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Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 12:46 pm
by seacoaster
Future of the American Right. Take a look and ask yourself if the "endless grievance" and "the Left hates America" bullsh*t refrain sounds familiar:

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archi ... ce/620746/

"Rachel Bovard is one of the thousands of smart young Americans who flock to Washington each year to make a difference. She’s worked in the House and Senate for Republicans Rand Paul, Pat Toomey, and Mike Lee, was listed among the “Most Influential Women in Washington Under 35” by National Journal, did a stint at the Heritage Foundation, and is now policy director of the Conservative Partnership Institute, whose mission is to train, equip, and unify the conservative movement. She’s bright, cheerful, and funny, and has a side hustle as a sommelier. And, like most young people, she has absorbed the dominant ideas of her peer group.

One of the ideas she’s absorbed is that the conservatives who came before her were insufferably naive. They thought liberals and conservatives both want what’s best for America, disagreeing only on how to get there. But that’s not true, she believes. “Woke elites—increasingly the mainstream left of this country—do not want what we want,” she told the National Conservatism Conference, which was held earlier this month in a bland hotel alongside theme parks in Orlando. “What they want is to destroy us,” she said. “Not only will they use every power at their disposal to achieve their goal,” but they’ve already been doing it for years “by dominating every cultural, intellectual, and political institution.”

As she says this, the dozens of young people in her breakout session begin to vibrate in their seats. Ripples of head nodding are visible from where I sit in the back. These are the rising talents of the right—the Heritage Foundation junior staff, the Ivy League grads, the intellectual Catholics and the Orthodox Jews who have been studying Hobbes and de Tocqueville at the various young conservative fellowship programs that stretch along Acela-land. In the hallway before watching Bovard’s speech, I bumped into one of my former Yale students, who is now at McKinsey.

Bovard has the place rocking, training her sights on the true enemies, the left-wing elite: a “totalitarian cult of billionaires and bureaucrats, of privilege perpetuated by bullying, empowered by the most sophisticated surveillance and communications technologies in history, and limited only by the scruples of people who arrest rape victims’ fathers, declare math to be white supremacist, finance ethnic cleansing in western China, and who partied, a mile high, on Jeffrey Epstein’s Lolita Express.”

The atmosphere is electric. She’s giving the best synopsis of national conservatism I’ve heard at the conference we’re attending—and with flair! Progressives pretend to be the oppressed ones, she tells the crowd, “but in reality, it’s just an old boys’ club, another frat house for entitled rich kids contrived to perpetuate their unearned privilege. It’s Skull and Bones for gender-studies majors!” She finishes to a rousing ovation. People leap to their feet.

I have the sinking sensation that the thunderous sound I’m hearing is the future of the Republican Party.

hen i came down to Florida for the National Conservatism Conference, I was a little concerned I’d get heckled in the hallways, or be subjected to the verbal abuse I occasionally get from Trump supporters. Judging by their rhetoric, after all, these are the fire-breathers, the hard-liners, the intellectual sharp edge of the American right.

But everyone was charming! I hung around the bar watching football each night, saw old conservative friends, and met lots of new ones, and I enjoyed them all. This is the intellectual wing of the emerging right. Many of them have spent their lives at progressive places like Princeton, New York, Hollywood, and D.C. Their bodies and careers are in the Republican coastal megalopolis—but their minds and mouths are in Trumpland. As one young man told me late one night, “We’d like to dislike Bill Kristol, but he got us all jobs.”

The movement has three distinctive strains. First, the people over 50 who have been hanging around conservative circles for decades but who have recently been radicalized by the current left. Chris Demuth, 75, was for many years president of the American Enterprise Institute, which used to be the Church of England of American conservatism, but now he’s gone populist. “NatCons are conservatives who have been mugged by reality,” he told the conference. Seventy-three-year-old Glenn Loury, a Brown University economist, was a conservative, then a progressive, and now he’s back on the right: “What has happened to public discourse about race has radicalized me.”

The second strain is made up of mid-career politicians and operatives who are learning to adapt to the age of populist rage: people like Ted Cruz (Princeton, Harvard), J. D. Vance (Yale Law), and Josh Hawley (Stanford and Yale).

