Far East Cynic

They left me, I did not leave them.

The Republican party that is.

This is a serious post-to try to explain why I feel as strongly as I do on several issues and why I feel abandoned by the political party I once considered my home. A post over at the League of Ordinary Gentleman by E.D. Kain and another one by him over at John Cole’s place got me to thinking.

Until the election of 2004, I had voted Republican all my life. I first voted in 1976 for Gerald Ford and voted Republican all the way through 2000 when I held my nose and voted for George Bush -even though I remained appalled at the sleazy way he treated McCain.  In hindsight-I wish I had voted for Gore, perhaps the country might have been spared eight years of misery. In 2004 my vote was a one issue vote-I truly believed ( and I still believe) that the War in Iraq was a huge mistake.  I did not want to lend my support to those who would see us continue to pour lives and effort into that sinkhole. I feel I have been vindicated by the last six -years of the Iraqi experience-which for whatever benefits came, the costs of the effort-in terms of the overall loss to the United States and the contribution of the war to our economic instability far outweighed them. The United States is weaker over all because of this endeavor and the fiasco in Iraq has hastened the rise of nations that are truly not our friends and made the multi-polar world we dislike more of a reality than most Americans realize. ( There is a reason we now rank 11th in all objective measures of national prominence). In 2008, my vote was again motivated primarily by the war(s) and the prospect of more “just let real people suffer and lose ground” economics. So I voted for Obama with a clear conscience-although I did not and still do not consider him to be the best qualified candidate. It was simply that John McCain had foreited any right to that support after choosing someone to appease those who do not deserve such attention. Clearly Obama has made some mistakes ( the gravest being not vetoing the Ominbus Budget bill early on and putting Pelosi in her place-and show the country and the Democrats who is boss). But on a lot of issues I care about-he’s advocated better positions than his opposition. It is clear to me that by 2010-Republicans in general had given up any desire to be concerned with you know, data and facts.

As Kain points out though-during that period, really starting in 1996, the Republican party morphed into something unrecognizable. With the advent of Newt Gingrich and the rise in talk radio and later on Fox News to stoke the propaganda flames, the party slowly, but inexorably abandoned all of the things that made it the reasonable man’s alternative. As Kain points out at Cole’s:

I’m not signing on, carte blanche, to the Democratic party here or to its platform though I am choosing to align myself with that party and with liberalism more broadly. I’m sure I will still find plenty of things the Democrats do that deserve a pox or two. But I did feel as though I was boxing myself in by calling myself a conservative and then finding every way under the sun to undermine that description. My “switch” is not about adopting a brand new pre-packaged ideology. No, I’m much more interested in creating new ways, third ways maybe, alternatives to the accepted left/right divide. But I found myself more and more interested and compelled by the liberal-tarian project. But I’m not a libertarian either, and so perhaps the term ‘liberal’ fits me better. In fact, I’m quite sure it does.

But what Kain pointed out is that it is becoming increasingly difficult-from the perspective of facts to remain allied in support of positions that no compassionate human being can be aligned with. Kain again:

Furthermore, while I think there’s a great deal of merit to competition (one reason I really liked Ron Wyden’s healthcare plan!), free markets, economic liberalism and so forth I find the fetishization of low taxes among the right and among many American libertarians more than a bit silly. I favor investment in public health, public transit and infrastructure, and in the welfare system generally rather than some vague bare-boned state. Sure, there’s problems with all sorts of government programs, with some public sector unions, etc. but at least liberals seem open to tackling these problems. At least within the big tent of liberalism there is room to disagree.

I’ve noted before that I don’t think free markets are sustainable without a broad and sturdy welfare state to support them. Theoretically, sure – anything is possible – but the fact is markets fail and must fail to be effective as a system, and very real people pay the price – not because they are lazy, or because they are lacking enough rugged individualism, but because life can be hard, and it is much harder for those people who lack strong family or community support. Ultimately, the highest price is paid by those who can afford it least. We need to craft a society where that price is not so high – and I think we can use markets and the welfare state to achieve this, much as they have done in northern Europe (though undoubtedly our version will be unique and we can, on the way, learn from their mistakes). I don’t see many conservatives taking these questions seriously, and even the most progressive-minded conservatives out there, I fear, are placing their hopes in the wrong coalition.

The demonization of “moderate” Republicans-leaders who actually put “Country First” ahead of partisan ideology is troublesome to me. And in folks like Palin and Beck I see that trend being carried out to its own serious, destructive, and out right pathological ends.  Furthermore-especially in Palin, there are clear indicators of a crass, selfish, narcissism that will be destructive to both her and the country in the long run if she were to run and win the highest office in the land.

