The Pardu

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The American Right Wing; Death Spiral; Denying Racism Via Justin Rosario

In Come to the White Side, George w. Bush, Justin Rosario, Liberals Unite. Right Wing Is In A Death Spiral., Michele Bachmann, Tea Party, The Southern Strategy on March 4, 2014 at 9:33 PM

Re-Blog from Liberals Unite via Justin Rosario

The American Right Wing Is In A Death Spiral Of Denial And Racism

Dixie1
“The Southern Strategy is a liberal myth! Liberals are the REAL racists! Liberals keep blacks on the Democratic Plantation! Liberals are afraid of blacks that can think for themselves! You’re just playing the race card! Blablabla! Garble Yarble Snarg!” – Standard right wing response to being called a racist.
When future historians look back at early 21st century politics, they will note that the political right was engaged in a level of denial not seen since since the band kept playing as the Titanic sank. The election of a black man to the White House triggered a response that can be charitably described as “unbelievably racist.”
Whoops! There I go, playing the race card again!
But let’s be honest: nobody screams “Go back to Kenya!” at a guy born and raised in Hawaii who lived in Indonesia for 4 years (which is over 5,000 miles away from Kenya) unless his skin color is an issue. If you seriously doubt this, try to imagine angry conservatives screaming “Go back to England!” to a hypothetical President Hilary Clinton. Doesn’t make any sense does it? Neither does “Go back to Kenya!” if race is removed from the equation.
But try convincing a right winger of that.

Seriously, who do they think they’re kidding?

What the right wing is doing right now is using racism to motivate their dying political movement. It’s called the Southern Strategy and despite what every single conservative will tell you, it’s quite real.
The Southern Strategy was first employed by Richard Nixon and Barry Goldwater as a way for the Republican Party to win elections in the South. Until the 60s, the South was strongly Democratic because, once upon a time, the Democratic Party was the party of slavery and racism. The Democratic Party actually founded the KKK a century ago! It’s true!
Conservatives LOVE to recite these facts. To them, it’s “proof” that Democrats and liberals are the “real” racists. But just as the right wing likes to “forget” about the disastrous eight years of George W. Bush, the also “forget” about what happened after the 60s.
You see, a funny thing happened after Democratic president Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 into law:
Southern white people went completely insane with rage.
How DARE black people be allowed to vote! How DARE black people be allowed to eat and shop wherever they want! How DARE white people be told they can’t treat blacks like slaves! This is the SOUTH and we like our Negroes to know their place!

Come to the White Side, we have cookies!

Nixon and Goldwater played to this completely unconcealed rage by pretending they cared about “states’ rights.” States’ rights, of course, is the fictional cause of the Civil War that racists use to literally whitewash the South’s failed attempt to perpetuate slavery and, later, apartheid. By pretending to care about the plight of the poor, oppressed white man in the South, the Republican Party was able to win the White House and more or less take over the region.
Recognizing a winning strategy, conservatives and Republicans threw themselves into dog whistle politics with a vengeance. Republican strategist Lee Atwater’s infamous quote perfectly sums up the right wing’s move to coded racism:
You start out in 1954 by saying, “Nigger, nigger, nigger.” By 1968 you can’t say “nigger”—that hurts you, backfires. So you say stuff like, uh, forced busing, states’ rights, and all that stuff, and you’re getting so abstract. Now, you’re talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you’re talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is, blacks get hurt worse than whites.… “We want to cut this,” is much more abstract than even the busing thing, uh, and a hell of a lot more abstract than “Nigger, nigger.”
Atwater, however, would be appalled by the modern day GOP and frothing at the mouth at the Tea Party. In a classic case of the chickens coming home to roost, conservative politicians have completely forgotten that the point of dog whistle politics is to appeal to bigots but still retain a fig leaf of respectability to allow moderates to ignore the underlying racism.
50 years of whipping up the racial resentment of right wingers has resulted in a crop of politicians who actually believe the nonsense they spew. Ronald Reagan was many things: a liar, a criminal and a bigot but he wasn’t stupid. He and the rest of the GOP did not actually believe that that an army of “welfare queens” were stealing millions of tax payer dollars. They didn’t actually believe that a race war was coming. They were quite aware that was just red meat for the rubes. Keep’em angry and they won’t notice while you give all of their money to the rich.
These days, Republicans are moving away from coded language and being far more open about how much they hate black people (and women and gays and immigrants, etc.). They call the president a skinny ghetto crackhead.” They say “I don’t want to make

