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Republiclan references to "real Americans" incite dividion and fear

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Wednesday, August 1, 2012 10:07
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Wednesday, August 1, 2012 10:07 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


I fully agree with the following. When people blame the entire Congress/Senate for things not getting better in the country, I'm immediately struck by the unfairness of it. Dems haven't been, from what I've seen, particularly divisive, but the Republican tactic of making Obama look "foreign" is reprehensible to me. Democrats have agreed to many cuts, but Republicans flatly refuse to raise taxes on the rich. We need both methods, but that and the fact that everything the Dems and Obama have TRIED to do has been blocked...again by the Republicans.

And the verbiage I hear from the right disgusts me; apparently they have nothing to rely on but "hate Obama" and vilify people in order to increase the existing chasms makes me ill. That the Republican party has handed the reigns to extremists and fringers is disconcerting to me, but I don't expeect it to change any time soon.
Quote:

Rep. Michelle Bachmann and her cohort of right-wing Republicans are using identity, religion, and race as a permanent wedge issue – most recently in their unsubstantiated attack on Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s Muslim aide Huma Abedin. When Ms. Bachmann was criticized for her suggestion that Ms. Abedin be investigated for potential ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, Newt Gingrich and Rush Limbaugh rushed to her defense.

By tapping into the powerful undercurrents of race and religion, Ms. Bachmann and others are using language to satisfy their immediate political ends, by dividing Americans and thereby America into pro- and anti-American parts.

In a diverse country built by immigrants, why are some Republicans taking this divisive approach?

As documented in the 2010 Census, the United States is in the midst of a demographic transformation. Minorities, now roughly one-third of the US population, are expected to become the collective majority before the middle of the century. These changes will have a long-term cultural and political impact, but they are also fueling an immediate backlash.

It appears that a small group of Americans have met these demographic changes with a mixture of fear and anxiety. America is changing too quickly and too uncomfortably for some, and it seems they have looked to their political home for reassurance and guidance.

This fringe group of Republicans has exploited the environment of mistrust to secure votes and fill their campaign coffers. By fashioning themselves as defenders of what Sarah Palin once termed “real America,” these melancholic preachers have used nostalgia to contrive a vision of a homogeneous America that is supposedly slipping away.

Not all Republicans are guilty of domestic divisiveness, but it is an unfortunate reality that members such as Bachmann and Rep. Louie Gohmert of Texas (who is continuing the accusations of Muslim Brotherhood influence in America) are allowed a prominent home under the Republican tent. The tragic irony of their vision is not that America is slipping from their grasp, but rather that the Republican fringe is increasingly hostile to the American ideal of a multi-cultural and pluralistic society.

The proportion of the population represented by Ms. Palin’s and Bachmann’s “real Americans” (white) is shrinking, and America is in the midst of an era of change and renewal. As our nation continues to diversify, the Republican Party will be unable to remain relevant unless it embraces a set of more enlightened policies and a more unifying message.

The lack of diversity within the Republican Party is already marginalizing them in what were once competitive states. Even Obama, in a fundraising trip to deep red Texas last month, declared that Texas could be a battleground state “soon,” an allusion to the increasing Hispanic population there and the potential for such demographic shifts to reshape the political landscape.

Both parties must acknowledge and try to solve the real issues facing all Americans, beyond momentary political gains. If some Republicans continue to resist the changes taking place, then a common effort to solve our problems will likely not be possible. There is an urgent need for an emphasis on solving problems and less on divisive rhetoric.

How we treat those who appear different from us reflects the degree of faith we have in the success of the American experiment – the great melting pot. And if our current times are filled with anxiety and unease, they also give us an opportunity and a challenge to open our eyes and hearts to a new generation of Americans, no matter their political, ethnic, religious, or racial background. http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2012/0731/Republican-refer
ences-to-real-Americans-incite-division-and-fear


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