Posted on 12/23/2014 6:22:03 PM PST by COBOL2Java
BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: I've been thinking about how this has happened. The fact that the Republican leadership is throwing in with the Democrat leadership on amnesty and Obamacare and take your pick of issues. And, you know, you and I, folks, have discussed and theorized for a long time, and it has become obvious -- and we've talked about this -- that the GOP agrees with Obama on amnesty because they, too, see a pool of potential new voters.
And they also think that they've got a supporter for the Hispanic vote. You know the drill. But it turns out that they also do not oppose Obamacare when it gets down to talking about repealing it. They really don't want to repeal any of Obamacare. So we have to assume they either don't want to do it, don't want the fight, or actually don't have a problem with it.
We had a chance here to take control of government spending with the omnibus versus continuing resolution for a couple of weeks. They chose to go big and just have all kinds of wacko, crazy spending, and there's no difference between them and the Democrats on that. But I've always thought that it goes deeper than the Republicans agreeing with the Democrats on a few issues. I think that what's happened -- and it goes right back to the article we made famous here on this program by Angelo Codevilla in the American Spectator called The Ruling Class.
It is apparent now that there is, overall, a Washington establishment, not just a Democrat establishment, not just a Republican establishment, there is a Washington establishment. Call it the ruling class if you want, and it's made up of people of both parties, and it is devoted to big government. It's devoted to big government because they all want the power of running it and controlling it. Republicans and Democrats alike. Not everyone. I'm talking about leadership now.
So there's an aphrodisiac about the power of spending all that money and what that can mean to you and the power of doling that money out and running the government. And therefore, anything that comes along that threatens big government, they are united in opposition to, such as the Tea Party, or just average, ordinary American citizens who want to streamline government, reduce its size, limit it, get it out of people's lives. They become the enemy of this Washington establishment.
John O'Sullivan, as I quoted last week, said any organization that is not actively conservative will, over time, become liberal. Liberalism is easy. Liberalism is gutless. But conservatism is a daily adherence. It's a daily application. And so what we have now, the Republican majority is actually a very happy Bob Michel type minority. They are the majority in the House and Senate with a minority frame of mind brought about by the media and the Washington culture.
But I think there's something else. A friend of mine gave me his analogy, and it makes some sense if you compare the Republican, the Beltway GOP with the State Department. Now, the State Department, there are plenty of good people there; but they're not there, they're in the field offices and various places. Your average State Department person is not as bad as, say, the average anti-American UN or euro socialist bureaucrat. But the people that run the UN and some of the people at the State Department, it's not that they are committed anti-Americans. A better way to describe them would be post-American.
They think that they have evolved beyond these trite notions of patriotism and American exceptionalism. That's quaint, and that's old-fashioned, that's really schoolboy, schoolgirl stuff. You know, patriotism, that's beneath these people. And American exceptionalism, that's 200 years ago. That's not today. We are much more progressive than that, these people say to themselves, and we are citizens of the world. And they think that the Constitution is a relic of a time that was unsophisticated, not very advanced, and they don't think they've got anything in common with the people who founded America, wrote the Constitution, or any of the founding documents.
Instead, they are transgressive, if you will, transnational progressives. They deal on a daily basis with these small-minded Americans who have these quaint old-fashioned notions of exceptionalism and patriotism. And they're embarrassed about it. This guy sees the Republican establishment the same way. They're post-conservative; they are embarrassed by conservatives; they are much more invested in Washington than they are in representative government, and they have much more common ground with progressive Democrats than they do with us, because we are hicks and hayseeds, and we're quaint pro-lifers and American exceptionalism.
It's almost a class thing where they're just so superior to us. We're kooks, you know, and we rally around all these old-fashioned, quaint notions, and they're no longer realistic and so forth. And they suffer us sometimes not gladly. I have to take a break, but I thought it was an interesting characterization to go along with the things that we also think are true about it.
END TRANSCRIPT
Huh? So El rushbo is coming to the conclusion that there is only one party, the uniparty? And only after its painfully obvious to everyone else in the country, he has a remarkable epiphany.
Things must really be hurting in political waterboy business.
DC is about M_O_N_E_Y. Period.
“Huh? So El rushbo is coming to the conclusion that there is only one party, the uniparty? And only after its painfully obvious to everyone else in the country, he has a remarkable epiphany.”
It’s been interesting to watch his evolution. Up until Bush, he was mostly a conservative R. But he supported R’s pretty much across the board in a party kind of way.
Toward the end of the first W administration, he started to shift. And now he’s full-tilt TEA party.
Harry Reid will continue to run the Senate. He just won’t get the “credit.”
They are following the Pelosi strategy of 2007 and 2008 : Leave the limelight(blame) on GWB. Don’t draw too much attention to her party.
It worked great for her, will see how well it goes for the GOP.
Change is coming or the GOP will go the way of the Whigs and the Federalists. Maybe it is time for a USIP or a Liberty Party after all. Real change is needed—the swamp must be cleaned out. Just wait until the conditions change and America has her back to the wall-—a cabal of enemies and few allies. Will Americans fight for liberty? If they lose their Internet? If the enemy offers free Cellphones? Free Drugs? How many would rush to join their ranks?
“And now hes full-tilt TEA party.”
Well not completely. Rush still repeats the GOPe talking points about how we somehow just can’t round up the foreign nationals squatting illegally in the USA and deport them back to their own countries. It’s too cruel on the scofflaw illegals if we enforce the law.
At least it’s apparently too hard for the sissified ‘conservative’ poseurs he likes to hang out with. They still have their hearts set on replacing the native American population with a new, more compliant one from the third world.
They’ve done it to California, now it’s the turn for the rest of the country.
Simply amazing!
I work at home; thus, I'm able to listen to Rush's program just about every day. And, yet, somehow, I've never heard him say what you claim -- except when he's quoting the GOP-e position. And taking issue with it...
My radio must not be equipped with the secret code, because it's not hearing what you're hearing.
Change is indeed coming, but I strongly doubt it will come from the realm of partisan politics. The uniparty has a lock on that. More likely it’ll be folks working outside and going around the partisan political system.
“My radio must not be equipped with the secret code, because it’s not hearing what you’re hearing.”
My, my, aren’t you clever. But sadly, your radio needs it’s hearing checked.
Rush has repeated the “no one is suggesting that we deport millions of illegal aliens” mantra many times, including in recent weeks. And he was endorsing that position, not refuting it as a GOPe talking point.
That you have managed to miss him say it doesn’t change the fact that he has been saying exactly that, your fantasy regarding his position notwithstanding.
There's not a person I know that wants to deport, try to round up 15 or 20 million people and send 'em packing. It isn't practical. It isn't going to happen. What everybody wants is the border secured with active limits on the amount of immigration so that the flow is two things: economically acceptable and productive, and that something that used to happen automatically begins to happen again; that's assimilation.
http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2014/12/16/conservatives_don_t_hate_immigrants
Even when it wins elections, the GOP is always a minority of a minority.
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