black
 blah people’s lives better by giving them somebody else’s money” (the “somebody,” of course, being white people). They say, on camera, Voter ID will hurt “lazy blacks.”

But, you know, they’re not appealing to white racists for votes or anything. That whole Southern Strategy thing is just a liberal myth…

Racist is as racist does.

Your average conservative lies through their teeth when they say they don’t care about race. When they talk about “welfare queens,” they ain’t talking about white women. When they talk about “thugs,” they ain’t talking about Justin Beiber. When the GOP goes on a rampage to cut food stamps and calls President Obama the “food stamp president,” they ain’t talking about fiscal responsibility.
No, they are talking about black people. Whoops! There’s that darn race card!
But what else can you say to someone that declares that over 90% of black people are too stupid to vote the “right” way? What can you say to someone that smugly announces that most blacks are killed by other blacks (and then refuses to acknowledge that most whites are killed by other whites)? What can you say to someone that says they “know a

blackguy” that uses his food stamps to buy crab legs so the whole program must be riddled with fraud?

If you’re me, you state the obvious, “You’re a racist piece of dirt.” And then sit back and listen to the howls of transparent denial and phony indignation.

Does it ever end?

Actually, yes, it does. The Southern Strategy is in its final stages and it’s destroying the GOP. Rapidly changing demographics, an aging base and the aforementioned crop of extremist politicians have combined to poison the conservative movement.
Pandering to racists is like a drug addiction: It’s easy to start and feels great for a while but it’s incredibly hard to stop and you need more of it just to keep going. The GOP wants to appeal to minority voters but can’t stop the racist rhetoric lest their bigoted base drop them like a hot potato.
And so the GOP is trapped by the very same Southern Strategy that served them so well for so many decades. The kind of intolerant voter they sought will be even more intolerant of the mandatory move to the social left the GOP must make to remain viable on the national stage. Imagine having a party that supported all the same kinds of hate you live and breathe. Now imagine that party opens its doors to the very same people you despise. It will be like the 60s all over again. Angry white bigots will feel betrayed by “their” party. In the areas of the country they control, they will elect ever more extreme and vitriolic lunatics to represent their core values of hate and fear.  Michele Bachmann was just the beginning. At least she tended to go along with the GOP leadership. Ted Cruz, on the other hand, represents the next iteration of this death spiral. He takes every opportunity to throw his own party under the bus for not being “ideologically pure.”
To paraphrase The Crow:
A (white) Man has an idea. The idea attracts others, like minded. The idea expands, the idea becomes an institution. What was the idea?
Sooner or later, the southern right wing will start openly speaking of “white pride” as a campaign platform and the Southern Strategy will have fully come around to bite the GOP in its lily white ass.
Nom. Nom. Nom.

The Daily GOP Ignominious: Paul Ryan…Misinterprets, Misleads and Misfires!

In Americans Against the Tea Party, Paul Ryan, The Daily GOP Ignominious on March 4, 2014 at 5:48 PM

No, conservative readers, my use of the words misfires is from a progressive context and has nothing to do with firearms

Paul Ryan Accidentally Proves Anti-Poverty Programs are Effective While Trying to Discredit Them (via Americans Against The Tea Party)

In probably one of the most ironic twists in GOP class warfare politics in recent memory, the 204-page report released by GOP Rep. and former vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan this Monday — that was supposed to analyze the results of the Nation…

…..AND THE BAND PLAYS ON….

