Monday, October 1, 2012

So Paul Ryan is a Hunter? Who Gives a Shit?


I’ve said before that it isn’t often that a contributor for any mainstream website writes anything that perfectly captures my own viewpoint, but last Friday Hamilton Nolan of Gawker did a pretty good job of summarizing the sheer idiocy of identity politics:
The Romney-Ryan ticket, which will lose the US presidential election this November, is still giving it their all. The campaign is trailing in key states like Wisconsin, Iowa and Ohio. But they have a secret weapon: VP nominee Paul Ryan is an avid hunter.

Who gives a shit?

Hunting is one of the top activities that politicians always do while looking painfully ridiculous, right up there with "dancing awkwardly at black churches." Paul Ryan, though, has an advantage: he actually is a hunter—a bowhunter, no less—who's been hunting since childhood, and who has all the expertise in and enthusiasm for hunting that come with a lifetime's experience.

Who gives a shit?

"[Wisconsin, Iowa and Ohio] are rich in hunters and crucial swing-state Electoral College votes, and Mr. Ryan's deer-hunting credential is a resonant cultural symbol," declares the WSJ, noting that Ryan will be speaking to the U.S. Sportsmen's Alliance meeting in Ohio tomorrow. Congratulations, Midwestern hunters: you are being treated like a bunch of simplistic children. The whole business of politicians posing in hunting gear, whether they really like it or not, is the height of bullshit, empty identity politics.
Hamilton then goes on to sum up what is wrong with voters who fall for such lame appeals:
"Take just one look at Paul Ryan holding a bow at full draw, and you know he's the real deal," one archery buff tells the WSJ. This is a man who is allegedly running on his economic platform. WHO GIVES A FUCK IF HE CAN SHOOT A BOW AND ARROW? He is supposed to be tasked with fixing Medicare, for fuck's sake. "Can operate a calculator correctly," would be a more relevant credential. Smell the sweet aroma of patronization, hunters. If you cast your presidential ballot based on which ticket likes bowhunting more, you are dumb; that is exactly what the campaigns think you are, and that is why Paul Ryan is speaking to a hunting group on the day that deer season opens.
Of course, this kind of crap has been going on throughout American history. Back in the early 19th century, for example, candidates who grew up in a log cabin would play up the fact even though it had nothing whatsoever to do with how they might handle a war with a Britain or France or how they might deal with the thorny and divisive issue of slavery. It is in the modern television age, however, that identity politics has reached a point where it now largely drowns out issues of real substance.

Back in the 1970s, candidates would be sure to be photographed standing outside construction sites wearing hard hats to emphasize their supposed empathy with the working man. Ronald Reagan mastered the art of always appearing in front of a whole row of American flags to visually reinforce the idea of his supposedly superior level of patriotism. A big moment in Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential bid was when he played the saxophone on the Arsenio Hall Show. His wife then elevated such pandering to an even higher level during her first New York Senate campaign when, despite having grown up a few miles from Wrigley Field, she doffed a Yankees cap and claimed to have always been a fan even though any true Chicagoan would be horrified at the very idea of ever pledging allegiance to any Big Apple sports team.

President George Bush the Lesser really upped the ante on this stuff when he purchased his ranch down in Texas specifically so he could be constantly photographed clearing brush, which somehow reinforced the idea in the minds of millions of idiot voters that he was just a regular guy whom they could sip a Lone Star beer with afterward. Ever noticed how much time Chimpy has apparently spent on that stupid ranch in the years since leaving office? Uh, that would be about NONE near as I can tell.

I’ve stated repeatedly on this blog that anyone who enters the voting booth this November thinking that there is any difference between President Hopey-Changey and Governor 47%-er on issues of real substance is delusional. But those who are going to go vote based on the fact that Ryan is a hunter, or Willard’s wife is an equestrian or Obama has a superior jump shot, or Biden…well, I’m not really sure what it is that Biden does exactly…is the absolute worst of the worst, even lower on the food chain that Bill Maher’s “dipshit” low information voters (although, in fairness, many of them probably ARE low information voters, which is why such appeals work so well).

Probably the most amusing aspect of this issue is that Ryan’s running mate is actually the worst candidate at making these kinds of appeals that we have seen on the national stage in a very long time. No matter how hard he tries, Willard always comes off as an arrogant rich prick who was born with a silver spoon shoved up his ass. To what will likely be their ultimate chagrin, the Republicans managed to nominate as their standard bearer a candidate who is a little TOO true to himself. The irony of this happening to the party of charlatans like Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush is quite delicious indeed.


