Friday, September 9, 2011

Dan Gelber: Rubio And The GOP's Far Right Have Lost Sight Of What Makes America Exceptional


Last week, when Florida fascist Marco Rubio was at the Roanld Reagan Library instead of Wednesday's cast of clowns, we noted his attempt to inject his alien anti-American perspective into our politics. His main point was that New Deal social programs like Social Security and Medicare have made Americans weaker. This kind of thinking is at the core of Republican thought-- though most, unlike Rubio and Rick Perry, are politically savvy enough to hide it from the public.

Briefly in 2009, Blue America encouraged Florida state Senator Dan Gelber to run against Rubio. In the end, the Florida Democratic Establishment, cynical to the core, persuaded Gelber to not run, in the hopes of using the affable but incompetent Kendrick Meek to lure African-American voters to the polls for their dull gubernatorial candidate, Alex Sink. Sink lost to Rick Scott 49-48%. And Rubio also won election with less than 50%-- although Meek came in a dismal third with only 20% of the vote, the worst result for a Democratic Senate candidate that anyone can remember... ever. Dan Gelber is back in private practice as an attorney but last week, after Rubio's latest fascist outburst, he penned an OpEd for the Miami Herald, Right Loses Sight Of What Makes Us Different. It's a different take on American Exceptionalism, right-wing jingoists never tire of trotting out to use to bludgeon their political foes.
In a recent speech at the Reagan Library... U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio asserts that the decision of America in this last century to collectively care for those that have fallen behind “actually weakened us as a people.” While his words may have been a dog whistle for the right wing, I took a double take.

Was this the same Marco Rubio who first ran on a platform of early childhood education and affordable housing for the elderly? Rubio’s thesis, packaged in lofty prose, is an extreme political view that parrots a bedrock tea party premise that America’s problems somehow stem from government doing too much for people from whom we expect too little.

These programs, Rubio argues, made our country weak, bankrupt and threatened the “exceptionalism” that defined us. There is nothing novel about blaming your problems on a boogeyman. Whether immigrants, or communists, or witches, or those that have been left behind or can’t fight back, the American experience suggests it can be an effective political strategy for at least the short term.

Of course, the notion that the social programs of the last century-- namely Medicare and Social Security-- fostered irresponsible behavior is patently absurd. No American became sicker or older because of the existence of these programs. Americans are living longer, healthier lives, in part due to the security they created.

No, it’s not that American Exceptionalism is being lost, it’s that Rubio and the tea party have lost sight of what makes America exceptional.

Our collective decision to make sure our weakest, oldest, and infirm are cared for is not a national failing-- it is one of our greatest strengths. No, it has not been a wealthy few that defines us as exceptional-- rather it has been our commitment to raising all boats in the harbor and supporting the middle class.

No, it has not been our military-- the most powerful in history that sets us apart-- but that we have used that force to protect freedom and fight tyranny. And no, our nation is special not because God made Americans special-- but because we exercised the free will He gave us to become a moral example in the community of nations.

And if we ever relinquish that mantle-- or in this case reject it-- we lose what has made us the greatest nation in the history of the world.

Rubio’s argument is no better or different than every past attempt by the right wing to use lofty language to rationalize wrongheaded policies that help a few well connected or advance a partisan agenda. But “trickle-down” economics and “compassionate conservatism,” aren’t truly policies, they are public relations gimmicks intended to make people feel better about disregarding who we are.

The proof the argument is so weak, or blatantly partisan, is its own inconsistencies and obvious ironies. They express outrage at America’s finances, pointing the finger directly at a president who inherited policies that many of them created and embraced.

They don’t want people to have a free ride, but reject healthcare reform that requires everyone to take responsibility and insure their own health so that others won’t have to pay. They believe Americans can’t sustain Social Security, but somehow believe we can and must sustain special interest giveaways and, yes, tax breaks for a select few.

Don’t misunderstand, America has real challenges. But so many of our fault-lines stem from a generational failure to invest in the education of our work force, or the unwillingness of our leaders to engage an honest discussion with their constituents rather than just feeding them tired old clichés or partisan finger-pointing.
Now is not the time to retreat from who we have always aspired to be.

The inscription on the Statute of Liberty isn’t a mere tourist attraction, it is the calling of an exceptional nation that seeks to embrace a higher purpose.

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