Difference between revisions of "User:Woozle/Why Republicans Suck/intro"
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It is by this irresponsible and underhanded ethos -- victory at any cost, we're always right -- that Republicanism has not only thrived but remade much of American culture in its own image: violent, hateful, narrow-minded, dishonest, ignorant, superstitious, paranoid, blindly loyal to the undeserving and trusting of the untrustworthy. Put more simply: it has made us stupid. | It is by this irresponsible and underhanded ethos -- victory at any cost, we're always right -- that Republicanism has not only thrived but remade much of American culture in its own image: violent, hateful, narrow-minded, dishonest, ignorant, superstitious, paranoid, blindly loyal to the undeserving and trusting of the untrustworthy. Put more simply: it has made us stupid. | ||
− | Or, rather, it has made ''you'' stupid. Yes, you out there -- railing about how terrible Donald Trump is while preparing to vote for Ted Cruz over Hillary Clinton in November. Cruz's policies are, on the whole, no better than those proposed by Trump; the only difference is that Cruz is constrained by the needs of the Party establishment, and will backtrack when he accidentally carries Party beliefs to their logical conclusions in public. Trump ''is'' that logical conclusion; he is everything the Party wants to say but is afraid to; he is everything that right-wing voters have come to believe because Republicans told them to believe it. | + | Or, rather, it has made ''you'' stupid. Yes, you out there -- railing about how terrible Donald Trump is while preparing to vote for Ted Cruz over Hillary Clinton in November. Cruz's policies are, on the whole, no better than those proposed by Trump; the only difference is that Cruz is constrained by the needs of the Party establishment, and will backtrack when he accidentally carries Party beliefs to their logical conclusions in public. Trump ''is'' that logical conclusion; he is everything the Party wants to say but is afraid to; he is everything that right-wing voters have come to believe because Republicans told them to believe it. Listen to Cruz's dad sometime if you don't believe me. |
− | + | What this really comes down to, though, is that the Republican base represents people who ''don't care enough about the facts to bother checking them.'' They'll blindly go along with whatever false beliefs their trusted leaders present to them -- and savagely defend those beliefs against any evidence they encounter, no matter how compelling. | |
+ | |||
+ | This is not a noble thing, but they seem to think it is. The Republican idea of "how we decide which things are true and which things are false" is basically 100% inverted from the scientific method: instead of collecting evidence, making guesses, and testing those guesses against reality to see if they hold up, Republicans take the truth they are handed and look for evidence to prop it up -- and the only reason they bother looking for evidence is with the hope of convincing us heathens that there is something to their beliefs; they'd be just as happy closing their eyes and ears and just Believing. | ||
+ | |||
+ | This is an absolutely terrible way to attempt to understand the universe. It's the opposite of what works. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Given the numerous Republican attempts to keep others from voting, then, I think it's only fair to break with liberal policy on this one issue and say the following: | ||
+ | |||
+ | If you can't be bothered to check the facts your leaders are giving you -- if you can't be bothered to research the issues you're voting on, to understand what the other side is arguing and why -- then just stay home on voting day, okay? If you're the sort of person who prefers to let others make the decisions, then let others do the voting too. | ||
==Footnotes== | ==Footnotes== | ||
<references /> | <references /> |
Revision as of 01:07, 26 March 2016
At the risk of restating the obvious, the US Republican Party has become a den of thieves, liars, and posers -- that is, far more so than the average political party (by which of course I mean the Democrats). This is a fact that is acknowledged pretty much universally by anyone who isn't a Republican.
If you are a Republican, you may not care what I think since I'm not a Republican and therefore not to be trusted or taken seriously -- which only proves one of my points: Republicans think they're in the right, regardless of any criticism or evidence. Anyone who criticizes you is therefore the enemy, and not to be trusted. As George W. Bush famously said: you're either with us, or you're against us; either you're with those who "love freedom", or you're with "the enemy".[1]
I find it simply unbelievable that anyone could think this is acceptable behavior.
It's not what America was ever about, it's not what civilization is about. It's what destroys civilizations. It is exactly what "the terrorists" want: a black and white world where everyone believes that our in-group is Right and everyone else is Wrong and evil and we'd be doing the world a favor if we just nuked 'em.[2]
In other words: Republicanism is what the terrorists want.[3] When Donald Trump says we should kill the families of known terrorists, he's following their playbook to the letter. When Republican leaders talk about nuking countries we dislike, they're doing the same way: using the threat to advance their own agenda, then using their agenda to advance the threat.
