Greene's sins are real and incite hatred and conspiracy

The likes of Margory Green are the true face of the new US Republican Party

  • Margory an extremist lawmaker supports Trump's views.

    Father

  • Trump has succeeded in planting the seeds of discord in American society.

    A.F.B.

  • Congress is witnessing an unprecedented polarization.

    Father

picture

Last Thursday, 95% of Republicans in the Chamber refused to strip new member Margory Taylor Green, who brandishes firearms and incites hatred and conspiracy;

Exemption from her duties in the committee to which she belongs.

And the deadly consequences of the January 6th rioters seem to have changed nothing.

President Donald Trump is out of power, but his spirit is still raging in his supporters, and the anger and resentment of his base will dominate the party for a long time, and Republicans in the House of Representatives remain fascinated by Donald Trump and fear his base, and it is likely that the anger and resentment of ordinary Republicans will determine the course of the party in the coming months and years. .

The "Keio Anon" doctrine is now a pillar of the party, although House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy has disavowed his existence.

True sins

Greene's sins are real, not fictional. Over the years, she has blamed California wildfires on a Jewish laser beam from space, claimed that the events of 9/11 was an inside job, and claimed that school shootings were a pre-set work.

Between 2018 and 2019 she endorsed comments on social media that appeared to support the assassination or execution of former President Barack Obama, his Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

(Greene recently backed away - in part - from some of her earlier, more disturbing comments.)

Unfortunately, the Republican Party has turned into a quagmire of fever fueled by racial hostility linked to fear and hatred of modernity, and it is unfair for any ordinary political party to provide a seat for someone like Greene, but these days Republicans are behaving - unfortunately - as an extremist group.

Likewise, the mob that attacked the Capitol could not be seen as an isolated outpouring of conspiratorial anger. The insurgent mob left dead and wounded, and supported the ranks of rioters, military veterans, real estate brokers, and seemingly privileged members of America's middle class.

And wealthy Republican donors have reportedly helped fuel this potential carnage.

Risk of undermining efforts

However, the dissatisfaction with Trump's 2016 election threatens to undermine Republican efforts to restore the House and Senate.

In January tens of thousands of Republican voters turned out, and in Arizona, Colorado, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Utah, the party suffered a cumulative loss of more than 30,000 voters from its lists.

Political success is more about adding, not discounting (attracting supporters).

An exodus of college-educated fathers and fathers from the suburbs is not what McCarthy needs to usurp the president's position, and likewise the exodus will not help the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, remove Chuck Schumer from his position as the Senate majority leader.

The retention of Republican Representative Liz Cheney in the third place in the leadership of the Republican House, who supports impeachment of Trump, does not change this toxic scene, as Cheney's difficult victory over 61 of her undercover colleagues is evidence of her determination and the desire of all weighty Republican lawmakers to preserve the power structure. Current party as it is, and not for some other reason.

Both Cheney and Greene attracted attention among Republicans in the House of Representatives, but the new Georgian lawmaker actually got more support from her party's MPs.

Cheney's upward index expired while Greene walked free to embark on an endless fundraising party, tweeting for content that appeals to her heart.

Freedom could have another meaning.

Loyalty to Trump

In fact, loyalty to Trump at the state level, which resembles religious devotion;

It is the practical belief of this kingdom, and those who refuse to kiss hands are the new heretics.

Arizona Republicans have criticized Cindy McCain, the widow of late Republican Senator John McCain, for supporting Joe Biden, as well as Republican Governor Doug Ducey for refusing to steal the election.

In Wyoming, Cheney was blamed by 10 organizations in the Republican provinces for supporting impeachment measures, and more are expected in the coming weeks, as Cheney already faces a fundamental challenge.

Meanwhile, Republican Senator Bensasi of Nebraska faces possible criticism in his home state.

He infuriated them by condemning Trump's drive to undermine democracy.

To date, Sassy is one of five Republican senators who opposed the refusal to impeach the forty-fifth president, and he refused to support Trump four years ago, and last November as well.

As a religious man, he framed things this way: "Politics is not about a person's strange worship."

So far, Trump is considered the party's best option to run for the presidency in 2024, and more than three-quarters of Republicans believe there has been widespread voter fraud despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

Regardless, Trump's big lie has taken hold and will not disappear anytime soon, and the structural forces and demographic inequalities that drove Trump to power still dominate the country.

Lloyd Green: attorney in New York

Loyalty to Trump at the state level, which is comparable to religious devotion;

It is the practical belief of this kingdom, and those who refuse to kiss hands are the new heretics.

Trump is the Republican Party's best choice to run for the presidency in 2024. Moreover, more than three-quarters of Republicans believe there has been widespread voter fraud despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

Follow our latest local and sports news, and the latest political and economic developments via Google news