Linguoboy wrote: ↑Sat Mar 21, 2020 10:02 pm
Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sat Mar 21, 2020 9:01 pmIt's a crisis in an election year. When there's a crisis in an election year, the party that doesn't hold the presidency takes issue with the other party's handling of the crisis.
I'm sure it's that and not the fact that the party whose unifying principle is opposition to "Big Government", whose ideologues want to "starve the beast" that is the Fed, who think businessmen are better than "politicians" at solving political problems is mishandling the kind of challenge that governments were pretty much invented to address in pretty much exactly the way that you'd expect members of a party which holds those view to do.
Seriously, who disbands a pandemic response team as a cost-cutting measure in order to cut taxes on the wealthy, delays their response to a crisis because
the director of the relevant agency assumed the private sector would do something, resists invoking legislation specifically designed to compel that private sector assistance when it isn't forthcoming, and then stands there surprised that things are getting so much worse so quickly? Oh, that's right, Republicans.
If you want to talk about the
small-government Republicans, a case can be made that they just weren't extreme enough about it. We didn't get early extensive testing because the federal government had strict criteria for who was allowed to be tested. When
researchers in Seattle did testing anyway, and found more cases than the official numbers suggested, the federal government told them to stop. When the CDC got around to distributing tests, they didn't work. And, even though the tests are routine and could easily be put together and run in a hospital,
the FDA says that only the CDC is allowed to make the tests. The same CDC that
outright lied to the public about safety measures.
On the other hand, small-government ideologues would get some things wrong -- government assistance in onshoring PPE production, for example, would be an
exceptionally good idea right now, and would've been an even better idea when the problem became obvious in December or January. The problem is neither that the government is doing bad things nor that it's failing to do good things; the problem is that
both of these are true at the same time.
As far as I can tell, the only political factions that come out of this looking completely reasonable are the far-right bloggers who've been talking about "anarcho-tyranny" for a decade, the protectionists who think we shouldn't have outsourced our entire PPE production capacity in the first place and want to bring it back, and the otherwise bland centrists who have suddenly discovered that it's bad when the government lies. And those bland centrists get complaints in their comments sections about how it's bad to point out when the government lies because it undermines trust in the lying government, because a dominant strain of thought in American politics is the sort of managerialism that sees the populace as empty vessels entirely devoid of agency who simply accept whatever information is given to them, for no other reason than that it's given to them.
It's an
outright lie to say that normalizing mask-wearing won't help flatten the curve. The countries that have succeeded in flattening the curve are the countries where mask-wearing was already normalized. You can tell which countries have already normalized mask-wearing from a graph of cases by country. But the government's seeming justification for this lie is a shortage of masks. Taiwan doesn't have a shortage of masks, because it
produces masks, at the rate of eight million a day.
The Republican Party is not very defensible as it stands. The problem is that the alternative is the Democrats, who are at least as bad (has anyone seen Biden recently?) and much more equipped to unilaterally block a necessary realignment. (Compare Biden to McMullin. Even Buttigieg ran a more competent campaign than the #NeverTrump CIA spoiler candidate, and if Sanders somehow wins the nomination, I bet the CIA spoiler candidate that inevitably launches a third-party run against him will do better than Egg McMuffin did. The man came third in Utah.) Trump couldn't immediately deliver on the realignment, but neither could Goldwater. These things take time. And if you don't like the Reaganites, shouldn't you
support the realignment away from them?
(And on the subject of mismanagement, remember that the opioid crisis wasn't a major issue until 2016. I know a few low-level people in Democratic factions -- people who set up PACs for state elections, journalists, and so on -- who I've personally seen
support the opioid crisis for the same reason Reagan intentionally mismanaged AIDS: it was killing people who they figured needed to die.)
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