Republicans and our lowered standards of public discourse
Video (updated below)
In the spotlight for calling Republicans to task for their damaging rhetoric: Senator Joe Biden talks with moderator Tim Russert about his campaign for the presidency (29-Apr-07), Meet The Press [longest-running TV program, featuring interviews with world leaders and U.S. newsmakers], online at video
Watch this video and hear Joe Biden (Delaware's longest serving Senator), appearing on the April 29, 2007 edition of Meet The Press, discuss the lowered standards of public discourse that have followed the 1994 Republican Congressional victory (starting around 42:00 minutes into the video; transcript here):
"Since 1994, from the Gingrich revolution to Karl Rove and President Bush, we have wallowed, wallowed in the politics of polarization."
For an example of what Biden is talking about, go to Bookworm Room and read how one right-wing commentator manages to politicize the collapse of a freeway.

UPDATE: For a recent Colorado example of how Republicans deploy the politics of polarization, see my blog article from August 30, 2007: Bob Schaffer: Last year's Republican.

UPDATE: Here's Sidney Blumenthal writing in Salon on September 20, 2007 about Bush's impact on the Republican Party and legacy (highlighting mine):
Of the Republicans, only Newt Gingrich, former speaker of the House, leader of the 1994 self-styled radical "revolution" that captured Congress, is willing to speak publicly about the danger Bush poses to the future of the party. "I believe for any Republican to win in 2008, they have to have a clean break and offer a dramatic, bold change," he told a group of reporters on Sept. 14. "If we nominate somebody who has not done that ... they're very, very unlikely to win it."
But repudiating Bush would also mean repudiating Gingrich's legacy, too. Draper reports that Bush loves claiming Ronald Reagan, not his father, as his role model. But Gingrich, more than Reagan, is Bush's forerunner. It was Gingrich who heightened the politics of polarization to a level of personal attack and unscrupulousness unlike any seen since the underside of Richard Nixon's operations was exposed in the Watergate scandal. Reagan was free of such dishonest and vicious politics. Bush, Cheney and Rove ("Pigpen") picked up where Gingrich left off. Republicans can no more return to the halcyon days of Reagan than magic carpets can be used in Iraq. For the Republicans to recover, they would have to extirpate their entire recent history, root and branch.




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