Tag Archives: political

Wayne LaPierre and the NRA – The True Terrorists

It certainly has been interesting seeing the aftermath of the Boston bombings, the hunt for the suspects, and the reactions after one was killed and the other captured.  I’m not trivializing the bombing.  It’s horrific event, perpetrated by a couple of very screwed up, evil men.  However…in what many are calling the first “terrorist” killing in the U.S. since 9-11, there were 3 people hurt, along with several score injured. 

On April 15th, the day of the bombing, there were ELEVEN Americans killed by guns.  The day after, on Tuesday, there were FOURTEEN Americans killed by guns.  The next day?  FIFTEEN gun deaths.  And so on…and so on…and so on.  Over 3,500 Americans have died due to gun violence, JUST since Newtown happened in December…a four month period.  That’s an average of about 30 deaths per day.  Gun deaths in the United States routinely top 12,000 a year, and nobody bats an eye.  An AVERAGE day in America and many more are killed by guns than were killed by the one “terrorist” event in the United States since 9-11.

But then again…what constitutes a “terrorist”?  If a Muslim guy blows up a bomb at a marathon?  You bet, says America!  It’s “terrorism”!  It’s a no-brainer!  A bomb is involved, and a Muslim is involved!! 

But what if a young white man who is NOT Muslim commits mass murder?  Is it called “terrorism” by the press?  Are there calls to suspend Miranda rights?  Are there calls to suspend due process under the law?  No.  If a white NON-MUSLIM commits mass murder, it’s a mental health issue, the act of a troubled young man. It’s NOT ever labeled as “terrorism”.  An young guy equally as troubled as the Tsarnaev’s from Boston walks into a grade school in Newtown and takes the lives of over 20 young children, a death toll that far surpasses Boston, but the “terrorism” label was never applied to that case. 

So again…what constitutes ”terrorism”?  What consitutes a “terrorist”? ”Official” definitions for “terrorism” usually infer violence with a political purpose.  However, in America, since 9-11, it seems that the term “terrorist” has unfortunately taken on religious connotations, with the religious background of the person evidently more important than the crimes that were committed.  Were there any political claims made by the Tsarnaev brothers for the Boston bombings?  Wouldn’t a “terrorist” claim responsibility in the name of a cause?  The Tsarnaev’s certainly didn’t attempt to claim responsibility, and certainly didn’t pronounce the bombing was for some political cause.  However, the event is widely labeled as “terrorism”, a label that has become further entrenched in Americans’ minds after it became known the brothers had at least some involvement in the Islamic faith.

It’s sad that we can spend SO much time and energy focusing on controlling “terrorism” in the United States, but completely ignore “everyday” violence that claims the lives of MANY thousands more Americans than does “terrorism”. 

If “terrorism” can be defined as a “violence with a political motivation”, then America is FULL of (as yet) unrecognized terrorists.  Look at how political the issue of gun control has become.  Even a simple, sensible, straight-forward piece of legislation to increase background checks and keep guns out of the hands of criminals and the mentally ill is turned into a political argument.  When I see THOUSANDS of Americans being killed every year by gun violence, I see MANY violent deaths that are ultimately due to political motivations. 

With THOUSANDS of highly preventable gun-violence deaths in America each year, if we are to follow the standard definition of “terrorism”, those that ENABLE those gun violence deaths should be defined as “terrorists”, just as those who provide bomb-making equipment and training are considered as “terrorists”.  If “Violence ultimately due to a political motivation” is the definition of a “terrorist”, then there’s little doubt that Wayne LaPierre, the head of the NRA, should be considered the most dangerous “terrorist” in America.  Thanks to the efforts of LaPierre and the NRA, criminals and violent mentally ill persons can easily obtain weaponry that no other Western culture allows such easy access to. 

Boston was a sad event to be sure.  The Tsarnaev brothers were sick, evil human beings.  But it’s stunning to me that Americans can tolerate the equivalent of 10 Boston bombings  PER DAY in America, in terms of deaths due to gun violence, and not get nearly as worked up as they do about a once-in-a-decade event.