The third and largest strain is the young. They grew up in the era of Facebook and MSNBC and identity politics. They went to colleges smothered by progressive sermonizing. And they reacted by running in the other direction. I disagreed with two-thirds of what I heard at this conference, but I couldn’t quite suppress the disturbing voice in my head saying, “If you were 22, maybe you’d be here too.”

The information age is transforming the American right. Conservatives have always inveighed against the cultural elite—the media, the universities, Hollywood. But in the Information Age, the purveyors of culture are now corporate titans. In this economy, the dominant means of economic production are cultural production. Corporate behemoths are cultural behemoths. The national conservatives thus describe a world in which the corporate elite, the media elite, the political elite, and the academic elite have all coagulated into one axis of evil, dominating every institution and controlling the channels of thought.

At the heart of this blue oligarchy are the great masters of surveillance capitalism, the Big Tech czars who decide in secret what ideas get promoted, what stories get suppressed. (The NatCon gospel includes great martyrdom stories, such as when Twitter and Facebook suppressed a New York Post story on Hunter Biden’s laptop, and when various social-media companies have tried to de-platform The Babylon Bee, the right-wing version of The Onion.) “Big Tech is malevolent. Big Tech is corrupt. Big Tech is omnipresent,” Ted Cruz roared.

In the NatCon worldview, the profiteers of surveillance capitalism see all and control all. Its workers, indoctrinated at elite universities, use “wokeness” to buy off the left and to create a subservient, atomized, defenseless labor pool. “Big Business is not our ally,” Marco Rubio argued. “They are eager culture warriors who use the language of wokeness to cover free-market capitalism.” The “entire phalanx of Big Business has gone hard left,” Cruz said. “We’ve seen Big Business, the Fortune 500, becoming the economic enforcers of the hard left. Name five Fortune 500 CEOs who are even remotely right of center.”

The idea that the left controls absolutely everything—from your smartphone to the money supply to your third grader’s curriculum—explains the apocalyptic tone that was the dominating emotional register of this conference. The politicians’ speeches were like entries in the catastrophism Olympics:

“The left’s ambition is to create a world beyond belonging,” said Hawley. “Their grand ambition is to deconstruct the United States of America.”

“The left’s attack is on America. The left hates America,” said Cruz. “It is the left that is trying to use culture as a tool to destroy America.”

“We are confronted now by a systematic effort to dismantle our society, our traditions, our economy, and our way of life,” said Rubio.

The first great project of the national conservatives is to man the barricades in the culture war. These people have certainly done their homework when it comes to cultural Marxism—how the left has learned to dominate culture and how the right now needs to copy their techniques. If I’d had to drink a shot every time some speaker cited Herbert Marcuse or Antonio Gramsci, I’d be dead of alcohol poisoning.

Hawley delivered a classic culture-war speech defending manhood and masculinity: “The deconstruction of America depends on the deconstruction of American men.” Listening to Hawley talk populist is like listening to a white progressive Upper West Sider in the 1970s try to talk jive. The words are there, but he’s trying so hard it sounds ridiculous.

Another speaker, Amanda Milius, is the daughter of John Milius, who was the screenwriter for the first two Dirty Harry films and Apocalypse Now. She grew up in L.A. and wound up in the Trump administration. She argued that America needs to get back to making self-confident movies like The Searchers, the 1956 John Ford Western. This was an unapologetic movie, she asserted, about how Americans tamed the West and how Christian values got brought to “savage, undeveloped land.”

This is about as dumb a reading of The Searchers as it’s possible to imagine. The movie is actually the modern analogue to the Oresteia, by Aeschylus. The complex lead figure, played by John Wayne, is rendered barbaric and racist while fighting on behalf of westward pioneers. By the end, he is unfit to live in civilized society.

But we don’t exactly live in an age that acknowledges nuance. Milius distorts the movie into a brave manifesto of anti-woke truths—and that sort of distortion has a lot of buyers among this crowd.

The first interesting debate among the NatCons is philosophical: Should we fight to preserve the classical-liberal order or is it necessary to abandon it?

