Politics is Life or Death: Why Your Loathing of the GOP is Perhaps Inadequate

Yes, despite every appearance there are rank and file Republicans who are decent, and in some cases fabulous people. Of course, they aren’t currently running for office or holding office as a member of the Republican Party, nor do they work for a right-wing news operation or political blog; nor are they involved with a conservative activist group or pac. Tragically, they may in fact be constituents of or members of the audience for these previously listed representatives of moral and intellectual rot, those in other words among the thousand points of dark, to modify a famous phrase from former president “Poppy” Bush. Consider them however, if not innocent, somewhat understandable victims of the worst among us, assaulted and battered by effectively brutish propaganda.

There are many who say that to construe the current severe dichotomy in our politics as a de-facto civil war is to overstate at best, and to become egregiously hyperbolic at worst. But alternately, in my debatably humble opinion I wonder if it is not possible, given history, to construe a failure to identify what arguably is dangerous and aggressive extremism as appeasement, unforgivable docility, irresponsible complacency and even cowardice? From a progressive point of view how else then should one respond to lying and thorough deception brazen even by the lowliest standards of politics, extremism that is irrational and debilitating to the country (see: downgrading of nation’s credit rating due to debt ceiling hostage crisis, fraying social, physical and educational infrastructure, millions uninsured and unhealthy)? Does it not fall somewhere between unforgivably pusillanimous and criminally idiotic to fail to engage when war has been declared against one?

It most certainly is rational and accurate to construe the policies Republicans are promising as having, if implemented, life or death consequences. The proposal for transformation of Medicaid into block grants going to the states rather than funded as it is currently means the lives of millions of children and elderly literally will be jeopardized. Beyond the loss of access to medical care for poor adults and children, the Romney-Ryan plan severely affects millions of elderly who rely upon it to pay for their nursing home care given that even middle-class seniors quickly burn through their savings after moving into such facilities. What will happen to this multitude of vulnerable seniors once the Medicaid rug is yanked from underneath them? The likely result is tragic to put it mildly.

Several Republican governors already have become pioneers in the practice of such despicable healthcare politics. These would be the dunderheaded ideologues oblivious to the needs of their constituents, Republican governors refusing full funding guaranteed to states for three full years for an expansion of Medicaid under Obamacare that would cover many currently uninsured Americans. Two of these malpracticing governors, Rick Perry of Texas and Rick Scott of Florida preside over states with among the highest numbers of uninsured citizens, Texas first and Florida tenth in the number of uninsured. For the governors it is just blithely brain dead ideological bravado, but yes, these dumbasses might actually kill you.

As reprehensible as anything in the Romney-Ryan plan for Medicaid is a proposed change in the rules that would allow nursing homes to demand the assets of children of their elderly parents before access to Medicaid funds would be approved. Whereas now seniors who pay out nearly all of their accumulated assets to owners of their nursing homes begin to quality for subsidization of their nursing home care by Medicaid, under the proposed Romney-Ryan change would not do so until their children burned through the bulk of their assets too, young and old handing over lifetimes’ worth of hard earned treasure to the nursing home conglomerates. Who says Republicans are deaf, dumb and blind to the needs of Americans? They are sensitive to a fault to the needs of the CEOs of corporate finance, health and energy for exorbitant profits… and these are Americans too, aren’t they?

Already, Republicans’ long opposition to the universal health insurance utilized by every other nation in the industrialized world has resulted in lack of access to basic healthcare for countless millions of our fellow citizens, and the dire, often lethal consequences of such an inexcusable state of affairs, in particular the lack of access to preventive care that has resulted in no small number of preventable deaths (far exceeding the numbers in nations with universal insurance). The Romney-Ryan plan and past Republican proposals to privatize the great, overwhelmingly successful Social Security and Medicare programs that have prevented millions of elderly from sinking into poverty and wretched circumstances jeopardize the health and certainly the actual lives of innumerable elderly citizens, the Romney-Ryan plan to offer vouchers in place of guaranteed coverage under Medicare only the most recent and bloodless.

Of course the important thing from the Republican point of view is that hegemony of the corporate and business sectors over American lives, income, freedom and health be retained at all cost, along with the generous financial backing of Republican power that flows from it, not anything as quaint or quotidian as the basic needs of or basic fairness toward ordinary American citizens and consumers. While the mainstream press has little appetite for presenting the bland abstractions out of the mouths of well, bland abstractions like Paul Ryan as anything other than the ruddy sport of politics, if sport it is, it is a contest to the death for many flesh and blood Americans, most of whom no one beyond their families will ever hear about.

