"...and if G.O.P. leaders of all stripes, from Romney to Mitch
McConnell to Olympia Snowe to Lindsey Graham, are afraid of these forces, that’s
the strongest possible indicator that the rest of us have reason to fear
them too."
( SEE ALSO:Tea Party Comes Out of the Closet, Shows True Colors, shouts:
"Nigger!" and "Faggot" http://wtfsgoingon.typepad.com/what-the-fucks-going-on-blog/2010/03/tea-party-comes-out-of-the-closet-shows-true-colors-shouts-nigger-and-faggot.html
)
By FRANK RICH
Published: March 27, 2010
·
But the laughs
evaporated soon enough. There’s nothing entertaining about watching goons hurl
venomous slurs at congressmen like the civil rights hero John Lewis and
the openly gay Barney Frank. And as the week dragged on, and reports
of death threats and vandalism stretched from Arizona to Kansas to
upstate New York,
the F.B.I. and the local police had to get into the act to protect
members of Congress and their families.
How curious that a
mob fond of likening President Obama to Hitler knows so little about history
that it doesn’t recognize its own small-scale mimicry of Kristallnacht. The
weapon of choice for vigilante violence at Congressional offices has been a brick
hurled through a window. So far.
No less curious is
how disproportionate this red-hot anger is to its proximate cause. The historic
Obama-Pelosi health care victory is a big deal, all right, so much so it
doesn’t need Joe
Biden’s adjective to hype it. But the bill does not erect a huge New
Deal-Great Society-style government program. In lieu of a public option, it
delivers 32 million newly insured Americans to private insurers. As no less a
conservative authority than The Wall Street
Journal editorial page observed last week, the bill’s prototype is the
health care legislation Mitt Romney signed into law in Massachusetts. It
contains what used to be considered Republican ideas.
Yet it’s this bill
that inspired G.O.P. congressmen on the House floor to egg
on disruptive protesters even as they were being evicted from the
gallery by the Capitol Police last Sunday. It’s this bill that prompted a
congressman to shout “baby killer” at Bart Stupak, a staunch
anti-abortion Democrat. It’s this bill that drove a demonstrator to spit on Emanuel
Cleaver, a black representative from Missouri. And it’s this
“middle-of-the-road” bill, as Obama accurately calls
it, that has incited an unglued firestorm of homicidal rhetoric, from
“Kill the bill!” to Sarah Palin’s cry for her
followers to “reload.” At
least four
of
the House
members hit with death threats or vandalism are among the 20 political
targets Palin marks with rifle crosshairs on
a map on her Facebook page.
When Social
Security was passed by Congress in 1935 and Medicare in 1965, there was indeed
heated opposition. As Dana Milbank wrote in The Washington Post,
Alf Landon built his catastrophic 1936 presidential campaign on a call for
repealing Social Security. (Democrats can only pray that the G.O.P. will “go
for it” again in 2010, as Obama goaded them
on Thursday, and keep demanding repeal of a bill that by September will
shower
benefits on the elderly and children alike.) When L.B.J. scored his
Medicare coup, there were the inevitable cries of “socialism” along with
ultimately empty rumblings
of a boycott from the American Medical Association.
But there was
nothing like this. To find a prototype for the overheated reaction to the
health care bill, you have to look a year before Medicare, to the Civil Rights
Act of 1964. Both laws passed by similar majorities in Congress; the Civil
Rights Act received even more votes in the Senate (73) than Medicare
(70). But it was only
the civil rights bill that made some Americans run off the rails. That’s
because it was the one that signaled an inexorable and immutable change in the
very identity of America, not just its governance.
The apocalyptic
predictions then, like those about health care now, were all framed in
constitutional pieties, of course. Barry Goldwater, running for president in
’64, drew on the counsel of two young legal allies, William Rehnquist and
Robert Bork, to characterize
the bill as a “threat to the very essence of our basic system” and a
“usurpation” of states’ rights that “would
force you to admit drunks, a known murderer or an insane person into your place
of business.” Richard Russell, the segregationist Democratic senator
from Georgia, said
the bill “would destroy the free enterprise system.” David Lawrence, a
widely syndicated conservative columnist, bemoaned the establishment of “a
federal dictatorship.” Meanwhile, three civil rights workers were murdered in
Philadelphia, Miss.
