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Cenk Uygur: The Last Gasp of the Angry White Man.

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Baikonour Donating Member (979 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-10-09 03:26 PM
Original message
Cenk Uygur: The Last Gasp of the Angry White Man.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cenk-uygur/the-last-gasp-of-the-angr_b_255273.html

What we're seeing in these angry town halls these days is the last gasp of the angry white man. He's not quite sure what he's angry about, but he knows he's angry. It's not the world he used to know. He gets the disquieting feeling that he doesn't rule the roost anymore. And it's driving him crazy.

One of the chants at the town hall events was, "No national health care!" Okay, mission accomplished. No one has proposed such a thing. So, I guess they can go home now, befuddled at what they were yelling about.

The reality is that what they have been manipulated into arguing against is a public option that would give them more choices, not less in health insurance. It wouldn't nationalize health insurance at all, let alone any part of the rest of the health care industry.

But this isn't about health insurance. It isn't even about health care. You think those people are really this animated about having less health care options and making sure it costs more for them and their family? No, this is visceral for them. And it has nothing to do with their perceived choices on health care. This is about the sinking feeling in their stomach that they are losing power in this country -- losing control. That the reins of power are slipping out of their hands and they don't know what to do about it, except yell, really loud.

One guy famously shouted, "Keep your government hands off my Medicare." Everyone is understandably amused by this. But there is a larger point here. They don't care about the logic of the issue at hand. I'm not convinced they even care what the issue is. These are the same people that were yelling at the Palin rallies. They were screaming just as loud then, and it was different issues, or no issues at all. Just name calling and fear. Pure, unadulterated fear.

At a recent Tampa town hall people were yelling at the top of their lungs, "Hear Our Voice." Ironically, that's all we could hear. No one could hear the congresswoman there. Or any arguments that were being made or any issues debated. All they could hear was the loud, angry voices demanding to be heard.

And who is stoking these fires? Encouraging and egging on these screams, this anger, this fear? Conservative talk hosts all across the country (and, of course, special interest groups funded by the health care industry who are relishing using these poor schleps as fodder for their effort to kill health care reform). They're telling them the proper response is anger. Don't wait your turn. Don't listen to the congressman. Shout. Be heard. Be angry. Obama is taking this country away from you.

The woman who now famously stood up in a Delaware town hall and demanded that her congressman recognize the illegitimacy of Barack Obama's birth certificate, said something telling in her rant. She said, "I want my country back!"

Indeed. Where did it go? Of course, the country is still right here. It's the "my" part that's missing. She doesn't want this country back. She wants her country back.

I want everyone to be heard, too. I hated it when the Bush handlers would keep out dissenting voices from their town halls. If conservatives are frustrated with some of the policy initiatives of the Obama administration, I think it's an appropriately democratic reaction to show up at town halls and ask questions. In fact, if they did it in a way that asked their representatives interesting and tough questions, I'd be proud of them.

Some of them are holding up constitutions. They finally got them out of the drawer where they were collecting mothballs as the Bush administration ran roughshod over that sacred text. They didn't seem to demand loyalty to that document as the Bush team eviscerated the Fourth Amendment.

But bygones be bygones, if they want to hold Obama responsible for his signing statements for example, great. You can argue he is impinging against Article I of the Constitution just as Bush did.

Do you think that's the argument the town hall screamers are making? Come on, can anyone really discern an argument? Could they point to one clause that they think Obama has violated? My guess is if challenged they would scream out the Second Amendment. Except Obama has not only not done anything to impose gun control, he has gone out of his way to rein in his Attorney General to make sure he also does nothing about it. It isn't about the Second Amendment. It isn't about the Constitution. It's about the anger.

It's a self-justifying anger. The angrier they get the more they feel the imperative to get angry. What is it? What's really eating away at them? I don't think it's a conscious racial thing for them. It's more a feeling of their way of life slipping away from them.

Think about it. If you worked at the local shop and in the old days you could get your son hired there, things were pretty good. Now, they tell you that they have to give the job to someone else's son. Someone that doesn't look like you, someone that you've never met or ever talked to. There's been a lot of generations of that now.