It is not that some of the ideas that conservatives have put forward are not without merit-it is their refusal to accept that the opposite may aslo be true that really troubles me. I agree with Kain when he states:

At the end of the day, I guess I just find very little in common with the right save for a sort of loose commitment to limited government, and even then it becomes more and more apparent that this is only true in a fictional world that bears no resemblance to our own.

Torture, war, mindless obstructionism, a rigid more-conservative-than-thou orthodoxy, the constant parroting of right-wing pundits, and a blatant disregard for civil liberties all lead me to the conclusion that I have no place in the modern American right. Perhaps that makes me a neoliberal or a liberal-tarian or an independent or a lost boy – I have no idea.

As move on into my graying years-I remain distinctly troubled by the fact that collectively-humanity has failed to advance to realize its real potential. We can-and should be- a lot further along in defeating diseases like AIDS and Cancer, and worldwide there should be a greater commitment to at least a baseline quality of life for all of a country’s citizens. The only place I actually see any of this occuring is in Asia-and even then the progress is very uneven. Troubling too,  is the countries that have made the most progress are also the most non-Democratic. (e.g. LKY’s Singapore-nice place to live, could never ever vote there). The colossal waste of what we-the supposedly civilized Western world, spend our resources on is troubling me more than you know. The income divide between the “haves and have nots” is growing and not shrinking-and we are failing to notice that. If you want a real reason for world wide terrorism we should be looking there first.

And at the end of the decade-I am still no safer than I was on Sept 10, 2001.

And so it has come down to this-I cannot, I will not,  ally myself with people who for whatever reason deliberately choose to be stupid and ignore facts and/ or historical precedents. The world is not black and white-it is only grey. But it should be progressing forward. And its not.

And I will not ally myself with those who will not support that.

So yes, I will continue to write passionately against those who advocate positions that are ultimately destructive to the USA as a whole-and who would rather take a selfish short term view -than seek to move ahead for the long term.  I’m sure my one lone, little, under-reported or read voice will not accomplish much. But at least I will be on record in opposition to collective stupidity.

And that is a better place to be than on the Washington Mall last weekend.

  1. The whole entire world needs to progress? All at once? Including Somalia, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Rwanda, South Africa, Zimbabwe, North Korea…all at once? together? Do they all start off on the left foot?

    I tend to write very short posts based on a certain thing going on with the hands.

    Here goes nothing.

    war in Iraq was a follow on to the World Trade Center massacre. Some sunnis wanted it that way as did the shiites. Progressive in the sense that one step follows another.

    At a $100Billion/year for the war in both countries the first economic bill posted by a democratic regime topped $1TRILLION deficit. in one year. Think about it.

    That Newt thingie resulted in Budget surplus and tiniest overdrafts. Look at it. It wasn’t until the democrats were back in charge of the fisc that overdrafts went totally nuts.

    Seriously dude, as a serial demonizer of Palin you cannot bring that up. You demonize like it’s going out of business and you want your fair share.

    When you look for the moderate wing of the rethuglicans, how did those votes go in this fair republic. How many thugs voted for Obamacare and the bailout and the rest? Is it that there are no moderates or is it that some people of principle adhere still to the whatchamacallit?

    The indisputable evidence is in and most of the terrorists are the wealthy middle class scions. They’re the international terrorists. The ones that drive a bus into a crowd of school kids are the stupid and dimwitted ones. Got a plan to deal with them?

  2. Not going to take the bait. It’s my blog and here we observe rules.

    Rule #1-I am always right.

    Rule#2-When in doubt see Rule #1. 🙂

  3. Well OK then, that’s where I went astray in Sal’s place.

    Just as you like it is phine with me.

    OTOH, I did suggest from time to time to ban this one. I play here as I do nowhere else.

    mostly. I used to play with your Canadian name sake but he was mostly without the humor. Half my relatives are of that ilk. They have lots and lots and lots of children.

  4. i’m reminded of the 1957 movie A Face In the Crowd. might be time to see it again, sugar!

