Tuesday, July 02, 2019

Last Chance To Beat Tyranny-- And About A Third Of The Country Is On Tyranny's Side-- Just Like In The Revolutionary War

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On Sunday, Robert Reich’s column in The Guardian emphasized that we— the U.S, the world— need urgent action to defeat the would-be tyrant, but wonders of the Democrats are up to the task. He asks his readers to imagine an opposition political party in a land being taken over by an oligarchy, headed by a would-be tyrant. The tyrant and the oligarchy have convinced many voters the reason they feel powerless and economically insecure isn’t because the oligarchy has taken most of the economic gains and overwhelmed the government with its money. It’s because the country has been taken over by undocumented migrants, Latinos, African Americans and a ‘deep state’ of coastal liberals, intelligence agencies and mainstream media.”

He doesn’t refer to these voters as morons but does call the propaganda they’re buying into as “rubbish” and makes the excuse that the tyrant “is masterful at telling big lies and he is backed by the oligarchy’s money.”
Imagine further that the opposition party will soon face another election in which it could possibly depose the tyrant and overcome the oligarchy. But at the rate they are consolidating power— over the courts, politics and the media— this could be the opposition’s last chance.

What would it do?

Would it allow virtually anyone to seek to be the party’s candidate for president (and gain valuable brand recognition along the way), including spiritual gurus, one-issue entrepreneurs and minor elected officials who have never even run for state office?

I doubt it. The party would establish criteria to filter out those who had no real chance.

Would it let almost every one of them go on television to debate one other, thereby placing a premium on one-line zingers, fast talk and rapid-fire putdowns? Would it assign them randomly to one of two nights, so several candidates with the most support would not even get to debate one other?

Of course not. Instead, it would take the half-dozen who had the best chance and structure the debates so they could demonstrate their understanding of the issues and the forcefulness of their ideas in lengthy back-and-forth exchanges.

Would it encourage them to split the party over policy issues that almost no one understands, such as the meaning of “Medicare for all,” thereby causing some voters to become alarmed about a government takeover of the healthcare system and others to worry the government won’t go far enough?

No. It would encourage the candidates to emphasize the larger goal, in this case to provide health insurance to everyone, and have them explain that a so-called “public option” to buy into Medicare would eventually displace for-profit private insurers anyway, because it would be so much cheaper.

Would it let any of this deflect attention from the tyrant keeping children in cages at the border, coddling foreign dictators and inviting them to help him in the next election, shattering alliances with other democracies, using his office to make money for himself and his family, lying non-stop, subsidizing fossil fuels and downplaying climate change, claiming the media is guilty of treason, and undermining other democratic institutions and norms?

Of course not. Although it would want its candidates to float some ambitious and sensible proposals that would get people hopeful about the future, it would also want them to keep attention on what the tyrant was doing and the dangers he posed.

Finally, given the extraordinarily high stakes in the upcoming election, would it decide on its candidate in much the same way it has done in the recent past— solely on the basis of who can attract the most primary voters and caucus attenders?

No. It would have its eye on the general election. It would be thinking strategically about how to attract voters in places the tyrant won in the last election but could swing back. In America, that would be Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona and North Carolina.

This doesn’t mean it would support a “moderate” or “centrist” candidate. These terms mean little in a land succumbing to tyranny and oligarchy.

It would do best with a candidate able to create a multiracial coalition to fight the tyrant and his oligarchy— a coalition combining poor, working class and middle class whites, blacks and Latinos.

It would need a candidate who could explain how the tyrant uses racism and xenophobia to divide and conquer, turning the majority against each other. A candidate who could help people understand that a necessary part of fighting tyranny is fighting racism, and a requisite for fighting inequality is reversing climate change. A candidate who could unite the country around an agenda of robust democracy and shared prosperity.

This may sound fanciful but the challenge is real and the Democratic party must meet it over the next 17 months.

What may be fanciful is that today’s Democratic party has the power to select its candidate in the ways I’ve suggested.

Yet the stakes in the 2020 election are larger than any election in living memory. The Democrats’ selection of a candidate therefore is no ordinary thing. In a very real sense, the fates of America and the world depend on it.

The question is whether the Democratic party is up to the task.

And we won the Revolutionary War... probably a harder, move dangerous and more arduous task. Right? (I'm not sure.)




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2 Comments:

At 1:58 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Yet the stakes in the 2020 election are larger than any election in living memory."

I thought '16 was the largest in living memory. And that was after 2008 was the largest.

This piece suggests that the democrap party is or should be actively deciding, AGAINST THE WILL OF THE VOTERS, who their nom should be.

I guess OUR tyranny is ok while THEIR tyranny is not?

I also guess it makes the title of this blog, what... ironic?

It also sheepdogs the dumbest electorate in the history of earth to just go along, do what the PARTY wishes, and all will be fixed?
Yeah. they're that stupid. But their party is that tyrannical too. not that it matters.

We're here today because the democraps are worthless, feckless cowards. They are what this piece suggests they are -- tyrants... or would-be tyrants should they entice a larg enough number of non-Nazi flora to get off their asses and vote... for the guy (or possibly gal) they rig the process for. They are ALSO inept stupid and paralyzed by fear. capitalize the inept.

If you want to beat tyranny, you cannot elect tyrants. not even democrap tyrants.

If you want to defeat tyranny, PERIOD, you need a new, truly left, party/movement with a whole new batch of them displacing a majority of the shit that currently soils congress. Then they'll need to impeach a shitload of judges and replace them with non-tyrannical types. Then they'll need to bulldoze K-street, implement a real GND and put big oil/coal/gas out of fucking business. Then they'll need to invoke Sherman and break up ALL the big banks. Then they'll need to pass MFA and put a whole lot of those vampire squid insurance companies out of fucking business. Then they could nationalize or otherwise control phrma and make drug prices reasonable.

I could go on. But the bottom line is that a tyrannical party that can't ever get out of its own way is never going to be the answer for any question... especially one about defeating tyranny.

Fortunately for both tyrannical parties, those who vote are far too fucking stupid to fathom this.

So... tyranny it is. does it matter which?



 
At 6:45 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The French won the Revolution for us.

 

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