How the GOP Purged Me

by Chris Currey


I am an old Republican. I am religious, yet not a fanatic.

I am a free-marketer; yet, I believe in the role of the government as a
fair evenhanded referee.

I am socially conservative; yet, I believe that my lesbian niece and my
gay grandchild should have the full protection of the law and live as
free Americans enjoying every aspect of our society with no prejudices
and/or restrictions. Nowadays, my political and socio-economic profile
would make me a Marxist, not a Republican.

I grew up in an era where William F. Buckley fought the John Birch
society and kicked them out of the Republican Party.

I grew up with -– in fact voted for the first time for –-
Eisenhower. In 1956, he ran a campaign of dignity. A campaign that
acknowledged that there are certain projects better suited to be handled
by the government. See, business thinks in the short term, as he said.
That's the imperative of the marketplace. I invest and I expect that
in a few quarters, I garner the fruits of my investment.

Government, on the other hand, has the luxury to wait a few years, maybe
decades, for a return on a given investment. As a former businessman, I
know that first hand. Am I a Marxist for thinking that?

I witnessed the fight for equal civil rights in the 1960s. And as a
proud American, I applauded the passage of the Civil Rights Act and
Voting Rights Act, and we became a better country because of them. 
Those acts made America stronger. Those acts, at their core, represented
and still represent all the values upon which the Republican Party was
founded.

Yet today, our GOP representatives and leaders are ashamed of them. When
they talk about them, you feel their discomfort, their clumsiness, and
sometimes their shame. That awkwardness is so strong that it crosses the
television screen and hits you in the face in your living room.

Why is that? What happened to this generation of Republicans? We are the
party of Abraham Lincoln, and yet we act and behave as if we are the
party of Nathan Bedford Forrest.

I did not like Medicaid and Medicare when they were passed. I was
opposed to them.

Maybe I was too young, too strong, and too ideologically confined. Yet,
over the years, I saw how Medicare helped millions of elderly Americans.
I saw how Medicare helped my mom in her final years battling emphysema
caused by years of smoking. You have to be blind to oppose those
programs. You have to be blind to wish for the suffering of millions of
Americans just because you believe in personal responsibility.

As a businessman, I was torn between my bottom line and providing health
coverage for my employees. I knew that if I provided them with that
coverage, their productivity increases. I did my best, but the riptide
of the health insurance market defeated me.

And with a heavy heart, I offered them gimmicky coverages that, deep
down, I knew did not provide a comprehensive and adequate coverage, but
it was the only coverage I could afford.

I voted for Nixon and for Reagan. Although I did not like the deficit
spending of the Reagan administration, I blamed it on and rationalized
it by the necessities of fighting the Cold War. I liked Reagan — who
didn't? Even my Democrat and liberal friends liked and respected
him.

I voted for Clinton, twice. I thought he was the best Republican
president since Ike.

No, I did not make a mistake. Bill Clinton was closer ideologically to
Eisenhower and Nixon than Bush I and II could ever be. I thought that
Clinton practiced and articulated true Republican ideology in his fiscal
discipline, job creation, smart tax cuts, and foreign policy better than
anyone since Ike.

Then something happened in the 1990s. The leaders of the GOP grew
belligerent. They became too religious, almost zealots. They became
intolerant. They began searching for purity in Republican thought and
doctrine. Ideology blinded them.

I continued to vote Republican, but with a certain unease. Deep down I
knew that a schism happened between the modern Republican Party and the
one I grew up with.

During the fight over the impeachment of President Clinton, the ugly
face of the Republican Party was brought to the surface. Empty rhetoric,
ideological intolerance, vengeance, and religious zealotry became the
common currency.

Suddenly, if you are pro-choice, you could not be a Republican. If you
are for smart and sensible taxes to balance out the budget, you could
not be a Republican. If you are pro-civil rights, you could not be a
Republican.

It started with minorities: they left the party. Then women; they
divorced the GOP and sent it to sleep on the couch. Then, the young
folks; they left and are leaving the Republican Party in droves.

Then, someone stood up and told my niece and my grandchild that they are
not fully Americans — just second class Americans because they are
homosexual. They wished hell and damnation upon my loved ones just
because they are different.

Are we led by priests or are we led by rational politicians? Now, we
have became the party of the Old Straight White Folks. We should rename
the Republican Party the OSWF rather than the GOP.

Recently, since the election of Barack Obama, common sense has left the
Republican Party completely. We are in the era of craziness. As David
Frum has written, a deal was there to be made over the healthcare bill.
Instead, this ideological purity blinded the GOP.

As LBJ said it, instead of being inside the tent pissing out, we choose
to be outside the tent, pissing against the wind. And we got splashed by
our own nonsense.

Why did we do that?

Well, when a political party shrinks its electoral based to below 30%
and is composed by one demographic group, all that is left are a bunch
of zealots.

We shrank it by kicking out of the party those who believe that abortion
should be legal but limited.

We shrank it by kicking out those who believe that an $11 trillion
economy, like ours, needs a strong government, not a government that can
be drowned in a bathtub.

We shrank it when we sanctified Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and Glenn
Beck, and canonized Sarah Palin. These are the leaders of my party
nowadays.

How did we go from William F. Buckley to Glenn Beck?

How did we go from Eisenhower and Nixon to Sarah Palin and Michelle
Bachmann? I do not know. What I do know, however, is that these leaders
remind of me of the leaders of the Whig Party. And if they continue on
their nonsense, they will bring the collapse of the GOP.

I do not recognize myself in the Republican Party anymore. As someone
said it before, I did not leave the Republican Party, the Republican
Party left me. I have the same ideological positions on most of the
issues that I had when I voted for Eisenhower, Nixon, Reagan and George
W. Bush in 2000.

However, I just cannot trust the reins of our government and nation, of
this formidably complicated and complex gigantic machine that is the
USA, to the amateurish leadership of the Republican Party.

We are living through tough times. We are being challenged like I have
never seen America being challenged before. China is a formidable foe,
and it is out there competing against us on every field and beating us
on several fronts. While our education budgets are being slashed in
every state across the nation, China is doubling and tripling theirs.

These are the challenges and challengers that we are facing. And we need
our best and brightest to lead us, not a half-term governor or radio/TV
talking heads.

Maybe I am too old and too cynical, but I think the Republican party is
in the last stages of agony. If nothing happens, we might win an
election or even two, but in the long run we will lose America.

http://www.frumforum.com/how-the-gop-purged-me


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