Three Reasons Conservatives are Losing the Battle for America | AmThinker

1. The Electorate.  The Republicans may as well stop their soul-searching and look at the reality of the Democrat electorate.  In addition to those Republican voters who stayed home on Election Day, the hard-core (so-called) progressives, the inadequate Republican ground game, and those who pay little or no federal tax and are happy to elect those who promise to take larger sums from those who DO pay, there’s a more profound and possibly intractable problem.  From my countless discussions with Democrats/liberals, it seems clear that many, many voters – we will never be sure of their numbers – neither hear, nor are interested in hearing, the stance of conservatives or Republicans.  I’m often incredulous at the self-satisfied political ignorance and gullibility of successful, otherwise high-functioning and intellectually curious Democrats. 

The range and depth of their ignorance regarding easily ascertainable facts is astounding (“No, President Obama has NOT increased the deficit: that’s a lie!  For your information, President Obama has spent less than any President in history!”); and many, in my experience, cite the New York Times as their irrefutable source of information, with phrases like: “The Times didn’t mention it so it can’t be true or relevant….”

For these people, it really doesn’t matter what conservatives or Republicans think or say: they won’t hear it!  Republican positions are totally lost – unheard and meaningless – to a growing number of the electorate, including huge swaths of highly-educated and effective leaders in society.  It would be understating the issue to note that the Republican/conservative “brand” has been sullied – but it begins to convey the nature of the problem: it’s more accurate to say that the Republican/conservative brand has been effectively nullified for many people.  For a growing number of voters, it doesn’t matter what Republicans say: they have bought into the idea – nurtured by the press, educators at every level, and almost the entire entertainment industry – that Republicans are the “bad guys”.  Furthermore, and possibly more disturbing, is the fact that this apparently mushrooming group of voters is largely unaware of and unconcerned about their stance.

Imagine trying to discuss the strengths of Judaism with members of the Hitler Youth, or the weaknesses of Mao’s Great Leap Forward with a cadre of the Red Guard: would your ideas be heard and rationally considered?  Or suppose you were running for office and these youngsters could vote: would they vote for you? When you discovered that you’d lost their vote and consequently an election, would you then ask yourself, for example, whether the ideas or nature of Judaism were at fault for your inability to persuade them?

That’s about the level of it with much of the U.S. electorate: they’ve totally bought into the liberal stance – which these days includes refusing to hear or even consider ideas of the blacklisted opposition – and there’s no indication that they’ll be coming back to a more rational stance. 

They proclaim themselves compassionate but really don’t care if the “bad guys” are emotionally or physically hurt.  And there’s a typical structure to their answers in response to interrogations about their reputed compassion: first the distancing phrase, then the conjunction, and finally the seemingly reasonable explanation.  (A couple typical answers: “Of course nobody would condone such violent behavior but I also don’t hear too many people upset about his absence”…or… “We should never turn to violence as an answer but who can blame them for getting upset”.)  An example to illustrate the point: although You may recall that a couple Republicans were savagely beaten in apparent political violence in New Orleans after a Republican fund raiser in 2010, I can guarantee you that essentially none of your Democrat friends do.

To call these people “zealots” would be overstating their political energy, but calling them “partisans” is somehow off point. Many of them, but for their political stance, would be considered bright or knowledgeable, as I’m sure were many of the Hitler Youth, the Red Guard and members of like organizations, who were often specially selected for their academic, athletic and social skills.

While some of these people may have limited political knowledge, they all know something really, really well: Republicans and conservatives are bad guys, should not be listened to, and will make everything worse. If you’re a Republican or a conservative, it doesn’t matter what you say because, if it comes out of your mouth, it’s wrong.

When I was young, it was a matter of pride that we’d try to familiarize ourselves with both sides of an argument: my teachers mostly attempted to present alternative views fairly and encouraged us to research opposing political stances independently.  Now educators at every level mostly seem to expect adherence to the liberal/Democrat position, and both challenge (even threaten) those who disagree, and create an environment where alternative views and their proponents are mocked (or worse). 