That a tsunami of
anger is gathering today is illogical, given that what the right calls
“Obamacare” is less provocative than either the Civil Rights Act of 1964 or
Medicare, an epic entitlement that actually did precipitate a government
takeover of a sizable chunk of American health care. But the explanation is
plain: the health care bill is not the main source of this anger and never has
been. It’s merely a handy excuse. The real source of the over-the-top rage of
2010 is the same kind of national existential reordering that roiled America in
1964.
In fact, the
current surge of anger — and the accompanying rise in right-wing extremism —
predates the entire health care debate. The first signs were the shrieks of “traitor”
and “off
with his head” at Palin rallies as Obama’s election became more likely
in October 2008. Those passions have spiraled ever since — from Gov. Rick
Perry’s kowtowing to
secessionists at a Tea Party rally in Texas to the gratuitous brandishing
of assault
weapons at Obama health care rallies last summer to “You lie!” piercing the president’s address to
Congress last fall like an ominous shot.
If Obama’s first
legislative priority had been immigration or financial reform or climate change,
we would have seen the same trajectory. The conjunction of a black president
and a female speaker of the House — topped off by a wise Latina on the Supreme
Court and a powerful gay Congressional committee chairman — would sow fears of
disenfranchisement among a dwindling and threatened minority in the country no
matter what policies were in play. It’s not happenstance that Frank, Lewis and
Cleaver — none of them major Democratic players in the health care push —
received a major share of last weekend’s abuse. When you hear demonstrators
chant the slogan “Take our country back!,” these are the people they want to
take the country back from.
They can’t.
Demographics are avatars of a change bigger than any bill contemplated by Obama
or Congress. The week before the health care vote, The Times
reported that births to Asian, black and Hispanic women accounted for
48 percent of all births in America in the 12 months ending in July 2008. By
2012, the next presidential election year, non-Hispanic white births will be in
the minority. The Tea Party movement is virtually all white. The Republicans
haven’t had a single African-American in the Senate or the House since 2003 and
have had only three in total since 1935. Their anxieties about a rapidly
changing America are well-grounded.
If Congressional
Republicans want to maintain a politburo-like homogeneity in opposition to the
Democrats, that’s their right. If they want to replay the petulant Gingrich
government shutdown of 1995 by boycotting hearings and, as John McCain has vowed,
refusing to cooperate on any legislation, that’s their right too (and a
political gift to the Democrats). But they can’t emulate the 1995 G.O.P. by
remaining silent as mass hysteria, some of it encompassing armed militias, runs
amok in their own precincts. We know the end of that story. And they can’t
pretend that we’re talking about “isolated incidents” or a “fringe” utterly
divorced from the G.O.P. A Quinnipiac poll last week found
that 74 percent of Tea Party members identify themselves as Republicans or
Republican-leaning independents, while only 16 percent are aligned with
Democrats.
After the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 was passed, some responsible leaders in both parties spoke
out to try to put a lid on the resistance and violence. The arch-segregationist
Russell of Georgia, concerned about what might happen in his own backyard,
declared flatly that the law is “now on the books.” Yet no Republican or
conservative leader of stature has taken on Palin, Perry, Boehner or any of the
others who have been stoking these fires for a good 17 months now. Last week
McCain even
endorsed Palin’s “reload” rhetoric.
Are these
politicians so frightened of offending anyone in the Tea Party-Glenn Beck base
that they would rather fall silent than call out its extremist elements and
their enablers? Seemingly so, and if G.O.P. leaders of all stripes, from Romney
to Mitch McConnell to Olympia Snowe to Lindsey Graham, are afraid of these
forces, that’s the strongest possible indicator that the rest of us have reason
to fear them too.