Bigotry and hatred as a political weapon

Rick Santorum

Faith, Family, and Freedom? As long as it's a white Christian heterosexual family.

Rick Santorum today urged Mitt Romney to use the gay marriage “controversy” as a “potent weapon” against Obama in the upcoming election.  Santorum says Obama is the one who is out of touch with what America “values”.

If it’s Rick Santorum who is IN touch with what America values…we’re screwed.  If ranting and raving against homosexuality and gay rights is what represents American values…we’re screwed.  If advocating for women to be treated as they were 200 years ago represents American values…we’re screwed.  You can’t build a democracy on a foundation of hate, but that’s what SO many on the Republican right seem to be trying to do. 

It’s not just the gay marriage issue.  It’s bigotry and hatred in general that might as well be the core platform of the Republican party.   Just look at some of the “core” Republican issues over the last decade, as the party swings ever further to the (very radical) right. 

  • Gay rights - Summed up very nicely in a nutshell by Santorum’s comments today.  Gays and lesbians aren’t people in the eyes of the radical right.  Constitution be damned, they’re not to be treated like other human beings.  They’re to be used as a “political weapon”, nothing more.
  • Race – Republicans have managed to lock down the South, helped in no small part by a not-so-transparent use of racism as a political tool.  It even has a very well-established name…the Republicans’ Southern Strategy, a large part of which is based on exploiting racial fears among white southerners.
  • Religion -  Promoting fear and intolerance of Islam, or ANY other religion other than mainstream Christianity has also obviously become a key part of the Republican platform.   Again, Santorum himself could be a poster child for using religious hate as a “potent weapon” in his politics.  Republicans have counted on the “values voters” in the last several election cycles, whipping up paranoia among evangelicals (aka…wackos) about some imagined conspiracy to trample on their religious rights or remove religion from Americans’ every day lives. 

Using bigotry, hatred, and promotion of fear has certainly be a winning political hand for Republicans.  God knows there are enough folks in America who share those views, and blindly follow any idiot who is bold enough to come out and actually campaign on a platform of hate and intolerance. 

But how long can such a strategy last?   I keep hoping that Americans will see the light and realize you CANNOT build a nation based on hate.  I keep hoping that Republicans’ exploitation of racial, religious, or sexual preference issues is a short-term blip, a trend that can’t last in the long run.  But then you see complete wackos like Rick Santorum get a shocking amount of support in the Republican campaign, and it makes you realize just how much fear, paranoia, and bigotry there is out there. 

I’m sure that Biden’s unintentional forcing of Obama’s hand on the gay marriage issue wasn’t something that Obama wanted to touch from a political perspective.  That indeed is why I’ve been disappointed by Obama on many fronts, his lack of conviction on issues such as this, ones where he should be leading the “anti-hatred” bandwagon.   But now that it’s out there, now that Obama has been forced to back gay marriage, I hope he seizes the opportunity. I hope he RELISHES a discussion on gay rights in America. He SHOULD be using the issue as an issue where he can shame Republicans for their platform of hatred.

Given Obama’s wishy-washy nature on tough issues like this though, I’m not holding my breath.

Immigration in Reverse

Immigration Trends since 1990

Immigration from Mexico has declined sharply in recent years, yet Republicans have still tried to make anti-immigration rhetoric a key part of the campaign. Graphic from the Pew Research Center and the Washington Post article referenced here.

I wonder how right-wing nutjobs are going to spin this.  For the first time since the Great Depression, there’s actually an OUTFLOW of Mexican immigrants from the U.S., as immigration into the U.S. is at about 1/4th of what it was in 2000, and half as much as it was when Obama took office, while more people are moving from the U.S. to Mexico.

Mitt Romney, as well as most of the former Republican field, all have tried to woo “conservative” (OK, let’s be honest and just say ”bigoted”) voters with very strong anti-immigration rhetoric.  Just think back a few months during the debates, when you had Repub candidates falling all over themselves talking about which one of them would build the biggest wall or would beef up border security the most.  Republicans have attacked the Obama administration, stating that ridiculous tough anti-immigration laws like those passed in Arizona and Alabama are necessary, because the Federal government supposedly wasn’t doing its job.  Yet the analysts who provided the immigration report note it was a tougher deportation stance under Obama that is partially responsible for the change in the immigration trend.

