Disclaimer

This blog is political satire and the opinion of one lonely dog at the back fence. Nothing written in this blog is to be taken seriously until tomorrow at the earliest. At that time you may consider taking the previous days' blog seriously if you choose, however careful consideration should be given to this decision as it is, after all, serious.



(For some reason if you Google Barking Labrador you get a bunch of dog training sites - Duh...- and one direct link to this blog. But it is a post from June 2011 and somewhat out of date. If you are telling any of your friends about the blog, please direct them via the full URL - http://www.barkinglabrador.blogspot.com/. Thanks)

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

"Everything stops for tea..." Long John Baldry

“Are they -- someone like me, maverick, you know, I do go rogue, and I call it like I see it, and I don't mind stirring it up.... is a title and is a campaign too shackling? Does that prohibit me from being out there, out of the box, not allowing handlers to shape me?"
This quote from an interview on Faux News with our preeminent political philosopher, Sarah “Is that camera on?” Palin says a lot about her ambitions and let’s be clear – they are not to be president.  She reminds me of Alice in Wonderland, ("It would be so nice is something made sense for a change").  An aging and tired John McCain choosing her for his VP was, I am sure, flattering, but she has to know that being president requires a level of sophistication and – dare I say – intelligence that she has yet to exhibit.   Running around the country showing her ankles to the panting and dim witted republican base is fun, as is cashing the checks for her literary achievements, such as they are.   And who could resist the kind of fawning and clamorous media attention she gets everywhere she goes and every time she opens her mouth in public?  But she could be president like I could do brain surgery and trust me on this – both would end badly, tea party or no tea party.
The other ingĂ©nue winking from the back of the room – Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey – also continues to be coy about running but watching video of a recent speech he gave was instructive for a couple of reasons.  A woman in the audience stood up and essentially beseeched him to run, saying that his country needed him and “we can’t afford to wait until 2016…”.  Remember;  there are currently – by my count – 10 republican candidates for her to choose from and she is blubbering in public for Tony Soprano to run and save us all from the terrible, terrible negro devil currently in the White House.  I mean, c’mon – it’s a “white” house after all, right? Wink, wink… In an astonishing example of pot, kettle black, he actually started his speech by saying something to the effect of, “Now Obama is starting his 2012 campaign by trying to divide the country to win re-election”, apparently not having noticed his colleagues working extremely hard at that very thing for almost three years now. 
I can say right now with a high degree of certainty that this guy has no chance to be elected.  He’s obese.  And while I have no particular prejudice myself regarding the morbidly obese, there are large numbers of people in this country who would never vote for the guy because he doesn’t look presidential; he looks like Vinnie, the fixer from down the block.  You go see this guy to get a bet down before the 5th race, not to have a cogent discussion on the strategic issues surrounding our policy towards China.   Like Palin said – in her usual tortured gibberish, about Herman Cain, who just won the Florida straw poll; “That Herb Cain, well he’s the flavor of the month”.   Christie’s rise to prominence is clearly a function of the dismal lack of an attractive choice amongst the Obama-hating posse trying to ride to the rescue of the party and the country at large.
  And besides; wither the tea party in all this?  What happened to tea party darling Michele “I’m just doing the lord’s work” Bachman, who dominated the media coverage for a solid month until everyone realized she was bat -shit crazy and a frightening and dangerous lunatic?   Rick “What did I say wrong?” Perry is still trying to get his Tony Lama out of his mouth and his fervent supporters are bailing on him in droves.   Even Roger Ailes, high priest of hyperbole and strategic misinformation, is now backing away from the rabble and that’s the most telling thing of all.
Will Bunch wrote recently in the Huffington Post about the demise of the tea party and what he said was right on:  “When historians look back on the surge and decline of the Tea Party Movement in America, and they will, I believe the focus will be how something that was real – anger and fear among a segment of the middle class that has been decimated by the decline of the US economy – was hijacked by a band of high-def hucksters, starting with media stars and their bosses seeking ratings, attention, and cash – not necessarily in that order.  The behind the scenes billionaires eager to save their oligarchy, and the craven politicians that they own, came later.”
The tea party’s popularity is running around 25% with likely voters, and,  with more and more public exposure to its anti-science, anti-immigrant, anti-government manifesto, obfuscating focus on deficit reduction rather than job creation and belligerent foreign policy, fading daily.  Now with Rand Paul holding up a pipeline safety bill in the senate because…well, because he can, sympathetic supporters will likely be fewer still.  It wasn’t bad enough that terrified middle of the road republicans, abandoning any remaining vestige of common sense or compassion, threatened a government shut down over their unprecedented refusal to provide disaster aid without cutting social services and a job-creating green technology bill.  Now with the very real threat of whole neighborhoods in Texas exploding in napalm-like fireballs, Perry's misguided and doctrinaire refusal to defer further cutting to some more appropriate opportunity makes him look like a thoughtless apparatchik straight out of Moscow, circa 1962. 
So I say come join us, Governor Christie.  Bring your straight talking coarseness and substantial girth and join the party’s party.  I think there’s room for one more…

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Hope this shows up this time...

Next up; Governor Chris Christie...or is it Sarah Palin...or...Sonia Henie...?

