Those who want a return to the FDR legacy can retake the party. All that is necessary is for disaffected and disappointed liberals to get over their inane pretense that they can effect change while remaining above party affiliation and unsoiled by the machinery of politics.
Alas, too many liberals prefer to whine about Obama's betrayal and the lingering wounds of 2008. Yes, the betrayal was very real and those wounds still smart. But what are the alternatives? The infantile fantasy of a third party is foolish and dangerous.
To a large extent, that fantasy is encouraged by transparently disguised GOP comment spammers on prog sites. I've been onto them for many years -- well before 2008. They are forever telling us to punish the Dems, up and down the ticket, in each state and city, for some real or imaginary grievance. And they are forever arguing that the parties are equivalent in sin, even though that clearly is not the case.
Third parties don't work. American history offers no clearer lesson.
The Occupy movement failed, as I predicted it would, because it grew paranoid about working with Democrats. (That paranoia was, of course, stoked by GOP ratfuckers.) Another problem, of course, was the protesters' initial lack of a coherent program coupled with their insane insistence on "consensus democracy" -- a tactic which never, ever works for very long.
The teabaggers, by contrast, succeeded. True, they alienated the majority of the citizenry. That doesn't matter. What matters is that they forced a fairly moderate Republican like Romney to transform himself into an Ayn Randroid. He will run as a Randroid and he will govern as one, should he win. The baggers have given him no choice.
Masterfully played.
What the baggers did is precisely what liberals secretly fear to do: They exercised power. I have always advised liberals to study what the Tea Partiers did, and to do likewise -- from the left.
Anyone who tells you to pursue another course of action is either a Republican plant or a typical liberal whiner motivated by a neurotic love of victimization and a fear of accomplishment.
4 comments:
Romney, lets se, brainwashed mormon with occult connections to freemasonry and occult underwear.
Strong ties to the financial elite that is looting the americas and europe. Sounds like the average presidential candidate me. Douglas Adams, rest his soul, tried to tell us somthing in "so long and thanks for the fish", something about representative democracy. Illusionists do the same thing, they invite you to "pick a card", but it is one of their cards and rhey are in control. The illusion is that you have a choice, you don if you pick one of their cards.
Adams http://wso.williams.edu/~rcarson/lizards.html
It seems to me you are counting reasons to vote for zero. Just stay home why not you will find something to do that day
"Another problem, of course, was the protesters' initial lack of a coherent program coupled with their insane insistence on "consensus democracy""
Sad, but unfortunately, very true.
The fact that many in the Occupy movement blasted the act of _voting_, of actually occupying a bloody voting booth and really making change there, turned me off to the movement.
I'd argue that the righ'st libertarian jaunt of late demonstrates that third parties DO work. It sometimes takes a few election cycles for the effects to be fully felt.
While a third party delivered the white house to Clinton, it forced the right to be more responsive to its base. Now the libertarians own congress and are zoning in on the presidency.
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