Wednesday, October 20, 2010

The GOP's and Tea Party's Embrace of Ignorance

Once being intelligent was something that one would strive for and before making public statements or entering into a debate one would try to read up on the issues. Not anymore in today's GOP and its Tea Party offshoot. Indeed, the dumber and more ignorant one is, the more the GOP base and the disaffected loons in the Tea Party are likely to swear allegiance and give out adulation. This rejection of knowledge and objective facts is indeed frightening, but perhaps not surprising since the GOP has become more and more a sectarian party dominated by conservative Christians, Catholics and Mormons who cling to 12th century knowledge and do everything short of advocating that the world is flat and that the sun orbits the earth. WTF happened to the once intellectual leaning party known for the educated country club Republican? Maureen Dowd has a column in the New York Times that looks at this scary phenomenon which shows no signs of abating. As the rest of the world moves into the 21st century, American seems Hell bent to return to the Middle Ages intellectually. Here are some highlights:
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Palin, has made ignorance fashionable.
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You struggle to name Supreme Court cases, newspapers you read and even founding fathers you admire? No problem. You endorse a candidate for the Pennsylvania Senate seat who is the nominee in West Virginia? Oh, well.
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At least you’re not one of those “spineless” elites with an Ivy League education, like President Obama, who can’t feel anything. It’s news to Christine O’Donnell that the Constitution guarantees separation of church and state. It’s news to Joe Miller, whose guards handcuffed a journalist, and to Carl Paladino, who threatened The New York Post’s Fred Dicker, that the First Amendment exists, even in Tea Party Land. Michele Bachmann calls Smoot-Hawley Hoot-Smalley.
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Sharron Angle sank to new lows of obliviousness when she told a classroom of Hispanic kids in Las Vegas: “Some of you look a little more Asian to me.”
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On Saturday, at a G.O.P. rally in Anaheim, Calif., Palin mockingly noted that you won’t find her invoking Mao or Saul Alinsky. She says she believes in American exceptionalism. But when it comes to the people running the country, exceptionalism is suspect; leaders should be — as Palin, O’Donnell and Angle keep saying — just like you.
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In Marilyn[Monroe]'s America, there were aspirations. The studios tackled literary novels rather than one-liners like “He’s Just Not That Into You” and navel-gazing drivel like “Eat Pray Love.” Walt Disney’s “Fantasia” paired cartoon characters with famous composers. Even Bugs Bunny did Wagner.
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But in Sarah’s America, we’ve refudiated all that.

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