Now that the empire is once again safe from the frightening prospect of a disoriented band of ner-do-wells spending too much time sitting on the back porch drinking schnapps all day and not paying the bills so the lights and cable get turned off and people whose houses blew away, were flooded or burned up in a Texas “global-warming-is-a-hoax” fire storm are no longer cursing the fools in charge while waiting for disaster aid, we can turn our attention back to dance of the republican pranksters running for president.   And what a wacky and ridiculous fish-slapping dance it is. 
Now that Rick “Wait…what?” Perry has completely befuddled his formerly rabid followers with his sputtering series of non sequiturs and pointless and ineffective attempts to get his rhetorical hands around Mitt Romney’s neck, and Herman Cain – a man who seems intent on simply proving that a black man can successfully run as a republican – won a completely unexpected 20 point victory in the Florida straw poll, all bets are off and Michele Bachman’s victory in the Iowa straw poll a mere six weeks ago seems very far away indeed.   Pundits and talking heads are falling over themselves trying to figure out what the hell to make of it all, leading to avid speculation and drooling anticipation of the heretofore coy and retiring Sarah Palin leaping into the void – a spectacular and mind-boggling proposition that would be wonderfully chaotic and clearly force a number of the lesser lights to throw in the towel.  (Hey Newt – Carnival is having a special on winter cruises to the Baltic).
Bachman, trying hard to put some kind of positive spin on her last place finish and 1.5% of the vote, sounded very much like the fox that couldn’t reach the grapes, saying her showing was no big deal, she didn’t try very hard and her campaign was still “perfectly positioned”, further evidence of her confused and hallucinatory relationship with reality.  She has fallen hard since those giddy days in August and appears to be in an ominous smoking spiral which doesn’t look like it will end well. 
Since participation in Florida was kind of spotty by the whole squawking flock, it may very well say less about Cain – still a looooooooong shot at best – than it does about the rest of them and, more importantly, how it appears that the restive republican voters – still a bit disoriented by the shouting and smoldering torches of the tea party – are leaning toward “none-of-the-above” and leaving a huge opening for those standing quietly on the sidelines like Chris Christie of New Jersey – a man who scoffed at the possibility of running just a few months ago and who now looks like he could at least be the flavor of the month for a while if he decided to run.  Just imagine the cacophony and bleating incoherence of a field that included both Christie and Palin in addition to the “Knucklehead-Eight” - Faux News personnel might just spontaneously combust.   Delicious…
The most interesting thing about the debate was the emergence of Gary Johnson, a proven, effective governor of New Mexico who is a libertarian, anti-war, republican along the lines of Ron Paul but without the “crazy” baggage and who one might well suspect has been excluded from previous debates, not because of his lack of support in “polls” – like the ones busy cheerleading for Bachman, Perry and Romney – but because he doesn’t carry the flag for the power brokers and king makers in the party.  He has effectively been excluded again from the next debate because he hasn’t reached the threshold of support ostensibly required, a chicken and egg argument that stifles his voice of reason, as the lack of popular support has handicapped Jon Huntsman.
On the other side of the aisle a newly energized and fiery Obama – yes, finally – has begun to at least swing back at Boner, McConnell and Cantor, laying the responsibility for government ineptness squarely at their feet where it belongs.  It may be a little late but he still has an enormous advantage over anyone in the current republican field because – as disenchanted as many of his supports are - they will surely vote for him over any republican unless they choose to not vote at all.  It is puzzling that he hasn’t taken this kind of bully pulpit stance before this, preferring to try to negotiate.  This, of course, has proved to be folly and self destructive and nearly crippled him.   You can’t negotiate in good faith with someone trying to destroy you; maybe he’s finally figured that out. 

Just as importantly, you can’t go on being reasonable and rational and a nice guy when your rivals are a bunch of pricks looking to hang you out to dry at every opportunity and are far less interested in accomplishing anything positive in a time of national crisis than in blocking any initiative you propose that doesn't follow their tory, royalist agenda.   Nice that you woke up, Barack – now you have to be sure to step on their necks if you can because they will continue trying to cripple you for the next year.  The next crisis created wholly out of republican yarn will be the super committee negotiations – an exercise in going through the motions if there ever was one and one almost guaranteed to be fruitless.  Count on a full blown Faux News sponsored media blitz leading up to Christmas with the hounds of the right baying through the night and painting you again as a failure and a weak, ineffectual leader who presided over cuts to defense that will be called catastrophic.  Count on it and get a strategy in place.
Finally, in a heartening development north of the border, the eminently sensible canucks greeted a promotional appearance by tired war criminal, Dick “enhanced interrogation” Cheney, with a sea of protest signs accompanied by robust and enthusiastic booing that I can only hope made the Lizard King uncomfortable enough to go back and retire to the rock he crawled out from under.  He should spend his days playing gin rummy with Kissinger in a room surrounded by portraits of Pinochet, Marcos and Robert Mugabe, debating imperialist foreign policy dogma and waxing nostalgic about their memories of Nixon.   Yeah, Dick – Saddam was an asshole; now go away.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Is Herman Cain the new #1...?

As the drama queens in congress once again strain credulity with a manufactured crisis and tedious hyper-partisan conflict and Faux News continues to shill for high income welfare, a $3.00 an hour minimum wage and Obama's ultimate failure, leading republican presidential candidate Rick "What did I say wrong" Perry suddenly finds himself losing conservative support faster than hot air out of an overstretched balloon, like the intellectually taxed gas-bag that he is.  Even his prayerful and exclusive connection to the lord himself may not be enough to save him after he not only shot himself in the foot in the last debate; he re-loaded his trusty sidearm and squeezed off a few more rounds just to be sure. 

 His good-ole-boy shtick is no longer charming and endearing – it is evidence of how dense he really is, making even the equally dense tea party rabble uneasy and pondering esoteric ideas like electability.  When even Bitch-Queen Ann Coulter is piling on you for coming across like your dim-witted cousin who usually sleeps in the barn, you’ve got a problem that maybe even Turd Blossom Karl Rove couldn’t overcome.   When he announced he was running I said the nomination was his to lose and it looks like that just what he’s going to do. 
The part that is annoying is not that he’s proving to be a dumb-ass bumpkin and losing supporters; he was a demonstrably dumb-ass bumpkin when he threw his spurs in the ring.  No, it’s the reason people are backing away from him that bugs me.  It’s not because he ran a pay-to-play political bordello in Texas that’s bothering the fired up republican faithful.  It’s not his willingness to give the oil and gas industry a sleeve job whenever they snap their fingers – hell, that’s a time honored Texas tradition perfected by the notorious Bush family cabal and treated with reverence by many of the Texas electorate. Borderline criminal duplicity also is, I believe, a requirement for full on membership in the republican party elite.  No, his people are getting pissed because he is in favor of letting children of immigrants qualify for financial aid and in-state tuition.  Michele Bachman’s head about exploded talking about his anti-conservative position that it is sensible for girls to get the HPV vaccination. The anti-government dimwits’ angry murmurs were loud and clear, insisting that the vaccination will lead to rampant promiscuity and general whorishness.  And Mitt “Doesn’t my hair look good” Romney continues to body slam him for his ridiculous take on social security, a stupid notion exacerbated by his equally stupid characterization of it as a ponzi scheme. 
Speaking of Michele “I’m naked under this coat” Bachman, it was hilarious listening to her go on and on about the sadly tedious story of Solyndra, the now defunct solar energy company that Obama visited and proclaimed a shining example of green technology.  Of course, they bet on the come and lost and so went bankrupt faster than you can say Lehman Brothers.  But fundamentally he wasn’t wrong – just happened to pick a bad example – plenty of green technology companies are doing well and the best is yet to come – clearly. 

