After the 2016 election, I had a long conversation with one of my
Trump-voting friends. “Why are you so angry?” he asked. I’ve heard it again
since then.
Why am I so angry? Because for nearly 40 years – or my entire adult
life – I’ve watched friends and family fall for economic and policy bunk to
vote against their own best interests. I’ve struggled alongside them and had to
listen to their puzzlement about why their lot keeps getting worse. Yet when I
try to share facts and information that explain it, I am tarred as “liberal”
and written off. Or I see their eyes glaze over, leading next to a shrug and
the excuse that nothing they do will make a difference.
Meanwhile, we’re all working
harder for less. So why do they think I’m angry?
I’m angry because these voters’ willful ignorance – whether because
they refuse to acknowledge facts they deem “liberal” or because they find
politics boring – costs us all daily.
This week Robert Reich came out with a column that explained this
40-year-plus marketing blitz. Salon Magazine published it under the headline, “The
Big Economic Switcheroo.” In it, Reich explains how the rich have swindled
Americans by lowering tax rates.
He writes: “The rich used to pay higher taxes to the government.
Now, the government pays the rich interest on a swelling debt, caused largely
by lower taxes on the rich. Which means a growing portion of everyone else’s taxes
are now paying the rich interest on those loans, instead of paying for
government services everyone needs.”
While Conservative Republican messaging has convinced voters that poor,
black, brown people and anyone else they can tag as “Other” are robbing us,
they are passing policies that increasingly strangle services we all rely on.
Paul Krugman at the New York Times described the problem more
pointedly as “Trump’s
Big Libertarian Experiment,” and he asks in the article’s subhead, “Does
contaminated food smell like freedom?”
In the article, Krugman points out the division between the libertarian-leaning
GOP base, that bought Reagan’s rhetoric about government being the problem, and
the GOP establishment, whose goal has been shoveling money to the rich. As he
concludes, “If a party is going to claim, year after year, to believe that
government is the problem, not the solution, then complain bitterly when the
government stops handing out checks, attention should be paid.
“And if you have libertarian leanings yourself, you should ask
whether you’re happy with what’s happening with government partially out of the
picture.”
During Reagan’s 1980 presidential campaign, I saw all this coming, thanks to a
politically astute father. I’ve paid an economic price for Reagan's election. I paid more for my
college education and loans, joined the workforce when starting wages were
lower, and may be forced into retirement earlier while continuing to work
part-time to make ends meet. So, is it any wonder I’m angry?
A willfully ignorant citizenry swayed by cheap and easy taglines
and myths, created this mess. First, they fell for broadcast media distortions via
cable news and talk radio pouring lies into their ears. Now they are falling
for messages swirling through the world’s biggest grapevine aka the Internet.
So yes, I’m angry. I may even be angry at you. But what I really
wonder is: Are you angry with yourself
yet? And if so, what are you going to do about it? Because we’re the only
solution to this mess.
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