It
seems the Republicans need to pump themselves up every couple of
months or so these days. It's not so much that they are meeting
that troubles me. It's sorta like an AA meeting except here its
where "ideologue-holics" come together and try to sober
up on their 2008 Presidential defeat with new rhetoric that gets
more and more extreme with each outing. This time, it was at the
2010 Southern Republican Convention in New Orleans that the more
"radical" elements of the party come together to try to
micro-manage the Presidency and give a demented spin on the course
of current affairs.
What we've learned in the Reagan
and post-Reagan eras is that truth is a relative engagement for
the Republicans. There is the truth told by the Republicans, then
there is the truth, period. They make it up and spit it out
as gospel. Then they make up their own facts to support their own
opinions. They're entitled to their own opinions, but pass them
off as for what they really are, opinions. Don't pass them
off as fact. They are not entitled to make up their own facts, which
they are regularly prone to do. This weekend was no different, and
on this occasion Republican relativism and radical rhetoric crashed
head on.
Who better than to remake the Republican
truth than its master rhetorician himself, former Speaker of the
House, Newt Gingrich. It was Gingrich who orchestrated the last
big lie passed off as the truth, the Contract with America,
an anti-taxation, anti-affirmative action, anti-big government,
family values (anti-abortion, anti-welfare) agenda that sought to
hogtie Washington from addressing social and economic disparities.
The rhetoric worked for the most part and government aid dwindled
while personal wealth of the rich and corporations skyrocketed.
Gingrich, before his own sex scandal, thought he was the �King of
Congress.� His rhetoric couldn�t save him and he got out of Congress
before he could take the hit.
Well, he�s back, trying to redeem
the glory past of Republican government reform and this weekend
Gingrich called President Barack Obama the "most radical President
in American History." Now let's think about that for a minute.
Clearly, that title has historically gone to Abraham Lincoln, the
President that took a direct hand in abolishing slavery by issuing
a proclamation freeing slaves in states in rebellion against the
Union, and by signing the resolution for a new amendment totally
abolishing slavery (though he didn't live to see its passing).
The
party of Lincoln was called "the Radical Republicans,"
and they ushered in, not one but, three "reconstruction"
amendments to try to legislate social and political equality, something
that 140 years later still has yet to be achieved. It was clearly
most radical act in our history as a nation, but there were other
"radical" Presidents. What about Andrew Jackson shutting
down the national bank? Or Rutherford B. Hayes' withdrawal of federal
troops from the South, or Grover Cleveland's "Veto term"
(414 vetoes) to negate Congress, or FDR's court-packing scheme,
or Dwight Eisenhower's use of the 101st Airborne to enforce desegregation?
How about Nixon's use of government to target "enemies"
or Ford's pardon of Nixon? I could go on and on...but Gingrich's
assertion comes in the aftermath of Obama signing the universal
health care bill. Radical rhetoric if you ever heard some. And he
doesn't stop there. In trying to dissect President Obama�s inaugural
day address in references to Lincoln, he stated that he noticed
after one year that Obama uses �parts of things� but not total context,
stating that Obama�s used �a new birth of freedom� from Lincoln�s
Gettysburg�s Address, but not �One Nation Under God.� Then he states
the Republican Party was �founded on Freedom, not founded on serfdom.�
Gingrich continued the rhetoric to
repeated rounds of applause that the Republican Party was �founded
on the work ethic, not on redistribution ethic,� and founded on
�defending America, not hiring lawyers for terrorists.� I�m sure
the freedom that Newt is talking about is not the freedom that Lincoln�s
Radical Republicans were talking about. Now, correct me if I�m wrong
but was not the Reconstruction era about political and equality
redistribution? The point here is that the latter day Republicans
have mastered code language. �Defending America.� He might as well
said �defending whiteness.� �One Nation Under God� is a signal to
the righteous right and the draconian views they support.
One truth the Republicans will never
acknowledge Obama�s popularity, nor his accomplishments. These conventions
are nothing no than �feel good� sessions to pump up the politically
depressed�and politically irrelevant. To regain power, they have
to craft a new message, or a new rhetoric. Seems like it�s going
to be based on the same relativism of Republican �truths� of past
years. It�s not exactly the kind of inspiration Lincoln would want
to hear-I think. Lincoln did say he�d tolerate slavery and colonize
Blacks.
Had he lived�but that�s beside the
point now. These are not the same Republicans. These Republicans
gave up on Lincoln years ago. He was, and still is, the inspiration
for new freedoms and ideas radical �redeemers� cannot tolerate.
All rhetoric and relativism aside.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing director
of the
Urban Issues Forum
and author of
Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is
AnthonySamad.com. Click here
to contact Dr. Samad. |