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Double-Minded Republicans
National Review ^ | 9/8/2012 | Andrew C. McCarthy

Posted on 09/08/2012 9:03:35 AM PDT by Servant of the Cross

They won’t get very far with “We’re not as bad as they say we are.”

After a first term that has been historically abysmal, President Obama stands a good chance of being reelected. How can that be?

Here is the blunt explanation: We have lost a third of the country and, as if that weren’t bad enough, Republicans act as if it were two-thirds.

The lost third cannot be recovered overnight. For now, it is gone. You cannot cede the campus and the culture to the progressive, post-American Left for two generations and expect a different outcome. So even if Obama is the second coming of Jimmy Carter — and he has actually been much more effective, and therefore much worse — it is unreasonable to expect a Reagan-style landslide, and would be even if we had Reagan. The people coming of age in our country today have been reared very differently from those who were just beginning to take the wheel in the early 1980s. They have marinated in an unapologetically progressive system that prizes group discipline and narrative over free will and critical thought.

The narratives are not always easy to follow. In the progressive weltanschauung, good and evil are relative. Good is whatever it is said to be in the moment; don’t ask anyone to explain why “choice” is a value when it involves killing the unborn, though it is seen as an obvious nuisance when it involves the right to choose the double cheeseburger over the salad. Evil is contextualized and root-caused into vaporous abstraction. We no longer know whether it’s wrong — only that, whoever may have done it, it’s our fault.

Yet, even with good and evil enveloped in fog, progressive narratives remain sharply Manichaean: You can always tell the heroes from the villains. Obama is a hero because he cares. Conservatives are villains because they don’t. And Republicans are villains because they are conservative.

None of these statements is true, of course. Obama cares about Obama, which is hardly heroic. Conservatives are repulsed by government intrusions into the private sphere because we believe private citizens are better than government’s social engineers at promoting prosperity for everyone. And today’s Republican party is not very conservative: At a time when the welfare state is — inevitably — collapsing of its own weight, Romney and Ryan run as its guardians. They’ve come to praise Caesar, not to bury him.

Still, the truth is increasingly irrelevant. Contemporary American politics is about emotion and perception. And this is a game Republicans will never win — and not, as they would have you believe, because the deck is stacked against them.

Certainly, the media, the academy, and most of our society’s major institutions are heavily influenced by progressives, if not outright controlled by them. It is therefore a given that elite opinion will portray Republicans as villains. Yet, that longstanding challenge for Republicans has never before been an insuperable one. In America, at least until now, the avant-garde has never been able to tame the public. It has always been possible to run against elite opinion and win — if you make a compelling counter-case.

Today’s Republicans do not. Indeed, they cannot, because they have accepted the progressive framework. Their argument is not that the welfare state, deficit spending, federalized education, sharia-democracy promotion, and the rest are bad policies. Their argument is not that Washington needs to be dramatically downsized. It is that progressive governance is fine but needs to be better executed.

Ain’t that something to rally around! The counter-case is supposed to demonstrate why the other guys are deeply wrong. You’re not going to get very far with “We’re not as bad as they say we are.”

It is hard to complain about Obama’s $5 trillion in new debt when you added $5 trillion just before he did. “Well, we took eight years and he took only four” is not exactly a response that stirs the soul — particularly when the country took two centuries to amass the first $5 trillion.

Then there’s Medicare, which the GOP has made a pivotal election issue. The problem with Medicare is not just that its current formula is unsustainable, or that Obama diverted a staggering amount of projected future spending on it into yet another bank-breaking entitlement. It is that the national government is innately incapable of running an entitlement program. Is the election about the side that grasps this versus the side for which enough is never enough? Surely you jest.

As constituted, our government offered two visions of “providing for the general welfare.” First is the Madisonian principle that Congress’s capacity to tax and spend is strictly limited to its enumerated powers — which do not include running social-welfare programs. The second is a Hamiltonian gloss, giving Congress additional latitude, provided that its schemes benefit all Americans equally — which would preclude welfare programs that take from A for the benefit of B.

Once you abandon these moorings, once you accept a wealth-redistribution system in which government becomes the arbiter of “social justice,” the ball game is over. If government is given license to even the scales between the have-nots and the haves, the political incentive to even them will be constant and overpowering: Enough will never be enough. If the rationale for giving government this power is that the asset in question is corporate property, not private, what is to be the limiting principle? Why health care but not housing or income? And when it comes to providing for the truly needy among 310 million people, central-government planners will simply never be as good at it as decent societies and their local governments. And so the allocation of burdens and benefits in federal entitlement programs are guaranteed to be warped, wasteful, and ultimately unsustainable.

Yet, no political party is making that case. Both candidates want you to know they are sentries of the safety net. And no major conservative journal or think tank, it seems, would have it any other way. Concededly, the GOP’s approach, “Let’s work within this implausible system and do the best we can to patch it up . . . someday,” is a more attractive position than Obama’s “Let’s break the bank now.” But inspiring? . . . Not exactly.

The third of the country we’ve lost may seem like a decided minority. Progressives do not need more than that, though, to run the show, not today. They proved that at their own convention this week, with the laughable platform-amendment episode.

