Thanks to my friend, Art, for sending me this.
Could
it possibly be that Santorum, et al, believe that the American voting public
could be that severely stupid? Or, is it that Santorum, et al, are
the severely stupid ones?
If God can work up the interest in our politics, may he, or she, intervene to protect us from ourselves come November.
But I hold out little hope of that. After all, God did not help me win the $300 million PowerBall prize day before yesterday; similarly, if the Almighty refuses to help out and Bring Us Into The Light on Election Day over an equally vital matter, will his or her indifference truly mark the end of civilization?
Just in case, you missed it this morning, here is Krugman's latest.
Art
If God can work up the interest in our politics, may he, or she, intervene to protect us from ourselves come November.
But I hold out little hope of that. After all, God did not help me win the $300 million PowerBall prize day before yesterday; similarly, if the Almighty refuses to help out and Bring Us Into The Light on Election Day over an equally vital matter, will his or her indifference truly mark the end of civilization?
Just in case, you missed it this morning, here is Krugman's latest.
Art
Severe Conservative Syndrome
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: February 12, 2012
Mitt Romney has a gift for words — self-destructive words.
On Friday he did it again, telling the Conservative Political Action Conference
that he was a “severely conservative governor.”
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
As Molly Ball of The Atlantic pointed out, Mr. Romney “described conservatism as if it were a disease.” Indeed. Mark Liberman, a linguistics professor at the University of Pennsylvania, provided a list of words that most commonly follow the adverb “severely”; the top five, in frequency of use, are disabled, depressed, ill, limited and injured.
That’s clearly not what Mr. Romney meant to convey. Yet
if you look at the race for the G.O.P. presidential nomination, you have to
wonder whether it was a Freudian slip. For something
has clearly gone very wrong with modern American conservatism.
Start with Rick Santorum, who, according to Public
Policy Polling, is the clear current favorite among usual Republican primary
voters, running 15 points ahead of Mr. Romney. Anyone
with an Internet connection is aware that Mr. Santorum is best known for 2003
remarks about homosexuality, incest and bestiality. But his strangeness runs
deeper than that.
For example, last year Mr.
Santorum made a point of defending the medieval Crusades against the “American
left who hates Christendom.” Historical issues aside (hey, what are a few
massacres of infidels and Jews among friends?), what was this doing in a
21st-century campaign?
Nor is this only about sex and
religion: he has also declared that climate change is a hoax, part of a
“beautifully concocted scheme” on the part of “the left” to provide “an excuse
for more government control of your life.” You may say that such
conspiracy-theorizing is hardly unique to Mr. Santorum, but that’s the point:
tinfoil hats have become a common, if not mandatory, G.O.P. fashion accessory.
Then there’s Ron Paul, who came in a strong second in Maine’s
caucuses despite widespread publicity over such matters as the racist (and
conspiracy-minded) newsletters published under his name in the 1990s and his
declarations that both the Civil War and the Civil Rights Act were mistakes.
Clearly, a large segment of his party’s base is comfortable with views one
might have thought were on the extreme fringe.
Finally, there’s Mr. Romney, who will probably get the
nomination despite his evident failure to make an emotional connection with,
well, anyone. The truth, of course, is that he was not a “severely
conservative” governor. His signature achievement was a health reform identical
in all important respects to the national reform signed into law by President
Obama four years later. And in a rational political world, his campaign would
be centered on that achievement.
But Mr. Romney is seeking the Republican presidential
nomination, and whatever his personal beliefs may really be — if, indeed, he
believes anything other than that he should be president — he needs to win over
primary voters who really are severely conservative in both his intended and
unintended senses.
So he can’t run on his record in office. Nor was he
trying very hard to run on his business career even before people began asking
hard (and appropriate) questions about the nature of that career.
Instead, his stump speeches rely almost entirely on
fantasies and fabrications designed to appeal to the delusions of the
conservative base. No, President Obama isn’t someone who “began his presidency
by apologizing for America,”
as Mr. Romney declared, yet again, a week ago. But this “Four-Pinocchio
Falsehood,” as the Washington Post Fact Checker puts it, is at the heart of the
Romney campaign.
How did American conservatism end up so detached from,
indeed at odds with, facts and rationality? For it was not always thus. After
all, that health reform Mr. Romney wants us to forget followed a blueprint
originally laid out at the Heritage Foundation!
My short answer is that the long-running con game of
economic conservatives and the wealthy supporters they serve finally went bad.
For decades the G.O.P. has won elections by appealing to social and racial
divisions, only to turn after each victory to deregulation and tax cuts for the
wealthy — a process that reached its epitome when George W. Bush won
re-election by posing as America’s
defender against gay married terrorists, then announced that he had a mandate
to privatize Social Security.
Over time, however, this strategy created a base that
really believed in all the hokum — and now the party elite has lost control.
The point is that today’s dismal G.O.P. field — is
there anyone who doesn’t consider it dismal? — is no accident. Economic
conservatives played a cynical game, and now they’re facing the blowback, a
party that suffers from “severe” conservatism in the worst way. And the malady
may take many years to cure.
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