Republican Hypocrisy category archive
Mitt the Flip Dogwhistles Dixie–Again (or Is It “Still”?) 0
Dick Polman has this to say about Mitt the Flip’s latest Dixie dogwhistle, in which the Flipster invoked Reagan’s welfare queen imagery:
Chauncey Devega analyzes the tune and concludes that Mitt the Flip is playing a dangerous game. Here’s a nugget.
I help Devega is right, but it is wise not to underestimate the power of hate.
Follow the links, especially Devega’s. Read the whole thing. Educate yourself about the playbill and the intended audience for Mitt’s Dixie concert.
Protecting Women (but Not from Men) 0

Contradict Me has a case in point. Follow the link–you won’t want to believe it.
Image via Bob Cesca’s Awesome Blog.
Helen Smells a Rat 0
A snippet. Read the rest. It’s worth it.
/blockquote
Mitt the Flip’s Song of the South 0
Chauncey Devega mercilessly dissects Mitt the Flip’s Southern Strategy Dixie dog whistles.
A nugget:
By proxy, these racially driven attacks on Barack Obama are really an assault on Black Americans. We are positioned in the White Conservative political imagination as perennial outsiders and second class citizens. As the late Joel Olson smartly observed, in the American political tradition, and in a country founded as a herrenvolk society, to be black means to be an “anti-citizen.”
He’s quite right, you know.
I’m a Southern boy. I know how to decode the damned code.
Aside:
We recently came into possession of a DVD of Disney’s Song of the South. Until then, all I had seen of the movie were the animated bits about Br’er Rabbit that used air on Walt Disney’s television show when I was a young ‘un.
The casual implicit racism, which was quite mainstream when the movie was filmed less than a long lifetime ago, made my skin crawl.
That is the America of the Southern Strategy and the Republican Party.
I doubt that I could watch the movie again, however amusing the animated bits might be (and even the portrayals of the animals in those fables was infused with racist imagery).
The Voter Fraud Fraud 0
Tony Norman points out the underlying hypocrisy of the gut out the vote movement. After citing Pennsylvania’s legal stipulation that no cases or prosecutions for voter fraud are known to exist in Pennsylvania, he observes:
Now, imagine if this was a debate about gun control. Wouldn’t conservatives be the first to scream that enforcing existing gun laws is all we need to do to stem the tide of death and violence and that adding new laws would only threaten Second Amendment rights?
Mitt the Flip the Bird to the Truth 0
In Florida, Mitt the Flip brought forth two companies to prove that they succeeded all on their ownsome, without government interference or assistance.
Tampabay dot com looked into the claims and found slight flaws (details at the link):
Government, in other words, had nothing to do with it.
But the Romney campaign couldn’t have picked more puzzling examples. Far from not needing big government, the Tampa companies have embraced government and benefited from it.
Jon Stewart asks,
Do you really want to hang entire your campaign on a willful out-of-context misunderstanding?
To answer Mr. Stewart (not that he’ll ever notice me), “Of course they do. It’s all they got.”
We Need Single Payer 0
Arizona death panel Republican state legislature at work:
The elected officials who control the state say we can’t afford to expand coverage.
The flaw in that logic is that taxpayers wind up picking up the tab anyway.
Republicanism, your choice for governance with a mean streak by persons with mean streaks on behalf of persons with mean streaks.
Civility, Republican Style 2
In the midst of a longer post about something else, Field sums up civility on the campaign trail, as defined by Republicans: it’s for the other guys (emphasis in the original).
Anyone who welcomes support from Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage, and the lot, then complains about “incivility” is talking through his hat.
In other news, Chauncey Devega wonders about sociopathy.
Image via Field.
Taxing Concepts 0
The Denver Post tries to bring some sense to our political discourse about the Supreme Court decision on the Affordable Care Act. A snippet:
Yet in a move that puts him in accord with other Republicans, Romney on Wednesday repudiated statements made by his staff just two days earlier that maintained he still believed the mandate was a penalty, not a tax.
“The majority of the court said it is a tax, therefore it is a tax. The majority has spoken,” Romney said. “There is no way around that.” (See note below.)
Oh, please. Does Romney accept as gospel everything else the court says? Look, there are many politically important issues to debate regarding the Affordable Care Act, but the question of whether the individual mandate is a tax or a penalty is not one of them. The question is of interest to constitutional scholars, of course, but in practical terms it makes no difference in how the act affects individual Americans.
They are certainly correct.
And unlikely to be noticed. Truth is irrelevant to propaganda.
________________
Note below:
The Supreme Court also once said that all black people were slaves for life and could never be freed.
“Don’t Get Sick. Die Quickly.” 0
When Congressman Grayson alleged that the Republican health care plan was
Don’t get sick. Die Quickly.
he was roundly derided by Republicans.
The Agony of Defeat 0
I have not wasted time and effort theorizing about internal motives of Supreme Court justices in their rulings. They are unfathomable and irrelevant.
It’s the rulings that count.
Nevertheless, the discomfiture of wingnut world at what they see as Chief Justice Roberts’s apostasy is rather delicious.
Change We Can Believe In . . . 0
. . . because we see the evidence every day. A snippet from a column about the Affordable Care Act decision, by Robyn Blumner (emphasis added):
If Romney hadn’t decided that he wants the presidency more than personal integrity, he might have savored the victory for a program modeled after the one he helped establish in Massachusetts as governor — with an individual mandate.
One Track Minds 0
Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley sums up Republican health care policy. From TPM:
The only health care mandate they can embrace are transvaginal probes for women.
More here.
Comment Rescue, Republican Beatitudes 1
From commenter Mary, commenting on this post. This is too marvelously done not to have wider exposure–at least as wide as my little backwater on the innerwebs can give it.
The Sermon on the Radio
Limbaugh. 5:3-13
3 Blessed are the physically wealthy,
for they shall rule the earth.4 Blessed are those who are not Mexican,
for they will not be deported.5 Blessed are the bankers,
for they will foreclose on the meek.6 Blessed are those who cause others to hunger and thirst,
for they shall be called capitalists.7 Blessed are the merciless,
for they will be called good businessmen.8 Blessed are the corporations,
for they are people too.9 Blessed are the war profiteers,
for they will be called good Americans.10 Blessed are those who persecute because of self-righteousness,
for theirs is the pulpit and podium.11 Blessed are you when you insult others, persecute others and falsely say all kinds of evil against others because of me.
12 Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward on earth, for in the same way persecuted the great conservatives who were before you.










