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The GOP's scramble for the stupid vote
The Week ^ | February 20, 2015 | Damon Linker, Sr. correspondent and consulting editor at the University of Pennsylvania Press

Posted on 02/20/2015 4:31:44 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Dinesh D’Souza is no one’s idea of a thoughtful participant in the nation’s public conversation. Still, his tweet on Wednesday morning may have set a new low for the right-wing rabble-rouser. Commenting on a widely circulated image of President Obama taking a picture of himself with selfie stick, D’Souza tweeted the following message: “YOU CAN TAKE THE BOY OUT OF THE GHETTO... Watch this vulgar man show his stuff, while America cowers in embarrassment.”

The tweet has created quite a stir, especially among people who think it demonstrates D’Souza’s racism. But I think it reveals something that might actually be worse: his willingness to pander shamelessly to racists in order to increase his own power and influence.

And really, isn’t that what’s most outrageous about the contemporary Republican Party — how ready and even eager it is to go slumming for support in the fever swamps of white cultural resentment?

Yes, even worse than its lamentable enthusiasm for prostrating itself before the super-rich. For one thing, while money can certainly influence the outcome of an election, it’s unclear how much or in what way. Just ask the notorious Koch brothers, who spent over $400 million during the last presidential election cycle with decidedly mixed results. Then there’s the fact that the Democrats have their own super-rich donors, showing that money doesn’t directly translate into a fixed ideological agenda. This is true even among the most reliably Republican donors, whose policy commitments can be as unpredictable as anyone’s.

Far greater civic damage is done by the GOP pandering to (and flattering the prejudices of) right-wing cultural populists.

It all began with Barry Goldwater’s 1964 bid to catapult himself into the White House on the backs of states-rights segregationists and Orange County conservatives. Goldwater lost in a landslide, but 16 years later Ronald Reagan succeeded with a similar strategy, combining culturally alienated Southern white voters with disaffected blue-collar northern Democrats to form a winning electoral coalition for the Republican Party.

As the size of that coalition has slowly shrunk over the intervening decades — due to a mixture of demographic attrition and changes in the ideological configuration of the Democratic Party since the early 1990s — the GOP has had to work ever-harder to motivate the coalition’s remaining members to show up at the polls on Election Day. And that has turned the Republican primaries into contests over who can pander to them the most egregiously.

That’s what’s inspired such sparkling policy gems as Mitt Romney’s proposal that undocumented workers “self-deport” and Herman Cain’s 9-9-9 tax cut gimmick. It’s also given us Sen. Ted Cruz — a politician whose every word and action seems driven by the singular desire to transform himself into an archetype of the median Fox News viewer.

And then there’s Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who’s already in the lead to win this election cycle’s award for Achievements in Pandering.

Exhibit A is a form of groveling that these days just about every Republican engages in when asked if he or she accepts the truth of Darwinian evolution. Walker played this sorry game on his recent trip to London, when the question was posed to him by a reporter and he chose to “punt.”

When members of the right-wing media dismiss such questions as exercises in confirming that conservatives belong to a different cultural “tribe” than liberals, they have a point. A president’s views on evolutionary biology are in almost all imaginable circumstances irrelevant to his job, and most liberals who scoff at Republican expressions of evolutionary agnosticism probably know no more about biological science than their ideological opponents.

Yet there is still something more than a little pathetic about the abject refusal of Republican candidates for high office to defend the reigning scientific consensus on the matter, at the risk of offending the most stridently fundamentalist Christians. Why not be similarly non-committal about whether the sun orbits the Earth or vice versa? Just because these believers have arbitrarily decided that it’s acceptable to defer to scientists on one issue but not the other?

A politician less terrified of antagonizing scientifically illiterate voters might respond to a question about evolution like this: “Yes, I believe life evolved on Earth, not because I’m a scientist but precisely because I’m not. Scientists study these questions, they revise their views in light of new evidence, all the evidence gathered today points toward evolution, and that’s good enough for me. As a Christian, I have faith that God played a role in evolution that we can’t fully grasp through science, but that doesn’t mean the science is wrong.”