The Big Stench Party

For its incorporation and inclusion of so many diverse segments of the population, the Democratic Party has earned its reputation as the party of the big tent. But to be fair, the Republican Party, based on the conspicuous biliousness animating so much of what it does and what it seeks to do must be designated the party of the Big Stench.  I don’t know what else to call that much toxic resentment and animus concentrated in a single place.

One can gather a healthy aggregation of examples of such vile aggression just from today’s newspaper reporting alone. First in the lineup is old favorite, reactionary harridan Jan Brewer of Arizona who declared today she is off to the Supreme Court again after other federal courts have nixed the policy she helped advance and then signed into law in Arizona stripping gays and lesbians of state domestic partner benefits.  Apparently in Brewer’s and Arizona’s case, enacting laws such as those later copied by Mississippi and Alabama and others designed to harass undocumented workers and to create such pervasive ethnic profiling as to drive Latinos out of their states did not sufficiently sate the urges to project venom. Anyone who really believes the origin of these gratuitously punitive measures is anything other than utter and naked animosity, much of it racial, needs to stand in the corner several hours wearing the dunce cap.

Speaking of gratuitously punitive measures, North Carolina has been on something of a roll of late. Earlier it was Republican engineering of a constitutional amendment restricting the right to marry to heterosexuals, an amendment whose only point was to administer a kick in the ribs to gays purely for the nasty fun of it given that North Carolina already had committed the same marriage restrictions to the books through legislation. North Carolina Republicans also, getting in on the new right-wing fad of razing Planned Parenthood went above and beyond the call of rancid when, after courts disallowed them from simply banning funds to Planned Parenthood banned all “private” contractors from receiving state funding for contraception. I’ll say this for Republicans’ bitterness and anger: one can’t accuse Republicans of holding it all inside or failing to emotionally share.

Out of the same cauldron of irrational animus and dangerous fanaticism Indiana Republicans passed themselves a law in 2011 denying Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood. Today’s news brought word that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have blocked it, at least temporarily. But again, the bounds of Republican extremism being vast in every area it touches, the right’s antagonism to the right to choose, and its antagonism toward Planned Parenthood for providing abortion services dictates that in defiance of rational analysis the organization must be extinguished from the face of the Earth entirely, no matter that abortions are 3% of all the organization’s services, that millions upon millions of women depend upon this organization for basic health care, that funding for abortion services is entirely separate, and most importantly, that there are literally life and death consequences for millions of flesh and blood human beings.

Also today we learn that House Republicans this week are finalizing their plan to reduce spending on the year’s farm bill, with 45% of that reduction coming from the food stamp program of course. Two to three million will lose their food assistance should this version of the bill become law, including 280,000 children in the same households who will lose their eligibility for free school lunches.  It’s a vengeful and cold “philosophy” that invariably targets the weak and vulnerable first, reflecting after such a long history of doing so nothing less than pure contempt for these unfortunate souls. Today came the announcement that Texas, the largest red state of them all will sacrifice millions of its citizens on the altar of zealous ideological purity, rejecting the expansion of Medicaid (in other words health insurance and health care) for millions, though the federal government provides all of the funding for this expansion for a full three years. I suppose it was about as predictable as cow pies in Texas that every Republican clown sitting in a governor’s mansion would rush to a megaphone as fast as his cloven hooves would carry him to proclaim his silly act of spite, the lives and health of actual human beings as forgettable, as absent a priority for these foolish ideological conformists as ever.

It’s a clue perhaps, but certainly not entirely necessary to be aware of the pervasive and persistent penchant for invective, slander and epithets from the Fox-Limbaugh Axis to the standard Republican blog, activist or politico to understand this is a segment of the body politic animated primarily by contempt for other Americans, as motivated by sheer hostility and resentment as any masking “principle”. Indeed, the case is strong for a conclusion that Republican tax policies and unashamed commitment to perpetuated or worsened income and wealth disparity, a new affection for castes and de-facto aristocracy isn’t simply bad and ineffective economics, it’s nearly biblically venal. Combine this with the mendacity it requires to pervasively misrepresent economic and other facts (death panels anyone), to deny material reality in favor of utopian ideological (the rest of us would say dystopian) economic models and this isn’t a “philosophy” in operation, it’s barely concealed and increasingly unconcealed animus under a single ideological umbrella, representing a fetid aggregation of resentment, prejudices and hostilities.

I would respectfully suggest that anyone accepting the philosophical pretenses of this seething crowd has far too much Pollyanna in them for their own safety. What’s called for is a magnificent dose of air freshener aimed directly at the party of the big stench, in the form of millions voting against the party’s relentlessly bonkers and odiferous candidates. And whatever else it takes to kill the smell.

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