A good friend asked me a question regarding near-term Republican
election outcomes in light of the current government shutdown. I responded to him, and that is reproduced here, with very little editing, except for improved clarity.
Bear in mind that my response is colored by being very angry
with both parties, just more so the
Republicans in recent years.
Myself, I am a die-hard
independent, so do NOT try to stereotype
me politically!
My friend’s question (unedited):
“Do you think that the GOP will lose about 90% of their
seats after this?”
My response (edits-for-clarity in red):
I wish, but I don't
think so. There are too many ignoramuses
around us who have been brainwashed into believing all the lying
propaganda. Classic Nazi and Bolshevik
"big lie" technique. Weak
minds and all that.
What's really going on is that our two-party system has been
transformed into a two-and-a-half party system.
Those so-called "tea party" idiots are an extremist sub-set of
the GOP who could not possibly get the votes to pass any of their agenda. They are a very loud but rather small
minority, and they know it.
Over the last several years,
they've effectively purged many non-tea-party GOP members from the
party, until they are somewhere close to
half its membership. Once they (the tea party extremists) comprised about half of the
surviving GOP, they could effectively
blackmail the non-tea-party types into voting their way, by mounting primary challenges when they (the non-tea party GOP) didn't vote for the tea party extremist agenda.
Blackmail and extortion are crimes, by the way,
in all other walks of life,
except apparently not in politics.
Maybe they should be.
So, with control of
the House after that massive propaganda campaign leading up to the 2010
election, they (the
tea party extremists) can now force the
entire GOP membership of the House to vote in a way that tries to extort the
Senate into passing the tea party agenda,
by threatening either government shutdowns or defaults on government
debt.
The lesson of the 2012 election is completely meaningless to
them (the tea party extremists), because they
now have a tool by which to extort their way.
Ted Cruz is the leading tea party candidate for 2016 now, but he's a fake, just playing the photo ops to get well-known
nationally.
Cruz is not there to do the people's business at all, he just wants to run for President. That's deliberate, intentional dereliction of duty, and I think that is a crime, too. Or it ought to be.
Considering that the Constitution mandates that Congress (House and Senate together) fund the government and
pay its bills, as part of their assigned
duties, it seems to me that threatening
not to do its duty is a Constitutional crime being committed by the tea
party-controlled portion of Congress.
And they didn't invent it.
Back in 1996, Newt Gingrich and
his "radical Republicans" invented using extortion in Congress, with that government shutdown back then.
Leading that extortion back then is why I have never liked Newt
Gingrich, then or ever since.
This tactic (a minority extorting
its way) is a crime against the people.
I'd just as soon see Obama send in the federal marshals and
arrest the perpetrators of this travesty,
on charges of wantonly and deliberately failing to do their
Constitutionally-mandated duties. I
might include the rest of the GOP for caving-in, and not resisting this evil. And I’m really that
angry about it.
Any time party agenda trumps the national interest, we have the wrong people in office. Period.
Applies to both parties, but of late the GOP is primarily the
culprit, and very egregiously so.
My grandfather told me back in 1965
before he died that the tools for good government are tar, feathers,
guns, and ropes. He said that in his younger days, folks still used them, and they had fairly good government. He also said that in my dad's younger days, we let the judges and lawyers talk us out of
using those tools. And now look what we
have! (Really
bad government.)
Maybe that (not using the tools for
good government) ought to change,
too.
Guess why there's such a push for gun control? We gotta have 'em, in order to successfully use the tar, the feathers,
and the ropes! That push for gun control is what I despise most about the Democrats.
They're (politicians of all types
and parties) still at least a little afraid of us, even after over
half a century of no one policing their behavior. They need to be very substantially afraid of
us, of what we would do to them, if they don't do the people's business
properly. And we
need to do it to them, too. Make a public example of one, and the rest fall into line, for a while.
These "town hall meetings" that a few reps still
hold are nowhere near as confrontational as they should be. The rest of the reps are
afraid to hold them. Have you noticed
that?
My friend responded thusly (spelling corrected):
“Obama should sign an E.O. stopping all congressional pay
and benefits also.”
My sentiment:
Well, that would be a
start, but nowhere near an adequate
response.
Wake up, folks! This crap has to stop!
GW
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