![]() | Pacific ViewsYou've been had. You've been took. You've been hoodwinked, bamboozled, led astray, run amok. - Malcolm X |
... by Walter Brasch
Some columns are easier to write than others.
This is one of them.
Providing all of my research were the "family values" Republicans.
This week, second term Gov. Mark Sanford of South Carolina disappeared for six days, leaving the state without a chief executive who could make decisions in an emergency. His Republican lieutenant governor didn't know where he was, and had not been given any authority to make decisions in his absence. The state police said they had not been informed. His wife told the Associated Press she didn't know where he was, wasn't worried about him, and thought he was "writing something and wanted some space to get away from the kids" over the Father's Day weekend. His senior aides said he was walking along the Appalachian Trail to "clear his head."
But it wasn't his head that he was clearing. When he returned, after first lying to a reporter for the Columbia State who caught up with him on his return to the Atlanta airport, he finally admitted he went to Argentina to meet with a long-time lover. His wife, who was not by his side when he held an early afternoon press conference, later said she and the governor had separated two weeks earlier. The State later produced e-mail love letters it had been keeping since December.
The rising young star of the Republican party who was seen as a presidential contender in 2012, the man who was head of the Republican Governors Association until the day after he acknowledged his extramarital affair, the man who had wanted to deprive his state of $700 million in federal stimulus funds as a political message to President Obama, the man who had established himself as a beacon for the sanctity of marriage and the values of the oh-so-pure Religious right, who a decade earlier as a congressman had strongly condemned Bill Clinton's extramarital affair, was not only an adulterer, but for at least the second time had left his state at risk since there were no contingency plans of how to reach him in an emergency.
Alas, Gov. Sanford isn't the only "family values" philanderer. Slightly more than a week earlier, Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) admitted he had a nine month extramarital affair with one of his campaign staff. Ensign, who was contemplating a run for president in 2012, had been chair of the Republican Policy Committee and the National Republican Senatorial Committee. Like Gov. Sanford, Sen. Ensign only admitted to the affair after information had been leaked to the media.
This is the same John Ensign who, as a congressman, had curled his lips in revulsion at Bill Clinton's affair, and demanded he either resign or be impeached. "He has no credibility," Ensign told the Las Vegas Review–Journal in 1998. Six years later, now a senator, Ensign supported a federal ban on same sex marriages by declaring, "Marriage is the cornerstone on which our society was founded . . . . [M]arriage, and the sanctity of that institution, predates the American Constitution and the founding of our nation." Ironically, Ensign is active in Promise Keepers, an evangelical group.
Also vigorously calling for President Clinton's impeachment, while having had their own extramarital affairs and covering them up or lying about them, were:
Add to the list of morally bankrupt Republicans:
Republican leaders aren’t the only ones who commit adultery, nor are conservatives or members of the Religious Right, including preachers, solely the ones to have violated the seventh and tenth Commandments. Democrats also have a litany of their own scandals. But, it is the "family values" Republican leaders, who have led the party of right wing moral indignation; it is the Religious Right that has overtaken the party and wears the now-tarnished shield of righteousness to protect itself against anyone who doesn't share their own views of the world, including moderate and liberal Republicans, and anyone belonging to another political party.
The hypocrisy and moral turpitude of the leaders is just one reason why only 21 percent of Americans identify themselves as Republicans.
[Walter M. Brasch is a university professor of journalism, social issues columnist, and the author of 17 books. His current book is Sinking the Ship of State: The Presidency of George W. Bush, available from amazon.com, bn.com, and other stores. You may contact him at brasch@bloomu.edu or through his website, www.walterbrasch.com]
Posted by Walter Brasch at June 29, 2009 11:03 PM | Guest Writings
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Dear Professor,
Thanks for this post. It is impressive the hypocrisy of these leaders and it is absolutely necessary for us to find the right people to do the job of changing our lives for the better.
-
(Editor Chefe - Aprenda como ganhar dinheiro pela internet conosco!)
McCain adviser, friend allegedly called Palin as 'Little Shop of Horrors' on campaign trail
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and now the clue: Palin retaliates against Steve Schmidt! (Another thriller in the dramatic Saga G.O.P.- twisting, thrilling,entertaining.
GOP Senator: Sanford's fate will be 'resolved' next week
">man, what a sandy fahrt. brick by brick the whole form shapes
">In post election clashes 20 get killed in Iran. Several thousand arrested
McCain adviser, friend allegedly called Palin as 'Little Shop of Horrors' on campaign trail
and now the clue: Palin retaliates against Steve Schmidt! (Another thriller in the dramatic Saga G.O.P.- twisting, thrilling,entertaining.
GOP Senator: Sanford's fate will be 'resolved' next week
man, what a sandy fahrt. brick by brick the whole form shapes
In post election clashes 20 get killed in Iran. Several thousand arrested
Good article
Posted by: 恒温恒湿 at July 2, 2009 08:51 PMMcCain adviser, friend allegedly called Palin as 'Little Shop of Horrors' on campaign trail
Posted by: Girard Perregaux at July 4, 2009 02:43 AM