The Va. GOP has decided those who wish to vote for the primary in Va. must sign an oath of loyalty to the republican party. That means if you think Obama is better than one but not the other, you either have to risk voting for a candidate that is not as good as Obama to nominate the candidate that is better than Obama, not vote in this primary, or lie. What disturbs me is not the republicans apparent childishness that has become the norm in American politics. No. What disturbs me is we have moved on from dividing the waters, throwing mud and name calling and moved towards ideological fanaticism.... the kind typical of the Taliban, not American politics.
Okay, that may have been a little harsh to say, but the loyalty oath is atypical of American politics. This is a step towards a single party system where citizens need to swear loyalty to an established party to be allowed to vote. It may only be a primary, but the mind set is the same. It also is not the first example of an oath of ideological fealty. Many republicans have been pressured into signing an oath to never raise taxes and many have kept to that oath. While we can admire such steadfast fidelity to a promise, it also hampers the political process; at times it is a must we raise taxes. Wars cost just as much as debt and we cannot cut our way out of it every single time.
But I do admit to how clever the Va. GOP is in requiring these oaths. While many will say they will just lie, the GOP has secured a certain amount of your mind space that otherwise only can be attained through marketing. If you understood this as a form of Meta Marketing, please give yourself a pat on the back. The oath is something many in Va. will remember and it will sway them to vote republican and if you take a group of people who signed, while there will still be people who vote democrat, there will be a stronger tendency for the group to vote republican after signing the oath than before.
This does not discount the dangers of an oath, even if it helps secure a handful of votes. We should as a nation sooner move towards a three, four or multiparty system instead of a single party system with oaths of loyalty.
Thanks for reading.
Okay, that may have been a little harsh to say, but the loyalty oath is atypical of American politics. This is a step towards a single party system where citizens need to swear loyalty to an established party to be allowed to vote. It may only be a primary, but the mind set is the same. It also is not the first example of an oath of ideological fealty. Many republicans have been pressured into signing an oath to never raise taxes and many have kept to that oath. While we can admire such steadfast fidelity to a promise, it also hampers the political process; at times it is a must we raise taxes. Wars cost just as much as debt and we cannot cut our way out of it every single time.
But I do admit to how clever the Va. GOP is in requiring these oaths. While many will say they will just lie, the GOP has secured a certain amount of your mind space that otherwise only can be attained through marketing. If you understood this as a form of Meta Marketing, please give yourself a pat on the back. The oath is something many in Va. will remember and it will sway them to vote republican and if you take a group of people who signed, while there will still be people who vote democrat, there will be a stronger tendency for the group to vote republican after signing the oath than before.
This does not discount the dangers of an oath, even if it helps secure a handful of votes. We should as a nation sooner move towards a three, four or multiparty system instead of a single party system with oaths of loyalty.
Thanks for reading.