America’s Fifth Column
If, in the B.T. (=Before Trump) era, anybody had ever posited that the Republican Party would turn out to be Moscow’s and Putin’s best ally, they would have been declared insane.
July 26, 2018
If, in the B.T. (=Before Trump) era, anybody had ever posited that the Republican Party would turn out to be Moscow’s and Putin’s best ally, they would have been declared insane.
And yet, here we are. Republican voters are extremely faithful to their man Trump and, by logical extension, to Moscow.
There used to be times, during the days of McCarthyism, when Republicans hurled the phrase “fifth column” as an insult at Democrats, to brand them for being soft on communism. Those days are long gone.
A key part of the explanation for why there are the now real – and, in contrast to the McCarthy days, not just the imagined – “Fifth columnists” in the United States is rooted in the boundless cynicism of the Republican Party.
The party has managed to perform some potent voodoo magic throughout the land. This is the only way to describe its ability to attract working-class whites, mostly in the rural areas of the United States, to its plutocratic causes.
Supporting Putin
The even bigger political magic the Republicans have pulled off is to get their voters to support Putin at the very same time as Republican campaign managers try to scare off potential Democratic voters by talking about the Democrats’ turn to “socialism.”
By that amazing logic, speaking up ever so slightly in favor of the potential economic, social and political interests of average Americans is an act of “socialism.” In contrast, it stands to reason that “democracy” is the process of ensuring that an entire country is largely organized for the economic interests of the top 1%.
The main reason why the inappropriate charge of socialism is thrown into the equation is to protect Republicans against appropriate charges that they are little more than a clever front organization dedicated to furthering the cause of economic plutocracy.
That this maneuver is even remotely possible is due to the fact that most Americans have always had a hard time with definitions and abstract concepts.
Why are Democrats taking it?
Still, one has to ask why the Democrats are allowing the Republicans to get away with these immense ideological distortions. A key part of the explanation here is the relentlessness of the Clinton wing of the Democratic Party to pay no more than lip service to the economic and political interests of the large U.S. working class (i.e., people with under $40,000 in annual income).
Under those circumstances, it is no wonder that U.S. politics is ever more linked to Russia. The leaders of that country have always managed to organize Russia’s economic affairs in an exploitative and/or deceitful manner.
This is true regardless of whether one is talking about nobility during Czarist days, the nomenklatura during the days of Communism or the oligarchs now.
For a long time, the United States held itself out as the alternative role model – a society that isn’t just organized for the benefits of the “haves” at the top of the economic pyramid.
Dispensing with that notion is the biggest implication of the Republicans having turned themselves into America’s Fifth column.
Takeaways
If before the Trump era anybody had posited that the Republican Party would turn out to be Moscow’s and Putin’s best ally, they would have been declared insane.
There used to be times when Republicans hurled the phrase “fifth column” as an insult at Democrats, to brand them for being soft on communism. Those days are long gone.
A key part of the explanation for why there are “Fifth columnists” in the US is rooted in the boundless cynicism of the Republican Party.
The Republican Party has managed to perform some potent voodoo magic throughout the land. This is the only way to describe its ability to attract working-class whites to its plutocratic causes.
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