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Aquarian
Weekly 10/13/10
REALITY CHECK
DEMOCRATS
CIRCLE THE WAGONS
Last
Ditch Effort To Fire-Up, Insult & Beg Progressives to Stem GOP
Tide
There
were no U.S. military survivors at the Battle of the Little Bighorn,
but later reports from Native Americans, most notably the widely
interviewed Joseph White Cow Bull, who'd taken part in slaughtering
every last member of George Armstrong Custer's charge, believed
they could hear the doomed general hollering at his troops. Witnesses
to the enemy swore each desperate salvo from the man who'd dedicated
the last years of his professional life to wiping out the "red
hordes", changed course, almost manically, as if predicting the
very modes of grief made famous in modern psychology; denial --
rallying his outnumbered and ambushed troops, anger -- questioning
their manhood, allegiance and alleged superior genetic make-up
to that of the savages, and finally a sad measure of bartering,
to save a lost cause in its most dire moments.
Custer
may have been eventually and ignominiously bludgeoned to death
by a Northern Cheyenne woman named Buffalo Calf Road Woman, but
his lessons survived a century and a half of political strategies
-- some with far better conclusions. The best and most recent
example of this was just six short years ago when a weakened president
with two fast-failing wars, a bloated deficit and plummeting approval
numbers, rallied in a whiz-bang circle-the-wagons last-ditch attempt
to rile up his party's base and take the attack to the enemy,
which at the time seemed as pathetic as Custer in his last throes
but returned the highest office in the land to George W. Bush.
Recently,
Karl Rove, the architect of Bush's comeback of 2004, has been
quite vocal about some of the wildly half-mad candidates mucking
up this year's version of Republican insurgence. He knows better
than most when you have the enemy on the run you do not play the
long odds. In '04, when tapping into the increasingly dormant
Religious Right vote with promises that if the president's opponent,
the out-maneuvered and oddly silent John Kerry would take power
then abortions would flow freely, gays would rule and the glorious
war effort against the godless Muslims would be lost.
Rove's
2004 political mastery was a classic example of badgering, rallying
and laying down the choice for the most fanatical among the GOP
base; those who'd vote for a weakened Republican rather than face
the consequences. The strategy to promise an anti-gay amendment
and everlasting military protection neutered the questions about
his candidate's immobilized state and made certain those who had
the most to lose would not sit idly by.
This
is what the White House has now unabashedly offered as a final
stratagem for the battered and bloodied Democrats in congress,
who not only face a demoralizing defeat next month, but in avoiding
the onslaught have run scared from the president. Even the vice
president, known far and wide for an uproariously inarticulate
blabbermouth technique, has gone on network television to castigate
progressives and liberals to "buck up" and "quit whining", despite
the broken promises to closing Gitmo, a single-payer National
Health Care option, a failure at Cap & Trade or Illegal Immigrant
Emancipation orthodoxy, and most agonizingly, a sucking up to
the "guilty" Wall St. set. This doesn't even factor in the ultra-left's
hope that Obama was above politics and had more than a minor interest
in ending nation building, adjusting existing marijuana laws,
and maybe go to battle for gay rights in the military and on the
stump.
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Even
taking the most fundamental approach to party politics,
the base is the thing. In cases of an avalanche of mid-term
angst and general inner-party malaise, it is the only
thing.
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Biden
is insane, and soon will be replaced by Hillary Clinton to save
Obama in 2012, but there may be nothing left to run on if 2010
is completely lost. Progressives, liberals, and even those in
the center expecting some sort of epiphany, have gone ballistic,
and in so doing, have caused a serious shift in Democratic politics.
Thus, as time runs out, and the numbers and impassioned anti-incumbent
rage surges against them, the Democrats' only hope is to temper
the blow, stop the political hemorrhaging and hang onto the House
or at the very least the Senate.
Even
taking the most fundamental approach to party politics, the base
is the thing. In cases of an avalanche of mid-term angst and general
inner-party malaise, it is the only thing.
Take
for instance the president's recent appearance at the University
of Wisconsin at Madison, streamed online to several campuses nationwide,
using the social networking and youth movement his staff brilliantly
tapped for his improbable 2008 rise and victory. The September
28 speech, symbolically recalling his most stirring oratory after
the 2008 Wisconsin primary victory, began earnestly with a Ronald
Reagan type "stay the course" routine, with promises of unfinished
business, then a dollop of Jimmy Carter "want to go back to the
last nightmare?" concluding with a firebrand call to arms for
those who he most relied upon to stake his claim; first inside
the party against the mighty Clinton Machine and then nationally
across center-right tides, where the now all-but lost Independents
reside.
It
was a rallying cry echoed plenty since, which was piggybacked
by left-shilling MSNBC -- much as FOXNEWS has shamelessly trumpeted
the fractious TEA Party movement -- when the week after Obama's
Wisconsin plea, the network hosted a Education Nation week, wherein
the focus was on teacher unions and the growing dumbing-down of
Americans over the past decades. The hint there is the elitist,
and in many cases honest, approach that the radical Right voices
count on the electorate's ignorance with emotional alternatives
to critically tangible solutions.
Although
the battles are disparate and motivated by local concerns, they
have lasting national consequences to the future of Nation Health
Care, the Bush Tax Cuts, continued troop surges in Afghanistan,
and the effectiveness of President Barack Obama's last two years
in office.
Whether
Republican or Democrat, the strategy in such a "crisis" has always
been and is now exceedingly employed; rally the troops and circle
the wagons with hefty Custer-like denials, harangues and a healthy
does of old-world beseeching.
Either
way it's cut, the Buffalo Calf Road Woman is raising her club.
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