...which is how the Republican Party makes its living, in a nutshell: create a threat, campaign on promises to defend against it; when elected, go out and attack something not necessarily related to the threat (which may have been imaginary to begin with), and act all shocked when they retaliate or protest -- a new Threat to America! We're saved I mean how terrible, and we must bomb, torture, imprison, or harass more people to show them we really mean business!
Republican Politics
Plenty has been written about the correlation between Republicanism and authoritarianism; I'm going to take a different (though compatible) tack, and put it in less technical terms based on my own observations.
Republicans don't see politics the way rational people do.
Rational people living in a free society see politics as the process of arriving at policies that work as well as possible for the most people. We may have disagreements about the best policies, but they're based on honest beliefs about what the evidence indicates. The discussion is about sharing evidence to minimize disagreement, and working out compromises until we arrive at a position that most participants agree is at least acceptable.
Republicans, however, see politics as being more like an Olympic gladiatorial mud-slinging contest where the key criterion for a good leader is that they defeat the other candidates, by any means necessary -- not that they have the first clue about running a government.
In Republican politics there's absolutely nothing wrong with lying to the public, even if it causes harm to your constituents (present or future). All that matters is whether it will help advance your (and by extension the Party's) position and whether you can get away with it. Having won, the winner will naturally be the candidate best qualified for the job -- never mind that the contest filters for qualities almost completely unrelated to job performance.[4]
Likewise, a bribe is a calculated risk -- there is no social stigma attached to it, within the Party. (It's only those damn liberals who are so high-and-mighty about it. What's wrong with trying to make a little profit?) If you get caught, you may have to drop out of sight for a little while until Republican voters forget what you did; you can then be dusted off and presented as a tested-and-worthy Party loyalist.
To a Republican, positions of power are rewards to be given out for loyalty -- not important work to be done by those best capable of using it, and certainly not implying any kind of responsibility or duty to those underneath or to those supposedly being served.
It is by this irresponsible and underhanded ethos -- victory at any cost, we're always right -- that Republicanism has not only thrived but remade much of American culture in its own image: violent, hateful, narrow-minded, dishonest, ignorant, superstitious, paranoid, blindly loyal to the undeserving and trusting of the untrustworthy. Put more simply: it has made us stupid.
Or, rather, it has made you stupid. Yes, you out there -- railing about how terrible Donald Trump is while preparing to vote for Ted Cruz over Hillary Clinton in November. Cruz's policies are, on the whole, no better than those proposed by Trump; the only difference is that Cruz is constrained by the needs of the Party establishment, and will backtrack when he accidentally carries Party beliefs to their logical conclusions in public. Trump is that logical conclusion; he is everything the Party wants to say but is afraid to; he is everything that right-wing voters have come to believe because Republicans told them to believe it. Listen to Cruz's dad sometime if you don't believe me.
What this really comes down to, though, is that the Republican base represents people who don't care enough about the facts to bother checking them. They'll blindly go along with whatever false beliefs their trusted leaders present to them -- and savagely defend those beliefs against any evidence they encounter, no matter how compelling.
This is not a noble thing, but they seem to think it is. The Republican idea of "how we decide which things are true and which things are false" is basically 100% inverted from the scientific method: instead of collecting evidence, making guesses, and testing those guesses against reality to see if they hold up, Republicans take the truth they are handed and look for evidence to prop it up -- and the only reason they bother looking for evidence is with the hope of convincing us heathens that there is something to their beliefs; they'd be just as happy closing their eyes and ears and just Believing.
This is an absolutely terrible way to attempt to understand the universe. It's the opposite of what works.
Given the numerous Republican attempts to keep others from voting, then, I think it's only fair to break with liberal policy on this one issue and say the following:
If you can't be bothered to check the facts your leaders are giving you -- if you can't be bothered to research the issues you're voting on, to understand what the other side is arguing and why -- then just stay home on voting day, okay? If you're the sort of person who prefers to let others make the decisions, then let others do the voting too.
Footnotes
- ↑ Never mind that his idea of "loving freedom" seemed to involve hoarding it. I'll touch only lightly on Bush's awfulness; I'd have to write another book to explore the subject even a little bit thoroughly.
- ↑ It says as much in the ISIS training manual: they're trying to create a black-and-white world where everyone not actively fighting against their cause is aligned with it.
- ↑ Not that I think we should care all that much about what the terrorists think; they're just part of the dark pantheon of overrated, created, or invented bogeyman threats that Republicans need to have around in order to be seen defending us from something -- but y'all seem to be scared of them, so....
- ↑ This is an example of another common Republican belief: the "just world" fallacy, where virtue is dependably rewarded and lack of reward is a reliable signal of non-virtue. We'll discuss this more later.