Some of the speakers at the conference were in fact classical liberals, who believe in free speech, intellectual debate, and neutral government. Glenn Loury gave an impassioned speech against cancel culture, the illiberal left, and the hyper-racialized group consciousness that divides people into opposing racial camps. Loury asserted that as a Black man he is the proud inheritor of the great Western tradition: “Tolstoy is mine! Dickens is mine! Milton, Marx, and Einstein are mine!” He declared that his people are Black, but also proudly American. “Our Americanness is much more important than our Blackness,” he said, before adding, “We must strive to transcend racial particularism and stress universality and commonality as Americans.” This is the classical-liberal case against racial separatism and in favor of integration.

But others argued that this sort of liberalism is a luxury we cannot afford. The country is under assault from a Marxist oligarchy that wants to impose its own pseudo-religious doctrine. If you try to repulse that with pallid liberalism, with weak calls for free speech and tolerance, you’ll end up getting run over by those who possess fanatical zeal, economic power, and cultural might.

Yoram Hazony, the chief intellectual architect of national conservatism, is an Orthodox Jew who went to Princeton before moving to Israel. He argues that you can’t have a society that embraces government neutrality and tries to relegate values to the private sphere. The public realm eventually eviscerates private values, especially when public communication is controlled by a small oligarchic elite. If conservatives want to stand up to the pseudo-religion of wokeism, they have to put traditional religion at the center of their political project.

Another Israeli political philosopher at the conference, Ofir Haivry, argued that Americans shouldn’t delude themselves into thinking that a nation is built out of high-minded liberal abstractions, like the Bill of Rights. A nation is, instead, a cultural tradition, a common language, a set of rituals and beliefs, and a religious order—a collective cultural identity.

The history of Judaism demonstrates, Haivry argues, that you don’t need a state or a political order to be a nation.

For his part, Hazony argued that the American cultural identity is Christian—and has to be if it is not going to succumb to the woke onslaught. If 80 percent of Americans are Christian, Hazony reasoned, then Christian values should dominate. “Majority cultures have the right to establish the ruling culture, and minority cultures have the right to be decently treated,” he said. “To take the minority view and say the minority has the ability to stamp out the views of the majority—that seems to me to be completely crazy.”

The problem in America, Hazony continued, is that LGBTQ activists today, like American Jews in the 1950s, are trying to expel Christianity from the public square. This threatens to render the public square spiritually naked. Wan liberalism collapses in the face of left-wing cultural Marxism. “Eliminating God and scripture in the schools … was the turning point in American civilization,” Hazony said. “Above all else we’ve got to get God and scripture back in the schools.”

Another interesting debate among the NatCons is political and economic. Conservatives have lately become expert culture warriors—the whole Tucker Carlson schtick. This schtick demands that you ignore the actual suffering of the world—the transgender kid alone in some suburban high school, the anxiety of a guy who can’t afford health care for his brother, the struggle of a Black man trying to be seen and recognized as a full human being. It’s a cynical game that treats all of life as a play for ratings, a battle for clicks, and this demands constant outrage, white-identity signaling, and the kind of absurd generalizations that Rachel Bovard used to get that room so excited.

Conservatives have got the culture-war act down. Trump was a culture-war president with almost no policy arm attached. The question conservatives at the conference were asking was how to move beyond owning the libs to effecting actual change.

Christopher Rufo, the architect of this year’s school-board-meeting protests against critical race theory, argued that conservatives had erred when they tried to slowly gain power in elite cultural institutions. Conservatives were never going to make headway in the Ivy League or the corporate media. Instead, Rufo argued, they should rally the masses to get state legislatures to pass laws embracing their values. That’s essentially what’s now happening across red America.

My old friend Rod Dreher of The American Conservative argued that because the left controls the commanding heights of the culture and the economy, the only institution the right has a shot at influencing is the state. In these circumstances the right has to use state power to promote its values. “We need to quit being satisfied with owning the libs, and save our country,” Dreher said. “We need to unapologetically embrace the use of state power.”

This is where Viktor Orbán comes in. It was Dreher who prompted Carlson’s controversial trip to Hungary last summer, and Hungarians were a strong presence at the National Conservatism Conference. Orbán, in Dreher’s view, understands the civilizational stakes of the culture war; he has, for instance, used the power of the state to limit how much transgenderism can be taught to children in schools. “Our team talks incessantly about how horrible wokeness is,” Dreher said at the conference. “Orbán actually does something about it.”

