For years Republicans’ most entertaining
characteristic has been their hypocrisy.
With a major portion of their ethos depending on public defense of a set
of values that people in positions of power are inherently unlikely to maintain,
they are doomed to be ousted often as hypocrites. Democrats, on the other hand, less likely to
represent religious that demand public declarations of virtue, are never so
ludicrous. You can call Bill Clinton
many things, but he is not a hypocrite because he has never told other people
how to behave. There have been so many
too-good-to-true moments among Republicans: preachers blasting homosexuality
and then getting nabbed with a male escort; stentorian proclamations of the
importance of family values from men engaged in illicit affairs (along with the
beautiful example of Sarah Palin nattering about abstinence except for her own
daughter); members of congress blithering about the stimulus while receiving funds
for their own districts. And then they make the talk-show rounds either to
repent or to explain why they were not in fact hypocrites, protracting the fun.
But it looks as if Republicans have found a
way of obviating future charges of hypocrisy: refusing to acknowledge the concept of hypocrisy
altogether. If
you don’t recognize anything wrong with saying one thing and doing another you
effectively neutralize the accusation.
The Oklahomans are voting on STATE QUESTION NO. 759
LEGISLATIVE REFERENDUM NO. 359 which seeks to make affirmative action,
defined as discrimination (presumably against white guys), illegal - except
when to refuse affirmative action would result in the loss of federal
funds. Part 3 of the “State
Question:” Affirmative action is allowed
when needed to keep or obtain federal funds.” This is the equivalent of Ryan going yes, as a matter of fact it is perfectly true
that lobbied for and managed to get stimulus funds for Janesville which
resulting in growth for the town and that I am now campaigning against the
stimulus. What’s your point? Ryan of course contorted himself trying to
show that he was not in fact a hypocrite, because the charge of hypocrisy remains embarrassing for him. But it
looks as if this won’t last long. If the Oklahomans are any indication, we are
on our way to a post-hypocritical world where we no longer paper over uncomfortable gaps
between our words and our actions: because such gaps will no longer be considered uncomfortable.
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