I find the entire immigration debate rather distasteful.   I think it’s quite obvious that simple racism is the true motivation behind many folks’ very strong anti-immigration views.  When you see a Romney or other pol pandering to the anti-immigration crowd, I think they’re mostly playing off people’s underlying racism for their own political game.  God knows Republicans have made an art form out of subtly (or not so subtly) using race to their political advantage, be it the immigration debate, or the quite transparent voter “fraud” laws that do little to combat fraud (what little there IS in the United States), but do a lot to ensure a weaker minority voting bloc. 

In an ideal world, this report would make Republicans think twice about using anti-immigration rhetoric for political gain.  However, we don’t live in an ideal world, and I have no doubt that we STILL will hear anti-immigration rhetoric from the right, particularly as the Arizona and Alabama laws continued to be publicly and legally debated.

Pity the Less Well-endowed Conservative

Intelligence - Liberals vs. Conservatives

I'm sorry, my conservative friends. When we argue, I always am reminded of Sean Connery in the Untouchables, who mocks his attacker for bringing a knife to a gun fight.

If you’ve ever even sniffed my blog, you know that I have quite strong, and generally quite liberal, political and social views.  Most of the people in my life at work, or personally, also tend to lean pretty heavily toward liberal viewpoints.  However, some of the people I enjoy the most are those who have intelligent, well-informed, and well thought-out political opinions that just HAPPEN to be the polar opposite of mine.   There’s something about having a conversation, or an argument, with your polar opposite that can be very, well, enjoyable.  Yes, people can take it too far, and be TOO serious or stubborn about their political views, something I too (obviously!) can be guilty of at times.  But it can be a real treat to find someone who is your polar opposite politically or socially, but yet is someone you still respect at the end of the day, and is someone where “arguments” generally consist of some fun teasing more than knock-down-drag-out fights.

And with that to set the tone for the rest of this post…

To put it simply…as this new study shows…if you’re, well, not blessed with intelligence, you’re also more likely to be a conservative, right-wing bigot.  It’s not fair, really.  We all have our burdens, but evidently, the facts show that if you’re born stupid, you also have some other strikes against you, things that make you, well…not so likable in my book. 

There have been many other studies that have shown similar linkages, particularly between intelligence and political persuasion.  As this report notes, the most educated cities in the United States are Boulder, CO, Anne Arbor, MI, and Washington D.C.   Talk about liberal strongholds!! As a card-carrying, tree-huggin’, liberal nutjob, I of course can take GREAT delight at finding all of the evidence that points to intelligence being directly correlated towards a tendency to hold liberal viewpoints.  For those conservative friends/acquaintances that fit in the general mold as described at the top of this post, studies such as this provide SO many wonderful opportunities for teasing and mocking. 

But alas, given that intelligence clearly IS tied to your viewpoints on life, those few conservative friends and acquaintances that I can disagree with, but yet still enjoy, are few and far between.  The Republican primaries themselves are ample evidence of the overall scarcity of intelligent Republicans.

I’m sorry, my Republican friends.  For those few intelligent conservatives who I do get along with, I not only respect you…but I actually pity you.  Being an “intelligent conservative” must be incredibly frustrating, given the mental deficiencies of all your conservative peers.   What a nightmare to be an intelligent conservative, where encounters with the vast majority of your conservative friends are marked by drooling and blank stares more than any meaningful conversation.  No WONDER the rare intelligent conservative seems to take so much delight in encounters with liberal acquaintances.  It must be like emerging from the nightmare of being alert but in a vegetative state, unable to express your views to anyone who will understand you.

So, to the few intelligent conservatives who are out there…take heart.  I feel your pain.  I will take pity on you should our paths cross.  I will engage in a hearty conversation with you.  Just remember…no matter how much we agree to disagree…the empirical evidence regarding intelligence clearly points to the likelihood that I am right, while you are wrong.