I know I should
be immune to this by now, but I still find myself awestruck by the
incredibly detailed, insulated fantasy world that the American
conservative "movement" has created for themselves. No lie is too
big to be told, no fact is too firm to be bent around ideology, no
myth is too absurd to defend to the knife. The ability to spew
deliberate nonsense into the credulous ears of Fox-watching
right-bent voters - and to be utterly without shame while doing it -
is the core of this "movement's" political muscle, and has been for
a number of decades now.
Take, for
example, this past weekend's festival of Reagan. The late
president's 100th birthday opened the floodgates for an ocean of
nonsense to be dumped on the American people. He was a great leader,
the conservative's conservative, a small-government hero who
deserves a place on Mt. Rushmore.
Rilly?
Ronald Reagan's
"supply side" economic model was the gateway drug that led
inexorably to the collapse of the American economy two years ago,
and yet his conservative acolytes - as well as far too many
Democrats who should know better - still cling to that economic
model as if it were holy writ.
Ronald Reagan
raised taxes massively, and grew the federal government enormously,
while sending the country spiraling into a morass of debt we are
nowhere near recovering from, and yet his worshippers continue to
tout him as the perfect "small government" man.
Ronald Reagan
and his people sold shiploads of weapons to Iran even as they
supported Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein in his war against the Islamic
Republic. Ronald Reagan and his people basically created the
Taliban, al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan as a means of
carrying on the Cold War fight against the Soviet Union, and yet
today his conservative followers cling to a "War on Terror" as their
sword and shield.
Didn't hear any
of this during the weekend's Reaganapallooza, did you? No surprise.
Why let facts - Reagan was a terrible president who bears a great
deal of responsibility for today's national problems, a president
who exploded the debt and the size of government, a president who
supported known terrorists and rogue nations with money and materiel
even as they were killing Americans - get in the way of a perfectly
good story line.
That's the kind
of comfort bubble these people live in, and it must be a nice place
to be, because they refuse to be budged out of it one centimeter.
The Reagan worship we just witnessed is merely this week's iteration
of an ongoing phenomenon: the creation of a parallel story line -
nay, a parallel universe - to satisfy the already-calcified opinions
of the far-right GOP base.
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A perfect
example of this is the Tea Party "movement," which is nothing more
or less than a creation of the "news" media. There is no Tea Party;
the term is a re-branding of that same GOP base, and nothing more.
By way of vast corporate cash infusions from entities like the
Koch brothers,
these Tea Party dupes were fooled into believing they are a force
for the common man, for the worker, for truth and justice and the
American way, and even managed to get some of their so-called
representatives elected to Congress in 2010...but it didn't take
long for the mythology to start unraveling.
"Earmarks
are bad" was the 2010 campaign refrain, but the very breathing
second these Tea Party House members hit their seats in Congress,
earmarks suddenly became no big deal, and now they are hardly
discussed outside of the cloak room. Job creation? Nah. The
newly-minted GOP House majority instead went to work trying to
redefine what rape is
in order to attack abortion rights, before backing off amid a storm
of outrage and protest. And, of course, there is the push to repeal
the health care bill, which, like the attack on abortion, is about
throwing red meat to the base instead of actually getting anything
done.
Here in
reality, the gulf between right-wing rhetoric and actual activity
has not gone unnoticed:
The GOP
majority is bringing only a handful of bills to the floor this
week, and none would be characterized as major legislation. Four
of the five measures will be considered under a procedure
generally reserved for non-controversial legislation; the fifth
is a resolution that merely instructs committees to review
federal regulations for their impact on job growth.
Democratic
leaders contend it doesn't amount to much.
"Members
return Tuesday from a week and a half of recess for another
light legislative agenda in the House of Representatives,"
Kristie Greco, spokeswoman for the assistant Democratic leader,
Rep. James Clyburn (S.C.), wrote in a note to reporters over the
weekend. "Perhaps if House Republicans had a jobs agenda, the
schedule would be more robust."
Greco
scoffed at the resolution on federal regulations, saying the GOP
planned to spend 10 hours debating a bill that "instruct[s]
oversight committees to conduct oversight."
Adding to
the criticism, a group of 10 Democratic committee leaders on
Monday sent a letter to Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) denouncing
the resolution as superfluous and a waste of time.
"The floor
schedule that the Republican majority has pursued and intends to
pursue this week will create no jobs," the Democrats wrote.
"Indeed, spending two days, and taxpayer dollars, on a
resolution calling on our committees to perform oversight
functions that they are already authorized to conduct distracts
from our efforts to create jobs."
Not
everyone on the right is in love with the fiction that permeates and
props up the "movement." Dick Wadhams, chairman of the Colorado
Republican Party, decided recently to abandon his re-election bid to
keep his post. Why? "I have tired," he
wrote in a memo
to party officials, "of those who are obsessed with seeing
conspiracies around every corner and who have terribly misguided
notions of what the role of the state party is while saying 'uniting
conservatives' is all that is needed to win competitive races across
the state." He was even more blunt with the Washington Post:
"I have loved being chairman, but I'm tired of the nuts who have no
grasp of what the state party's role is."
Unfortunately
for the rest of us, people like Mr. Wadhams are the exception that
proves the rule. The rich fantasy life enjoyed by the right - Reagan
was great, the Tea Party is a "movement" for the little guy, and the
new GOP House majority will be a force for good - continues
unabated.