So Republicans and conservatives, I’d say the same thing to you that I’d say to a Rabbi rejected by the Hitler Youth: if you think that the Democrats heard, digested and rejected your arguments in the last election, you’re deluded. Your brand is so soiled that you will not be heard by this generation…short of a calamity on the order of the one that befell the Nazis.  Your misreading of the times and the situation is startling. You look like bewildered youngsters trying to please a psychotic mother, looking for cues in an electorate and media that derides and, in many cases, despises you. In terms of convincing the electorate of the good sense of your positions, there may not be workable solutions: but take a first step by facing the truth: you have allowed the culture to drift for decades, and one feature of the drift is the acceptability of determined mindlessness…including the mindless rejection of you and whatever it is that you proclaim. You still have a substantial choir to whom you preach…but probably a larger counter-choir that not only doesn’t hear you but aggressively covers its ears when you speak.

2. Media Bias.  The fact is that while there has never been a pure news delivery system, it was much, much cleaner 60 years ago.  One could have argued the case several decades ago that there was such an entity as “news”, but it makes no sense to call these groups “news” organizations anymore.  A more sensible approach would be to say that there’s hot, warm, cool and cold information, and that the mainstream press and the left are the arbiters of what will be hot, cold, etc.  If the press decides that a particular story does not fit their world-view or plan, the story becomes “cold”, is ignored and, to the acolytes, doesn’t exist.  Examples would be The New York Times ignoring the Benghazi story or “Fast and Furious” for extended periods; when they finally reported on these, they had lots of ways, as always, to effect their spin: story placement and flow, leaving out facts that might be inconsistent with their world-view, interviewing those with known sympathy to their stance and then editing the interviews for greatest New-York-Times-style impact.  Since so many news organizations and acolytes look to the Times to define worthy/unworthy stories, advance the “proper” spin, etc., much of the country, including many Republicans, believe that they’ve heard the full story after having read The Times (and The Washington Post).  I’ve been told several times – although it always amazes me – that a particular event “never happened”…with the explanation that “The Times didn’t mention it….”  Because this situation has been in place without effective challenge for so long, it’s second-nature to the (so-called) reporters involved in creating and perpetuating it: to most of them, the idea that they have a political slant that finds expression in their news stories would be obviously bogus…not worth wasting a moment pondering.

“What?? Are you claiming that there’s a conspiracy among these journalists???”  No: it’s group-think!  Imagine the Jewish fellow noted above speaking to a Nazi Youth club and later finding that essentially all of them had a negative reaction to his presentation.  Would that be a conspiracy?  Or how about someone identified as a “Petit Bourgeois” delivering a roundly rejected lecture on the benefits of capitalism to a group of Bolsheviks: although they all found his ideas wrong-headed, would their rejection reflect a conspiracy?  I don’t think so.

Republicans and conservatives: you are playthings of the mainstream media and they can totally have their way with you, no matter your observations or objections.  And the most interesting part of living in such a one-sided media environment for so long is that the vast majority of Republicans (and many conservatives) will, like obedient puppies, follow the media lead. The bottom line: you Republicans and conservatives are powerless in defining or moving the debate: the mainstream media along with the liberals and Democrats essentially totally define the issues, the responses to the issues, which events to focus on or ignore, etc.  And their chosen topics and slants can be very bizarre indeed.  But you have nothing to do with it!  You’re powerless!  Impotent!  The sooner you face this fact, the sooner you might find a productive path ahead.

And one other note about the mainstream media: because you Republicans and conservatives are so impotent and because they identify, define and massage (or ignore) the stories consistent with their world view, it stands to reason that anyone can be tarnished and destroyed by them.  Anyone!: Ben Carson, Marco Rubio, a reincarnated Jesus Christ, and you and any of your colleagues: it’s simply a matter of who is picked out and how thoroughly he or she needs to be destroyed.  If the target will cooperate and absent himself or herself, it’s often unnecessary – a waste of time and resources – to continue the assault.