This is national conservatism pursued to its logical conclusion: using state power to break up and humble the big corporations and to push back against coastal cultural values. The culture war merges with the economic-class war—and a new right emerges in which an intellectual cadre, the national conservatives, rallies the proletarian masses against the cultural/corporate elites. All your grandparents’ political categories get scrambled along the way.

Will it work? Well, Donald Trump destroyed the Reagan Republican paradigm in 2016, but he didn’t exactly elucidate a new set of ideas, policies, and alliances. Trump’s devastation of the old order produced a grand struggle on the right to build a new one on Trumpian populist lines.

The NatCons are wrong to think there is a unified thing called “the left” that hates America. This is just the apocalyptic menace many of them had to invent in order to justify their decision to vote for Donald Trump.

They are wrong, too, to think there is a wokeist Anschluss taking over all the institutions of American life. For people who spend so much time railing about the evils of social media, they sure seem to spend an awful lot of their lives on Twitter. Ninety percent of their discourse is about the discourse. Anecdotalism was also rampant at the conference—generalizing from three anecdotes about people who got canceled to conclude that all of American life is a woke hellscape. They need to get out more.

Furthermore, if Hazony thinks America is about to return to Christian dominance, he’s living in 1956. Evangelical Christianity has lost many millions of believers across recent decades. Secularism is surging, and white Christianity is shrinking into a rump presence in American life. America is becoming more religiously diverse every day. Christians are in no position to impose their values—regarding same-sex marriage or anything else—on the public square. Self-aware Christians know this.

Finally, there is something extremely off-putting about the NatCon public pose. In person, as I say, I find many of them charming, warm, and friendly. But their public posture is dominated by the psychology of threat and menace. If there was one expression of sympathy, kindness, or grace uttered from the podium in Orlando, I did not hear it. But I did hear callousness, invocations of combat, and whiffs of brutality.

One big thing the NatCons are right about is that in the Information Age, the cultural and corporate elites have merged. Right-wing parties around the world are gradually becoming working-class parties that stand against the economic interests and cultural preferences of the highly educated. Left-wing parties are now rooted in the rich metro areas and are more and more becoming an unsteady alliance between young AOC left-populists and Google.

NatCons are also probably right that conservatism is going to get a lot more statist. At the conference, Ted Cruz tried to combine culture-war conservatism with free-market economic policies—free trade and low taxes. Marco Rubio countered by, in effect, arguing that you can’t rally cultural populists if you are not also going to do something for them economically. Cultural populism leads to economic populism. Rubio’s position at least has the virtue of being coherent.

Over the past few decades there have been various efforts to replace the Reagan Paradigm: the national-greatness conservatism of John McCain; the compassionate conservatism of George W. Bush; the Reformicon conservatism of the D.C. think tanks in the 21st century. But the Trumpian onslaught succeeded where these movements have so far fizzled because Trump understood better than they did the coalescence of the new American cultural/corporate elite and the potency of populist anger against it. Thus the display of Ivy League populism I witnessed in Orlando might well represent the alarming future of the American right: the fusing of the culture war and the class war into one epic Marxist Götterdämmerung.

Sitting in that Orlando hotel, I found myself thinking of what I was seeing as some kind of new theme park: NatCon World, a hermetically sealed dystopian universe with its own confected thrills and chills, its own illiberal rides. I tried to console myself by noting that this NatCon theme park is the brainchild of a few isolated intellectuals with a screwy view of American politics and history. But the disconcerting reality is that America’s rarified NatCon World is just one piece of a larger illiberal populist revolt that is strong and rising."

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 1:01 pm
by Peter Brown
Great article!!! But probably not what Brooks was hoping. He makes his targets sound incredibly smart and aware.

On Rachel Bovard

One of the ideas she’s absorbed is that the conservatives who came before her were insufferably naive. They thought liberals and conservatives both want what’s best for America, disagreeing only on how to get there. But that’s not true, she believes. “Woke elites—increasingly the mainstream left of this country—do not want what we want,” she told the National Conservatism Conference, which was held earlier this month in a bland hotel alongside theme parks in Orlando. “What they want is to destroy us,” she said. “Not only will they use every power at their disposal to achieve their goal,” but they’ve already been doing it for years “by dominating every cultural, intellectual, and political institution.”


