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I haven't waxed politic in a long time, but I needed to say this.
There's various reasons for what happened Tuesday night. Voters, especially "minorities" (I hate using that word nowadays, since no race is in the majority anymore) showed up to vote in record numbers, for the 2nd presidential race in a row. The right-wing pundits could only stare in shock (and in many cases, have nothing short of apoplectic fits) as everything they thought they knew about the election crumbled to dust. Even electoral-vote.com, which amalgamted numerous polls to predict the race, and were right on the dot in 2008, underestimated Obama's margin of victory by 29 electoral votes (they called FL for Romney on Monday).
So how did this amazing victory for the Democrats happen?
1) Mitt Romney was the face of evil. I don't mean just personally, I mean across the majority of the country. He was the smirking bastard who fired you, instead of Obama's inspiring pep-talking coach. As far as the public was concerned, both candidates weren't really running so much on their performance over the last few years, as they were running on their first impressions. It was really 2008 Obama (with more "balls" to fight back, as it were) vs. 1990s Romney for most people. No contest.
2) The right-wing media honestly thought they had a chance. No, they honestly thought they'd have a LANDSLIDE! With all the poll data, it seems strange to think they'd think that, but in reality, they were kept in a bubble created by their own kind. They only paid attention to sources like Fox News, Rasmussen, UnskewedPolls.com (which is SO mistakenly named it's ridiculous), Conservative Talk Radio, Dick Morris, Donald Trump…and even those sources were only getting their news from each other! They said the "mainstream" polls were "skewed" Democrat (despite being correct almost 100% of the time in the past, and actually, they likely UNDERsampled Democrats this year). The right-winged media was sealed tighter than a Scientologist's home from outside information. This is why they panicked so hard this year, unlike any reaction we ever saw from them in 1992, 1996, 2006 (when Dems took both houses for 4 years), or 2008. The numbers Obama got for electoral vote, they had predicted for Romney. Basically, there was reality, and then there was right-winged media.
3) And this goes back to (1): Because Romney was so perceived as he was, people came out from the left in record numbers to vote. That effect was even seen here right in the apartment I live in (which was a polling place). Tak and I noticed numerous people-- some who came as immigrants, some who had lived here from the start and gone without voting their entire lives-- come out to vote for the first time simply because ROMNEY NEEDED TO BE STOPPED! However, the perception of "big money" Romney was only part of the issue, as yes, the Republicans have an image problem of not caring about the "lower" clases of people, and that leads to…
4) The Republicans' BIG problem. It's not their money. It's not their success. It's not even really their conservativism per se. It's their officially-sanctioned BIGOTRY. Deep-seated, brain-piercing, dyed-in-the-wool party BIGOTRY! The Republicans' official party platform states that being gay (like me) shouldn't be a protected class like race and shouldn't be allowed to marry. The Republicans' official party platform says no to all abortion, but then also says no to any form of birth control, because they think sex should only be for procreation. The Republicans' official party platform then also proceeds to say they're for smaller government. Sorry, telling me who I should love, telling me who I should marry, telling me when I should have sex and for why… that's not smaller government. It's not even *really* conservative. Not really. conservativism is leaving well enough alone: If it ain't broke, don't fix it. conservativism is only allocating those resources that are fundamentally needed. Granted, I do have issues with the way some of that is applied (like privatizing medical care, police, fire, etc), but that's still what *true* conservativism is. Allocating resources toward making sure people don't do actions that don't affect anyone else negatively (like all the money spent on MN's "Vote YES" campaign) is NOT conservative.
Their bigotry was most defined by yesterday's Rush Limbaugh show. In one segment, he lamented that ethnic voters didn't like the ethnic politicians on the Republican ticket. He basically ranted in this segment, talking about Condi Rice, and Mia Love, and Suzanne Martinez, and Marco Rubio. All I got from Rush's rant is that he was basically saying "we have minorities now! Why don't you love us?" The fact that he actually thought the mere presence of ethnic people on the ticket would make that demographic love the Republicans shows just how out of touch he, and by likely extension the Republican Party itself, are. That's a stark example of the deep-rooted bigotry that will continue to plague the Republicans for years to come.