A statement like that would take the faith of religious voters seriously while not pretending that ignorance is acceptable or treating it as something positively admirable. But of course it might also alienate a few Know Nothings, and that’s apparently not something Walker is willing to risk doing.

He is not only unwilling to risk offending fundamentalists, but also seems actively committed to wooing people who think that what America really needs in 2015 is to stick it to university professors.

That’s Exhibit B: Walker’s effort to cut $300 million from the budget for the University of Wisconsin system — coincidentally at the precise moment he’s gearing up to compete in the notoriously far-right GOP Iowa caucuses.

I have no idea if Walker actually believes professors are parasites on the Wisconsin state budget — or if he’s merely ingratiating himself to those who do. What matters is that in taking this stance he’s allied himself with the forces in American society that consider Advanced Placement history courses to be a problem rather than a plus, and who know so little about university life that they actually think professors are coddled wards of the state instead of richly educated researchers and teachers who work endless hours for modest pay and (thanks in part to slanderous statements by public figures like Scott Walker) precious little social esteem.

Is this really what America needs now — a scramble to nail down the stupid vote? That is the spectacle the Republican Party seems once again poised to provide.

Add it to the list of reasons I won’t be voting for the GOP anytime soon.


TOPICS: Campaign News; Issues; Parties; State and Local
KEYWORDS: academia; evolution; scottwalker; tedcruz
If the average college professor is anything like the examples we see in the news every day, then this guy probably smokes more dope than the Colorado state Hacky Sack champion.
1 posted on 02/20/2015 4:31:44 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The democrap party has already nailed the stupid vote.


2 posted on 02/20/2015 4:38:21 AM PST by bravo whiskey (we shouldn't fear the government. the government should fear us.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet; All

“The GOP’s scramble for the stupid vote”

Hummm, compared to the LIBERAL’s scramble for the lazy, low information, drugged, drunk, and ignorant vote...ok, so be it.


3 posted on 02/20/2015 4:57:05 AM PST by areukiddingme1 (areukiddingme1 is a synonym for a Retired U.S. Navy Chief Petty Officer and tired of liberal BS.))
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I see Demon works all the Democrat talking hate points into his screed. No original thought to be had. As for the “stupid vote”, we know which party has the lock on the low info members of the erectorate (sic).


4 posted on 02/20/2015 4:59:45 AM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Linker is a homosexual and atheist. What else would you expect. He screeches about the Koch brothers without mentioning Soros. He is your typical leftist who pretends to be impartial. The worst of the worst.


5 posted on 02/20/2015 5:02:33 AM PST by Flavious_Maximus
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
I have no idea if Walker actually believes professors are parasites on the Wisconsin state budget — or if he’s merely ingratiating himself to those who do. What matters is that in taking this stance he’s allied himself with the forces in American society that consider Advanced Placement history courses to be a problem rather than a plus, and who know so little about university life that they actually think professors are coddled wards of the state instead of richly educated researchers and teachers who work endless hours for modest pay and (thanks in part to slanderous statements by public figures like Scott Walker) precious little social esteem.

Yep that’s me.

Actually very few undergraduate courses are taught by professors. Most are taught by grad students that are part time and paid slave wages.

Most tenured professors teach one or two post grad classes per term.

And the real waste in the college budget is the political indoctrination courses designed to turn out Leftist political activist like women’s studies and ethnic studies.

Then there are things like rock climbing walls and other purely recreational add ons that having nothing what so ever to do with education. State colleges have expanded way beyond providing useful education at the expense of tax payers.

Their budgets should be cut to bring them back to reality. Ivy League universities should not get a penny of government money. They should be ivory towers of socialism on their own dime.

6 posted on 02/20/2015 5:03:59 AM PST by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.)
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To: fieldmarshaldj

“I see Demon works all the Democrat talking hate points into his screed. No original thought to be had.”

Isn’t that most remarkable thing? Somehow you can have supposedly highly educated “folks” echoing exactly the same opinions as feral ghetto “folks”. I just find that strange. You would not find such “folks” sharing the same opinion about literally any other topic you can name.

