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    Why Perry Is Dangerous (And Also a Nut)

    The rare Texan Loon (R-TX) in his natural habitat.

    There has been a lot of concern about Rick Perry as of late.  Most of this centers around the prayer rally he hosted just prior to announcing his candidacy.  There was commentary on this from all the places you'd expect.  There was also some from places you might not, too. 

    Perry's religious views and religious grandstanding, though, are less of a big deal than other things.  What is a big deal is his idea of how government works, and how America should be run.  To put it simply: Gov. Perry might believe in a thing called "The United States of America".  But it seems evident that he doesn't believe in a United States of America.  It is a key distinction, and one with major consequences.

    Let's go back in time a couple years first (no flux capacitor required here).  In 2009, Perry famously attacked federal government overreach, and disturbingly claimed:

    "There's a lot of different scenarios. We've got a great union. There's absolutely no reason to dissolve it. But if Washington continues to thumb their nose at the American people, you know, who knows what might come out of that. But Texas is a very unique place, and we're a pretty independent lot to boot."

    Plenty of bloggers and reporters took this as declaring the legitimacy of secession.  And maybe that's exactly what it was.  But it's more important to explore the ideology that produces this sort of statement.

    The sum total of that ideology seems to be that very few things that the Federal government does are legitimate.  Social Security, most regulations, the minimum wage, labor laws, and so forth are unconstitutional and not in keeping with our founding principles.  What the Federal government actually can do according to Perry isn't exactly clear.

    Ordinarily one would invoke the general welfare and necessary and proper clauses of Article 1, but he rejects the general welfare clause as having anything to do with...well, anything really.  This reading of the Constitution is rather interesting, since it ignores basic things like "what words mean".  Perry has a vision, though, and it's one that doesn't involve the Federal government needing to do anything.

    His solution to everything is to leave it to the states instead.  And that applies to pretty much everything.  It's not hard to see how this could fail like the Hindenburg.  Independent Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid, and so forth would be a disaster, given the ease of moving between states.  The burdens would be placed on states with the most friendly policies to beneficiaries, while people would live most of their lives elsewhere.

    Indeed, we've already seen what happens in Perry's vision, as Klein points out: credit card companies are regulated differently in different states.  Therefore they set up shop where regulations are lax, and screw the rest of us from a distance.  We would see the same with everything else: banking regulations, for example.

    If Perry had his way, the nation would look radically different.  Of course, we've seen it before, because we've done this song and dance once already.  What Perry describes isn't too different from how things functioned under the Articles of Confederation.  Then, we did not have a Union; we had a loose network of trade agreements and mutual defense.  If you remember your history, then you remember how spectacularly it failed.  Its failure led, in turn, to the Constitution that Perry so reveres yet understands so badly.

    Under Perry's system, things like Social Security and Medicare would be almost impossible.  Environmental regulations would be pointless.  Labor laws would be shattered.  Civil rights gains, won hard with blood, sweat and tears, would be broken.  The advances of the 20th Century, in other words, would be gone.  Undone.  Destroyed by a man who thinks secession is a reasonable idea to throw around, and that a central government doesn't serve any purpose.

    Perhaps that is the point.  And so we are left with no choice but to see Perry's ideology as hopelessly reactionary, feckless and terrible for everyone.  Perry thinks that we can have a 21st Century America - the standard of living, the economic engine, the superpower-ness - without the things that allowed that America to build itself.  It's an un-United States, with nothing to hold the states together.  This vision is wrong and insane, of course, but being wrong and insane doesn't seem to stop any Republicans these days.

    This is why Perry is perhaps the most dangerous and offensive of the Republican field.  He knows exactly what he wants to do, and how it needs to be achieved.  He has a real vision for what America should be, and it is a vision where the parts make no whole.  The problem, though, is that it's of an America that does not exist, never existed, and should not ever exist.  Perhaps he will never make it out of the primaries.  That would be good.  But if he does, then anyone who enjoys living in a first world, 21st century nation needs to ensure Perry loses.

    Read more from The Liberal Mob at our other humble blogging abode at The Liberal Mob.

    Comments

    ALL OF THEM ARE NUTS!

    But unlike Bachmann, Perry is dangerous beyond belief.

    He would pray us into six new wars (at least) and a real depression.

    Yes, good points.

    PERRY IS SCARY!


    He's friends with Adam Bomb

    They need to make a Garbage Pail Kids trading card with the name  "Scary Perry"

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garbage_Pail_Kids


    hahahahah

    I hereby render unto Resistance the Dayly Line of the Day Award for this here Dagblog Site, given to all of him from all of me...for this gem

     

    Adam Bomb. hahahhahahahah


    Richard, compare the two links I’ve provided

    Doesn’t Perry look like Dracula? @1:00

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVPxAgy7lBA

    Notice the fangs are withdrawn.

    http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/08/perry-calls-bernanke-policies-almost-treasonous.php?ref=fpblg


    Interesting take on Perry. I take his states-rights demands with a grain of salt, however. Governors have a lot of incentive to promote states rights. Presidents, not so much. And politicians in general tend to invoke states rights only when the other party controls the federal government.

    The last Texas governor to run for president was also a champion of states rights, but as president he passed No Child Left Behind and the Patriot Act, and he fought state emissions standards, recognition of gay marriage, and legalization of medical marijuana.


    I just hit some of your links, particularly the Ezra Klein review of his book. OK, I now acknowledge that Perry may be a lot more passionate and radical about states rights than the average Texas governor.


    It is not entirely without impact that Texas is a state whose existence owes itself to a successful act of secession (from Mexico).  I think that makes it unique, unless you want to call the Declaration of Independence an act of secession from England, which is sort of a stretch,and, anyway, those were the FOUNDING FATHERS, and all, plus there was actually a seven year civil war over the question of our independence...


    bad server, bad!


    It can't hear you


    In a way, we're lucky that book exists.  The bog standard politician-authored book is usually a lot more vague on details and less strident.  There's usually some meat there, of course.  But it seems like most candidates/current officeholders show more discretion than Perry has.

    It's an advantage because now there really can't be a whole lot of doubt about what he thinks.  And it can (and should) be used to hammer him, because some of that stuff is just plain bonkers.


    Perry is the second Governor of Texas who (1) has been strongly influenced by members of the Christian Right in the wealthy state of Texas; and who (2) has set a new record for the number of executions by any modern Governor. Perry has overseen a record number of executions of death row inmates. He has never given given clemency. He has overseen 230 executions. Here is what the Texas Freedom Network says at their web site, Religious Right Watch, about the Religious Right in Texas: "Perhaps the greatest success of the state’s religious-right movement has been its complete takeover of the Republican Party of Texas. This effort progressed steadily during the 1990s and was complete by the end of Gov. George W. Bush’s administration in 2000.".. In the 2004 Yurica Report "The Despoiling of America, The First Prince of the Theocratic States of America," Katherine Yurica explains that Pat Robertson's resignation from his position as President of the Christian Coalition on December 24, 2001 signaled to the faithful that "the Bush administration was a government under God that was led by an anointed President who would be the first regent in a dynasty of regents awaiting the return of Jesus to earth. The President would now be the minister through whom God would execute His will in the nation. George W. Bush accepted his scepter and his sword with humility, grace and a sense of exultation." Now Texas governor Rick Perry - anointed by the Christian Right has begun "his" run.


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