I
have been trying to figure out the current Republican approach
to government and it finally hit me. There is a peculiar
mix of the theory of the Kamikaze pilot and the approach
of the Nazi Party in the Reichstag pre-1933. Let
me explain.
At
the end of World War II Japan was in desperate conditions.
They were expecting an amphibious assault on Japan
itself from the USA,
the Soviet Union was preparing to enter the war, and the Japanese were running
very low on fuel. Out of this desperation emerged the Kamikaze,
named after the “divine wind,” the typhoon that destroyed
the Mongol invading fleet of Kublai Khan.
A
Kamikaze fighter plane was only loaded with enough fuel
to reach the target. There was no plan for their return.
They were well armed and had plenty of explosives so that
they could create maximum damage. Since the pilots never
planned to return, their approach toward a target was different
from most. They went straight through the anti-aircraft
fire with their plane aimed at the target and…BOOM.
Part
of what we have to understand about the approach that Republicans
are taking toward government, and this is especially true
of the Tea Party, is that they do not see themselves occupying
positions of government for very long. Part of this flows
from their hatred of government. Part of this may also be
that they know the clock is ticking, given changes in the
USA. But the other part is very shrewd. Their
aim is to get through all the Washington ‘flack’ and create as much damage as they can. Since they
are not worried about polls, they can dive straight in without
much in the way of fear of ramifications. After all, they
do not plan on hanging around. If they can damage government
enough, and we should be clear that this means destroying
everything that is left of the New Deal, then they have
accomplished their mission. They have become part of the
‘divine wind.’
There
is an equally disturbing part to this which we can learn
from the 1930s. When the Nazi Party was able to achieve
a critical mass of elected officials in the Reichstag (the
German parliament), they had no intention of being respectable
or constructive. In fact, they did everything they could
to discredit not simply a particular political party, but
to discredit elected government. By
creating a situation where nothing could be accomplished,
the Nazis fueled the popular frustration with the Weimar
Republic and laid the foundation for the willingness of millions to
embrace German fascism.
The
antics of the Tea Party wing of the Republicans bear a striking
resemblance to the approach of the Nazis. The point here
is not to ascertain whether the Tea Party movement are closet
Nazis (I actually do not think that they are, but they are
right-wing populists) but more to point out that a second
objective of that wing of the Republican Party is to discredit
elected government. They are looking, as we can see in numerous
states, for authoritarian or semi-authoritarian methods
of governing. They are looking, despite their rhetoric,
for restrictions on democratic rights and liberties, such
as the right to join and form labor unions. We can see part
of this in the increasingly repressive election laws that
have been passed by Republican-dominated legislatures. Rather than expanding democracy, which
was the clarion call for millions during most of the 20th
century, they seek to restrict ‘democracy’ to those with
means, or to those who this segment of the political Right
believes to be deserving.
For
these reasons, we should get away from thinking of the Tea
Party elected officials as crazy. They are not. They are
no more crazy than the Japanese Kamikaze pilots in 1945.
They are just as determined and wish to create maximum damage.
The Tea Party is no more crazy and rude than the Nazis in
the early 1930s. Rather they are shrewd and manipulative
and know how to play to the frustration of the public.
So,
just as there was no compromise with either Kamikazes or
Nazis, we must understand that there is no compromise with
the Tea Party. They are not looking for compromise. In fact,
they actually do not seem to care whether they blow themselves
up in the process, as long as at the end of the day someone
can say…the Tea Party won…
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with
the Institute for
Policy Studies, the immediate past president of TransAfricaForum and co-author of Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University of California Press), which examines
the crisis of organized labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.
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