Posts Tagged ‘Sarah Palin’

Even Conservatives Don’t Like Tea Parties

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Jonathan Kay visited the Tea Party convention and came away impressed in a bad way. Read his “Black Helicopters Over Nashville:

I consider myself a conservative and arrived at this conference as a paid-up, rank-and-file attendee, not one of the bemused New York Times types with a media pass. But I also happen to be writing a book for HarperCollins that focuses on 9/11 conspiracy theories, so I have a pretty good idea where the various screws and nuts can be found in the great toolbox of American political life.

Within a few hours in Nashville, I could tell that what I was hearing wasn’t just random rhetorical mortar fire being launched at Obama and his political allies: the salvos followed the established script of New World Order conspiracy theories, which have suffused the dubious right-wing fringes of American politics since the days of the John Birch Society.

It is quite a cast of characters:

This world view’s modern-day prophets include Texas radio host Alex Jones, whose documentary, The Obama Deception, claims Obama’s candidacy was a plot by the leaders of the New World Order to “con the Amercan people into accepting global slavery”; Christian evangelist Pat Robertson; and the rightward strain of the aforementioned “9/11 Truth” movement. According to this dark vision, America’s 21st-century traumas signal the coming of a great political cataclysm, in which a false prophet such as Barack Obama will upend American sovereignty and render the country into a godless, one-world socialist dictatorship run by the United Nations from its offices in Manhattan.

Sure enough, in Nashville, Judge Roy Moore warned, among other things, of “a U.N. guard stationed in every house.” On the conference floor, it was taken for granted that Obama was seeking to destroy America’s place in the world and sell Israel out to the Arabs for some undefined nefarious purpose…

A software engineer from Clearwater, Fla., told me that Washington, D.C., liberals had engineered the financial crash so they could destroy the value of the U.S. dollar, pay off America’s debts with worthless paper, and then create a new currency called the Amero that would be used in a newly created “North American Currency Union” with Canada and Mexico. I rolled my eyes at this one-off kook. But then, hours later, the conference organizers showed a movie to the meeting hall, Generation Zero, whose thesis was only slightly less bizarre: that the financial meltdown was the handiwork of superannuated flower children seeking to destroy capitalism.

And then, of course, there is the double-whopper of all anti-Obama conspiracy theories, the “birther” claim that America’s president might actually be an illegal alien who’s constitutionally ineligible to occupy the White House. This point was made by birther extraordinaire and Christian warrior Joseph Farah, who told the crowd the circumstances of Obama’s birth were more mysterious than those of Jesus Christ…

Of course the main stream media was on the job, refusing to cover the real story:

Perhaps the most distressing part of all is that few media observers bothered to catalog these bizarre, conspiracist outbursts, and instead fixated on Sarah Palin’s Saturday night keynote address. It is as if, in the current overheated political atmosphere, we all simply have come to expect that radicalized conservatives will behave like unhinged paranoiacs when they collect in the same room…That doesn’t say much for the state of the right in America. The tea partiers’ tricornered hat is supposed to be a symbol of patriotism and constitutional first principles. But when you take a closer look, all you find is a helmet made of tin foil.

They are kooks but it would be a mistake to dismiss their influence. They were close to power just a few years ago and may well get there again.

She’s Back

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Since Sarah Palin is back in the news, it’s worth revisiting some golden oldies from last year.

Juan Cole shows how closely the beliefs of Sarah Palin resemble those of fundamentalist Islam.

On censorship, the teaching of creationism in schools, reproductive rights, attributing government policy to God’s will and climate change, Palin agrees with Hamas and Saudi Arabia rather than supporting tolerance and democratic precepts. What is the difference between Palin and a Muslim fundamentalist? Lipstick. 

McCain pledged to work for peace based on “the transformative ideals on which we were founded.” Tolerance and democracy require freedom of speech and the press, but while mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, Palin inquired of the local librarian how to go about banning books that some of her constituents thought contained inappropriate language. She tried to fire the librarian for defying her. Book banning is common to fundamentalisms around the world, and the mind-set Palin displayed did not differ from that of the Hamas minister of education in the Palestinian government who banned a book of Palestinian folk tales for its sexually explicit language.

Read the whole article.

And here is a wonderful review of Sarah Palin’s “book”:

Now we are faced with the daunting task of wrapping our minds around the Palin memoir Going Rogue, appearing atop a bestseller list near you. Millions of copies will be sold of a book written by someone who can’t write, intended for an audience that doesn’t read, about the thoughts of a person who doesn’t think. God is dead.

She is fun and she is scary.

Right-wing Tactics Boost the Importance of Health Care Reform

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

The lies continue to tumble from the mouth of Sarah Palin:

“The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down Syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama’s “death panel” so his bureaucrats can decide, based on a subjective judgment of their “level of productivity in society,” whether they are worthy of health care.”

This is utter bullshit that has nothing to do with any proposal that has ever been before Congress or discussed by legislators. It is just one example of the misinformation generated daily by conservatives who have vowed to defeat Obama’s health reform efforts. This misinformation combined with the thug-like tactics of demonstrators who disrupt townhall meetings to prevent accurate information form being disseminated show that conservatives have no intention of helping to solve our health care deficiencies.

And no congressperson of any ideology has any reason to be swayed by these tactics. As Neil Sinhababu wrote over the weekend:

When some of your constituents furiously oppose legislation mainly on the basis of total confusion about what’s in it, you have no obligation to represent their preferences in your vote. […] Neither is there any hope for a Democrat to get the mob’s votes by voting the way they want. These are the most extreme people in the Republican Party, and there’s no way to be a Democrat and get their votes. They’re the people who work to boot moderate Republicans out of the party in primaries.

We send people to Congress to vote according to their best judgment about what is good for their constituents, not to simply reflect the opinions of an ill-informed mob.

Conservative tactics have ratcheted up the stakes of health care reform. With regard to most issues taken up by Congress, a defeat of a major bill means that its proponents have to improve the bill or wait for political conditions to change in order to improve its chances. But no improvements in the bill will satisfy the radical right, and I doubt that political conditions will improve if they demonstrate that through sheer deception and force a minority of loudmouths can defeat reform that everyone, including conservatives, agrees we need.

If health care reform is defeated or weakened sufficiently to be ineffective, it will show in fact that this country is ungovernable.

It is not just Obama’s agenda that is at stake; it is our democracy.