Most compellingly, the article weaves the modern day rants of Glenn Beck back to his spiritual predecessor, a man named W. Cleon Skousen. And I use the term 'spiritual' advisedly; Skousen was an ardent Mormon, whose beliefs were long promoted by his church. Beck, a reformed alcoholic, is a recent convert to that faith.
So, given the long held Mormon depiction of black people as devils (since rescinded), it is no surprise that not-so-hidden racism helps fuel the Tea Party anger. But it is a mistake to make that anger and the racism synonymous; there is far more to the anti-government, anti-taxation and anti-American aspects of the movement.
And one, in particular, should not be overlooked.
By the time Bill Clinton formally announced for Democratic nomination in the early 90's, millions of Americans were already warning that his wife, Hillary, would ruin the nation. She was too liberal, too uppity and far too opinionated--for a woman. And certainly more than 90% of those people who felt certain Hillary would prove the death of democracy would not have recognized her had she walked into their living rooms. No matter that they didn't know her; they knew her to be evil. Expressly because she was a woman. If there is one thing a Mormon will not abide--to this day--it is the idea of a woman standing on equal intellectual footing with a man. Men lead...and women follow. It is God's law.
And that, in turn, helps explain the irrational and terroristic views espoused about the Democratic Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi. To GOP candidates this fall, running against Obama may be a home run. But running against Pelosi is a grand slam. She is the new femme fatale--the new woman who would ruin America.
Now, let me express my own opinion. America would be far better off if Pelosi had been elected in 2008 instead of Obama. With her years of experience, she understands the take-no-prisoners, suicidal obstructionism of the Republican Party. She would not have sauntered into the White House holding even the faintest belief in bipartisanship. She would have ruled with the iron hand of progressivism that is the only hope for the next generation...or two. This is the greatest fear of the right wing: a woman who understands their false bravado, and is willing to call the bully's bluff.
At the same time, it must be conceded that the anti-female credo of the Mormons and right wing extremists does allow for admission of women into the fold--as long as they are candidates who will align themselves abjectly to the dictates of their uber-male corporatist masters. The girls can be acceptable, even useful. It's OK if Fiorina and O'Donnell and Palin and Angle and Bachmann and McMahon carry the standard for the Party into office.
They don't matter. They are simply tools. They can prove their true destiny: serving their men.
Update: On Countdown this week, Nancy Pelosi delivered the following statistic: more new private sector jobs have been created during the first eight months of the Obama administration than during all eight years of the Bush presidency. This qualifies as an astounding fact...and further distances the communication effectiveness of Pelosi from the curious reticence of Mr. Reid and Mr. Obama.
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