jonottawa, on 2012-September-19, 11:46, said:
I feel kinda sorry for Mitt. His constituency is crazy; he isn't. Unfortunately, the lesson the Repugs will draw from this won't be 'Our party's ideas are morally and intellectually indefensible.' It will be 'Mitt blew it.'
The problem is that the ideas are neither crazy nor indefensible. Mostly when I hear republicans talk I think "B is a crazy way to achieve objective A", not "A is a crazy thing to try to achieve".
Its their implementation that is crazy. They think the banks have colluded with Washington to make huge profits while the economy suffers: The answer is not to return to the Gold Standard. Ryan talking on the "insidious evil of money printing" is just crazy talk. I'm sure that he believes that his policies will fix the economy. He is just crazy
.
They believe in a strong National Defence. Well, the world is a scary place. Just this week I have seen YouTube videos of Chinese Mobs chanting "death to the Japanese", and calling for War, over some basically irrelevant islands. This in the same week that Mobs in the Middle East have stormed US embassies and lynched a US ambassador while chanting "Death to America". There have always been a segment of society who believes that people are now sufficiently enlightened that we will avoid war in the future. Historically, they have been right 0% of the time.
Lets not forget that the enlightenment started out calling for justice, liberty and brotherhood for all men, right up until the more militaristically minded revolutionaries seized control, beheaded all their political opponents, and set about exterminating all their supporters (the Vendee massacres, about 250,000 people, though estimates vary wildly), so as to to be able to build a society "free of the impurity of opposition" (Voltaire's words). The world can change very quickly, a strong military is insurance, that is an argument that has mileage.
Even the opposition to healthcare has play, it is clearly a rational choice to refuse medical insurance. Its a tragedy of the commons type thing. Lots of moderately wealthy healthy people who refused insurance will be worse off under the ACA. Its a long standing piece of financial wisdom is that you should never insure for things you can afford to go wrong, because it is always an EV negative proposition, and most people can afford to pay for most illnesses that young healthy people are likely to get.
I am sure you were partly referring to their social policies, of opposition to Abortion, but that is a policy which enjoys widespread support.
Gallup suggets that the prolife-prochoice division is now 50%-41%, with 9% undecided. On
Gay marriage, the republicans likewise appear to be on the right side of public opinion, with 57%-40% opposing legalisation of Gay marriage.
The quest for "small government" will never be over. When I went to university, I had to fill out a twelve page form about my parents income and hence eligibility or not for student loans, even though I was not applying for student loans. But the bureaucracy was set up in such a way that the university wouldn't receive their part of the funding unless I was "on the system", which required filling out reasonably personal data about income, race, gender and orientation (for monitoring purposes). When this happens you are going to feel that Government is "too large" entirely independent of the fraction of national wealth that the government spends. People on the left see "Big government" purely in terms of jobs and money, but that characterises the reason for the opposition, imo.
I continue to believe that a serious contender could unite the republican base sufficiently over these concerns, without needing to be crazy or stupid.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper