Sunday, October 26, 2008

McCain, Macaca and Hope for America

Like many others, I have been increasingly appalled by the racism and anti-immigrant mind set which increasingly defines the Republican Party and the McCain/Palin Ticket. Palin's cries stirring up hatred at campaign rallies are disgusting and her endorsement of more anti-gay measures is merely icing on the cake. I sincerely hope that the American public will resoundingly reject this hate based vision of America. Frank Rich's column takes a look at this phenomenon and the way the GOP's intolerant message will hopeful backfire on November 4th. While Rich does not make the tie, what is of note is that the main players in formulating and furthering the GOP's toxic measure are the self-styled, falsely pious members of the Christian Right. Here are some highlights:
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IT seems like a century ago now, but it was only in 2005 that a National Journal poll of Beltway insiders predicted that George Allen, then a popular Virginia senator, would be the next G.O.P. nominee for president. George who? Allen is now remembered, if at all, as a punch line. But any post-mortem of the Great Republican Collapse of 2008 must circle back to the not-so-funny thing that happened on his way to the White House.
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Cut to 2008. You’d think that this incident would be a cautionary tale, but the McCain campaign instead embraced Allen as a role model, with Palin’s odes to “real” and “pro-America” America leading the charge. The farcical apotheosis of this strategy arrived last weekend, again on camera and again in Virginia, when a McCain adviser, Nancy Pfotenhauer, revived Allen’s original script, literally, during an interview on MSNBC. After dismissing the Northern Virginia suburbs, she asserted that the “real Virginia” — the part of the state “more Southern in nature” — will prove “very responsive” to the McCain message. All Pfotenhauer left out was “macaca.
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There are at least two larger national lessons to be learned from what is likely to be the last gasp of Allen-McCain-Palin politics in 2008. The first, and easy one, is that Republican leaders have no idea what “real America” is. In the eight years since the first Bush-Cheney convention pledged inclusiveness and showcased Colin Powell as its opening-night speaker, the G.O.P. has terminally alienated black Americans (Powell himself now included), immigrant Americans (including the Hispanics who once gave Bush-Cheney as much as 44 percent of their votes) and the extended families of gay Americans (Palin has now revived a constitutional crusade against same-sex marriage). Subtract all those players from the actual America, and you don’t have enough of a bench to field a junior varsity volleyball team, let alone a serious campaign for the Electoral College.
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But the other, less noticed lesson of the year has to do with the white people the McCain campaign has been pandering to. As we saw first in the Democratic primary results and see now in the widespread revulsion at the McCain-Palin tactics, white Americans are not remotely the bigots the G.O.P. would have us believe. Just because a campaign trades in racism doesn’t mean that the country is racist. It’s past time to come to the unfairly maligned white America’s defense.
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[D]espite the months-long drumbeat of punditry to the contrary, there are not and have never been enough racists in 2008 to flip this election. In the latest New York Times/CBS News and Pew national polls, Obama is now pulling even with McCain among white men, a feat accomplished by no Democratic presidential candidate in three decades, Bill Clinton included. The latest Wall Street Journal/NBC News survey finds age doing more damage to McCain than race to Obama.
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[The] conservative warriors of the Allen-McCain-Palin ilk . . . . see all Americans as only white or black, as either us or them. The dirty little secret of such divisive politicians has always been that their rage toward the Others is exceeded only by their cynical conviction that Real Americans are a benighted bunch of easily manipulated bigots. This seems to be the election year when voters in most of our myriad Americas are figuring that out.

1 comment:

Indigo said...

Indigo Incarnates

Y'know... you'd think McCain would have figured this out when the campaigns of Huckabee and Romney went down in flames when they tried to sell hate and fear to the voters.

So, McCain gets Palin. She starts trying to sell hate and fear to the voters. Mysteriously, a previously unknown candidate (Obama) is now beating a much more experienced foe (McCain). Go figure!

I really hope McCain/Palin fail miserable on November 4th.