The smarter Alinskyites among them realized that taking God and Jerusalem out of the platform was a blunder, so they ordered them put back in. Under the rules (ahem), that required a two-thirds’ vote of the delegates. When the vote was publicly taken, it became embarrassingly clear not only that there were not two-thirds in favor but that the “nays” may have had a majority. But the minority “ayes” are in power, and that’s all they needed. They peremptorily deemed themselves the victors. The amendments passed, and, after some brief groaning, the rest of the Left got with the program.

It was as rigged a vote as you’d find in any banana republic. But Democrats are unembarrassed — maybe even unembarrassable. It’s like the Obamacare debate in Congress: They’re not worried about what it looks like; they’re worried about winning.

Today’s Republicans are worried about what it looks like. Winning is secondary. What matters most is that they not appear too mean on a stage they’ve allowed their bare-knuckles opponents to set. Their consultants tell them: “It’s not what you stand for; it’s how you get to 50 percent plus one. So soften your edges, drop the philosophy crap, and if you need to show the media some backbone, find a conservative to bash.”

There is a big conservative base out there — bigger than the third of the country we’ve lost. But they’re left to scratch their heads and say, “I’m supporting this guy . . . why?” The response comes a little less quickly after each fit of pique: “Oh, right, because he’s not Obama.”

That’s a lot, but will it be enough?

Obama’s base, that lost third of the country, may not be as enthralled as they were in 2008. But they are committed, utterly convinced about who the villains are, and are prepared to be as chameleon as it takes to reel in, from the culture they dominate, the additional 15 percent or so needed to push their guy across the finish line. That’s how what should be a landslide for his opponent becomes a squeaker.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: doubleminded; mccarthy; republicans
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To: WOSG

Well, I would argue the problem is not a 4 year problem, but a problem that goes all the way back to the 1930s when the welfare state was created.

The problem is not entirely Obama, but American liberalism, in general.

And the welfare state is not just limited to cash payments to the poor, but extends to every area of life, which includes Food Stamps, the entitlement programs, corporate subsidies and bail-outs, agricultural subsidies, etc.

These problems existed before Obama and they will exist after Obama.


21 posted on 09/08/2012 10:15:33 AM PDT by radpolis (Liberals: You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy)
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To: sand88
a push to remove Boehner and McConnell from leadership positions

Get back to on how well that works out.

A GOP-E sweep will entrench the liberals in the GOP. Boehner is there until the GOP loses the House, and Mitt will run unopposed in 2016. It's their table, their rules, their comittees. Conservatives can pound sand.

/johnny

22 posted on 09/08/2012 10:16:09 AM PDT by JRandomFreeper (Gone Galt)
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To: ansel12

I am on Medicare and Social Security. I would vote in a heartbeat to eliminate both and every other government intervention in Health, Insurance, Education, Transportation and a lot of Etc. Are there a hundred of us in the country? Fifty?


23 posted on 09/08/2012 10:18:05 AM PDT by arthurus (Read Hazlitt's Economics In One Lesson)
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To: arthurus

I think your first paragraph is an accurate description of the problem we face, but I honestly don’t understand the second paragraph.


24 posted on 09/08/2012 10:19:25 AM PDT by radpolis (Liberals: You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy)
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To: Servant of the Cross

A good analysis. The economy is heading towards a cliff and Americans are still clamoring for more free stuff. Obama is scaring people into believing that Romney is going to deny them their free stuff and Romney is busy denying that he is going to deny them their free stuff.
.
Meanwhile, that cliff . . .


25 posted on 09/08/2012 10:32:54 AM PDT by Jeff Chandler (Whatever a homosexual union might be or represent, it is not physically marital. - F.Cardinal George)
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To: arthurus

I don’t know what medicare is, but I wouldn’t vote to SUDDENLY end SS for any reason, I would vote for reform, or for a reasonable way to eventually eliminate it, in fact, that does help guide my voting.

To say that a person should pay into SS for 50 years and then at age 65, when they are old and worn out, that they must refuse their SS to be principled, is ridiculous.

If one is wealthy they can indulge whatever whim they want, but it would be irrational for none wealthy and poor conservatives to make that the routine conservative protest for their last years.

I’m against the pay and retirement structure of the military, I am a vet, but I don’t expect vets and active duty to martyr themselves in a weird, pathetic gesture that doesn’t even make sense.


26 posted on 09/08/2012 10:38:18 AM PDT by ansel12 ( Aug. 27, 2012-Mitt Romney said his views on abortion are more lenient than the Republican Platform)
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To: hosepipe
We have TWO DEMOCRAT PARTIES..

The JFK Democrats vs. the European Social Democrats. Been that way since Bush 41.

27 posted on 09/08/2012 11:01:00 AM PDT by Mr. Jeeves (CTRL-GALT-DELETE)
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To: arthurus

Eact is that the government already the money, taken from many different people, and is doling it out as it sees fit. We have been content to let it make those decisions.