But she bleats and blabbers about Solyndra as if it were the personification of everything evil about Obama simply because they took stimulus money and subsequently failed.  Maybe she prefers those companies who caused the fucking mess in the first place, took stimulus / bail-out money anyway, gave out obscene bonuses, played fast and loose with the money by lending it to the wives of executives for imaginary shell companies, who routinely outright bribe members of the impotent SEC and lie every time they open their mouths, like, say, Goldman Sachs.  Of course she also was fine with stimulus money being spent in her own district in Minnesota – just not for anything as scientifically complex as high tech solar panels.  And nothing that Obama was promoting.
Prior to the republican debates, interviews of the audience members are typically done to try to get a feel for the vibe in the room and a bigger bunch of dill weeds I have never seen assembled in one place: God fearing, gay hating, anti-science, anti-government, anti-immigrant Obama haters who seem to believe sick people should be allowed to just die if it costs them one god damned dime to keep them alive and who cheer Texas’ relentless stream of executions. They seem to have the collective IQ of a school of shrimp. 
Now as the duplicitous John Boner and his side kick, Eric Cantor, make the incoherent case for additional cuts before passing a budget with disaster relief and the republicans on the so-called Super Committee have halted negotiations in their tracks by saying new taxes or letting tax cuts expire or anything that hints at taxes has no chance of approval with them, the threat of the automatic across the board cuts looms with defense spending at the forefront.  Defense secretary Leon Panetta says such cuts would be disastrous so me thinks the recalcitrant elephants may find themselves hoisted on their own petard and struggling to explain how they abandon citizens whose homes have been damaged or destroyed and undermine our brave service personnel by stubbornly continuing to slavishly serve the interests of the wealthiest among us – some of whom are them.  I think Obama may have had this in mind when he signed off on what looked like a very questionable deal during the summer.   I can’t wait to hear the explanation.  Maybe they can get Rick “What’d I say wrong?” Perry to do the “splainin’.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Mr. Boner...that god damned dog is barking again...

The four head dwarves of the republican party – Sleepy (McConnell), Doc (Cantor), Dopey (John Boner) and Smiley (Kyl) - in an unprecedented act of sticking their noses where they don’t belong, sent a letter to Ben Bernanke today telling him that, in their opinion it would be best if the Fed took no action to help the economy and that further stimulus activities would piss them off no end.   Since these same four dick-heads have been publicly saying that they would do everything in their power to see to it that Obama is not re-elected, I believe this to be treason and all four of them should be arrested post haste and sent to live in downtown Gary, Indiana on $1,200 in Social Security income and $400 in food stamps.   See how many absurdly inappropriate pink ties you can buy then, Boner. 
This particular outrage is only the latest in a whole series of surreal and nightmarish political tableaus plastered all over the media in the last two weeks while I have been peacefully chilling on the West side of Kauai – huge props to Kekaha kine.   Hanging out there watching the surf it’s easy to forgot that there is a systematic effort underway to deceive the woefully uninformed average American voter into thinking that Obama is the enemy of their best interests and that the budding republican theocracy has the answer to all of their problems.  
 Rick Perry, good book under one arm and executioners switch in hand, suddenly is Israel’s best friend and is harping on Obama for “betraying” them for trying to be even handed with the Palestinians – whose fate only stands in for the entire newly restive Arab world.  Our heretofore utterly ineffective and frankly disingenuous policy having led nowhere, Obama is being vilified by the new soldiers of Abraham who have suddenly seemed to realize they can’t win an election without Jewish votes and are tripping over each to ingratiate themselves with idiotic foreign policy positions pandering to Jews and other old testament believers who covet Jerusalem as much as any 13th century crusader.  Romney,  Rick “Bomb Iran tomorrow” Santorum – everyone but Ron Paul – have weighed in, acting like they are dying to get to the front of the line with the Sword of Truth held high to smite the filthy heathen terrorists and end up sounding like a bunch of ignorant, patronizing clowns.
Meanwhile Michele Bachman has been abandoned by old republican hand, Ed Rollins, who claimed ill health or family issues or some other transparently trumped-up excuse but who really came to realize -her victory in the Iowa straw poll notwithstanding - she has absolutely no chance of even finishing second.  With her unsettling combination of tea party support, Dominionism, theocratic leanings and anti-science posturing, she drives clear thinking independent voters running for cover.  A campaign picture released yesterday shows her as she wanders in a daze through hanging sides of beef in a meat factory, a strangely fitting metaphor for her candidacy to date.   Tonight’s third republican debate may very well go a long way towards further winnowing the field, or at least establishing with certainty who will be in the race to the finish line and who will be sitting in the back row lobbing Pee Wee Herman-like “that’s what you are; what am I?” bombs and sinking into obscurity.
Putative front runner Rick “We killed another one last night” Perry is finding it a little harder to run in his Tony Lama’s than he thought and is getting bludgeoned from all sides by his fellow republicans – and rightfully so – for his idiotic positions on everything from social security and evolution to who’s hotter – Ginger or Maryanne.   Now he’s being advised to “tighten up his message”, a tacit verification of his continuing incoherence as he crows about his miraculous job creation in Texas, never mentioning that they’re mostly minimum wage and worse.
While the merry band of knuckleheads preps for tonight’s debate, their congressional leaders plus leading economic genius and all around poster boy Paul Ryan have taken the Faux News talking point – class warfare – and run with it, insisting ad nauseum that every Obama initiative is “job killing” and every attempt to close tax loop holes and re-set a reasonable tax rate for people making over a million dollars per year is class warfare and, oh, by the way, also “job killing”.   And in their latest treacherous move, they are busy tying the provision of disaster aid to additional spending cuts, thereby denying help to average people whose lives are upside down while further sticking it to the poor and those unfortunate enough to live in the path of a hurricane, solidifying their position as elitist money worshiping sluts devoted to serving the gentry and giving the finger to the rest of us.   
And this barely scratches the surface…more to come tomorrow.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Another republican pulls down the emperor's pants...

What follows is a letter from Ron Paul before he started to hit the pharmaceuticals too hard.  It lays out more solid evidence of what the republican party has become, personified by the criminals, grifters, thieves and pimps on stage tonight.  I couldn’t have said it better…

As a lifelong Republican, it saddens me to have to write this letter. My parents believed in the Republican Party and its free enterprise philosophy, and that's the way I was brought up. At age 21, in 1956, I cast my first vote for Ike and the entire Republican slate.
Because of frustration with the direction in which the country was going, I became a political activist and ran for the U.S. Congress in 1974. Even with Watergate, my loyalty, optimism, and hope for the future were tied to the Republican Party and its message of free enterprise, limited government, and balanced budgets.

Eventually I was elected to the U.S. Congress four times as a Republican. This permitted me a first-hand look at the interworkings of the U.S. Congress, seeing both the benefits and partisan frustrations that guide its shaky proceedings. I found that although representative government still exists, special interest control of the legislative process clearly presents a danger to our constitutional system of government.

In 1976 I was impressed with Ronald Reagan's program and was one of the four members of Congress who endorsed his candidacy. In 1980, unlike other Republican office holders in Texas, I again supported our President in his efforts.

Since 1981, however, I have gradually and steadily grown weary of the Republican Party's efforts to reduce the size of the federal government. Since then Ronald Reagan and the Republican Party have given us skyrocketing deficits, and astoundingly a doubled national debt. How is it that the party of balanced budgets, with control of the White House and Senate, accumulated red ink greater than all previous administrations put together? Tip O'Neill, although part of the problem, cannot alone be blamed.

