Romney's 'free stuff' speech is a new low
Romney really showed us something in his luridly self-congratulating
N.A.A.C.P. gambit, followed by the awesomely disgusting "free stuff"
post-mortem speech he delivered the next night in front of friendlier
audiences. The twin appearances revealed the candidate to be not merely
unlikable, and not merely a fatuous, unoriginal hack of a politician,
but also a genuinely repugnant human being, a grasping corporate
hypocrite with so little feel for how to get along with people that he
has to dream up elaborate schemes just to try to pander to the mob.
As Charles Blow in the New York Times put it:
The speech sounded like it was designed not for the audience in the room, but for those in Republican living rooms.
It sounded as though he wanted to show force and fearlessness: “Look
folks, I walked into hostile territory unafraid and unbowed.” This was
his version of a Daniel in the lions’ den speech.
Talk tough. Get heckled and booed for telling the truth to those who
don’t want to hear it. Take the president down a couple of pegs in front
of the most loyal segment of his supporters…
So Romney did that, and then the next night he went to Montana and he
discussed the experience in front of a friendlier audience. And this is
what he said:
When I mentioned I am going to get rid of Obamacare they weren’t
happy, I didn’t get the same response. That’s O.K, I want people to know
what I stand for and if I don’t stand for what they want, go vote for
someone else, that’s just fine…
But I hope people understand this, your friends who like Obamacare,
you remind them of this, if they want more stuff from government tell
them to go vote for the other guy — more free stuff.
So now this is the message: I tried to reason with the blacks, I really did, but it turns out they just want a free lunch.
As far as free lunches go, we of course just witnessed the biggest government handout in history, one that Romney himself endorsed. Four and a half trillion dollars in bailout money already disbursed, trillions more still at risk in guarantees and loans, sixteen trillion dollars
in emergency lending from the Federal Reserve, two trillion in
quantitative easing, etc. etc. All of this money went to Romney’s pals
in the Wall Street banks that for years helped Romney take over
companies with mountains of borrowed cash. Now, after these banks
crashed, executives at those same firms used those public funds to pay
themselves massive salaries, which is exactly the opposite of “helping
those who need help,” if you’re keeping score.
That set of facts alone made the “free stuff” speech shockingly
offensive. But the problem isn’t just that Romney’s wrong, and a
hypocrite, and cynically furthering dangerous and irresponsible
stereotypes in order to advance some harebrained electoral ploy
involving white conservative voters. What makes it gross is the way he
did it.
Romney can’t even be mean with any honesty. Even when he’s pandering
to viciousness, ignorance and racism, it comes across like a scaly
calculation. A guy who feels like he has to take a dump on the
N.A.A.C.P. in Houston in order to connect with frustrated white yahoos
everywhere else is a guy who has absolutely no social instincts at all.
Someone like Jesse Helms at least had a genuine emotional connection
with his crazy-mean-stupid audiences. But Mitt Romney has to think his
way to the lowest common denominator, which is somehow so much worse.
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