I guess it’s the same phenomenon that makes Hillary talk in Southern drawl when she campaigns in the South.


7 posted on 02/20/2015 5:04:04 AM PST by Attention Surplus Disorder (At no time was the Obama administration aware of what the Obama administration was doing)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

This is exactly the narritive we are going to hear over, and over, and over, and over again - that conservatives are racist (thanks a lot Dinesh!), that Republicans feed at the trough of superrich (the GOPe certainly has done so), and out of cowardice or stupidity can’t answer a simple question about creation (well done Walker!).

More than ever we need a candidate who can stand up and articulately (and unapologetically) can defend conservative principles.


8 posted on 02/20/2015 5:04:48 AM PST by Menthops (If you are reading this..... the GOPe hates you!)
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To: fieldmarshaldj

I realize that articles like this are posted to let us read what the other side is saying but from now on I refuse to read any more of their garbage. All I needed to do was read the first sentence and I was finished. I see no redeeming value in poisoning my brain. Liberalism is, indeed, a mental disorder and I do not need to read articles written by those afflicted...


9 posted on 02/20/2015 5:08:49 AM PST by Russ (Repeal the '17th amendment.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

From the party that is always trying to win votes among the felon and welfare-recipient blocs, both known for their high IQs.


10 posted on 02/20/2015 5:12:48 AM PST by denydenydeny ("World History is not full of good governments, or of good voters either "--P.J. O'Rourke)
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To: Pontiac

Yes, I was looking at pictures of modern dorms and comparing them to the Quonset huts and other barracks from my Army days. They looked like the Ritz Carleton in comparison.


11 posted on 02/20/2015 5:12:50 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

After the first sentence, I knew that an as* wrote it. A typical liberal hit piece.


12 posted on 02/20/2015 5:16:10 AM PST by ExCTCitizen (I'm ExCTCitizen and I approve this reply. If it does offend Libs, I'm NOT sorry...)
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To: Russ

I don’t really read it word for word, I just look for the key “talking point” phrases. Koch Brothers, racist, homophobic, rich, et al. That so-called “educated” individuals write like this is shameful. It’s its own form of virulent racist hate that only the left can produce, an “intellectual” attempt to dehumanize its opponents.


13 posted on 02/20/2015 5:21:51 AM PST by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Every vote counts the same, stupid or college-educated. What’s wrong with appealing to the electorate?


14 posted on 02/20/2015 5:49:41 AM PST by Lisbon1940
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To: bravo whiskey

Yup. Can’t beat Free Sh*t for locking up the Stupid Vote.


15 posted on 02/20/2015 6:18:22 AM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: Lisbon1940

“—stupid or college-educated.”

I take offense to this remark, as written a person is either stupid or college educated, with no other possibilities in between.

Did you obtain your arrogance and ignorance in college or come by it naturally?


16 posted on 02/20/2015 6:36:15 AM PST by redfreedom (All it takes for evil to win is for good people to do nothing - that's how the left took over.)
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To: redfreedom

You’re right. Intelligence and college education are not correlated. However, there are stupid people and it is perfectly legitimate to appeal for their votes.


17 posted on 02/20/2015 6:42:48 AM PST by Lisbon1940
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Where was the barf alert? (Or is The Week one of those publications for which that's supposed to be redundant? I'm not familiar with it, so an alert would have helped.)

And no, not all Penn professors are like this. Alan Kors is a Professor of History there, and a physics professor went with me and my best friend in grad school to help disrupt (by being politely obstinate in our critiques of the whole enterprise) one of the early (mid-1980's) "racism awareness workshops" Penn's Office of Student Life held.

18 posted on 02/20/2015 7:32:55 AM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

He’s brainwashed. It’s either drugs or re-education programs at Universities.

It’s always funny when progressives, probably the most stupid people in the nation (see Obamacare, stimulus, race hate and bait, dealing with Islamists and foreign relations, in general), write about stupid people.


19 posted on 02/20/2015 8:13:38 AM PST by SaraJohnson
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