The
sick and pathetic nature of today’s Republican Party really hit
me in connection with the attacks on Senator John McCain. Don’t
get me wrong, I am no McCain supporter. But the attacks on him by
the White House and many of Trump’s supporters have been
nothing short of reprehensible. White House joking, for instance,
about how McCain’s views no longer matter because he is going
to die. The comments by retired Lieutenant General McInerney to the
effect that torture worked on John McCain, as a way of suggesting
that torture works, was nothing short of perverse.
These and other comments, for which Trump and his allies apparently
will not apologize, speak to the devolving political situation but it
begs a question: how did this come about?
The
degeneration of the Republican Party brings to mind the story of Dr.
Frankenstein and the Monster. You remember the story. Dr.
Frankenstein decides to try to create a living human being from the
dead but becomes horrified by his own creation. The Monster goes on
a killing spree but Dr. Frankenstein refuses to take responsibility
leading to more death and grief.
The
Republican Establishment, of which (and quite ironically) Senator
McCain is part, believed that they could cultivate and manipulate a
dangerous, irrationalist
right-wing populist movement
that slowly emerged in the late 1960s. For years there was an
alliance between the Republican Establishment and this right-wing
populist movement because the right-wing populist movement served the
interests of the Republican Establishment in demanding tax cuts,
attacking affirmative action, pushing back on women’s rights
and going after Democrats. At the end of the day, the Republican
Establishment believed that they could keep control over this growing
movement, in much the same way that Dr. Frankenstein believed that he
could control the Monster.
During
the Obama presidency, the right-wing populist movement, slowly
congealing around Donald Trump, let loose with vitriolic attacks on
Obama, particularly in the absurd tirades in connection with
President Obama’s place of birth. During that entire period,
few Republicans would speak up. They found reasons to avoid
challenging the racist myths.
When
the Department of Homeland Security came out with a report on the
danger of domestic terror from right-wing extremists, the Republican
Establishment angrily barked, claiming that this was an attack on
so-called legitimate conservatives rather than evidence of the
greatest domestic terrorist threat—white supremacists and other
right-wing extremists. These attacks amounted to a precursor to
Trump’s rants about alleged “fake news.”
And
so it comes to pass that the Monster is now seeking to destroy, with
all of the fury and hatred previously reserved for their attacks on
Democrats, much of the Republican Establishment.
Dr.
Frankenstein chased his monster into the Arctic only to die in his
mission, well after the deaths of many of his friends and loved ones
at the hands of the Monster.
Whither
the Republican Establishment? Whither the Monster?
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