President Obama’s 2015 Budget Proposal

In President Obama on March 4, 2014 at 5:06 PM

No, President Obama will not simply sit in the White House with feet on his desk with intermittent visits to the (golf) links. The president will serve his full-term and he will serve with a level of zeal tempered by five years of pure GOP obstruction, but he will serve for the good of the people.

The Obama 2015 Budget has been release and it is ambitious. It is not as ambitious as I had hoped, but it can be called nothing shy of a “lean” forward. 

We will report on GOP reaction to the 2015 budget in a separate post. We refuse to soil the essence and positive lean of the Budget with GOP drivel, politicking and rhetoric not backed-up by facts.

White House Dot Gov.

The President’s Budget for Fiscal Year 2015

Opportunity for All: The President’s Fiscal Year 2015 Budget

A Roadmap for Growth, Opportunity, and Fiscal Responsibility:  The President’s Budget provides a roadmap for accelerating economic growth, expanding opportunity for all Americans, and ensuring fiscal responsibility. It invests in infrastructure, job training, preschool, and pro-work tax cuts, while reducing deficits through health, tax, and immigration reform.
Builds on Bipartisan Progress: The Budget adheres to the 2015 spending levels agreed to in the Bipartisan Budget Act and shows the choices the President would make at those levels.  But it also shows how to build on this progress to realize the nation’s full potential with a fully paid for $56 billion Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative, split evenly between defense and non-defense priorities.
WHAT THE PRESIDENT’S BUDGET DELIVERS:
  • Stronger Growth and Job Creation:
    • Advanced manufacturing – Invests in American innovation and strengthens our manufacturing base, including a national network of 45 manufacturing institutes.
    • Research and innovation – Supports ground-breaking research to fight disease, protect the environment, and develop new technologies, and makes permanent the R&D Tax Credit.
    • Pro-growth infrastructure  Lays out an ambitious, four-year $302 billion surface transportation reauthorization proposal paid for with transition revenue from pro-growth business tax reform. 
    • Government reform – Promotes government management that delivers improved services that are more effective, efficient, and supportive of economic growth.
  • Opportunity for All:
    • Tax cuts for working Americans – Doubles the maximum value of the childless worker EITC to build on the EITC’s success in encouraging people to enter the workforce and reducing poverty; improves tax benefits that help middle-class and working families pay for child care and college and save for retirement.
    • Preschool for all – Invests in the President’s vision of making access to high-quality preschool available to every four-year-old child.
    • Job-driven training – Invests in new efforts to drive greater performance and innovation in workforce training to equip workers with skills that match the needs of employers.
  • Fiscal Responsibility:
    • Continues historic progress in slowing health care cost growth – Builds on the savings and reforms in the Affordable Care Act with additional measures to strengthen Medicare and Medicaid, slow health care cost growth, and improve the quality of care.
    • Pro-growth tax reform – Curbs inefficient and unfair tax breaks that benefit the wealthiest, and ensures that everyone is paying their fair share.
    • Immigration reform – Supports comprehensive reform of our broken immigration system, which independent economists say will grow our economy and shrink our deficits.
    • Further reduces the deficit and debt – By paying for new investments and tackling our true fiscal challenges, reduces deficits to 1.6 percent of GDP by 2024, and stabilizes debt as a share of the economy by 2015 and puts it on a declining path after that.
* * *

Category Highlights

Investing in American Innovation to Create Jobs and Opportunity
Building a 21st Century Infrastructure
Equipping All Americans with a High-Quality Education and the Skills They Need
Expanding Opportunity and Middle Class Security
Ensuring Our Nation’s Safety and Security
Managing Government to Drive Further Growth and Opportunity
Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative: Securing Our Nation’s Future
 Reducing Long-Run Deficits and Promoting Sustainable Long-Run Growth


Attack the Poor!

