by Steve Benen
Former New York Gov. George Pataki (R) probably wouldn’t
be a competitive national candidate, but he nevertheless seems to be
moving forward with his plans for a presidential campaign. Late last
week, he even released an ad teasing a likely announcement.
In the spot, which is airing in New Hampshire, the Republican
says he’s had enough of “Obama-style socialism.” He didn’t appear to be
kidding.
The comment came to mind yesterday reading Dave Weigel’s latest report
on Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who seems annoyed by scuttlebutt about
Republicans nominating a governor, not a senator, for their 2016 ticket.
After Texas Senator Ted Cruz addressed the First in the Nation summit in Nashua, New Hampshire, on Saturday, he headed to a basement conference room for a conversation with young Republicans…. When one audience member asked Cruz what executive experience he could bring to the job, Cruz lambasted the “greybeards” in Washington for coming up with the “senator versus governor” framework in the first place.“Obama is not a disaster because he was a senator,” said Cruz. “Obama is a disaster because he’s an unmitigated socialist, what he believes is profoundly dangerous, and he’s undermined the Constitution and the role of America in the world.”
Let’s put aside the question of whether or not President
Obama’s successful tenure constitutes a “disaster,” and instead focus on
that other part.
They keep using that word, “socialism,” but I don’t think it means what they think it means.
Look, there’s no reason for “socialism” to serve as a synonym
for “stuff Republicans don’t like.” It’s an actual word with a fairly
specific meaning, involving public ownership of the means of production.
And it in no way reflects the Obama era. After corporate
profits reached all-time highs, the stock markets reached all-time
highs, and the sharp drop in the unemployment rate was based almost
entirely on private-sector job growth, I thought to myself, “Well, at
least they’ll stop calling Obama a ‘socialist.’” But here we are anyway,
hearing the same nonsense.
Have we considered the possibility that Republicans literally
don’t know what “socialism” means? Isn’t it plausible that knee-jerk
partisans have relied so heavily on the word for so long that they
simply have lost track of its definition?
Cruz complained
last year, “Right now, the top 1 percent in this country … earn a
higher share of our national income than any time since 1928.” I’m
curious: does the far-right senator believe those are economic
conditions created by “an unmitigated socialist”? Or does Cruz believe
the president is just really ineffective in implementing his socialist
vision?
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