Tax revenues are up 59 percent since 1980. Because of our economic growth? No. During Carter's four years, we had growth of 37.2 percent; Reagan's five years have given us 30.7 percent. The new revenues are due to four giant Republican tax increases since 1981.
All Republicans rightly chastised Carter for his $38 billion deficit. But they ignore or even defend deficits of $220 billion, as government spending has grown 10.4 percent per year since Reagan took office, while the federal payroll has zoomed by a quarter of a million bureaucrats.

Despite the Supply-Sider-Keynesian claim that "deficits don't matter," the debt presents a grave threat to our country. Thanks to the President and Republican Party, we have lost the chance to reduce the deficit and the spending in a non-crisis fashion. Even worse, big government has been legitimized in a way the Democrats never could have accomplished. It was tragic to listen to Ronald Reagan on the 1986 campaign trail bragging about his high spending on farm subsidies, welfare, warfare, etc., in his futile effort to hold on to control of the Senate.

Instead of cutting some of the immeasurable waste in the Department of Defense, it has gotten worse, with the inevitable result that we are less secure today. Reagan's foreign aid expenditures exceed Eisenhower's, Kennedy's, Johnson's, Nixon's, Ford's, and Carter's put together. Foreign intervention has exploded since 1980. Only an end to military welfare for foreign governments plus a curtailment of our unconstitutional commitments abroad will enable us really to defend ourselves and solve our financial problems.
Amidst the failure of the Gramm-Rudman gimmick, we hear the President and the Republican Party call for a balanced-budget amendment and a line-item veto. This is only a smokescreen. PresidentReagan, as governor of California, had a line-item veto and virtually never used it. As President he has failed to exercise his constitutional responsibility to veto spending. Instead, he has encouraged it.

Monetary policy has been disastrous as well. The five Reagan appointees to the Federal Reserve Board have advocated even faster monetary inflation than Chairman Volcker, and this is the fourth straight year of double-digit increases. The chickens have yet to come home to roost, but they will, and America will suffer from a Reaganomics that is nothing but warmed-over Keynesianism.

Candidate Reagan in 1980 correctly opposed draft registration. Yet when he had the chance to abolish it, he reneged, as he did on his pledge to abolish the Departments of Education and Energy, or to work against abortion.

Under the guise of attacking drug use and money laundering, the Republican Administration has systematically attacked personal and financial privacy. The effect has been to victimize innocent Americans who wish to conduct their private lives without government snooping. (Should people really be put on a suspected drug dealer list because they transfer $3,000 at one time?) Reagan's urine testing of Americans without probable cause is a clear violation of our civil liberties, as are his proposals for extensive "lie detector" tests.

Under Reagan, the IRS has grown bigger, richer, more powerful, and more arrogant. In the words of the founders of our country, our government has "sent hither swarms" of tax gatherers "to harass our people and eat out their substance." His officers jailed the innocent George Hansen, with the President refusing to pardon a great American whose only crime was to defend the Constitution.
Reagan's new tax "reform" gives even more power to the IRS. Far from making taxes fairer or simpler, it deceitfully raises more revenue for the government to waste.

Knowing this administration's record, I wasn't surprised by its Libyan disinformation campaign, Israeli-Iranian arms-for-hostages swap, or illegal funding of the Contras. All this has contributed to my disenchantment with the Republican Party, and helped me make up my mind.

I want to totally disassociate myself from the policies that have given us unprecedented deficits, massive monetary inflation, indiscriminate military spending, an irrational and unconstitutional foreign policy, zooming foreign aid, the exaltation of international banking, and the attack on our personal liberties and privacy.

After years of trying to work through the Republican Party both in and out of government, I have reluctantly concluded that my efforts must be carried on outside the Republican Party. Republicans know that the Democratic agenda is dangerous to our political and economic health. Yet, in the past six years Republicans have expanded its worst aspects and called them our own. The Republican Party has not reduced the size of government. It has become big government's best friend.

If Ronald Reagan couldn't or wouldn't balance the budget, which Republican leader on the horizon can we possibly expect to do so? There is no credibility left for the Republican Party as a force to reduce the size of government. That is the message of the Reagan years.

I conclude that one must look to other avenues if a successful effort is ever to be achieved in reversing America's direction.

I therefore resign my membership in the Republican Party and enclose my membership card.

Ron Paul - 1987

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Read this or the kitten gets it...

I write this blog with a cynical, sarcastic, voice because it seems like a good way to highlight the inconceivable idiocy that I see in our current political environment.  I came of age as Kennedy was shot and the subsequent cast of characters in the White House and congress ever since has left me deeply cynical and despairing that my truly patriotic feelings for this country will ever be personified in the highest office in the land.  With Obama's election, I felt a surge of hope that I had not known since Nixon resigned.  I thought we had truly turned a corner in this country.  But as we have come to know over the last three years, a desperate, hateful, republican party has once again decided that its agenda is more important than actually saving the country from the deepest and most profound economic disaster in modern times; a shifting structural change that essentially means that many formerly middle class, blue collar, uneducated citizens will never again see the lifestyle they have felt entitled to by generations of precedent and the promise of the American Dream. 

Now Mike Lofgren, a career republican congressional staffer who has been at the heart of high level policy decisions in the international security arean for over 25 years has written a devastating analysis of what has been happening in the republican party for the last generation and which is seeing its zenith in the current treasonous hate campaign against a sitting president in a time of crisis; a campaign dedicated to seeing that he fail from the moment of his inaugeration. Lofgren has written a concise description of this political moment in time, one that - all sarcastic cynicism and snarkiness aside - I think is the most important thing I've read in the media in many years.  It's not mainstream; the mainstream is far too inhibited and intimidated and controlled by the very powers who are perpetrating this coup d'etat to really say these things.  But I think they are very, very important.  I hope that enough people read this, assimilate it, and can explain it to their fellow Americans before it's too late.  Read it - please...

Barbara Stanwyck: "We're both rotten!"
Fred MacMurray: "Yeah - only you're a little more rotten." -"Double Indemnity" (1944)

Those lines of dialogue from a classic film noir sum up the state of the two political parties in contemporary America. Both parties are rotten - how could they not be, given the complete infestation of the political system by corporate money on a scale that now requires a presidential candidate to raise upwards of a billion dollars to be competitive in the general election? Both parties are captives to corporate loot. The main reason the Democrats' health care bill will be a budget buster once it fully phases in is the Democrats' rank capitulation to corporate interests - no single-payer system, in order to mollify the insurers; and no negotiation of drug prices, a craven surrender to Big Pharma.