Likewise, if the mainstream media and the left decide to ignore a scandal or other situation, for a large percentage of the population – including many who are otherwise well informed and high-functioning – it won’t exist: there’s essentially nothing that you conservatives and Republicans can do about it.  In related fashion, if the left and mainstream media decide to re-route information or assign blame idiosyncratically, their version will quickly become the accepted explanation for a large percentage of the populace.  It’s why George W. Bush is largely to blame for the mortgage crisis, (supposed) global warming, increased violent crime, persistent racism and all manner of other difficulties.  Scapegoats are a beautiful thing for people who don’t want to face themselves or grow up and, in a lopsided information system like ours, there is neither a shortage of scapegoats nor a practical limit to the extent of blame that one scapegoat can absorb.  If you think that this plum George Bush-Sarah Palin-scapegoat-era is over, think again.  And, more to the point, you Republicans and conservatives have nothing whatever to say about it.

So stop with the, “If we’d only nominated” somebody, he or she would be “so much less vulnerable” to attacks than the person we nominated; and stop the, “It’s such a shame that he keeps opening his mouth and sticking his foot in it….”  If some other person had been nominated, he or she would have been destroyed if he didn’t fit the media paradigm: and then you’d be complaining that yet another candidate should have been nominated.  Face it, Republicans and conservatives: you have nothing to say about who gets pilloried in the press and who doesn’t, or what the issues will be, and there’s essentially nothing you can do to change it: all of that is decided by people who disagree with and often despise you.  So you may as well stop your automatic genuflections to the liberals/Democrats by beating each other up.  (From a distance, though, you have to admit that it must be a gas to be able to call the shots for your opponents…to get them to hop and dance on cue, to self-flagellate, to start fighting with each other or join in the carnage.)

3. Techniques.  A third element that makes the position of Republicans and conservatives almost untenable is the range of techniques for destroying them that are accepted by many Americans and the mainstream press.  The most effective and destructive technique is so-called “political correctness”, a method of silencing those who disagree with a group or party controlling the political agenda: it’s a technique that depends on a constant reinforcing dialogue between the media and compliant citizens.  Political correctness is a capital political concept because: the participants silently acquiesce to its dictates; it’s a self-modulating system where groups of people self-monitor and groom each other into conformity; through unspoken or overt threats of censure, it propagates itself; and, among the willing, it inevitably leads to the control of thought.  If we freely restrict our speech to only “allowed” topics, in short order we restrict our thinking as well.  In the end there is no more powerful political tool than thought control, which is why mastery and management of information is a central issue in all totalitarian regimes.  What has required the overt elimination or forced domination of media outlets in most autocratic regimes has been yielded up easily by our group-think media, who now march along in near lockstep while trumpeting their independence.  Political correctness must be a beautiful thing to behold if you’re a politician inclined toward domination.

Another technique is the investigation and censure of politicians and groups who don’t fit the media or left wing paradigm, while ignoring or manipulating scandalous information on political allies.  When potentially damaging information about left wing allies is ignored by the mainstream media, it simply “doesn’t exist” to growing numbers of otherwise well-informed acolytes.  This is why Sarah Palin is regarded as perhaps the most heinous and hated American politician today to a large portion of the population, while Bill Clinton is lionized and his wife may be the brightest woman in the western world.  With enough investigation and diligence, anyone can be destroyed and almost anyone can be elevated.  Again, who is destroyed and who idealized is totally within the control of the mainstream media and the left wing: conservatives and Republicans cannot substantially affect these processes because of the nullification of their brand advanced through the press, the entertainment media and educational institutions. 

Two elements exacerbate this technique for conservatives and Republicans: the fact that the left wing, because it views itself as having an essential and morally-superior “mission”, excuses its unscrupulous destructive strategies (like, for example, essentially inventing and repeating false stories until they become part of the political landscape [such as bogus Tea-Party threats toward Congressmen]; attacking family members of antagonists; somehow “discovering” legitimately sealed information and dropping it over the transoms of friendly media; etc.); and the fact that Republicans and conservatives, so inured to being cogs in the left-wing-driven information system, leap in to play their roles of unwitting enablers in the destruction of their own.

