Here
is an issue that deserves some attention.
Commentators
have had some harsh things to say about the Republican Party
of late, what it has become, and the direction in which
it is heading. One
observer, a clinical psychologist, characterized the GOP
as the mainstreaming of political
paranoia, with politicians who invent their own reality.
The New York Times� resident conservative said �the
Republican Party may no longer be a normal party. Over the
past few years, it has been infected
by a faction that is more of a psychological protest than
a practical, governing alternative.� And a Washington
Post columnist called the party a cult,
a �virtual political Jonestown� of intellectual stringency
on issues such as taxes and abortion.
Now,
these three writers said nothing within the realm of the
unreasonable. Their indictment is warranted. There is no
question, based on the evidence, that the GOP is that peculiar
institution in which people thrive, based on an alternate
set of facts, divorced from reality. To say, for example,
that climate change does not exist, or that the New Deal
did not end the Great Depression, is to operate under one�s
own set of facts. Further, believing it is a good thing,
even desirable, to allow the U.S.
to default on its debt obligations - and that all tax cuts
are and no revenue increases are good - is not the mark
of an organization that should be anywhere near the reins
of power. And there can be no denying that twisted ideas
such as criminalizing miscarriage and forcing rape and incest
victims to give birth are the stuff of Kool-aid drinkers.
But
can we take this a step further and ask whether the Republican
Party is a hate group? If not, does it run the risk of becoming
one? First, we need a working definition.
According
to the Southern
Poverty Law Center, �All hate groups have beliefs or practices that attack or malign an entire class
of people, typically for their immutable characteristics�
Hate group activities can include criminal acts, marches,
rallies, speeches, meetings, leafleting or publishing� [but]
does not imply a group advocates or engages in violence
or other criminal activity.�
And
the FBI says that a hate group is �an organization whose
primary purpose is to promote animosity, hostility, and
malice against persons belonging to a race, religion, disability,
sexual orientation, or ethnicity/national origin which differs
from that of the members of the organization.�
Based
on either definition, there is an argument to be made that
the Republican Party - formerly known as the party of Abraham
Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, the Radical Republicans,
and the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments
- has lost its way and is engaged in poisonous activity
that is harmful to the social and political discourse.
As
for the first definition, the GOP does attack and malign
groups based on immutable characteristics. The efforts in
Missouri, Tennessee, Oklahoma and Texas to ban Sharia law, and hearings
on radical Islam in the halls of Congress amount
to raw attacks on Muslim Americans. Arizona-style anti-immigrant
bills are designed to foment white hostility towards Latinos,
America�s largest and fastest
growing minority group. Further, let us not forget the assault
on the reproductive rights of women and control over their
own bodies, with virtual Republican nullification of Roe
v. Wade in states such as Kansas,
Indiana and Ohio. Meanwhile, Texas
and Arizona openly display their contempt for people of color by whitewashing
the textbooks, banning ethnic studies, and removing the
civil rights movement from school curricula.
These
regressive laws remind me of what Martin Luther King said
in Letter
from Birmingham Jail: �An unjust law is a
code that a numerical or power majority group compels a
minority group to obey but does not make binding on itself.�
In 2011, the �minority� King referenced has been expanded
to poor and working people of all backgrounds, as punitive
policies and coldhearted austerity measures assault broader
segments of the population.
As
for the second definition, it is debatable whether the Republican
Party�s primary purpose is to promote animosity,
hostility, and malice towards certain groups that differ
from their members. However, it is also arguable that the
GOP�s primary purpose is to win elections - and advance
a plutocratic agenda of upward wealth redistribution in
the process � by promoting ill will toward Muslims, Latinos,
African-Americans, the LGBT community and others.
Even
if one refuses to accept that the GOP is a hate group, or
well on its way to becoming one, at what point can we entertain
the possibility? It is rather curious that members of that
organization have no qualms about associating with known
hate groups, yet manage to escape that designation. For
example, the state legislators that sponsored Arizona�s
infamous SB1070 immigration law, and Pennsylvania�s voter ID and anti-immigrant legislation,
are affiliated with the Federation for American Immigration
Reform, a white nationalist group. Texas Governor Rick Perry
teamed up with the American
Family Association, a homophobic hate group, for a
so-called �prayer meeting.� And Newt Gingrich funneled $125,000
to the political wing of that group, which compared
blacks to rabbits and called Native Americans savages,
claimed Europe is �infested� with Muslims,
and compared homosexuality to murder, adultery and
theft.
How
is it that a party which once boasted 1,500 black elected
officials in the Reconstruction-era South has now become
a de facto party of white nationalism in the twenty-first
century? How is it that the party that enacted the Fourteenth
Amendment now seeks to repeal it? Well, it took a lot
of hard work.
Once
a truly �big tent� party with liberals, moderates and conservatives,
the GOP decided to hitch its wagon to Lee Atwater�s Southern
Strategy. The Southern segregationists migrated from the
Democrats to the Republicans after Lyndon Johnson enacted
his civil rights legislation, and the Republicans enticed
them with a warmed-over Jim Crow message of racial resentment
towards black people. This
race card strategy proved highly successful in winning elections,
and extremely addictive. Then, the means became an end in
itself. Suddenly, the highly racialized Birthers and radical
teabaggers came on the scene - armed with their hatred of
facts, science, racial minorities and the nation�s first
black-Muslim-Kenyan-fascist-socialist president. Lacking
in empathy, these bullies have finished off any vestiges
of moderation in the once Grand Old Party. They killed whatever
common sense and sanity remained. Today, Reagan would be
a bleeding heart liberal compared with this crowd.
So,
the question remains, are the Republicans a hate group?
I don�t know, I only ask the questions.
BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David
A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based
in Philadelphia, is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania
Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio, 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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