But both parties are not rotten in quite the same way. The Democrats have their share of machine politicians, careerists, corporate bagmen, egomaniacs and kooks. Nothing, however, quite matches the modern GOP.
To those millions of Americans who have finally begun paying attention to politics and watched with exasperation the tragicomedy of the debt ceiling extension, it may have come as a shock that the Republican Party is so full of lunatics. To be sure, the party, like any political party on earth, has always had its share of crackpots, like Robert K. Dornan or William E. Dannemeyer. But the crackpot outliers of two decades ago have become the vital center today: Steve King, Michele Bachman (now a leading presidential candidate as well), Paul Broun, Patrick McHenry, Virginia Foxx, Louie Gohmert, Allen West. The Congressional directory now reads like a casebook of lunacy.

It was this cast of characters and the pernicious ideas they represent that impelled me to end a nearly 30-year career as a professional staff member on Capitol Hill. A couple of months ago, I retired; but I could see as early as last November that the Republican Party would use the debt limit vote, an otherwise routine legislative procedure that has been used 87 times since the end of World War II, in order to concoct an entirely artificial fiscal crisis. Then, they would use that fiscal crisis to get what they wanted, by literally holding the US and global economies as hostages.

The debt ceiling extension is not the only example of this sort of political terrorism. Republicans were willing to lay off 4,000 Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) employees, 70,000 private construction workers and let FAA safety inspectors work without pay, in fact, forcing them to pay for their own work-related travel - how prudent is that? - in order to strong arm some union-busting provisions into the FAA reauthorization.

Everyone knows that in a hostage situation, the reckless and amoral actor has the negotiating upper hand over the cautious and responsible actor because the latter is actually concerned about the life of the hostage, while the former does not care. This fact, which ought to be obvious, has nevertheless caused confusion among the professional pundit class, which is mostly still stuck in the Bob Dole era in terms of its orientation. For instance, Ezra Klein wrote of his puzzlement over the fact that while House Republicans essentially won the debt ceiling fight, enough of them were sufficiently dissatisfied that they might still scuttle the deal. Of course they might - the attitude of many freshman Republicans to national default was "bring it on!"
It should have been evident to clear-eyed observers that the Republican Party is becoming less and less like a traditional political party in a representative democracy and becoming more like an apocalyptic cult, or one of the intensely ideological authoritarian parties of 20th century Europe. This trend has several implications, none of them pleasant.

In his "Manual of Parliamentary Practice," Thomas Jefferson wrote that it is less important that every rule and custom of a legislature be absolutely justifiable in a theoretical sense, than that they should be generally acknowledged and honored by all parties. These include unwritten rules, customs and courtesies that lubricate the legislative machinery and keep governance a relatively civilized procedure. The US Senate has more complex procedural rules than any other legislative body in the world; many of these rules are contradictory, and on any given day, the Senate parliamentarian may issue a ruling that contradicts earlier rulings on analogous cases.

The only thing that can keep the Senate functioning is collegiality and good faith. During periods of political consensus, for instance, the World War II and early post-war eras, the Senate was a "high functioning" institution: filibusters were rare and the body was legislatively productive. Now, one can no more picture the current Senate producing the original Medicare Act than the old Supreme Soviet having legislated the Bill of Rights.

Far from being a rarity, virtually every bill, every nominee for Senate confirmation and every routine procedural motion is now subject to a Republican filibuster. Under the circumstances, it is no wonder that Washington is gridlocked: legislating has now become war minus the shooting, something one could have observed 80 years ago in the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic. As Hannah Arendt observed, a disciplined minority of totalitarians can use the instruments of democratic government to undermine democracy itself.
John P. Judis sums up the modern GOP this way:
"Over the last four decades, the Republican Party has transformed from a loyal opposition into an insurrectionary party that flouts the law when it is in the majority and threatens disorder when it is the minority. It is the party of Watergate and Iran-Contra, but also of the government shutdown in 1995 and the impeachment trial of 1999. If there is an earlier American precedent for today's Republican Party, it is the antebellum Southern Democrats of John Calhoun who threatened to nullify, or disregard, federal legislation they objected to and who later led the fight to secede from the union over slavery."
A couple of years ago, a Republican committee staff director told me candidly (and proudly) what the method was to all this obstruction and disruption. Should Republicans succeed in obstructing the Senate from doing its job, it would further lower Congress's generic favorability rating among the American people. By sabotaging the reputation of an institution of government, the party that is programmatically against government would come out the relative winner.

A deeply cynical tactic, to be sure, but a psychologically insightful one that plays on the weaknesses both of the voting public and the news media. There are tens of millions of low-information voters who hardly know which party controls which branch of government, let alone which party is pursuing a particular legislative tactic. These voters' confusion over who did what allows them to form the conclusion that "they are all crooks," and that "government is no good," further leading them to think, "a plague on both your houses" and "the parties are like two kids in a school yard." This ill-informed public cynicism, in its turn, further intensifies the long-term decline in public trust in government that has been taking place since the early 1960s - a distrust that has been stoked by Republican rhetoric at every turn ("Government is the problem," declared Ronald Reagan in 1980).

The media are also complicit in this phenomenon. Ever since the bifurcation of electronic media into a more or less respectable "hard news" segment and a rabidly ideological talk radio and cable TV political propaganda arm, the "respectable" media have been terrified of any criticism for perceived bias. Hence, they hew to the practice of false evenhandedness. Paul Krugman has skewered this tactic as being the "centrist cop-out." "I joked long ago," he says, "that if one party declared that the earth was flat, the headlines would read 'Views Differ on Shape of Planet.'"

Inside-the-Beltway wise guy Chris Cillizza merely proves Krugman right in his Washington Post analysis of "winners and losers" in the debt ceiling impasse. He wrote that the institution of Congress was a big loser in the fracas, which is, of course, correct, but then he opined: "Lawmakers - bless their hearts - seem entirely unaware of just how bad they looked during this fight and will almost certainly spend the next few weeks (or months) congratulating themselves on their tremendous magnanimity." Note how the pundit's ironic deprecation falls like the rain on the just and unjust alike, on those who precipitated the needless crisis and those who despaired of it. He seems oblivious that one side - or a sizable faction of one side - has deliberately attempted to damage the reputation of Congress to achieve its political objectives.
This constant drizzle of "there the two parties go again!" stories out of the news bureaus, combined with the hazy confusion of low-information voters, means that the long-term Republican strategy of undermining confidence in our democratic institutions has reaped electoral dividends. The United States has nearly the lowest voter participation among Western democracies; this, again, is a consequence of the decline of trust in government institutions - if government is a racket and both parties are the same, why vote? And if the uninvolved middle declines to vote, it increases the electoral clout of a minority that is constantly being whipped into a lather by three hours daily of Rush Limbaugh or Fox News. There were only 44 million Republican voters in the 2010 mid-term elections, but they effectively canceled the political results of the election of President Obama by 69 million voters.