Bonus: "Who the fuck are you?"


7 comments:

  1. The only hope in hell the Republicans had/have of winning the election was Romney. It sure wasn't with lunatics like Eichmann ... err, Bachmann. I try to tell the Romney lovers in my family that Obama has spent the last four years blowing Wall Street, and it just doesn't register, even though they are otherwise intelligent people. Oh well. Not much choice when your selection is bending over or getting on your knees and opening wide ...

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    1. Ron Paul could have beat Obama; see "Ron Paul poll shocker: He beats Obama head-to-head" | Christian Science Monitor

      The election is already over; the elite 1% won by eliminating candidates in the primaries that threatened their control and aura of respectability.

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    2. Funny. I actually thought Ron Paul had a chance, too. In national elections, you have to think about who gets the blocks of voters. Any Republican will get the evangelicals and conservatives. It doesn't matter who - it could be Ron Paul, Paul Ryan, Bachmann, or a Commodore 64 with a GOP sticker.

      Same with the mainstream liberals - they'd vote for Obama no matter what.

      It always comes down to the Independents and the swing voters ridiculed by Maher (or if a candidate can get the vast majorities of sizeable groups).

      The candidate that appeals to them the most wins. Ron Paul had tremendous support amongst the young and independents, and although he has some wacky positions, he has a solid record of voting for his principles. It would have made a great contrast.

      It was also the perfect time to grab these voters from Obama - there's a ton of discontent in the country. But the Republicans seem insistent on the 'our way or the highway' approach, and even a relative moderate like Romney gets pushed to the right and picks a corporate pod person like Paul Ryan for his veep. Romney has absolutely no appeal to the middle, and he's barely tried to reach out to it.

      This also says it well (it's at the end):
      http://screen.yahoo.com/obama-unsure-how-to-turn-huge-support-among-women-latinos-gays-african-americans-into-electoral-victory-30739179.html

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    3. My take is that had RP even come close to looking like he could win, the national media would have obliterated him. Look at how they didn't trot out those 20-year-old articles from his old newsletter until he started gaining traction in the primaries. Had he kept rising, you can just bet Romney would have gone all, "he's coming for you Social Security money" with the Republicans' senior citizen base.

      Paul only does well in the polls against Obama because so many people are disillusioned with the choice of Obama/Romney and most people still do not know that much about him. Once they became more widely known, his more extreme positions would have caused "Spoiled Rotten Nation", as I call it, to recoil in horror.

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    4. Yes, I'm missing the obvious - Ron Paul never truly had a chance because the media and establishment wouldn't have allowed it. In fact, that's pretty much what happened.

      It was painfully evident that the media had a bias against Paul. I'm not an economic libertarian by any means (I think it's a proxy for incredibly destructive economic and social stratification and environmental degradation), but it was interesting to watch how virtually every article on the GOP race filtered his candidacy in some way. I would presume it was because of his other positions regarding the military, the banking sector, corporate welfare, and that he's a social libertarian, too (all stuff I do agree with).

      He was never treated as a serious contender in the nomination race, and he actually was one in the beginning:
      http://blog.alexanderhiggins.com/2011/08/15/corporate-media-openly-admitting-ignoring-blacklisting-ron-paul-57351/

      My barber is a classic Bible Belt conservative. We have some interesting discussions, and that's with me holding back. She really followed the nomination and watched all the debates. Her take on Paul was that he was spot on with government social spending but crazy about the military. I'm afraid her take was the majority GOP position. There almost certainly was a backlash against Paul within the GOP plebs as the debates continued - whereas there always was a disregard (or outright dislike) for Paul in the GOP establishment.

      Part of the charm of Ron Paul is that he's incredibly optimistic about human nature. He's wonderfully, beautifully naive that way. Why he ran as a Republican, when he should have known he never had a real chance there, should have been obvious to him - and apparently it wasn't.

      And I know he continued even after it was over so that he could have some influence over the convention. That didn't turn out so well, though:
      http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/28/shouts-of-let-him-speak-greet-paul-at-convention/

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    5. Well that, and he is a Randroid. That alone should make anyone sane write him off.

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  2. "he actually is a hunter—a bowhunter, no less—who's been hunting since childhood, and who has all the expertise in and enthusiasm for hunting that come with a lifetime's experience.

    Who gives a shit?"

    Ummm . . . There may be parts of the Romney/Ryan economic policies that you don't fully understand. Actually, in the proposed New Economy, this will be a key and valuable skill, inside the government and out. :)

    --Gaianne

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