She’s correct!!

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 1:11 pm
by a fan
Peter Brown wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 1:01 pm One of the ideas she’s absorbed is that the conservatives who came before her were insufferably naive. They thought liberals and conservatives both want what’s best for America, disagreeing only on how to get there. But that’s not true, she believes. “Woke elites—increasingly the mainstream left of this country—do not want what we want,”
:lol: Neither you nor she can tell us what you want.

The part that your voters don't get, is that you can't legislate cultures. So no matter hard you and your team pushes back, Pete, eventually black Americans will be able to vote, eat where they want, and own businesses. Women will be able to attend the college of their choice. Anyone who wants to get married will be able to marry. You can't stop that change, my man.

As you and your fellow R voters can't distinguish between policy and culture. You think that voting for Trump "because" you're sick of what you think is PC culture will change things. Nope. Doesn't work like that.

Meanwhile? Did you know that 40 years of Republican trickle down economics took truck drivers from making an adjusted $120K per year in the 70's, all the way down to $40k? And these are TrumpVoters, Pete.

And your team doesn't have the FIRST IDEA as to how to change that.


So please, pretty please----keep electing these fake conservative Republicans, Pete. All the coastal liberal elites that you think are ruining the country would LOVE more money from your R policies.

What's DeSantis going to do? :lol: You already know, Pete. He's going to give Trickle Down policy a "try" yet again, and slash taxes and increase spending.

And then sit back and try and blame the Dems for inflation. :lol: Please. Go ahead. Blame the Dems.

Blame doesn't put food on the table, Pete. It solves nothing.

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 2:15 pm
by dislaxxic
Image

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:39 pm
by seacoaster
Dis, why is everyone white in your graphic novel?

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:56 pm
by RedFromMI
seacoaster wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:39 pm Dis, why is everyone white in your graphic novel?
Because it represents the essential reality of the current R party/Fox News, in spite of the tokens...

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 4:30 pm
by youthathletics
RedFromMI wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:56 pm
seacoaster wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:39 pm Dis, why is everyone white in your graphic novel?
Because it represents the essential reality of the current R party/Fox News, in spite of the tokens...
Like the tokens at CNN and MSNBC?
Much like CNN
Much like MSNBC

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:49 pm
by Typical Lax Dad
Democracy:


Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:55 pm
by kramerica.inc
More democracy.
Partisan Fairness Grade:
“F”
Significant Democratic advantage.

https://gerrymander.princeton.edu/redis ... YGFzQ7DE2h

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:56 pm
by MDlaxfan76
youthathletics wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 4:30 pm
RedFromMI wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:56 pm
seacoaster wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:39 pm Dis, why is everyone white in your graphic novel?
Because it represents the essential reality of the current R party/Fox News, in spite of the tokens...
Like the tokens at CNN and MSNBC?
Much like CNN
Much like MSNBC
I'm confused.
Do you see those links as reflecting the full diversity of America or are you saying those who aren't white are 'tokens'?

Do think the GOP has a voter makeup that reflects the diversity of America, in broadly equal proportion as the actual country?

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:58 pm
by MDlaxfan76
kramerica.inc wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:55 pm More democracy.
Partisan Fairness Grade:
“F”
Significant Democratic advantage.

https://gerrymander.princeton.edu/redis ... YGFzQ7DE2h
A deserved F...
Question, though, how many GOP states get F's versus Dem ones?

Is there a stat on that?

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Sat Nov 20, 2021 6:46 am
by seacoaster
MDlaxfan76 wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:58 pm
kramerica.inc wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:55 pm More democracy.
Partisan Fairness Grade:
“F”
Significant Democratic advantage.

https://gerrymander.princeton.edu/redis ... YGFzQ7DE2h
A deserved F...
Question, though, how many GOP states get F's versus Dem ones?

Is there a stat on that?
Yes, each if the States' redistricting efforts are graded. Check out Wisconsin and Ohio.

https://gerrymander.princeton.edu/redis ... 9nyIRHzCXs

https://gerrymander.princeton.edu/redis ... TgReqGhI5h

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Sat Nov 20, 2021 8:41 am
by Typical Lax Dad
kramerica.inc wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:55 pm More democracy.
Partisan Fairness Grade:
“F”
Significant Democratic advantage.

https://gerrymander.princeton.edu/redis ... YGFzQ7DE2h
Who said it’s ok for Democrats to gerrymander? Anyone on this board? Gerrymandering is anti- democracy…. Wrong is wrong. I was taught that.

