Wolf wrote:
Birthers represent a cry for help from a generation or a population of people who do not like the changes and hold personal issues with these changes. It's the "things were all fine before THEY got their way" thought and these folks just ain't taking it anymore. They hide behind the constitution but are prepared to have papers please laws and mosque banning laws to go into place. This is not a disagreement on the constitution, most these folks are not merely "concerned" about the performance of government, this is about culture, this is a war of cultures, and right now the birthers represent the old view of culture that is on the losing end. Things are changing and they don't know how to stop it, they just want it to end. Now that the gays are in the military, what's next? While I do agree at times with many folks who are part of the "old" culture, you know, birthers, reaganites and so forth, while they have good arguments at times, they are deluded in most other issues. Sorta gotta feel sorry for them.... sorta.
The problem is that delusion is always bad, or almost always. I actually think it is a bad thing that there are so few conservative intellectuals, partly because they have virtually been driven out of academia. The problem is that in America, we are always going to have conservative politicians, and they are always sometimes going to take power. If their conservatism has no intellectual foundation, they're going to be crazy dumbfucks.
I look back in the past, even the recent past, and see conservative intellectuals like William F. Buckley, Jr. and, in academia, Leo Strauss. Neocons sort of use a bastardized, dumbed-down version of Strauss's dumbest ideas, but don't appear to have any actual political philosophy other than getting elected. They have no actual principles and are often too dumb even to have an ideology, much less adhere to it.
I feel sorry for them, but sort of like you feel sorry for Old Yeller. Yes, it's a bummer, but the mad dog has to be put down.