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Disharmonious
Author: TriSec    Date: 11/09/2021 01:25:51

Good Morning.

We interrupt your regularly-scheduled "Ask a Vet" with some observations from this past weekend.


But we will start with yesterday, November 8, a date which will live in infamy.

It was on this date in 1994 that the "United" States began a long, painful, death spiral. One that has only accelerated over the last few divisive years.


The Republican Revolution, Revolution of '94, or Gingrich Revolution, refers to the Republican Party (GOP) success in the 1994 U.S. midterm elections,[1] which resulted in a net gain of 54 seats in the House of Representatives, and a pickup of eight seats in the Senate. On November 9, 1994, the day after the election, Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama, a conservative Democrat, changed parties, becoming a Republican; on March 3, 1995, Colorado Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell switched to the Republican side as well, increasing the GOP Senate majority.[2]

Rather than campaigning independently in each district, Republican candidates chose to rally behind a single national program and message fronted by Georgia congressman and House Republican whip Newt Gingrich. They alleged President Bill Clinton was not the New Democrat he claimed to be during his 1992 campaign but was a "tax and spend" liberal. The Republicans offered an alternative to Clinton's policies in the form of the Contract with America.

The gains in seats in the mid-term election resulted in the Republicans gaining control of both the House and the Senate in January 1995. Republicans had not held the majority in the House for 40 years, since the 83rd Congress (elected in 1952). From 1933 to 1995, Republicans had controlled both House and Senate for only four years. From 1933 into the early 1970s, most white conservatives in the South belonged to the Democratic Party, and created the Solid South bloc in Congress. Most African Americans in the South were disenfranchised in those years, based on laws and subjective administration of voter registration practices.

By the mid-1990s, white conservatives from the South joined Republicans in other parts of the country, leading to the change in Congress. Large Republican gains were made in state houses as well when the GOP picked up twelve gubernatorial seats and 472 legislative seats. In so doing, it took control of 20 state legislatures from the Democrats. Prior to this, Republicans had not held the majority of governorships since 1972. In addition, this was the first time in 50 years that the GOP controlled a majority of state legislatures.

Discontent with Democratic candidates was foreshadowed by a string of elections after 1992, including Republicans winning the mayoralties of New York and Los Angeles in 1993. In that same year, Christine Todd Whitman won the New Jersey governorship. Bret Schundler became the first Republican mayor of Jersey City, New Jersey, which had been held by the Democratic Party since 1917.

Republican George Allen won the 1993 Virginia gubernatorial election and Texas Republican Kay Bailey Hutchison won a U.S. Senate seat from the Democrats in the 1993 special election. Republicans also picked up three congressional seats from Democrats in Oklahoma and Kentucky in May 1994.


It was not so much the shift in power as much as the shift in style. For those previous forty years, it was still possible for Democrats and Republicans to forge alliances and even put aside some differences in order to move the country forward, no matter how awful that sausage-making may have been to watch.

After 1994 - that sense of a common goal evaporated, never to return. The so-called "Contract With America" was a pipe dream of Republican policies. With no further checks or balances, things rapidly spiraled out of control. George W. Bush winning the presidency six years later cemented the deal. It was now "all or nothing".

It perhaps came to a head during the Obama presidency, when the leadership of the Senate rather famously said "The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president."

Never mind the issues the country faced in that long ago year...the Republicans' only goal was to oppose the President at all costs. I believe there was no going back after that. Mr. Trump swept into office on a promise to "undo everything that Obama did", as well as normalizing racism and misogyny once again.

The discord now is so bad, that simple things like taking care of each other as part of an advanced society are now concepts completely alien to half of the several states. Even here in Boston, groups that would see us suffer and die from a preventable illness have felt empowered to disrupt a quiet Sunday on Boston Common.


The rally was scheduled for noon Sunday on the Boston Common.

Problems started early on in the rally after the windshield of the protesters' rental van was smashed and the van drove into barricades.

Nearby businesses were closed and Emerson College locked campus doors, warning students of potential problem.

At one point, a fight broke out between the groups, and police had to break it up.

The chaotic events stemmed from a planned protest against mask and vaccine mandates organized by members of Super Happy Fun America, a Massachusetts group with far-right ties that was behind plans for a “Straight Pride” parade in 2019.

A far larger group of counter demonstrators showed up to oppose the group. Individuals from both sides pushed against metal barriers erected by police, and at another point protesters from the Super Happy Fun America walked around police to confront the counter demonstrators.


The only parallel I can think of is the rancourous debate that occured in the United States between September 3, 1939 and December 7, 1941. Equally vituperative groups argued both for and against involvement in another European war. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor rendered that moot - and we were truly a "United States" for the four years it took to win WWII.

Covid should have been a uniting influence, but we are obviously too far gone for the patient to recover. We are far beyond the point of common sense.

When doing the right thing is now seen as Anti-American.....this country is truly dead.






 
 

11 comments (Latest Comment: 11/09/2021 18:49:55 by Raine)
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