This tactic of inducing public distrust of government is not only cynical, it is schizophrenic. For people who profess to revere the Constitution, it is strange that they so caustically denigrate the very federal government that is the material expression of the principles embodied in that document. This is not to say that there is not some theoretical limit to the size or intrusiveness of government; I would be the first to say there are such limits, both fiscal and Constitutional. But most Republican officeholders seem strangely uninterested in the effective repeal of Fourth Amendment protections by the Patriot Act, the weakening of habeas corpus and self-incrimination protections in the public hysteria following 9/11 or the unpalatable fact that the United States has the largest incarcerated population of any country on earth. If anything, they would probably opt for more incarcerated persons, as imprisonment is a profit center for the prison privatization industry, which is itself a growth center for political contributions to these same politicians.[1] Instead, they prefer to rail against those government programs that actually help people. And when a program is too popular to attack directly, like Medicare or Social Security, they prefer to undermine it by feigning an agonized concern about the deficit. That concern, as we shall see, is largely fictitious.

Undermining Americans' belief in their own institutions of self-government remains a prime GOP electoral strategy. But if this technique falls short of producing Karl Rove's dream of 30 years of unchallengeable one-party rule (as all such techniques always fall short of achieving the angry and embittered true believer's New Jerusalem), there are other even less savory techniques upon which to fall back. Ever since Republicans captured the majority in a number of state legislatures last November, they have systematically attempted to make it more difficult to vote: by onerous voter ID requirements (in Wisconsin, Republicans have legislated photo IDs while simultaneously shutting Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) offices in Democratic constituencies while at the same time lengthening the hours of operation of DMV offices in GOP constituencies); by narrowing registration periods; and by residency requirements that may disenfranchise university students.

This legislative assault is moving in a diametrically opposed direction to 200 years of American history, when the arrow of progress pointed toward more political participation by more citizens. Republicans are among the most shrill in self-righteously lecturing other countries about the wonders of democracy; exporting democracy (albeit at the barrel of a gun) to the Middle East was a signature policy of the Bush administration. But domestically, they don't want those people voting.

You can probably guess who those people are. Above all, anyone not likely to vote Republican. As Sarah Palin would imply, the people who are not Real Americans. Racial minorities. Immigrants. Muslims. Gays. Intellectuals. Basically, anyone who doesn't look, think, or talk like the GOP base. This must account, at least to some degree, for their extraordinarily vitriolic hatred of President Obama. I have joked in the past that the main administration policy that Republicans object to is Obama's policy of being black.[2] Among the GOP base, there is constant harping about somebody else, some "other," who is deliberately, assiduously and with malice aforethought subverting the Good, the True and the Beautiful: Subversives. Commies. Socialists. Ragheads. Secular humanists. Blacks. Fags. Feminazis. The list may change with the political needs of the moment, but they always seem to need a scapegoat to hate and fear.

It is not clear to me how many GOP officeholders believe this reactionary and paranoid claptrap. I would bet that most do not. But they cynically feed the worst instincts of their fearful and angry low-information political base with a nod and a wink. During the disgraceful circus of the "birther" issue, Republican politicians subtly stoked the fires of paranoia by being suggestively equivocal - "I take the president at his word" - while never unambiguously slapping down the myth. John Huntsman was the first major GOP figure forthrightly to refute the birther calumny - albeit after release of the birth certificate.

I do not mean to place too much emphasis on racial animus in the GOP. While it surely exists, it is also a fact that Republicans think that no Democratic president could conceivably be legitimate. Republicans also regarded Bill Clinton as somehow, in some manner, twice fraudulently elected (well do I remember the elaborate conspiracy theories that Republicans traded among themselves). Had it been Hillary Clinton, rather than Barack Obama, who had been elected in 2008, I am certain we would now be hearing, in lieu of the birther myths, conspiracy theories about Vince Foster's alleged murder.

The reader may think that I am attributing Svengali-like powers to GOP operatives able to manipulate a zombie base to do their bidding. It is more complicated than that. Historical circumstances produced the raw material: the deindustrialization and financialization of America since about 1970 has spawned an increasingly downscale white middle class - without job security (or even without jobs), with pensions and health benefits evaporating and with their principal asset deflating in the collapse of the housing bubble. Their fears are not imaginary; their standard of living is shrinking.

What do the Democrats offer these people? Essentially nothing. Democratic Leadership Council-style "centrist" Democrats were among the biggest promoters of disastrous trade deals in the 1990s that outsourced jobs abroad: NAFTA, World Trade Organization, permanent most-favored-nation status for China. At the same time, the identity politics/lifestyle wing of the Democratic Party was seen as a too illegal immigrant-friendly by downscaled and outsourced whites.[3]

While Democrats temporized, or even dismissed the fears of the white working class as racist or nativist, Republicans went to work. To be sure, the business wing of the Republican Party consists of the most energetic outsourcers, wage cutters and hirers of sub-minimum wage immigrant labor to be found anywhere on the globe. But the faux-populist wing of the party, knowing the mental compartmentalization that occurs in most low-information voters, played on the fears of that same white working class to focus their anger on scapegoats that do no damage to corporations' bottom lines: instead of raising the minimum wage, let's build a wall on the Southern border (then hire a defense contractor to incompetently manage it). Instead of predatory bankers, it's evil Muslims. Or evil gays. Or evil abortionists.

How do they manage to do this? Because Democrats ceded the field. Above all, they do not understand language. Their initiatives are posed in impenetrable policy-speak: the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The what? - can anyone even remember it? No wonder the pejorative "Obamacare" won out. Contrast that with the Republicans' Patriot Act. You're a patriot, aren't you? Does anyone at the GED level have a clue what a Stimulus Bill is supposed to be? Why didn't the White House call it the Jobs Bill and keep pounding on that theme?

You know that Social Security and Medicare are in jeopardy when even Democrats refer to them as entitlements. "Entitlement" has a negative sound in colloquial English: somebody who is "entitled" selfishly claims something he doesn't really deserve. Why not call them "earned benefits," which is what they are because we all contribute payroll taxes to fund them? That would never occur to the Democrats. Republicans don't make that mistake; they are relentlessly on message: it is never the "estate tax," it is the "death tax." Heaven forbid that the Walton family should give up one penny of its $86-billion fortune. All of that lucre is necessary to ensure that unions be kept out of Wal-Mart, that women employees not be promoted and that politicians be kept on a short leash.

