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Monday, August 1, 2011

Stockholm, DC

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Paul Krugman, paraphrasing Jonathan Chait in The New Republic (and himself on many other occasions), boils the so-called deficit crisis into its irreducible essence:
As Chait says, the first thing you need to understand is that modern Republicans don’t care about deficits. They only pretend to care when they believe that deficit hawkery can be used to dismantle social programs; as soon as the conversation turns to taxes, or anything else that would require them and their friends to make even the smallest sacrifice, deficits don’t matter at all.
In the Stockholm Syndrome world of Washington, DC, and the corporate media that sustain America's political withdrawal from consensual reality, this kind of talk from a liberal is condemned as "partisan bickering" or "uncivil."

Putting that childish, dishonest perspective aside for later discussion, preferably on someone else's blog, I simply suggest that a skeptical reader simply  at the evidence that has been right in front our our noses from the moment we learned about Grover Norquist's quest to drown the federal government in the bathtub. Use Occam's razor. Is there a simpler, more direct statement that explains the state of our political discourse today?

2 comments:

  1. Yeah, use Occam's razor to separate Grover's adipose-filled body from his shit-filled head.

    But this moron isn't really a problem any more than the filthy, ranting, homeless troll under a bridge. Ignorant US voters send ignorant (terrorist, actually) representatives to Congress who either believe (Rand Paul) the stupid troll or use his incoherent ranting as cover for their criminal behavior (Eric Cantor).

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  2. OCH: I disagree about Norquist's importance. He is the Goebbels of the GOP. What is happening to America today is only possible through the relentless application of propaganda. People tethered to their televisions and Internet connections by force of habit quickly become dissociated from the everyday reality of friends, neighbors, and their own five-plus senses. Emotions unmediated by reason or community reality are the "short hairs" that the propagandist grabs ahold of. Norquist provides raw material for the operation.

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