A third technique – another favorite of despotic regimes like the Soviets in Eastern Europe – is “selective violence”: physically harmful acts meant to both stop a political opponent and send a message to like-minded potential opponents.  This category includes such things as union attacks on Tea Party demonstrations; the arrest, prosecution and imprisonment of the “Coptic Christian” on charges “unrelated” to his film; covert threats toward Chief Justice Roberts by national politicians on the eve of the health care decision; the use of government powers, like repeated, intensive tax audits against political enemies; etc.  It must be a comforting and, unfortunately for the body politic, “liberating” position for politicians and left-wing groups to know that no matter how many or how severe their physical or administrative attacks, these will be ignored by the mainstream press and consequently “not exist” for much of the population.

In a word, we are observing the regression of a culture…one that is moving away from sophistication and proudly stepping backward from civilizing attempts.  We have seen primitive behavior in our own culture and others: when people look to a label or a skin color as all that need be said about a person; when information from trusted sources of information are grossly biased so only one side is heard or even “exists”; and when physical or administrative violence against people is belittled, laughed at or ignored.  It’s a cultural regression and, as the unifying, reassuring legal structures and precepts wither, as information sources become untrustworthy, and as physical and administrative violence worsens, it becomes increasingly difficult to reverse.

via By J. Paul Masko, III: Three Reasons Conservatives are Losing the Battle for America.

2 thoughts on “Three Reasons Conservatives are Losing the Battle for America | AmThinker

  1. thetinfoilhatsociety 02/25/2013 / 9:12 PM

    Honestly, two Nazi references in three paragraphs makes it hard to finish reading. Referencing the Nazis is kind of a last resort sort of argument; it shows a disturbing lack of imagination and a black/white outlook that doesn’t bode well for the rest of the argument.

    I live in an area where the liberal/democratic point of view isn’t welcome, so to say that the liberal agenda is all schools are about is rather nonsense.

    I will finish reading this, and perhaps I will have another comment. From as much as I’ve read now, however, this essay supports his thesis that the “other side doesn’t listen” for his own side as well. I personally could be conservative, and was a registered republican for most of my adult life, except for the fact that I am repulsed by religious hypocrites trying to use civilian law to force their beliefs on others, I happen to think that caring for our society’s HEALTH care (not illness care, which is what we have) is conducive to a healthy productive society, the fact that many modern conservatives use ‘the evils of liberalism’ as a cloak for outright racism, the fact that voter caging has in fact happened ON BOTH SIDES, and more that would simply take too much of your space to outline.

    Simplistic thinking doesn’t benefit anyone, and that’s the major problem with most people these days. You can’t stand in the tent or under the umbrella unless you blindly accept EVERYTHING that the umbrella stands for.

    The plain fact of the matter is that mature adults realize there are grey areas to EVERY problem we face. And another plain fact is that we have much more in common, on both sides of the aisle, than differences, and we really need to actively LISTEN and SEEK OUT these commonalities in order to combat those who are enemies of both equally.

    I am not a Buddhist but I do try to generally keep the Buddhist outlook in my dealings with people (not necessarily for work, but for the rest of my life): seek out those who oppose you, and LISTEN to their point of view. REALLY listen. You can learn a lot that way. And more importantly, you can find points of commonality that you can bond over.

    Our society is falling apart because of simplistic definitions and lack of listening on both sides.

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  2. aurorawatcherak 02/26/2013 / 2:28 AM

    I think there’s lots of hope in the 20-year-old set. My daughter and her friends all talk a lot like libertarians. Many of them were planning to vote for Ron Paul and some of them voted for the libertarian candidate because he was on the ballot here in Alaska. More of them forgot it was election day, but that’s okay, because they remind me of the kids I went to college with. It was 1980, and we were mad at the government for the Vietnam War debt, double-digit inflation and unemployment and we wanted a change. I wasn’t one of the ones who voted for Reagan (that time), but a lot of my classmates did and we all voted for him the next time.

    This generation is the hope that we can come back from this. They’re aware of what got us into this mess and they don’t want to stay there. And, the polls mostly miss them because they don’t have home phones and the pollsters are still trying to figure out cell phones. They give me hope for the future as my generation gave my mother hope for the future. Of course, she died a long time before Barack Obama became president.

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