It was not always thus. It would have been hard to find an uneducated farmer during the depression of the 1890s who did not have a very accurate idea about exactly which economic interests were shafting him. An unemployed worker in a breadline in 1932 would have felt little gratitude to the Rockefellers or the Mellons. But that is not the case in the present economic crisis. After a riot of unbridled greed such as the world has not seen since the conquistadors' looting expeditions and after an unprecedented broad and rapid transfer of wealth upward by Wall Street and its corporate satellites, where is the popular anger directed, at least as depicted in the media? At "Washington spending" - which has increased primarily to provide unemployment compensation, food stamps and Medicaid to those economically damaged by the previous decade's corporate saturnalia. Or the popular rage is harmlessly diverted against pseudo-issues: death panels, birtherism, gay marriage, abortion, and so on, none of which stands to dent the corporate bottom line in the slightest.

Thus far, I have concentrated on Republican tactics, rather than Republican beliefs, but the tactics themselves are important indicators of an absolutist, authoritarian mindset that is increasingly hostile to the democratic values of reason, compromise and conciliation. Rather, this mindset seeks polarizing division (Karl Rove has been very explicit that this is his principal campaign strategy), conflict and the crushing of opposition.
As for what they really believe, the Republican Party of 2011 believes in three principal tenets I have laid out below. The rest of their platform one may safely dismiss as window dressing:

1. The GOP cares solely and exclusively about its rich contributors. The party has built a whole catechism on the protection and further enrichment of America's plutocracy. Their caterwauling about deficit and debt is so much eyewash to con the public. Whatever else President Obama has accomplished (and many of his purported accomplishments are highly suspect), his $4-trillion deficit reduction package did perform the useful service of smoking out Republican hypocrisy. The GOP refused, because it could not abide so much as a one-tenth of one percent increase on the tax rates of the Walton family or the Koch brothers, much less a repeal of the carried interest rule that permits billionaire hedge fund managers to pay income tax at a lower effective rate than cops or nurses. Republicans finally settled on a deal that had far less deficit reduction - and even less spending reduction! - than Obama's offer, because of their iron resolution to protect at all costs our society's overclass.

Republicans have attempted to camouflage their amorous solicitude for billionaires with a fog of misleading rhetoric. John Boehner is fond of saying, "we won't raise anyone's taxes," as if the take-home pay of an Olive Garden waitress were inextricably bound up with whether Warren Buffett pays his capital gains as ordinary income or at a lower rate. Another chestnut is that millionaires and billionaires are "job creators." US corporations have just had their most profitable quarters in history; Apple, for one, is sitting on $76 billion in cash, more than the GDP of most countries. So, where are the jobs?

Another smokescreen is the "small business" meme, since standing up for Mom's and Pop's corner store is politically more attractive than to be seen shilling for a megacorporation. Raising taxes on the wealthy will kill small business' ability to hire; that is the GOP dirge every time Bernie Sanders or some Democrat offers an amendment to increase taxes on incomes above $1 million. But the number of small businesses that have a net annual income over a million dollars is de minimis, if not by definition impossible (as they would no longer be small businesses). And as data from the Center for Economic and Policy Research have shown, small businesses account for only 7.2 percent of total US employment, a significantly smaller share of total employment than in most Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries.
Likewise, Republicans have assiduously spread the myth that Americans are conspicuously overtaxed. But compared to other OECD countries, the effective rates of US taxation are among the lowest. In particular, they point to the top corporate income rate of 35 percent as being confiscatory Bolshevism. But again, the effective rate is much lower. Did GE pay 35 percent on 2010 profits of $14 billion? No, it paid zero.
When pressed, Republicans make up misleading statistics to "prove" that the America's fiscal burden is being borne by the rich and the rest of us are just freeloaders who don't appreciate that fact. "Half of Americans don't pay taxes" is a perennial meme. But what they leave out is that that statement refers to federal income taxes. There are millions of people who don't pay income taxes, but do contribute payroll taxes - among the most regressive forms of taxation. But according to GOP fiscal theology, payroll taxes don't count. Somehow, they have convinced themselves that since payroll taxes go into trust funds, they're not real taxes. Likewise, state and local sales taxes apparently don't count, although their effect on a poor person buying necessities like foodstuffs is far more regressive than on a millionaire.

All of these half truths and outright lies have seeped into popular culture via the corporate-owned business press. Just listen to CNBC for a few hours and you will hear most of them in one form or another. More important politically, Republicans' myths about taxation have been internalized by millions of economically downscale "values voters," who may have been attracted to the GOP for other reasons (which I will explain later), but who now accept this misinformation as dogma.

And when misinformation isn't enough to sustain popular support for the GOP's agenda, concealment is needed. One fairly innocuous provision in the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill requires public companies to make a more transparent disclosure of CEO compensation, including bonuses. Note that it would not limit the compensation, only require full disclosure. Republicans are hell-bent on repealing this provision. Of course; it would not serve Wall Street interests if the public took an unhealthy interest in the disparity of their own incomes as against that of a bank CEO. As Spencer Bachus, the Republican chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, says, "In Washington, the view is that the banks are to be regulated and my view is that Washington and the regulators are there to serve the banks."

2. They worship at the altar of Mars.  While the me-too Democrats have set a horrible example of keeping up with the Joneses with respect to waging wars, they can never match GOP stalwarts such as John McCain or Lindsey Graham in their sheer, libidinous enthusiasm for invading other countries. McCain wanted to mix it up with Russia - a nuclear-armed state - during the latter's conflict with Georgia in 2008 (remember? - "we are all Georgians now," a slogan that did not, fortunately, catch on), while Graham has been persistently agitating for attacks on Iran and intervention in Syria. And these are not fringe elements of the party; they are the leading "defense experts," who always get tapped for the Sunday talk shows. About a month before Republicans began holding a gun to the head of the credit markets to get trillions of dollars of cuts, these same Republicans passed a defense appropriations bill that increased spending by $17 billion over the prior year's defense appropriation. To borrow Chris Hedges' formulation, war is the force that gives meaning to their lives.

A cynic might conclude that this militaristic enthusiasm is no more complicated than the fact that Pentagon contractors spread a lot of bribery money around Capitol Hill. That is true, but there is more to it than that. It is not necessarily even the fact that members of Congress feel they are protecting constituents' jobs. The wildly uneven concentration of defense contracts and military bases nationally means that some areas, like Washington, DC, and San Diego, are heavily dependent on Department of Defense (DOD) spending. But there are many more areas of the country whose net balance is negative: the citizenry pays more in taxes to support the Pentagon than it receives back in local contracts.

And the economic justification for Pentagon spending is even more fallacious when one considers that the $700 billion annual DOD budget creates comparatively few jobs. The days of Rosie the Riveter are long gone; most weapons projects now require very little touch labor. Instead, a disproportionate share is siphoned off into high-cost research and development (from which the civilian economy benefits little); exorbitant management expenditures, overhead and out-and-out padding; and, of course, the money that flows back into the coffers of political campaigns. A million dollars appropriated for highway construction would create two to three times as many jobs as a million dollars appropriated for Pentagon weapons procurement, so the jobs argument is ultimately specious.

