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Why Right-Wing Hissy Fits Work

September 4, 2009

On Wednesday, the fact checking web site Politifact deemed a "pants on fire" lie the Republican claim that President Obama planned to indoctrinate America's school children in a broadcast next week. On Friday, press secretary Robert Gibbs rightly noted that presidents Reagan and Bush similarly addressed students in speeches which, as Steve Benen pointed out, actually promoted their agendas on taxes and education. Nevertheless, as ABC, the New York Times and Politico tell us, the "school speech backlash builds."
All of which prompted one blogger to question, "Why do hissy fits succeed?"

The short answer is because politics is now just another form of entertainment.

As we've seen time and again with tea bagger rants over taxes, health care reform, President Obama's birth, grandma's government mandated death and so much more, the mythmaking by conservative pundits and Republican politicians alike is a necessary but not sufficient condition for the successful propagation of right-wing lies. (Minnesota Governor and 2012 GOP White House hopeful Tim Pawlenty is just the latest Republican to question the motivation of an American President speaking to American kids, branding his speech "uninvited.)
That sufficient condition is the devolution of a well-informed citizenry into what Al Gore deemed the "well-amused audience." In a nutshell, political debate is now presented by the media as no different than any other form of amusement.
Sadly, that puts a premium on the entertainment value of political combat. Just about nothing makes for better box office than the conflict between good and evil. And as I suggested last year, these developments are just the latest signs that the transformation of politics into theater is almost complete:

Politics must now compete with an oversupply of entertainment and information sources, from television, radio, books, newspapers and magazines to web sites, blogs, online video, Podcasts and more. The result is a 21st century "infotainment complex" where politics, news, opinion and entertainment merge. Politics itself is now entertainment, part drama and part competition in a passion play where confrontation, conflict and good versus evil rule the day. The journalistic search for objective truth is replaced by the presentation of ideological clashes with two - and only two - sides.

The result, as the distortion of Obama's innocuous speech to kids about the importance of staying in school show, is the legitimization and persistence of demonstrably false claims in American political discourse.
The textbook case, of course, is the Iraq war and the search for WMD. The grim success of the Bush administration's mythmaking and the media echo chamber is staggering. As an October 2003 PIPA survey showed, even after the invasion of Iraq, majorities of Americans continued to believe Bush administration claims about Saddam (Iraq role in 9/11, an alliance between Saddam and Al Qaeda, and Saddam's WMD) all long since proven false. (Unsurprisingly, viewers of Fox News were the most delusional.) And as late as July 2006, fully 50% of Americans still believed the discredited claim that Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction.
The same dynamic is at work with the more recent hissy fits of Tea Baggers, Birthers, Deathers and myriad other frothing-at-the-mouth right-wing extremists. Despite the fact that President Obama as promised cut taxes for 98.6% of American working households, furious Tea Baggers fume about no taxation with representation. While 17% of Republicans in an April Pew Research Center survey believed the Christian Barack Obama is a Muslim, a July DailyKos/Resarch 2000 poll found that a stunning 58% of GOP supporters did not believe (28%) or were unsure (30%) that the President was in fact born in the United States.
The numbers are even more alarming - and ironic - when it comes to the health care debate. (Ironic, that is, because of the Iron Law of Birtherism: the birther movement does best in precisely those states where Republicans poll best and health care is worst.) A recent NBC poll showed that majorities of Americans wrongly believe reform proposals on the table would constitute a government "takeover" of the health care system, one which would cover illegal aliens. (A separate Public Policy Polling analysis showed that 59% of self-identified conservatives and 62% of McCain voters responded that the government should "stay out of Medicare," a program which is, of course, run by the government.) The NBC survey also quantified the deather madness: a staggering 45 percent said it's likely the government will decide when to stop care for the elderly.
In addition, as MSNBC noted, viewers of Fox News - a strong predictor of Republican allegiance - were overwhelmingly afflicted by this health care dementia:

In our poll, 72% of self-identified FOX News viewers believe the health-care plan will give coverage to illegal immigrants, 79% of them say it will lead to a government takeover, 69% think that it will use taxpayer dollars to pay for abortions, and 75% believe that it will allow the government to make decisions about when to stop providing care for the elderly.

In the new infotainment media environment which prizes the entertainment value of political warfare over the search for objective truth, rage, conflict and confrontation make for the best show. The media have simply upended the classic statement from comic Demetri Martin:

"Raising your voice - the next best thing to being right."

4 comments on “Why Right-Wing Hissy Fits Work”

  1. Any Republican with any sense at all should be looking to start another party. The GOP has now become a group of phonies whose only agenda is opposition and fear mongering