In Uncategorized on March 4, 2014 at 1:43 PM

…and I am reading about how the GOP has the inside track on the mid-term elections.  What a county?


Why attack people who are poor? We live in a capitalist economic system. The system has an inherent reality of people living in the lower rungs of the economic strata. So, why use the poor for politicking. A more salient point, why do the poor vote for people who will accept their vote and within weeks go about legislating against the them?

Why are the nation’s poor even a political item?

MSNBC’s Al Sharpton delves deep into GOP misjudgment and callous governance. Let’s see cut food stamps, deny extension of unemployment insurance payments and, of course, no medical coverage for those without coverage.  Existential isn’t it!


http://on.msnbc.com/1eYKBnD

Sharpton wasn’t finished. He icing’d his show with some Issa. Did I mention ‘callous’ governance above?

http://on.msnbc.com/1pXLCoS

I am truly perplexed about why I continue hear and read reports of the GOP having an inside track on this years mid-term elections. America cannot seriously exist that far off its rocker!

Jon S. Randal: Hinmatóowyalahtq’it (Chief Joseph) A Leader Who Sought Peace

In Uncategorized on March 4, 2014 at 9:35 AM

We at the TPI appreciate the effort of writers who write for the love of the craft and for archiving life as the writer sees it, know it or as she/he views and questions the human experience. 

We occasionally hear and read comment from certain American politicians about the former business (and it was a true business) commonly referred to as “colonialism.” How often have you heard people like Newt Gingrich and Mike Huckabee mention the words “Anti-colonialism?” Of course, we live in a nation that was born of colonialism.  So we should, forever hold dear sacrifices of Americans who preceded us.  By all and by any means, “yes.”  

Some who lived in North America long before any white settlers or African slaves were forced to endure sacrifices and in many cases outright genocide. We must never forget sacrifices of people who sought life as they knew it; people who sought life when the alternative was death or imprisonment. 

I recently read a treatise from TPI friend Jon S. Randal, I must share.  We thank Mr. Randal for allowing the TPI to run the treatise.  

A story of Hinmatóowyalahtq’it (Chief Joseph)…..

    

I wrote this in November during Native American Heritage Month. Each day during that month, I wrote something about Native Americans, their history, their contributions, their proverbs and sayings, their pain and suffering which was inflicted upon them when they lost their land, when they were cheated and lied to, when they were massacred. Chief Joseph was one of the more well-known chiefs, renowned as a humanitarian and peacemaker during his time. Today is his birthday, he was born on this day, March 3, 1840, his Native American name was Hinmatóowyalahtq’it. 

I started my Native American tribute with Chief Joseph and I ended it with Chief Joseph, I think his story is representative of many of the great Native American Nations which graced this great land. I think it is a story that needs to be told over and over again, which is the reason I’m sharing it again. 

Although some of Chief Joseph’s writings and speeches, as well as other great chiefs, are now in dispute because of the translations, no one will ever be able to dispute what was in his heart, his love for this land and for his people. This great nation lost something very valuable, we need to always remember all the great nations, the true, the first Americans.

He loved and respected this land. He loved his people. He just wanted peace, but after the U.S. government broke another land treaty with his Nez Perce tribe, Chief Joseph had no choice. His only hope was to meet up with Sitting Bull across the Canadian border, hopefully finding peace. He started off with about 800 followers, which only about 200 were warriors while the rest were family members: wives, youngsters, and elders.

For more than three months, in what has been referred to as one of the most brilliant retreats in American history, Chief Joseph and his followers fought with dignity, courage, and fortitude, out maneuvering more than 2,000 pursuing U.S. soldiers time after time. He and his followers battled hunger and freezing weather, and covered a distance of more than 1,000 miles across Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana. He received the admiration of whites by treating any prisoners humanely and purchasing supplies along the way rather than stealing them.

