Scott McConnell writes:
It is a genuinely sad thing to see the party of
Nixon and Eisenhower, Reagan and Pat Buchanan, turn into a joke. But it seems
beyond dispute that this has happened. One could seek to understand, while
condemning, George W. Bush’s foreign policy after 9/11: it had traceable roots
in the party’s influential neoconservative intellectuals and was made possible
only by a genuine national panic after an attack that seemed to come, to the
uninformed, completely out of the blue.
Even Joe McCarthy and his demagogic scattershot
blasts of false allegations could be understood in the context of the nation’s
shock in turning from a wartime alliance with “Uncle Joe” to an abrupt
realization that the Soviet Union was an expansionist totalitarian country with
a genuine network of sympathizers inside the United States.
But what explains the GOP’s present absurdity? In
its reality-resistant style it resembles McCarthyism, but of course the second
time it is McCarthyism as farce. Here
Colbert runs through the GOP and “conservosphere” media’s wholehearted embrace
of the “Friends of Hamas” charge—Chuck Hagel was said to have delivered speeches
before the non-existent group. Here
is how the charge started—a journalist thought he was being obviously, crudely
sarcastic in suggesting the possibility to a Republican aide.
It would be funny, except the country—really any
country, but certainly this one at a critical historical juncture—does actually
need a conservative party that isn’t ridiculous. Unfortunately, it doesn’t have
one.
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