28 posted on 09/08/2012 11:58:47 AM PDT by RobbyS (Christus rex.)
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To: Servant of the Cross

You are right. We can only hope that enough voters will support the standard bearers. But like McCarthy, I don’t them to do much more than try to bale the water out of the boat.


29 posted on 09/08/2012 12:01:35 PM PDT by RobbyS (Christus rex.)
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To: Servant of the Cross
Obama’s base, that lost third of the country, may not be as enthralled as they were in 2008. But they are committed, utterly convinced about who the villains are, and are prepared to be as chameleon as it takes to reel in, from the culture they dominate, the additional 15 percent or so needed to push their guy across the finish line. That’s how what should be a landslide for his opponent becomes a squeaker.

Don't believe the polls. There are plenty of reasons to think that they don't reflect reality. The first is that opposing Obama can be considered racist.

Obama has unmasked the rats as a radical left party. It's the one thing we can thank Obama for this unmasking. Think of all the groups that have been offended either culturally or economically.

30 posted on 09/08/2012 12:19:30 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: JRandomFreeper

But at least the Demsocialists will not be allowed to quickly end the republic and appoint SCOTUS libs . Mitt is not great shakes but he wants free enterprise to succeed and he will not appoint Ayers’ type jurists. There is a difference. The PUbs must win if only to stop the complete destruction of America in 4 years. Conservs have infiltrated much of the Pubs and will be a tempering group. There is none of that with a leftist Dem win. None.


31 posted on 09/08/2012 5:27:25 PM PDT by phillyfanatic
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To: phillyfanatic
Have you seen the justices appointed by the GOP presidents? Or Romney's judicial picks?

You are much more optimistic than I am on that score.

/johnny

32 posted on 09/08/2012 5:31:50 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (Gone Galt)
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To: radpolis

Teddy Roosevelt, the Progressive in Republican Clothing, started the welfare state in America. He gave us imperialism, nascent environmentalism and the “Square Deal”. He was a political invention, just like Obama.


33 posted on 09/08/2012 5:33:56 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: ansel12
I stand by what I said. Get rid of all of it at once. My total income including SS is barely. I have enough savings to live minimally for a year, maybe. It is far better to get rid of it all. Myself, well I will have a very hard time for a time but the economy would pick up so damned fast with that weight (and entitlements of all sorts) gone and 90% of the business regulations gone and the government ruled insurance gone that all of us would be better off in a year than we could be any other way short of finding a pots gold in our back yards. Medicine would be affordable on one's income when one is not and has not been paying hordes of bureaucrats' livings both private and government (not to mention all the requried ER freebies for illegals and welfare colds and sniffles.

And besides, we have no right to that SS money or that Medicare/caid insurance. The USSC has said so. The government can take it all away when it chooses to and at some point it will choose to. Better now rather than later with no plan, just bankruptcy.

34 posted on 09/08/2012 8:48:08 PM PDT by arthurus (Read Hazlitt's Economics In One Lesson)
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To: radpolis

The second paragraph is what must happen when the American Empire finally collapses. As the American State ceases to function, the Moslems will do to this civilization what they did to the Roman civilization- end it and convert the world’s arable land to semiarid sheep pasture that will support a small fraction of the present population.


35 posted on 09/08/2012 8:51:23 PM PDT by arthurus (Read Hazlitt's Economics In One Lesson)
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To: arthurus

You can’t do it suddenly.

You can’t just stop the sole income for people who can no longer work and who are isolated and without friends and family at age 70 or 80 or whatever the situation, you cannot make someone pay and plan for 50 years, and then suddenly say psych! and walk away with their money.

You have to make a workable plan for the transition, and then sell it politically.


36 posted on 09/08/2012 8:56:54 PM PDT by ansel12 ( Aug. 27, 2012-Mitt Romney said his views on abortion are more lenient than the Republican Platform)
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To: ansel12
Paul Ryan agrees with you. Paul Ryan — when you include Social Security — Paul Ryan has to go to those people, I think, quickly, and convince them, ‘Look, I’m not trying to end the things you need. I am trying to save the things you need.’ The Democrats are going to say that he’s shark. He has to say that he’s the lifeboat.”

Paul Ryan's plan leaves in place the SS benefits to current retirees. It has to.

37 posted on 09/09/2012 6:51:55 AM PDT by Servant of the Cross (the Truth will set you free)
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To: JRandomFreeper
Romney Sends Clear Signal with Bork-Led Legal Team.
38 posted on 09/09/2012 6:57:00 AM PDT by Servant of the Cross (the Truth will set you free)
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To: ansel12

Actually, yes, you can. Except in the hard core ghettos and the hard core monolithic liberal neighborhoods the people themselves will keep things going for those destitute. That is what churches once did and still do and will do more and a myriad of ad hoc associations will spring up to do the same, after, of course the first shock of the rioting etc.


39 posted on 09/09/2012 11:28:28 AM PDT by arthurus (Read Hazlitt's Economics In One Lesson)
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To: arthurus

I’m not going to waste time with this fantasy stuff.


40 posted on 09/09/2012 3:56:48 PM PDT by ansel12 ( Aug. 27, 2012-Mitt Romney said his views on abortion are more lenient than the Republican Platform)
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