The Shocking Things the GOP and Trumpians Believe
By Thom Hartmann for the Independent Media Institute
With the Republican Party turning to Trumpism,
and the Democratic Party returning to their progressive roots, will we have an
honest debate this election year in our media?By Jeff Darcy
“What you see is what you get” is an old cliche,
but it’s endured all these centuries because there’s so much truth in it. “Don’t
listen to what people say, instead look at what they do” is another truism we
can apply to inform us about today’s politics.
The past forty years have seen three Republican
and three Democratic presidencies, and the modern priorities and values of each
Party are now quite clear.
On the Republican side, Reagan laid the
foundation for Bush and Trump to hand over $10 trillion in tax cuts to
billionaires and giant corporations while spending an equal amount on
senseless, unwanted and unwinnable wars, leaving us with a $20 trillion
national debt.
Trump has since merged the Grand Old Party with
the anti-democratic, oligarchic and male/white-supremacist values of the
pre-Civil War South, leading his followers to proudly fly Confederate flags and
strut around with as many large guns as they can carry.
On the Democratic side, there’s been a steady
revival of the progressive movement, along with its efforts to lift up working
class and poor Americans while cleaning up the environment and protecting the
social safety net.
While the Democratic Party embraced
neoliberalism for a while, from 1992 until 2016, the majority of elected
Democrats today are committed to extending the benefits, freedoms and
privileges of citizenship to all Americans, regardless of race, religion
or gender identification.
There’s an uncredited meme that’s been floating around the internet in various forms
for a while, generally titled “Shocking Things Liberals Believe” that
summarizes:
·
People who work full
time shouldn’t live in poverty
·
Homelessness shouldn’t
exist in the richest country in the world
·
Women deserve both
equal rights and equal pay
·
Corporations and rich
people shouldn’t be able to legally bribe politicians
·
Trashing the planet
for profit is wrong and must stop
·
Every American should
have world-class healthcare at little or no cost
·
Free higher education
(and quality public schools) unlock human potential which benefits the entire
country
·
Children should learn
the true racial history of America so they can empathize with their peers who
are still experiencing these problems and grow up to become well-informed
adults
·
Women should make
their own medical decisions, not politicians
·
Massively profitable
industries, from oil/coal/gas to Walmart and Amazon, shouldn’t get billions in
subsidies and tax breaks
·
Children shouldn’t
fear getting shot at school
·
When Wall Street
banksters steal from us all, they should be imprisoned instead of bailed out
·
No CEO is worth
$100,000 an hour ($20 million a year) or more
It’s actually a pretty reasonable summary of the
perspectives and positions of most Democrats who’d describe themselves as
liberal or progressive today and, while not descriptive of every elected
Democrat, shows the direction the Party is moving.
But it immediately provokes the
counter-question: Now that Trumpism has taken over the GOP, what do they
believe?
Since the Party stopped publishing a Platform or
clear positions on issues after the 2016 election, we pretty much have to look
at their behaviors, but those, at least, have been consistent. Here’s what’s
obvious, based on “what they do”:
· “Free and fair elections” are for suckers
·
White men should run
the country and the world
·
Violence is a
legitimate tool in politics
·
Conspiracy theories
like the one suggesting Democrats drink children’s blood as an “elixir of
youth” are probably real
·
Rich people and their
kids shouldn’t have to pay taxes
·
More guns means less
crime and fewer deaths
·
The darker your skin,
the more likely you’re a criminal
·
Leadership is about
instilling fear, not vision
·
Women are men’s
property
·
Climate change and
evolution are tricks to take away our freedoms and ruin religion
·
Education makes people
stupid
·
Going into politics is
the ticket to riches and fame
·
Rich people should
make a buck off everything the government does through privatization
·
Helping people who’re
going through a rough patch is a waste of time
·
The “rule of law” only
applies to minorities and the poor
·
Money and power are
the only truly important things in life
·
Teaching the true
racial history of America is a plot to make white children feel sad
·
LGBTQ people don’t
deserve respect or rights
·
Wealth is proof of
goodness; poverty is proof of moral failure
·
“Giving” citizens
things like healthcare, education, family leave, etc. are all “socialism” and
will destroy “the American way of life”
·
Government has no
right to regulate pollution or protect consumers
·
“Fiscal
responsibility” is a phrase that can justify just about anything
Both are obviously partial lists, an attempt to define our political parties based on their behaviors instead of just their words.
This is an election year, and these differences
should be the basis of our national conversation about who leads the country in
2023 and beyond.
Is our “reality TV” news media up to the task of
comparing and contrasting the two political parties, and judging the most
likely outcomes of the directions they’ve chosen?
It’s going to be a challenge as long as
Republicans keep spewing crap like John Kasich saying on CNN yesterday, when discussing the January 6th attack, that “we have
seen hatred on both sides.” Or Joe Manchin grandstanding, using
long-discredited “but the deficit!” and “but the filibuster!” GOP talking
points, every time a camera shows up on Capitol Hill.
On the other hand, if enough of us are active in
holding our Fourth Estate to account, particularly on social media, and can
amplify truthful messages of compassion, clarity and sanity to our friends and
neighbors, perhaps we can actually have a meaningful election year.
Thom
Hartmann is a talk-show host and the author of The
Hidden History of American Healthcare and
more than 30+ other books in print. He is a writing fellow at the Independent Media Institute and his writings are archived at hartmannreport.com.
This article was produced by Economy for All, a project of the Independent
Media Institute.