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Sat Nov 20, 2021 8:44 am
by youthathletics
MDlaxfan76 wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:56 pm
youthathletics wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 4:30 pm
RedFromMI wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:56 pm
seacoaster wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:39 pm Dis, why is everyone white in your graphic novel?
Because it represents the essential reality of the current R party/Fox News, in spite of the tokens...
Like the tokens at CNN and MSNBC?
Much like CNN
Much like MSNBC
I'm confused.
Do you see those links as reflecting the full diversity of America or are you saying those who aren't white are 'tokens'?

Do think the GOP has a voter makeup that reflects the diversity of America, in broadly equal proportion as the actual country?
1st question - this was in reply to to Reds slap at fox at FOX for tokens, showing CNN and MSNBC were no better.
2nd question - nope, but it never really has. It is the one thing the D-Party banks and fights for....daily. I believe it is why the use the race card so often. The New Deal set the hook and the d-party never looked back.

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Sat Nov 20, 2021 9:01 am
by Typical Lax Dad
youthathletics wrote: Sat Nov 20, 2021 8:44 am
MDlaxfan76 wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 8:56 pm
youthathletics wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 4:30 pm
RedFromMI wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:56 pm
seacoaster wrote: Fri Nov 19, 2021 3:39 pm Dis, why is everyone white in your graphic novel?
Because it represents the essential reality of the current R party/Fox News, in spite of the tokens...
Like the tokens at CNN and MSNBC?
Much like CNN
Much like MSNBC
I'm confused.
Do you see those links as reflecting the full diversity of America or are you saying those who aren't white are 'tokens'?

Do think the GOP has a voter makeup that reflects the diversity of America, in broadly equal proportion as the actual country?
1st question - this was in reply to to Reds slap at fox at FOX for tokens, showing CNN and MSNBC were no better.
2nd question - nope, but it never really has. It is the one thing the D-Party banks and fights for....daily. I believe it is why the use the race card so often. The New Deal set the hook and the d-party never looked back.
You sound sad actually.

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2021 10:13 am
by Peter Brown
This needs to be a core message of my party. I realize some of it will be tough for the base, but it’s all the correct messaging.


End civil asset forfeiture.
End the drug war.
End overcriminalization.
End pretextual stops.
End excessive force.
End qualified immunity.
End mandatory minimums.
End the death penalty.

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2021 12:50 pm
by Typical Lax Dad

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2021 6:01 pm
by MDlaxfan76

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2021 7:51 am
by dislaxxic
Two longtime Fox News contributors quit the network after Tucker Carlson "expose"
Fox News still does real reporting, and there are still responsible conservatives providing valuable opinion and analysis. But the voices of the responsible are being drowned out by the irresponsible.

A case in point: Patriot Purge, a three-part series hosted by Tucker Carlson.

The special—which ran on Fox’s subscription streaming service earlier this month and was promoted on Fox News—is presented in the style of an exposé, a hard-hitting piece of investigative journalism. In reality, it is a collection of incoherent conspiracy-mongering, riddled with factual inaccuracies, half-truths, deceptive imagery, and damning omissions. And its message is clear: The U.S. government is targeting patriotic Americans in the same manner —and with the same tools—that it used to target al Qaeda.

“The domestic war on terror is here. It’s coming after half of the country,” says one protagonist. “The left is hunting the right, sticking them in Guantanamo Bay for American citizens—leaving them there to rot,” says another, over video of an individual in an orange jumpsuit being waterboarded.

This is not happening. And we think it’s dangerous to pretend it is. If a person with such a platform shares such misinformation loud enough and long enough, there are Americans who will believe—and act upon—it.

This isn’t theoretical. This is what actually happened on January 6, 2021.

Over the past five years, some of Fox’s top opinion hosts amplified the false claims and bizarre narratives of Donald Trump or offered up their own in his service. In this sense, the release of Patriot Purge wasn’t an isolated incident, it was merely the most egregious example of a longstanding trend. Patriot Purge creates an alternative history of January 6, contradicted not just by common sense, not just by the testimony and on-the-record statements of many participants, but by the reporting of the news division of Fox News itself.
..

