The Real Romney Captured on Tape Turns Out to Be a Sneering Plutocrat
By Jonathan Chait, New York Magazine
Presidential campaigns wallow so tediously in pseudo-events and manufactured outrage that our senses can be numbed to the appearance of something genuinely momentous. Mitt Romney’s secretly recorded comments at a fund-raiser are such an event — they reveal something vital about Romney, and they disqualify his claim to the presidency.
To think of Romney’s leaked discourse as a “gaffe” grossly misdescribes its importance. Indeed the comments’ direct impact on the outcome of the election will probably be small. Romney repeated the wildly misleading but increasingly popular conservative talking point that 47 percent of Americans pay no income taxes. The federal income tax is, by design, one of the most progressive elements of the American tax system, but well over 80 percent of non-retired adults pay federal taxes. But most people hear “income taxes” and think “taxes,” which is why the trick of using one phrase to make audiences think of the other is a standard GOP trick when discussing taxes. For that very reason, it won’t strike many voters as an insult: Most people who don’t pay income taxes do pay other taxes, and fail to distinguish between them, and thus don’t consider themselves among the 47 percent scorned by Romney.
Instead the video exposes an authentic Romney as a far more sinister character than I had imagined. Here is the sneering plutocrat, fully in thrall to a series of pernicious myths that are at the heart of the mania that has seized his party. He believes that market incomes in the United States are a perfect reflection of merit. Far from seeing his own privileged upbringing as the private-school educated son of an auto executive-turned-governor as an obvious refutation of that belief, Romney cites his own life, preposterously, as a confirmation of it. (“I have inherited nothing. Everything I earned I earned the old fashioned way.”)
(More here.)
1 Comments:
Finally, a politician with the balls to call a spade a spade. 47% of Americans are parasites with 'no skin in the game'. I find it ironic that the VV quotes Adam Smith as "The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support of the government, as nearly as possible, in proportion to their respective abilities". Did Smith ever say half of those subjects should pay nothing in support of their government?
John Edwards was right - we have two Americas: those that produce and those that take from the producers.
So what happens when the producers have had enough and they go on strike? Say goodbye to that gold plated public pension. I am ready to quit working and live off the state for the rest of my life and I'm only 42.
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