The kind of neo-"conservativism" the Republicans currently represent is in actuality religious in nature. They don't like gays because their religion thinks it's icky. They don't like pre-marital sex because they think it's a sin. In fact, the official Republican party platform also says… they want to enshrine "Christian values" into law.
In this country, religion is supposed to stay out of politics by Constitutional edict. Religious statements shouldn't be in *any* party platform in this country, and that's where the bigotry comes from. And because among most Republicans, their faith is everything to them, it's not likely to change anytime soon. As time passes, and the Internet makes communication with many different types of people easier, this bigotry will fade more among the populace, and the number of people that support the current Republican platform will dwindle more and more with each passing year. It's simply social physics, and there is no stopping it short of a global EMP to kill the Internet.
You want to vote conservative? Vote Libertarian. Seriously. Conservativism in and of itself isn't necessarily a bad thing. Liberalism in and of itself isn't always a good thing either (see the recent fiasco surrounding Buckyballs for an example of hyper-liberalism), and it's the Libertarians who are only as far right as the Democrats are left. The actual polar opposite of the current Republican party right now… is the Green Party.
So how can the Republicans keep from fading into eventual obscurity? They have to let go of religion. Full stop. They have to take it out of their party platforms, and everything that stems from that. Stop hating on gays. Stop hating on sex. Stop trying to ban abortion. Stop hating on drugs. Rush Limbaugh was wondering also on yesterday's show if the Republican Party needs to just accept these and change their stance. My reply in a word: YES! They've done it before on other issues in the last 150+ years, and it needs to be done again.
Basically, Republicans need to TRULY start being conservative. Yes, they'd lose the Tea Party base, but they NEED to right now. In return, they'd gain the Libertarians, and then maybe we can REALLY start getting some reform done.
Okay, I think this rant is over.
There's various reasons for what happened Tuesday night. Voters, especially "minorities" (I hate using that word nowadays, since no race is in the majority anymore) showed up to vote in record numbers, for the 2nd presidential race in a row. The right-wing pundits could only stare in shock (and in many cases, have nothing short of apoplectic fits) as everything they thought they knew about the election crumbled to dust. Even electoral-vote.com, which amalgamted numerous polls to predict the race, and were right on the dot in 2008, underestimated Obama's margin of victory by 29 electoral votes (they called FL for Romney on Monday).
So how did this amazing victory for the Democrats happen?
1) Mitt Romney was the face of evil. I don't mean just personally, I mean across the majority of the country. He was the smirking bastard who fired you, instead of Obama's inspiring pep-talking coach. As far as the public was concerned, both candidates weren't really running so much on their performance over the last few years, as they were running on their first impressions. It was really 2008 Obama (with more "balls" to fight back, as it were) vs. 1990s Romney for most people. No contest.
2) The right-wing media honestly thought they had a chance. No, they honestly thought they'd have a LANDSLIDE! With all the poll data, it seems strange to think they'd think that, but in reality, they were kept in a bubble created by their own kind. They only paid attention to sources like Fox News, Rasmussen, UnskewedPolls.com (which is SO mistakenly named it's ridiculous), Conservative Talk Radio, Dick Morris, Donald Trump…and even those sources were only getting their news from each other! They said the "mainstream" polls were "skewed" Democrat (despite being correct almost 100% of the time in the past, and actually, they likely UNDERsampled Democrats this year). The right-winged media was sealed tighter than a Scientologist's home from outside information. This is why they panicked so hard this year, unlike any reaction we ever saw from them in 1992, 1996, 2006 (when Dems took both houses for 4 years), or 2008. The numbers Obama got for electoral vote, they had predicted for Romney. Basically, there was reality, and then there was right-winged media.