You think those guys are going to inquire into the history of racial prejudice in this country and why it might make sense to increase diversity in a workplace when some groups have been excluded entirely? No, all they know is that their son couldn't get the same job that their dads got for them. They want their country back.

Of course, this has been building up for quite awhile. But now they have lost their political power. Now the epitome of what they were fighting against is their new leader. His first hire for the Supreme Court is a Hispanic woman, who they hear is racist against white men and was only picked because of her race and gender.

And when the president is talking about a confrontation between a white man (a cop trying to do his job) and a black man (another one that got to be a professor, though God knows if he earned it), he immediately chooses the side of the black man -- without even knowing the facts. Man, they're angry. This is the guy they were warned about.

Whether their perception is true is not relevant. It's the intensity of the perception that is relevant. And on top of all this, they feel the whole system is rigged against the average guy (and they're right about this one).

The bankers get all the money. The government spends a ton of cash, but they feel like it never comes to them. It feels like the guys at the top are the ones who always make out like bandits (the fact that their anger against this is being used by those same guys for their own interests is of tremendous irony).

But then add on top of that, their team lost. They don't feel like the president is "one of them." Maybe that's not even malicious, or at least consciously malicious. But that's how they feel. The world is changing around them and every time they turn on the radio or television (which, of course, is glued to Fox News), they are being told they're right to be angry. And that their anger should be directed primarily at one man: Barack Obama.

That's where the trouble comes in. It's starting to feel like a third world country around here. In developing countries there are organized mobs. There are disruptions of political gatherings. There are angry crowds and talk of gathering weapons. Talk of revolutions (one man in South Carolina told Rep. Inglis that "there is not a day that goes by ... that I don't hear talk of revolution in our country.").

We're America. We're supposed to be better than this.

We're supposed to resolve our differences peaceably and civilly. We're supposed to listen to one another. We're supposed to have the best democracy in the world. As it stands, we're one burning tire away from Haiti. We have to dial this thing back down.

Of course, the problem isn't the progressives here. Their side won. The moderates and independents aren't necessarily boiling over with anger. No, in this case, it's the right-wing. And there's the problem. Because there does not seem to be anyone on that side who is capable or inclined to bring down the volume of the conversation. If anything, their response is more shouting, more disruptions, more rancor and more accumulation of weapons. As one local Republican nominee in Virginia put it, "We have the chance to fight this battle at the ballot box before we have to resort to the bullet box." So, what happens when they keep losing at the ballot box?

It's beginning to smell a lot like banana republic around here. And there is no answer. If you try to suggest that they bring it down a notch, they scream censorship and warn their audience that their rights are about to be taken away from them. And so is their country. If you say it might not be such a good idea to have all of these weapons in the hands of all these angry men, they scream about the Second Amendment and tell their audience to hold on to their guns even tighter. And many have held on so tight that some of them even pulled the trigger.

How many more will? When does this stoking of anger and fear stop? And who would stop it? I really don't know. Here's one more thing I don't know. What happens if it doesn't?
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no_hypocrisy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-10-09 03:38 PM
Response to Original message
1. "Falling Down". Two scenes of pissed off white man.
Edited on Mon Aug-10-09 03:49 PM by no_hypocrisy
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MajorChode Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-10-09 03:57 PM
Response to Original message
2. Regardless of their race they are simply useful idiots
But such campaigns often do backfire when more intelligent people realize the truth that only the idiots are standing in opposition. Although it may not always be the case, doing the exact opposite of what an idiot wants is usually a good idea.
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ihavenobias Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-10-09 03:57 PM
Response to Original message
3. Thanks, I posted a version of this with hyperlinks in Editorials and Articles earlier.
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Baikonour Donating Member (979 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-10-09 05:18 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. Sorry!
I did a forum search before posting this and didn't see anything. My bad!
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ihavenobias Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-10-09 05:43 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. No, not at all. You posted it in GD which is different than the A & E section.
Some people only go to one or the other, so it's good to post in both places!
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quiet.american Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-10-09 04:52 PM
Response to Original message
4. Good piece, but you know, nobody's son is getting that job -- it's been outsourced.
It is a sad thing to think I'm considered "the enemy" by some of my fellow citizens just because I'd like to see the decent thing done in this country -- good jobs, living wage, affordable healthcare, equal rights, etc. Since Limbaugh first squealed onto the scene, whenever there is an attempt to elevate the quality of living in this country, there you'll find the angry hordes he's helped to create just as you described them, without a clue.