  2. Hey you. You there in the Glenn Beck T-shirt headed off to the Tea Party Patriot rally.
    Stop shouting for a moment, please, I want to explain to you why you're so very angry.
    You should be angry. You're getting screwed.
    I think you know that. But you don't seem to know that it doesn't have to be that way. You can stop it. You can stop it easily because the system that's screwing you over can only keep screwing you over if you keep demanding that it do so.
    So stop demanding that. Stop helping the system screw you over.
    Look, you can go back to yelling at me in a minute, but just read this first.
    1. Get out your pay stub.
    Or, if you have direct deposit -- you really should get direct deposit, it saves a lot of time and money (I point this out because, honestly, I'm trying to help you here, even though you don't make that easy Mr. Angry Screamy Guy) -- then take out that little paper receipt they give you when your pay gets directly deposited.
    2. Notice that your net pay is lower than your gross pay. This is because some of your wages are withheld every pay period.
    3. Notice that only some of this money that was withheld went to pay taxes. (I know, I know -- yeearrrgh! me hates taxes! -- but just try to stick with me for just a second here.)
    4. Notice that some of the money that was withheld didn't go to taxes, but to your health insurance company.
    5. Now go get a pay stub from last year around this time, from January of 2009.
    6. Notice that the amount of your pay withheld for taxes in your current paycheck is less than the amount that was withheld a year ago.
    That's because of President Barack Obama's economic stimulus plan, which included more than $200 billion in tax cuts, including the one you're holding right there in your hand, the tax cut that's now staring you in the face. Republicans all voted against that tax cut. And then they told you to get angry about the stimulus plan. They didn't explain, however, why you were supposed to get angry about getting a tax cut. Why would you be? Wouldn't it make more sense to get angry at the people who voted against that Obama tax cut?
    But taxes aren't the really important thing here. The really important thing starts with the next point.
    7. Notice that the amount of your pay withheld to pay for your health insurance is more than it was last year.
    8. Notice that the amount of your pay withheld to pay for your health insurance is a lot more than it was last year.
    I won't ask you to dig up old paychecks from 2008 and 2007, but this has been going on for a long time. Every year, the amount of your paycheck withheld to pay for your health insurance goes up. A lot.
    9. Notice the one figure there on your two pay stubs that hasn't changed: Your wage. The raise you didn't get this year went to pay for that big increase in the cost of your health insurance.
    10. Here's where I need you to start doing a better job of putting two and two together. If you didn't get a raise last year because the cost of your health insurance went up by a lot, and the cost of your health insurance is going to go up by a lot again this year, what do you think that means for any chance you might have of getting a raise this year?
    11. Did you figure it out? That's right. The increasing cost of health insurance means you won't get a raise this year. Or next year. Or the year after that. The increasing cost of health insurance means you will never get a raise again.
    That's what I meant when I said you really should be angry. That's what I meant when I said you're getting screwed.
    OK, we're almost done. Just a few more points, I promise.
    12. The only hope you have of ever seeing another pay raise is if Congress passes health care reform. Without health care reform, the increasing cost of your health insurance will swallow this year's raise. And next year's raise. And pretty soon it won't stop with just your raise. Without health care reform, the increasing cost of your health insurance will start making your pay go down.
    13. I wish I could tell you that this was just a worst-case scenario, that this was only something that might, maybe happen, but that wouldn't be true. Without health care reform, this is what will happen. We know this because this is what is happening now. It has been happening for the past 10 years. In 2008, employers spent on average 25 percent more per employee than they did in 2001, but wages on average did not increase during those years. The price of milk went up. The price of gas went up. But wages did not. All of the money that would have gone to higher wages went to pay the higher and higher and higher cost of health insurance. And unless Congress passes health care reform, that will not change.
    Well, it will change in the sense that it will keep getting worse, but it won't get better. Unless the problem gets fixed, the problem won't be fixed. That's kind of what "problem" and "fixed" mean.
    14. Sadly for any chance you have of ever seeing a raise again, it looks like Congress may not pass health care reform. It looks like they won't do that because they're scared of angry voters who are demanding that they oppose health care reform, angry voters who demand that Congress not do anything that would keep the cost of health insurance from going up and up and up. Angry voters like you.
    15. Do you see the point here? You are angrily, loudly demanding that Congress make sure that you never, ever get another pay raise as long as you live. Because of you and because of your angry demands, you and your family and your kids are going to have to get by with less this year than last year. And next year you're going to have to get by with even less. And if you keep angrily demanding that no one must ever fix this problem, then you're going to have to figure out how to get by on less and less every year for the rest of your life.
    16. So please, for your own sake, for your family's sake and the sake of your children, stop. Stop demanding that problems not get fixed. Stop demanding that you keep getting screwed. Stay angry -- you should be angry -- but start directing that anger toward the system that's screwing you over and taking money out of your pocket. Start directing that anger toward fixing problems instead of toward making sure they never get fixed. Instead of demanding that Congress oppose health care reform so that you never, ever, get another pay raise, start demanding that they pass health care reform, as soon as possible. Because until they do, you're just going to keep on getting screwed.
    And it's going to be that much worse knowing that you brought this on yourself -- that you demanded it.
    Thanks for your time.
    P.S. -- I didn't mention this because I'm trying here to be as patient with you as I can, but you might also want to keep in mind that in addition to screwing over yourself and screwing over your family and screwing over your own children by demanding that Congress oppose health care reform so that you will never, ever see another pay raise, by doing that you're also demanding that I never, ever see another pay raise, which means that you're also screwing over me, and my family, and my children. Not to mention the millions of poor and uninsured and uninsureable people I didn't even mention above because they don't seem to matter at all to you. And for that, let me just say the only appropriate thing that can be said to someone so determined to do direct, tangible harm to the welfare of my family:Why do you hate Americans?

  3. is if Congress passes health care reform. Without health care reform, the increasing cost of your health insurance will swallow this year's raise. And next year's raise. And pretty soon it won't stop with just your raise. Without health care reform, the increasing cost of your health insurance will start making your pay go down.
    13. I wish I could tell you that this was just a worst-case scenario, that this was only something that might, maybe happen, but that wouldn't be true. Without health care reform, this is what will happen. We know this because this is what is happening now. It has been happening for the past 10 years. In 2008, employers spent on average 25 percent more per employee than they did in 2001, but wages on average did not increase during those years. The price of milk went up. The price of gas went up. But wages did not. All of the money that would have gone to higher wages went to pay the higher and higher and higher cost of health


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Jon Perr
Jon Perr is a technology marketing consultant and product strategist who writes about American politics and public policy.

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