    Lonesome Rhodes: This whole country’s just like my flock of sheep!
    Marcia Jeffries: Sheep?
    Lonesome Rhodes: Rednecks, crackers, hillbillies, hausfraus, shut-ins, pea-pickers – everybody that’s got to jump when somebody else blows the whistle. They don’t know it yet, but they’re all gonna be ‘Fighters for Fuller’. They’re mine! I own ’em! They think like I do. Only they’re even more stupid than I am, so I gotta think for ’em. Marcia, you just wait and see. I’m gonna be the power behind the president – and you’ll be the power behind me!

    keep writing, i’ll keep reading! xoxox

  5. Women vote democratic
    Jews vote democratic
    Elites vote democratic
    20-30 somethings vote…
    Hispanics, African Americans et al vote…
    The only people that vote Republican are two OLD white guys
    that attended the tea party in DC and Glen Beck of course.
    Thais can’t find their own country on a map.
    Turks believe there is a hidden planet and ‘that the Jews, the US and the Armenians intend to occupy their country.
    Paks believe the the US is responsible for ALL theri ills.
    Europeans believe that Isreal will attack them with atomic weapons.
    In Japan there are dating clubs for people with the same blood type…
    The world is FULL of ignorance and idiocy.
    Its our misfortune to live among the great unwashed that revel in their own willful ignorance.

  6. Richard,

    I’d take issue with your first contention- plenty of women vote Republican. In fact some of the most dogmatic people I know are in Alabama are women.

  7. Skippy, Great post. Intelligent and well researched and written. Do not see how a rational person could come to a different conculsion.

  8. I still cannot wrap my head around the current set decrying huge deficits while sitting on their hands the previous eight years. The entire mantra of smaller government, less spending, constitutional protection rings hollow from those that support(ed) the war in Iraq, the huge, I mean gigantic increase in the size of government during the bush years, and the continual erosion of rights due to extra constitutional activities.

    It just surprises me, the unmitigated gall of those that now stand up and cry out “They’re raising taxes! They’re liberal! They’re creating a bigger gooberment!” Of course they are, what did you expect, they are democrats. They are doing what democrats have done for the last hundred years. Where were you when your own party was doing those very same things? Why did you let congress pass the medicare prescription drug act? Why did you let the Bush administration fight a war off the books? Hypocrite, first remove the rafter from your own eye, all the better so you can see to remove the piece of straw from my eye.

    As far as the rich are concerned, let them have there money, I don’t care. In fact, perhaps we could persuade them, a la Rand, to buy that island paradise and move there, all the better not to deal with the riff raff.

    Sorry, I can’t help myself sometimes. [/rant]

  9. Not to worry at all Paul. The ones with the $ are leaving in droves: moving to Texas and Nevada. Sanish sort of states. Seriously, you watch businesses leave CA over the last couple of years? CA is paradise! No mosquitoes, no bugs, hardly any spiders, beach, desert mountains whatever strikes your fancy and yet…..my company relocated corporate offices for just one, well, two reasons but the first was to get out from under the CA State government and its insane corporate tax strategy.

  10. So I’m sitting on the can last week, reading Engels, and I come to a realization: while his solution to the working man’s ills (socialism leading to “true” communism) might not be the correct path for mankind, his characterization of the enemies of the working class is dead-on, 100% right.

    The capitalists (the real ones, not just poor schlubs who want to make a little money and buy a new bass boat) really ARE pure evil, and will outsource their mothers for another dime’s worth of quarterly earnings.

    The petty bourgeoise (middle and upper middle class) really ARE dupes being used by the capitalists to keep themselves in power. Engels’ description of the “middle class reactionaries” fits the tea baggers to a T.

    The Republican party didn’t leave you Skippy: it was never with you; it’s always been in the pocket of Big Business, and hasn’t given a rat’s ass about YOU (or me, or 99% of the fools that call themselves Republicans) since 1854. I hold TR up as an ideal candidate (hell, LEADER), mostly because of his trust-busting and populism (that and a xenophobic nationalism which I love). The Repubs haven’t had a candidate like him since, and we’ll never see someone like Teddy run in our or our children’s lifetimes. The Dems are no better, having been co-opted by ultra-left “social action groups”.

    That leave normal, semi-moderate, semi-agnostic, semi-socialists that make up the bulk of white America out in the cold, apathetic, and grumpy. Too bad we’re also too soft and complacent for a real revolution.

  11. “It is not that some of the ideas that conservatives have put forward are not without merit-it is their refusal to accept that the opposite may aslo be true that really troubles me.”

    Skippy, I hate to say it, but the Dems aren’t much better. We need to elect people on both sides who will put country first instead of pander to their base and make the corporate interests happy. I nearly voted Libertarian in the last election but couldn’t bring myself to toss away my vote, as I considered McCain the lesser of two evils, and hoped that if he won he would return to the McCain of 2000 and put a muzzle on Palin. I still cling to the Republicans in the hopes that maybe one day we’ll return to our history of smaller, more effective government, balanced economic policy, and progressive social agenda. It’s probably too much to hope for, but I’d honestly settle for just having a president who can sound intelligent and presidential without a teleprompter.