In my anonymous life I often get into heated discussions about my concerns that the Tea Party candidates for president (Sarah Palin and now Michele Bachman) are not the right stuff. The arguments generally go that Obama was not the right stuff (or left stuff, if you prefer) either, so wouldn’t they be better than he? Well, of course, but that’s not the point. So what is the point?
Recently I was in a situation where I found myself with the TV on to CNN. I won’t explain, other than to say that this is a very unusual situation in our house. I was also in a predicament (also difficult to explain) where I was unable to correct the situation. I was trapped and forced to listen to it for about 15 minutes.
It began with a report that Michele Bachman had, in 2006, stated that she did not believe it was the government’s duty to decide if Intelligent Design should be taught in the classroom. So far, no harm, no foul. But it went on. She then stated that she believed in Intelligent Design… “that there were hundreds of scientists studying it, some of them Nobel Laureates.” She went on to say, more recently, that she continued to support this same position.
The CNN folks were having a field day, and they accurately drew the parallels that the Right “doesn’t believe in Evolution, they don’t believe in Global Warming, and they believe that if you lower taxes that you actually raise revenues.” It doesn’t matter if the latter is false statement and in fact true. It ties together in nice string. There is no arguing with the first. They have Mrs. Bachman on tape, in her own words, TWICE, over a series of years, as an ally of Intelligent Design. Intelligent Design is Creationism under a politically correct guise and everyone knows that.
It was, frankly, a brilliant string of issues, tied together in a neat little package to make Republicans look like dolts, all because of the Evolution/Creationism issue. And if Republicans are going to continue to bring their religious beliefs into the discussion and bring fables such as “hundreds of scientists, some of them Nobel Laureates” then they are idiots, which Michele Bachman demonstrates in one sentence that she is, then she will make the Party irrelevant.
Every single time the Republicans have the lead and the attention of the American people they always blow it (except Ronald Reagan) and put their foot in their collective mouths by dragging religion into it. They cannot seem to understand that religion is the way to divide the country, not unify it. This is not the time to, nor will there ever be a time, to have Roe v Wade and the Scopes Trial the Sequels. Those fights are over. In the past. What the American people care about are national security, financial security, and jobs. If the message is not about those three things, we will lose.
While the CNN talking heads were giggling over the tape (and they had every right to laugh at so idiotic a statement) I was doing a deer in the headlights, “Oh my God, we are so doomed if that woman stays anywhere near the top of the polls.” The CNN folks knew that these positions would be untenable to any group other than the extreme, religious right – the stereotype the Left is always trying to portray the entirety of the Republican Party.
By portraying Michele Bachman as the Creationist-supporting member of the Religious Right they have successfully portrayed her, and the Party, as entirely anti-science. The arguments against Global Warming aren’t because the science isn’t there – it is because the Party is anti-science. With these religious belief-drawn portrayals, there would be no hope of appealing to the moderates, the undeclared, which would be necessary to win in November.
What would be worse for the country is a splinter: the Tea Party deciding that they are not being taken seriously and deciding to run as a third-party, and in doing so, assuring Obama’s victory for a second term.
When folks continue to ask me “What makes you believe that Michele Bachman is not smart enough to be President?” I will simply refer to the above. It does not matter that Obama is not smart enough to be President either. What matters is that we need to find someone who is. That doesn’t mean that I think Romney is the candidate, or Ron Paul, or any of the other fools who are on the stage at the moment. Not one of them is competent to be President. I think that Michele Bachman is a lovely lady and a fine Congresswoman. The job descriptions are different. She serves the constituents of her state quite well. She is a brilliant budget hawk for her state. But the job of President is not what many think it is. It is to be an Ambassador of Foreign Affairs, a Diplomat, and Commander in Chief.
Someone who thinks that there are Nobel Laureates who believe in Creationism for one, or who would repeat the meme without fact-checking it, or would have around her advisers who would feed her the meme and she hasn’t properly vetted them, demonstrates that she has none of the skills necessary to have about her men and women who can be trusted with the nation’s secrets, and she lacks the wisdom to have a healthy BS detection meter. And that, above all, is critical in a Diplomat and Commander in Chief. We expect that through all the noise and blather that our Commander in Chief will keep us safe, but if they can’t tell the difference between fact and myth in something so simple, there is no hope she could do that with something complex, especially against a skilled opponent such as Putin. He’d eat her alive.
Iniuria non excusat iniuriam.
(One wrong does not justify another.)
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