Where
do they find these people? I’m talking about those crazy-talking
Tea Party types, ultra-conservative Republicans posing as
legitimate lawmakers and politicians, some of them even
passing themselves off as senators, members of Congress
and governors.
Now, before you say anything, I am not naïve about politics.
I know that politics has always attracted some of the best,
but all too frequently it has attracted some of the worst
that society has to offer. But this past election season,
it seems as if the bottom fell out on how bad it can get—how
truly pathetic and hopelessly unqualified candidates for
political office are allowed to be. Tea party candidates
demonstrated their extremist and racist views, their ignorance
of basic constitutional principles, and their lack of preparation
for primetime.
And most of all, they showed that they are wholly-owned pawns
of wealthy interests.
Rand Paul, Rick Scott and Jan Brewer won. Christine O’Donnell,
Ken Buck and Sharron Angle lost, but they were still legitimate
nominees of a major political party, so victory was at least
within the realm of the possible for them. Dumb as bricks,
with no practical experience or knowledge of which to speak,
is suddenly a virtue. Some of them said they would criminalize
abortion in the case of rape and incest, or protect the
rights of private businesses to discriminate against black
people. Some have urged the use of Second Amendment remedies.
At least one candidate led a program to openly intimidate
black voters. And yet, a number of them found enough votes
to take them to victory. They told the constituents they
would protect the interests of the rich, and yet they were
able to garner enough votes from the poor dumb citizenry
to win the election. That’s something, isn’t it?
The bar of stupidity and intolerance is lowered every day,
and yet someone will vote for these people. In Oklahoma,
a state senator authored a measure to amend the state constitution,
prohibiting state courts from considering
international law or Islamic Sharia law when reviewing cases. The measure
passed with 70 percent of the vote, and a federal judge overturned
it, which shows that the federal government is necessary
to protect us from the states.
The reelected governor of Texas, Rick Perry, longs for the old days, a hundred
years ago—before the progressive movement and the New Deal,
when there were no child labor laws, unemployment insurance,
national income tax, consumer regulations or worker protections.
He even wanted Texas To secede from the Union, and likely
put an innocent man to death, and still the citizenry of Texas
rewarded Perry with a third term in office.
Meanwhile, in Arizona, the governor and a state legislator
pass an anti-immigrant “papers please” law that was drafted
by white supremacists and the private prison industry.
Whenever you find deplorable laws, there were deplorable
people behind those laws, driven by greed and fanaticism,
and lacking in character, empathy, scruples, and a concern
for the common good. America needs some sort of competency
exam, some kind of quality control process for their elected
officials. Where are the regulations? I know, elections
are supposed to take care of that. Under normal circumstances,
in a democracy with elected representatives, you should
be able to count on an informed electorate to pick the best
candidates based on the issues. But this is America, and
there are several problems with that notion. Civic engagement
is lacking, voter participation is low, and many who vote
are low information voters. Public education and the news
media have failed them. While democracy depends on an educated
electorate, sadly too many American voters are ignorant
and ill-informed.
It does not help matters that the nation’s politics are driven
by a system of legalized bribery, blown wide open by the
U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision. In
this pay-to-play land, with the best system money can buy,
democracy goes to the highest bidder. So, what is considered
corruption in your run-of-the-mill, Third World banana republic
is the law in America, protected by the First Amendment—because
corporations are people, too.
Given the dysfunction, the gridlock and the mean-spiritedness
in our politics, it is no wonder that the best and brightest
too often flock to other disciplines, leaving the barrel
scrapers to fill the vacuum of political leadership. And
yet, someone somewhere out there will vote for them.
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights
advocate based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to The Huffington Post, theGrio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily
Kos,
and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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