A Tampa police armored vehicle is parked outside The Tampa Bay Times Forum in downtown Tampa. (photo: Brian Blanco/Reuters)
RNC You Didn't Build That
By Carl Gibson, Reader
Supported News
25 August 12
Reader Supported News | Perspective
he entire theme of the upcoming Republican National Convention in
Tampa is "We Built This."
It's a dig at a remark Obama made at a Virginia
campaign event, where he pushed the narrative that government investments in national
infrastructure like good schools, good roads and good police/fire protection is
essential to the success of the business community. Naturally, the GOP
took a few words out of Obama's speech and sold it to a media eager to paint
the president as anti-business, even though the stock market is
near an all-time high and corporate profits are already at all-time highs.
At a nauseating campaign rally last week dubbed
a "town hall meeting" in Manchester, New Hampshire, which turned
away Democrats with tickets to the event, both candidates relentlessly harped on Obama's
"you didn't build that" remark. The meticulously-scripted event only
took questions from fawning supporters, one of whom was a small business owner
who also reveled in the GOP's new favorite anti-Obama meme. Paul
Ryan's twitter is full of such tired
platitudes like: "I'm
proud to stand with @MittRomney - a leader who knows that if you have a small
business, you did build that!"
Ironically, the Tampa Bay Times Forum arena, the
location the Republican Party chose to host a convention with the "We
Built This" theme, was built
with taxpayer funds,
which accounted for $86 million, or 62%, of the total money needed to finance the
construction of the stadium. It's a fitting paradox, as the GOP is expected
to nominate a guy for president who made his millions tearing
down American businesses and selling them to China, and a vice-presidential pick whose past voting history contradicts nearly every one of his current positions.
Like his party's philosophy, Paul Ryan is a
walking contradiction. He didn't become a deficit hawk until Barack Obama was elected. The biggest
spending bills during the Bush administration - tax cuts for the top 1%, two
unfunded wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the costly Medicare
Part D donut hole - all
account for most of the current debt for which Ryan, who voted to add $6.8
trillion to the debt, is using to bludgeon
Obama. At the August 20 campaign event in New Hampshire, Ryan managed to speak
of 1 in 6 Americans living in poverty as "unacceptable" while keeping
a straight face, while simultaneously championing a budget
plan that would literally cut taxes for people
like himself and Romney, while raising taxes on - and cutting paid-for benefits
for - people like those in the audience cheering for him. The $4 trillion in cuts proposed in
the Ryan budget is offset by the $4
trillion less in
revenue that would be collected. Paul Ryan, like his budget, is a complete fraud.
Republicans like Paul Ryan and Eric Cantor blast
big government spending in the press, while simultaneously lobbying for it in
private. Ryan's
district benefited
from spending from Obama's
Recovery Act, which used $20 million to make homes more energy-efficient.
House Republican Leader Eric Cantor wrote
this letter asking for
government spending in his own district. Then, once the TV cameras are on,
Cantor, Ryan, and the Republicans fall all over themselves to talk about how
government doesn't create jobs. And in order to reinforce their false narrative
that can't otherwise stand on its own under scrutiny, they fight to get more of
themselves elected to office on the premise of "government can't do
anything right," and vote
down every proposal that
would create jobs and improve the economy while saying,
"See? We told you government doesn't do anything!"
The Republican Party having their national
convention with a "We Built This" theme in a stadium made possible by
the government spending they claim to hate is the perfect illustration of how
silly today's Republican Party has become. If you're voting Republican in this
election and you aren't a millionaire or a corporate lobbyist, you're proving
to everyone around that you're just as silly as your politicians.
Carl Gibson, 25, is
co-founder of US Uncut, a nationwide creative direct-action movement that mobilized
tens of thousands of activists against corporate tax avoidance and budget cuts
in the months leading up to the Occupy Wall Street movement. Carl and other US
Uncut activists are featured in the documentary "We're
Not Broke," which premiered
at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. He currently lives in Old Lyme,
Connecticut.
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