He was only 40 miles short of his Canadian goal, when Chief Joseph was cornered by the U.S. Army. Knowing it was over and he had to protect the lives of the few remaining followers, he sent a message to General Howard:

“I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed; Looking Glass is dead, Too-hul-hul-sote is dead. The old men are all dead. It is the young men who say yes or no. He who led on the young men is dead. It is cold, and we have no blankets; the little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food. No one knows where they are—perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children, and see how many of them I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever.”

Chief Joseph surrendered and negotiated safety for his people, but he himself and four hundred followers were taken on unheated rail cars to be held in a prisoner of war campsite for eight months. Toward the end of the following summer the surviving Nez Perce were forcibly relocated to a barren reservation in Indian Territory for seven more years, where many of them died of epidemic diseases.

In his last years, Joseph spoke eloquently against the injustice of United States policy toward Native Americans and held out hope that one day America’s promise of freedom and equality would ring true.

And, even with all the suffering of his people, he remained a true humanitarian who valued each individual and respected life. When a settler ran into him and his tribe one day, the settler was brought to Chief Joseph. The settler thought this would be the end for him, but Chief Joseph gave him all the food he could eat and showed him the directions back home. The settler tried to give Chief Joseph money, but he refused. He finally convinced him to accept a red yarn which he had around his neck.

Chief Joseph was an indomitable voice of conscience for the West, one of the last Native American heroes. He died in 1904, still in exile from his homeland. According to his doctor, he died “of a broken heart.”

As Chief Joseph once said: “The winds which pass through these aged pines we hear the moaning of departed ghosts, and if the voice of our people could have been heard, that act would never have been done. But alas though they stood around they could neither be seen nor heard. Their tears fell like drops of rain.”

For more than three months, in what has been referred to as one of the most brilliant retreats in American history, Chief Joseph and his followers fought with dignity, courage, and fortitude, out maneuvering more than 2,000 pursuing U.S. soldiers time after time. He and his followers battled hunger and freezing weather, and covered a distance of more than 1,000 miles across Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, and Montana. He received the admiration of whites by treating any prisoners humanely and purchasing supplies along the way rather than stealing them.

He was only 40 miles short of his Canadian goal, when Chief Joseph was cornered by the U.S. Army. Knowing it was over and he had to protect the lives of the few remaining followers, he sent a message to General Howard:

“I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed; Looking Glass is dead, Too-hul-hul-sote is dead. The old men are all dead. It is the young men who say yes or no. He who led on the young men is dead. It is cold, and we have no blankets; the little children are freezing to death. My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food. No one knows where they are—perhaps freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children, and see how many of them I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever.”

Chief Joseph surrendered and negotiated safety for his people, but he himself and four hundred followers were taken on unheated rail cars to be held in a prisoner of war campsite for eight months. Toward the end of the following summer the surviving Nez Perce were forcibly relocated to a barren reservation in Indian Territory for seven more years, where many of them died of epidemic diseases.

In his last years, Joseph spoke eloquently against the injustice of United States policy toward Native Americans and held out hope that one day America’s promise of freedom and equality would ring true.

And, even with all the suffering of his people, he remained a true humanitarian who valued each individual and respected life. When a settler ran into him and his tribe one day, the settler was brought to Chief Joseph. The settler thought this would be the end for him, but Chief Joseph gave him all the food he could eat and showed him the directions back home. The settler tried to give Chief Joseph money, but he refused. He finally convinced him to accept a red yarn which he had around his neck.

Chief Joseph was an indomitable voice of conscience for the West, one of the last Native American heroes. He died in 1904, still in exile from his homeland. According to his doctor, he died “of a broken heart.”

As Chief Joseph once said: “The winds which pass through these aged pines we hear the moaning of departed ghosts, and if the voice of our people could have been heard, that act would never have been done. But alas though they stood around they could neither be seen nor heard. Their tears fell like drops of rain.”
______________________________

It is important for artist like Jon S. Randal to visit with our past. We are often too consumed with our short-term future while forsaking the lessons of the past and the benefit prologue (as a preceding event) offers humanity.  ~The Pardu