Saturday, August 08, 2009

Is The GOP Turning Into A Religion?

A couple recent polls showed that a significant percentage of Republicans--on the order of 30-40%--don't believe President Obama was born in the U.S. The evidence to support that view is scant, practically non-existent, based mainly on wishful thinking.

That got us to thinking: is the Republican party turning into a religion, where belief trumps fact?

Trying to define the difference between a religion and a political philosophy isn't easy. Political ideologies are often based on beliefs in the unprovable, just as are religious theologies. Theology may just be a subset of ideology: a theology concerns mankind's "conception of god" whereas an ideology is broader, concerning mankind's conception of rules to govern people.

There are times when we wish we had an alternative to the Democratic party. We tend to be more fiscally conservative than many Democrats, preferring to pay for government services rather than borrowing money or printing currency to do so. (Mind you, under W. Bush, Republicans were perfectly happy to borrow money and print currency to further their goals as well.) And we don't see gov't as the best solution to all problems.

Unfortunately, the GOP isn't a viable alternative these days, at least not for us and many moderate independent voters. The party seems filled with birthers, creationists, goldbugs and supremacists; is anti-science, hypocritical on issues of marriage, adultery and sexuality; and represents an ideology mired in theology. Remarkably, a party that once featured many strong intellectual thinkers, like William F. Buckley, has become a party of anti-intellectuallism, with blow-hards like Limbaugh and O'Reilly resembling modern-day No-Nothings.

Is there room in the U.S. for a new, third political party? Probably not. We've been a dual-party nation for too long a time to make that likely.

3 comments:

J. Tyler Ballance said...

The Republican Party leadership is filled to the brim with multi-national corporate lackeys.

Ross Perot was right. As soon as the Republicans gained power, we witnessed an acceleration in the shipment of our strategic manufacturing base to Communist China and other third world states.

The Communists are patiently bleeding the United States dry of our industrial capacity and they are doing it with the consent of the Republicans.

When we had a Democratic Party that stood-up for the American working man, instead of being the mouthpiece for all things politically correct, for trial lawyers, teacher's unions and tree-huggers, the citizens could at least depend on the Democrats of old to apply strong anti-trust action to break-up the oligopolies and to keep American industry, and industrial workers moving forward.

Now, the Democrats have made it too expensive to build anything here and the Republicans have responded to their corporate puppet-masters by opening the borders, while sending our core industries to our enemy, the Communist Chinese.

We do not need any "third parties" but we do need REPLACEMENT parties for both the Republican and Democratic parties.

John Doe said...

I wonder if you asked this assinine question of the Democrats when a majority were blaming the Bush Adminstration for 9/11, calling it an inside job. Something tells me that did not bother you.

X Curmudgeon said...

No, we didn't ask the question of Dems after 9/11. The 9/11 conspiracy theorists are mostly on the right and we've never heard any of our Democratic friends suggest it wasn't real.