Ryan and Akin serve notice of imminent threat to democracy

http://peoplesworld.org/ryan-and-akin-serve-notice-of-imminent-threat-to-democracy/

The pick of Paul Ryan as Mitt Romney's vice presidential running mate
and the outrageous remarks of Missouri Republican Senate candidate
Todd Akin serve notice on the American people that the threat to our
nation's future is imminent and profound.

Every inch of social progress secured in the course of struggle over
the past several decades is subject to reversal in the event of a
government takeover by the Republican Party in November.

This danger takes center stage in the midst of a deep, protracted, and
structural economic crisis that is roiling the entire country - the
multiracial working class in the first place. It occurs on the cusp of
long-term demographic changes that create new democratic possibilities
as we scan forward in time. And it comes at the close of the first
term of an African American president whose re-election is viscerally
dreaded by right-wing extremism, due to the president's skin color and
politics.

Each of these factors give right-wing extremism - in its newest form
(it goes back to the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980 and subsequent
iterations up to the present) - a particularly venomous and
reactionary character.

Indeed, in the worldview of the present-day right-wing extremists
there is too much equality, too much democracy, too much
"redistribution," too much regulation, too much secularism, too much
science, too much diplomacy, and too much government.

In their view, the rights revolution that began in the '30s, took a
leap forward in the '60s, and continues to this day, needs to be
reversed and unceremoniously crushed.

I'm not suggesting that fascism is around the corner. But the
ascendancy of the Republican Party in November could well set the
stage for an authoritarian government not bound by the democratic
desires of the vast majority of Americans, or by constitutional
limits.

It is fair to ask: How could a party that presents such extreme
dangers to the democratic values and fabric of our country possess any
chance of winning in November?

There is no simple answer to this question. But some explanations come to mind.

The extreme right cleverly conceals its overarching aim to do the
bidding of the top layers of the capitalist class at the expense of
everyone else. It appeals to racist, misogynist, xenophobic, and
homophobic feelings and beliefs. It resorts to demagogy, lies, and
twisting facts. It invokes the fairy tale of an unrelenting government
intruding into every aspect of the economy and people's lives. It
conjures up a rampaging secularism that is supposedly at war with
religious practices and values. It exploits legitimate (and
illegitimate) discontent, economic and otherwise, with the Obama
administration. It raises the specter of "freeloaders" (re: people of
color, welfare recipients, and low-income people) living off the labor
and taxes of hard working Americans. And, not least, it systemically
tries to suppress the vote.

At the core of this political coalition of the Right are the most
reactionary sections of monopoly capital on Wall Street and elsewhere,
willing and able to spend billions of dollars in this campaign.

But gathered around them are disparate social groupings set adrift by
larger socioeconomic changes in our society and convinced that the
world as they knew it is collapsing before their eyes.

While this is a formidable coalition, it is neither of one mind nor
invincible. Indeed, because of its diverse character, it contains
contradictions - contradictions that the people's movement, with an
eye to peeling away some of its social base, should take advantage of.

The main task however is to mobilize every American who is worried
about this gathering danger to register their opposition at the polls
on election day.

>From rural to urban America, from schoolyard to college campus, from
neighborhood to workplace, from small town and to big city, from
ghettos and barrios to suburbs and exurbs - no voter who is concerned
about the democratic character of the country should stay home.

It is a big challenge for the labor and people's movement, but there
is no other road forward to a better future for the American people.

Photo: Republican Vice Presidential candidate Paul Ryan, along with
Todd Akin (on right). The country is in danger if their party takes
over in November.   Scott Applewhite/AP
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