Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Unless The Republicans Are Removed . . .


There is a myth going around these days in the United States. In the midst of the violence, some are claiming that both sides are equally responsible. Paul Krugman writes:

False equivalence, portraying the parties as symmetric even when they clearly aren’t, has long been the norm among self-proclaimed centrists and some influential media figures. It’s a stance that has hugely benefited the GOP, as it has increasingly become the party of right-wing extremists.
You might have thought that the horrifying events of recent days would finally break through that norm. But you would have been wrong. Bothsidesism is, it turns out, a fanatical cult impervious to evidence. Trump famously boasted that his supporters would stick with him even if he shot someone on Fifth Avenue; what he didn’t point out was that pundits would piously attribute the shooting to “incivility,” and that Sunday talk shows would feature Fifth-Avenue-shooting advocates and give them a respectful hearing.
This needs to stop, and those who keep practicing bothsidesism need to be shamed. At this point, pretending that both sides are equally to blame, or attributing political violence to spreading hatred without identifying who’s responsible for that spread, is a form of deep cowardice.
The fact is that one side of the political spectrum is peddling hatred, while the other isn’t. And refusing to point that out for fear of sounding partisan is, in effect, lending aid and comfort to the people poisoning our politics. Yes, hate is on the ballot next week.

Under Trump, the Republican Party has become a beacon of hate. It's not just the people at his rallies who have taken to making Hitlerian salutes. It's his enablers in Congress who refuse to criticise Trump's rhetoric. And unless and until the Republicans are removed from power, the horror show will continue.

Image: The New York Times

2 comments:

Lorne said...

As Yeats said so long ago, Owen, the best lack all conviction, while the worst are filled with passionate intensity.

Owen Gray said...

Which raises the question, Lorne: What awaits us around the corner?