What's even more frustrating is that the Democratic leadership is always the last ones to acknowledge that their "friends across the aisle" haven't had honorable motives at least since the Age of Clinton and it's not far-fetched to imagine they lie awake nights dreaming up more ways to whip up the Willfully Ignorant With Guns (WIWG). By the time our leadership issues at most a mildly-worded rebuke against their "friends across the aisle," the damage has almost always irreversibly been done.

I, too, don't know how this country-damaging behavior can be stemmed as long as those at the top of our leadership refuse to even acknowledge there is a real and present danger posed by the WIWG.

As long as Limbaugh's verbal diarrhea is allowed to spatter across the realm without any accountability; same thing for Hannity, O'Reilly, Coulter, Palin, et al. Lately I've wondered, isn't there anything in the FCC rules that prohibits Limbaugh's outright seditious lies and propaganda? Guess not, since he's been going at it for so long.

I've mentioned it before, but I truly think the source of a lot of the anger we're seeing, too, is that there are large swaths of the South who, even these hundred-and-so years later, have never gotten over that their side lost the Civil War, and they want a do-over. God help this country if this "kind of a Cold Civil War" as Al Gore called it a few years ago, eventually turns "hot."
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aidawedo Donating Member (3 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-12-09 04:33 PM
Response to Original message
7. Smell that, it's fowl isn't it?
How nice that Mr. Uygur has so much sensitivity and empathy for the White angry mobs and thugs at these health care rallies. I agree, these White people are angry for fear of what the age of Obama may bring. No need White people. I assure you President Obama is not about real change. That is just a slogan by a savvy politician.

I know it is off topic, but my wish is that Mr. Uygur showed a small measure of sensitivity, empathy and understanding for Black Haitians. His gratuitous slap at Haitians in his concluding statements brought all of his lucid reasoning crashing down for me. I must admit I was very angry.

He tossed out a little grenade during his piece that indicated very little thought for the feelings, thoughts and motivations of struggling, embattled Haitians. A common and racially insensitive basic instinct. So Mr. Uygur thinks America represents the best democracy in the world? As one with expertise in democracy he may be incognizant of a small matter. Washington's violent anti-democratic interventions in Haiti.

And so, in light of the chaos and madness Americans have inflicted on Haitians over the centuries of Haiti's existence as a nation, from Jefferson orchestrating a trade embargo on the newly independent formerly enslaved Blacks (for fear of upsetting his French allies and of the Haitian Revolution stirring up the American enslaved peoples to rebellion), to the brutal US occupation of Haiti for 20 years, to the bloody Washington backed and financed coups of 1991 and 2004. When recently did this mythical America he speaks of defend freedom and liberty for Haitians, Latin Americans, Palestinians, Iraqis, Afghanis, Africans, or Uyhurs for that matter... just name one instance please? Oh, so they rescued their brethren the Europeans? That is immaterial, because fear of the *other* is endemic to American foreign policy. Europeans are not the *other*. There is no one in Holland who should fear that America will invade for the cheese. And you can be sure that a *European bailout* which occurred recently (as Washington generously bailed out its banks leading to a spreading of the wealth to the multi-nationals) did not have any *structural adjustment measures* attached. Why even Russia is now in the fold and participated in the G8 summit of *the world's wealthiest nations*. Hey, lets be clear, *Cold War* posturing aside, Russia always had more in common with America then they had differences.

Mr Uygur writes: "We're America. We're supposed to be better than this."

Wrong. No one in the world expects America to be better then this. Not even America's Western Block.

"We're supposed to have the best democracy in the world. As it stands, we're one burning tire away from Haiti. We have to dial this thing back down."

America listen: HAITIANS WANT THEIR COUNTRY BACK! THEY WANT JUSTICE FOR THE THOUSANDS WHO HAVE DIED BECAUSE OF YOUR POLITICAL AND VIOLENT INTERVENTION IN HAITI.

According to Uygur: "It's beginning to smell a lot like banana republic around here."

Welcome to the NEW NEW WORLD. There's a fowl smell about it, isn't there? It's not bananas.
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