Take away the cash nexus and there still remains a psychological predisposition toward war and militarism on the part of the GOP. This undoubtedly arises from a neurotic need to demonstrate toughness and dovetails perfectly with the belligerent tough-guy pose one constantly hears on right-wing talk radio. Militarism springs from the same psychological deficit that requires an endless series of enemies, both foreign and domestic.
The results of the last decade of unbridled militarism and the Democrats' cowardly refusal to reverse it[4], have been disastrous both strategically and fiscally. It has made the United States less prosperous, less secure and less free. Unfortunately, the militarism and the promiscuous intervention it gives rise to are only likely to abate when the Treasury is exhausted, just as it happened to the Dutch Republic and the British Empire.

3. Give me that old time religion. Pandering to fundamentalism is a full-time vocation in the GOP. Beginning in the 1970s, religious cranks ceased simply to be a minor public nuisance in this country and grew into the major element of the Republican rank and file. Pat Robertson's strong showing in the 1988 Iowa Caucus signaled the gradual merger of politics and religion in the party. The results are all around us: if the American people poll more like Iranians or Nigerians than Europeans or Canadians on questions of evolution versus creationism, scriptural inerrancy, the existence of angels and demons, and so forth, that result is due to the rise of the religious right, its insertion into the public sphere by the Republican Party and the consequent normalizing of formerly reactionary or quaint beliefs. Also around us is a prevailing anti-intellectualism and hostility to science; it is this group that defines "low-information voter" - or, perhaps, "misinformation voter."
The Constitution to the contrary notwithstanding, there is now a de facto religious test for the presidency: major candidates are encouraged (or coerced) to "share their feelings" about their "faith" in a revelatory speech; or, some televangelist like Rick Warren dragoons the candidates (as he did with Obama and McCain in 2008) to debate the finer points of Christology, with Warren himself, of course, as the arbiter. Politicized religion is also the sheet anchor of the culture wars. But how did the whole toxic stew of GOP beliefs - economic royalism, militarism and culture wars cum fundamentalism - come completely to displace an erstwhile civilized Eisenhower Republicanism?

It is my view that the rise of politicized religious fundamentalism (which is a subset of the decline of rational problem solving in America) may have been the key ingredient of the takeover of the Republican Party. For politicized religion provides a substrate of beliefs that rationalizes - at least in the minds of followers - all three of the GOP's main tenets.

Televangelists have long espoused the health-and-wealth/name-it-and-claim it gospel. If you are wealthy, it is a sign of God's favor. If not, too bad! But don't forget to tithe in any case. This rationale may explain why some economically downscale whites defend the prerogatives of billionaires.
The GOP's fascination with war is also connected with the fundamentalist mindset. The Old Testament abounds in tales of slaughter - God ordering the killing of the Midianite male infants and enslavement of the balance of the population, the divinely-inspired genocide of the Canaanites, the slaying of various miscreants with the jawbone of an ass - and since American religious fundamentalist seem to prefer the Old Testament to the New (particularly that portion of the New Testament known as the Sermon on the Mount), it is but a short step to approving war as a divinely inspired mission. This sort of thinking has led, inexorably, to such phenomena as Jerry Falwell once writing that God is Pro-War.

It is the apocalyptic frame of reference of fundamentalists, their belief in an imminent Armageddon, that psychologically conditions them to steer this country into conflict, not only on foreign fields (some evangelicals thought Saddam was the Antichrist and therefore a suitable target for cruise missiles), but also in the realm of domestic political controversy. It is hardly surprising that the most adamant proponent of the view that there was no debt ceiling problem was Michele Bachmann, the darling of the fundamentalist right. What does it matter, anyway, if the country defaults? - we shall presently abide in the bosom of the Lord.
Some liberal writers have opined that the different socio-economic perspectives separating the "business" wing of the GOP and the religious right make it an unstable coalition that could crack. I am not so sure. There is no fundamental disagreement on which direction the two factions want to take the country, merely how far in that direction they want to take it. The plutocrats would drag us back to the Gilded Age, the theocrats to the Salem witch trials. In any case, those consummate plutocrats, the Koch brothers, are pumping large sums of money into Michele Bachman's presidential campaign, so one ought not make too much of a potential plutocrat-theocrat split.

Thus, the modern GOP; it hardly seems conceivable that a Republican could have written the following:
"Should any political party attempt to abolish social security, unemployment insurance and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history. There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes you can do these things. Among them are H. L. Hunt (you possibly know his background), a few other Texas oil millionaires and an occasional politician or business man from other areas. Their number is negligible and they are stupid." (That was President Eisenhower, writing to his brother Edgar in 1954.)
It is this broad and ever-widening gulf between the traditional Republicanism of an Eisenhower and the quasi-totalitarian cult of a Michele Bachmann that impelled my departure from Capitol Hill. It is not in my pragmatic nature to make a heroic gesture of self-immolation, or to make lurid revelations of personal martyrdom in the manner of David Brock. And I will leave a more detailed dissection of failed Republican economic policies to my fellow apostate Bruce Bartlett.

I left because I was appalled at the headlong rush of Republicans, like Gadarene swine, to embrace policies that are deeply damaging to this country's future; and contemptuous of the feckless, craven incompetence of Democrats in their half-hearted attempts to stop them. And, in truth, I left as an act of rational self-interest. Having gutted private-sector pensions and health benefits as a result of their embrace of outsourcing, union busting and "shareholder value," the GOP now thinks it is only fair that public-sector workers give up their pensions and benefits, too. Hence the intensification of the GOP's decades-long campaign of scorn against government workers. Under the circumstances, it is simply safer to be a current retiree rather than a prospective one.

If you think Paul Ryan and his Ayn Rand-worshipping colleagues aren't after your Social Security and Medicare, I am here to disabuse you of your naiveté.[5] They will move heaven and earth to force through tax cuts that will so starve the government of revenue that they will be "forced" to make "hard choices" - and that doesn't mean repealing those very same tax cuts, it means cutting the benefits for which you worked.
During the week that this piece was written, the debt ceiling fiasco reached its conclusion. The economy was already weak, but the GOP's disgraceful game of chicken roiled the markets even further. Foreigners could hardly believe it: Americans' own crazy political actions were destabilizing the safe-haven status of the dollar. Accordingly, during that same week, over one trillion dollars worth of assets evaporated on financial markets. Russia and China have stepped up their advocating that the dollar be replaced as the global reserve currency - a move as consequential and disastrous for US interests as any that can be imagined.
If Republicans have perfected a new form of politics that is successful electorally at the same time that it unleashes major policy disasters, it means twilight both for the democratic process and America's status as the world's leading power.