Whether they agree or disagree with President Obama’s direction for the nation, Americans are quickly forming the opinion that his team doesn’t miss much.
For example, someone on the team last fall jotted some notes on the success of “Sarah’s Base Hardener” in continuing the work of the late icon of conservatism, William F. Buckley. Buckley’s work: “I’ve spent my entire lifetime separating the right from the kooks.”
”Sarah” was, of course, Sarah Palin. Quickly, she established an identity among many Americans as Billy Mays (the screeching TV pitchman) in lipstick. John McCain put her to work hardening the GOP base, and her success exceeded the lifelong hopes of William F. Buckley. Throughout the late summer and fall, “Sarah’s Base Hardener” was separating the right from the kooks in boatload numbers. It featured a secret ingredient that, when dumped into a party-full of conservatives, acted to eliminate choice. At the molecular level, it removed any molecule that didn’t look like and act like the molecule next to it. Those molecules (including David Brooks and Christopher Buckley, William’s son) rose to the top in a confused, multi-colored froth, while the base molecules, all exactly identical, sank to the bottom, so enraptured by their liberation from choice that they cried out against any agent of choice, including but not limited to Barack Obama, intoning, “Treason!” “Terrorist!” “Liar!” “Kill him!”
Rush Limbaugh was beside himself with envy. When Sarah visited his radio show, he told her, “I’ll tell you, I’m in a quandary here this morning. I admire you so much. I really don’t even know what to ask.”
The Obama strategists watched this, and took notes. Their particular interest was the colorful, confused froth at the top of the GOP, and the November votes that might be extracted from it. But the ultimate national value of this froth, and how to capitalize on it, may not have occurred to them until last weekend. Or they may have just been waiting for the right opportunity, the right conditions to experiment on the froth.
Then, last Saturday, Limbaugh delivered an 85-minute speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference that was textbook hard-base Limbaugh, so textbook that it rattled the Republican National Chairman, Michael Steele, who called it “incendiary” and “ugly.” The next morning on national television, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel threw the switch. Of Limbaugh, Emanuel said: “He is the voice and the intellectual force and energy behind the Republican Party.”
Imagine those words passing through David Brooks’ body, and you see the colorful, confused GOP froth, separated from the hardened base, but still in the party pot with no place to go, nowhere to turn, converted instantly to live steam on being touched with the voltage of an intellectual association to Rush Limbaugh. There they are this week, a huge conservative cloud blown into the atmosphere, looking for a place to precipitate out. Buckley’s work is at last completed. And by Democrats! With a huge assist, when he selected Sarah Palin, by John McCain. Talk about reaching back and forth across the aisle.
It will be interesting to see how the cloud precipitates out. Wherever it is, there are some good people up there, important to the near, the intermediate, and the distant future of the country. I will bet you $7.50 that Obama knew that.
I would say that what Sarah did was indeed a “base hardener” and indeed it was the “base” (or kook) portion that hardened. That's why Rush admired Sarah so- since Rush appeals to base (and kooky) instincts…. And it was this “base” which also shouted threats at Obama.
The reasonable and thinking Republicans were spurned when they said something that didn't appeal to the kooks of the party.
Is this the same guy who said “Never let a good crisis go to waste?”
Rush Limbaugh February 13, 2009:
“I'll say it again. Not only do I want Obama to fail, I want this package to fail. I want this to blow up in their face.
I hope the stimulus bill fails. I hope it does exactly what we know it will do, blow everything to smithereens and not do one thing that has been promised. Apparently, experience is the greatest teacher, and when these poor people who think Barack Obama means a new house, a new car, a new job, when they find out that's not what Barack Obama means, maybe then they'll see. So I hope that happens.
I hope Obama fails. Now the bill has passed the House. I hope when they implement it, that it fails. If I hope it fails beforehand, I better hope it fails afterwards to be consistent, right?”
Wow, Now that will show those poor slobs who was right!!. That will teach them a lesson!
I asked a co-worker of mine, a Republican, about this…. Without hesitation he said that Limbaugh is the Republican leader and has been pretty much since Reagan left office. He said when Reagan left office there was a void in leadership and Limbaugh filled that void. My friend does not think Rush will run for office.
Thinking about his comments made me realize that Limbaugh has been the one Republican figure with a national audience that has consistently been around and someone who Republicans look to as a gauge of what it means to be a Republican.
[...] Blowing Concerned Conservatives Clear of Rush [...]
[...] Blowing Concerned Conservatives Clear of Rush [...]