Letters posted here are associated with the following article:

349
Letters
Monday, July 20, 2009 12:00 AM

My GOP: Too old, too white to win

A Republican looks at the numbers and sees disaster ahead, unless his party figures out how to be less -- caucasian

The letters thread is now closed.

View:
Monday, July 20, 2009 08:34 AM

Forgot to mention Sotomayor...

I forgot to mention this in my previous post. I agree with the author and found the Sotomayor hearings to be very tame compared to past hearings, such as the Justice Alito and Justice Thomas hearings. (Many of you need to go back and watch the highlights of those hearings for a good reminder of what a tough confirmation process looks like.) I think that her confirmation was inevitable and it looked like the GOP wanted to save their fight for other causes. She is an obviously qualified jurist with a great American rags to riches story.

Monday, July 20, 2009 08:41 AM

Truth

If the Republican Party wants to be viable, how about beginning with telling the truth. Name the Democrats that made those vile racist statements, better yet name the Republicans that continue to make vile racist statements. If you were sincere about Change you would be representative of all the people and not the interest of the wealthiest. You would close your white only Clubs. Stop sending out those token Oreo spokespersons like Ron Chrispy, Michelle Bernard and that Filipino Michelle from Fox who acts white and hates all people of color,to show that you are all inclusive. The Media is owned by you and presents what it is told to present. We are not fools, we know who the Chris Matthew's, the David Gregory's, and the Tim Russet's, Wolf Blizer, Kiran Chetry, Anderson Cooper, and Fox Noise protect.

Monday, July 20, 2009 08:49 AM

Laurel

Bush won in 2004 by about the same as Obama won in 2008? What planet are you on? Bush won by 2.46 percent in the popular, and 286-251 in the electoral college. Obama won by 7.27 percent in the popular, about 3 times what Bush won by, and 365-173 in the electoral college, 157 electoral college vote victory more than Bush in 2004.

Monday, July 20, 2009 08:51 AM

Taking off the blinders

"Finally, I must says that it's a sad commentary that only us white guys seem to appreciate the virtues of limited government, private enterprise, the rule of law, American exceptionalism and traditional social values. The GOP should continue to fly the flag for those principles on the off chance that one day, non-white and female voters will see the light."

Just as I was thinking that the writer failed to tell us why he was a Republican, along came this post from a reader who does know what he believes his party stands for. While I admire his consistency, I would suggest that every one of the principles he has listed has been compromised not only by circumstance, but by members of his own party. That in turn leads me to believe that those principles, while valid in the abstract, do not translate intact when it comes to real life. To take the slightest and easiest example, traditional family values. While there is nothing wrong with advocating for strong marriages and intact families, the fact of the matter is that about half of all marriages end in divorce, which often leads to the disruption of the family. That has a ripple effect, which impacts society in very concrete ways that naturally involves institutions, such as schools, courts, social programs, etc. Consequently, while it is all well and good to preach homilies about family values, homilies don't provide child support, child care, counseling, financial assistance or job training. For the phrase "family values" to have meaning, it has to include some measure of pragmatism, some offer of assistance to those who are struggling or who have not been able to achieve the ideal. And that is where the GOP falls short. Republicans are very good at "forgiving" their politicians who stray, but they are not good at forgiving human frailty, in general. At a certain point the party simply has to acknowledge the discrepancy between what they advocate and what exists and come up with some sort of compromise, not in their beliefs in the ideal, but in the application of their philosophy.

That is one simplistic example of a wider problem. It is very convenient to make a list of "values" that in the abstract sound extremely reasonable, but the real debate is about their definition. You'd have to go far into the fringes to find may Americans who don't believe in free enterprise. But you could walk a block and stumble on plenty who have noticed the ill effects of irresponsible tax cuts during wartime, rampant deregulation, corporate malfeasance and a corrupt system of campaign financing, all of which were enabled by a Republican administration, majority in Congress and conservative members of the Supreme Court. I'm afraid the GOP is going to have to go a lot farther than simply trotting out the notion of "free enterprise" to convince the majority of Americans that they are referring to anything that touches the lives of ordinary citizens. In this context, the very notion of "limited government" rings hollow.

If members of the Republican party want to stick to their guns, so to speak, that is their choice, but the chances of their doing so and attracting "non white and female" voters is next to nil. As the GOP would have it, those categories shouldn't even exist, because in their ideal world there is no discrimination, nevertheless any problems which can't be solved with a healthy dose of platitudes. In short, the GOP doesn't have to give up its principles; it simply has to adjust them to fit the real world.

Monday, July 20, 2009 08:52 AM

Stick to Economics

There is a Republican message, if they would ever find it -- an economic message. Somewhere along the way Rove, Gingrich and others saw great things coming out of an alliance between economic and social conservatives, without realizing how that could backfire. Now it has. There are a lot of people who are opposed -- even alarmed -- at the Obama economic program, but who have no interest in Republican social conservative politics. I'm one of those. You find me a Republican of whatever age and color who will further a reasonably conservative economic program, and I will vote for that person.

Monday, July 20, 2009 08:53 AM

More Republican Victim Syndrome

The endless cries of media bias from the Republicans are beyond tiresome. Far from reporting Obama's victory as a foregone conclusion the media outlets bent over backwards to portray it as a horse race long after the polls showed that Obama was pulling ahead. Far from fawning over Obama we received endless coverage of "concerns" about palling around with terrorists. Sarah Palin was covered as if she was a credible candidate and "Joe the Plumber" found no shortage of media opportunities.

So, please, give it a rest. John McCain did not lose because of the media, because of demographics, because of astrology or whatever other excuse you want. He lost because more Americans felt that Barack Obama would do a better job as President.

Most Active Letters Threads

367

A key British official reminds us of the forgotten anthrax attack

A vast array of establishment and expert sources do not believe this episode was really resolved.
203

Is Obama's civil liberties record understandable?

Was it unreasonable to expect him to adhere to his commitments regarding the Constitution?
102

How dare you criticize wasteful defense spending!

So you think it's only terrorist-appeasing lefties who are down on Pentagon profligacy? Think again
50

Police to talk to Woods

Early morning crash raises questions, and revives tabloid speculation
47

Have yourself a very merry black Friday

The author of "Scroogenomics" explains why holiday shopping is a drain on the wallet and the holiday spirit

View all »

Letters Help

Currently in Salon