Re: Conservative Ideology

Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2021 8:20 am
by seacoaster
EJ Dionne in the Post:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions ... m-solving/

"The leaders of both parties in the House of Representatives offered the nation an important lesson last week about why our politics are broken and our national mood is so surly.

The master class was taught inadvertently by Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and somewhat more consciously by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). Their closing speeches on the Build Back Better bill passed by the House on Friday illustrates how our political parties are not even in the same business anymore.

The Republican enterprise is devoted to stoking anger and social resentment, not to enacting legislation. Democrats may take an eternity to do it, but they actually want to pass bills, create programs and spotlight day-to-day concerns (child care, health care) that government can plausibly address.

McCarthy’s 8 ½-hour rant reflected his need to mollify the GOP’s large right wing with a protracted, nihilistic scream of opposition, even if “some of his claims,” as The Post’s Marianna Sotomayor, Paul Kane and Jacqueline Alemany wrote, “wildly defied the facts.”

His marathon of negativity capped a week in which just two House Republicans joined Democrats in voting to censure Rep. Paul A. Gosar (R-Ariz.) for tweeting an anime video that depicted him killing Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).

The party’s collective refusal to draw a line against such odiousness speaks to a degree of extremism that is partly obscured by the willingness of a small number of Republicans, particularly in the Senate, to work with Democrats on a handful of issues.

The GOP now focuses on undermining our electoral system and stoking division across racial lines. In pursuit of these goals, Republicans are willing to tolerate and apologize for right-wing violence and intimations of violence by the likes of Gosar.

In her brief speech before the bill finally won House approval Friday morning, Pelosi tweaked the Republican leader for his bombast — “as a courtesy to my colleagues, I will be brief,” she said to applause. But her emphasis was on the sweeping legislation’s specifics: bringing down the costs of insulin, cutting child-care costs “fully in half for most families,” “universal pre-K for every 3- and 4-year old in America,” “high-quality home health care.”

The vogue is to say that none of the historic measures Democrats are trying to enact (or have already in the case of roads, transit and broadband) will be of much help to them in next year’s elections, or do much to lift President Biden’s poll numbers.

We’ll see soon enough. But it’s true that the radically different nature of the two parties tilts the scales heavily against a serious, substantive debate over how and when public action can improve lives.

If politics is defined as nothing but the one big culture war that so many Republicans embrace, the practical work of government becomes a mere sideshow. One result: Any Republican willing to work with Democrats to solve particular problems (say, collapsing bridges) becomes a traitor in the only conflict that matters.

You can say this for McCarthy: His actions suggest he is fully aware that the dominance of a resentment narrative serves the GOP’s interest.

The Pew Research Center’s latest edition of its always-enlightening typology of the American electorate shows that moving politics away from bread-and-butter economic concerns is the best way for Republicans to hold their supporters together.

Two of the party’s four key coalition groups (Pew labels them “Faith and Flag Conservatives” and “Committed Conservatives”) are conservative across the board and welcome the party’s opposition to Democrats’ government initiatives. So does a third group, the “Ambivalent Right,” which though more moderate on issues such as abortion, immigration and same-sex marriage, is also skeptical of larger government.

But Pew characterizes nearly a quarter of the GOP’s supporters as the “Populist Right,” hard-liners on immigration who are also “highly critical of the economic system.” If politics ever became more about economics than culture, the party’s hold on many in this group could become tenuous.

But here is the most disturbing Pew finding: “Perhaps no issue is more divisive than racial injustice in the U.S.”

Pew found that among “the four Republican-oriented typology groups, no more than about a quarter say a lot more needs to be done to ensure equal rights for all Americans regardless of their racial or ethnic background; by comparison, no fewer than about three-quarters of any Democratic group say a lot more needs to be done to achieve this goal.”

This gulf on one of the central questions facing our nation suggests that, for now at least, Republicans have a powerful interest in keeping a politics of resentment alive. The angry divisions over Friday’s verdict in the Kyle Rittenhouse case — and the facts of the case itself — are the latest example of why the country needs less of this kind of politics, not more."