3) And this goes back to (1): Because Romney was so perceived as he was, people came out from the left in record numbers to vote. That effect was even seen here right in the apartment I live in (which was a polling place). Tak and I noticed numerous people-- some who came as immigrants, some who had lived here from the start and gone without voting their entire lives-- come out to vote for the first time simply because ROMNEY NEEDED TO BE STOPPED! However, the perception of "big money" Romney was only part of the issue, as yes, the Republicans have an image problem of not caring about the "lower" clases of people, and that leads to…
4) The Republicans' BIG problem. It's not their money. It's not their success. It's not even really their conservativism per se. It's their officially-sanctioned BIGOTRY. Deep-seated, brain-piercing, dyed-in-the-wool party BIGOTRY! The Republicans' official party platform states that being gay (like me) shouldn't be a protected class like race and shouldn't be allowed to marry. The Republicans' official party platform says no to all abortion, but then also says no to any form of birth control, because they think sex should only be for procreation. The Republicans' official party platform then also proceeds to say they're for smaller government. Sorry, telling me who I should love, telling me who I should marry, telling me when I should have sex and for why… that's not smaller government. It's not even *really* conservative. Not really. conservativism is leaving well enough alone: If it ain't broke, don't fix it. conservativism is only allocating those resources that are fundamentally needed. Granted, I do have issues with the way some of that is applied (like privatizing medical care, police, fire, etc), but that's still what *true* conservativism is. Allocating resources toward making sure people don't do actions that don't affect anyone else negatively (like all the money spent on MN's "Vote YES" campaign) is NOT conservative.
Their bigotry was most defined by yesterday's Rush Limbaugh show. In one segment, he lamented that ethnic voters didn't like the ethnic politicians on the Republican ticket. He basically ranted in this segment, talking about Condi Rice, and Mia Love, and Suzanne Martinez, and Marco Rubio. All I got from Rush's rant is that he was basically saying "we have minorities now! Why don't you love us?" The fact that he actually thought the mere presence of ethnic people on the ticket would make that demographic love the Republicans shows just how out of touch he, and by likely extension the Republican Party itself, are. That's a stark example of the deep-rooted bigotry that will continue to plague the Republicans for years to come.
The kind of neo-"conservativism" the Republicans currently represent is in actuality religious in nature. They don't like gays because their religion thinks it's icky. They don't like pre-marital sex because they think it's a sin. In fact, the official Republican party platform also says… they want to enshrine "Christian values" into law.
In this country, religion is supposed to stay out of politics by Constitutional edict. Religious statements shouldn't be in *any* party platform in this country, and that's where the bigotry comes from. And because among most Republicans, their faith is everything to them, it's not likely to change anytime soon. As time passes, and the Internet makes communication with many different types of people easier, this bigotry will fade more among the populace, and the number of people that support the current Republican platform will dwindle more and more with each passing year. It's simply social physics, and there is no stopping it short of a global EMP to kill the Internet.
You want to vote conservative? Vote Libertarian. Seriously. Conservativism in and of itself isn't necessarily a bad thing. Liberalism in and of itself isn't always a good thing either (see the recent fiasco surrounding Buckyballs for an example of hyper-liberalism), and it's the Libertarians who are only as far right as the Democrats are left. The actual polar opposite of the current Republican party right now… is the Green Party.
So how can the Republicans keep from fading into eventual obscurity? They have to let go of religion. Full stop. They have to take it out of their party platforms, and everything that stems from that. Stop hating on gays. Stop hating on sex. Stop trying to ban abortion. Stop hating on drugs. Rush Limbaugh was wondering also on yesterday's show if the Republican Party needs to just accept these and change their stance. My reply in a word: YES! They've done it before on other issues in the last 150+ years, and it needs to be done again.
Basically, Republicans need to TRULY start being conservative. Yes, they'd lose the Tea Party base, but they NEED to right now. In return, they'd gain the Libertarians, and then maybe we can REALLY start getting some reform done.
Okay, I think this rant is over.
Re: Long time no rant!
Date: 2012-11-09 10:37 pm (UTC)