I'm going to do something I'm normally loathe to do, and that's to
post a Townhall link. Consider this your trigger warning. (for anyone who doesn't know, Townhall is a very, VERY conservative paper that has a history of being...careless...with regards to accuracy)
The reason I'm breaking my long-standing taboo is because it's not every day you get to watch one of the major political parties of the most powerful country in the world split itself right down the middle on the issue of whether or not they should be defending
actual Nazis. The article is question is written by Mona Charen, a long-time and very conservative columnist, who is flabbergasted at what's she's seeing.
That said, in the era of Donald Trump, I stand slack-jawed as some on the right live down to the worst calumnies conjured from the left's febrile imagination. That the entire Republican Party has not risen up, en masse, to renounce Donald Trump's comments about Charlottesville is a disgrace. Nancy Pelosi's response to the attack on Steve Scalise showed far more decency than did Trump's to Charlottesville. She denounced the would-be assassin and proclaimed that Republicans and Democrats were members of one American family.
...
The Republican Party under Donald Trump has regressed from the party of Lincoln to the party of Lee (who, as a historical matter, is actually a skeleton in the Democrats' closet). Hanging racism around Republican necks is the fulfillment of the dearest wish of the left, and unless powerfully rebutted by however many decent Republicans still exist, will discredit the party for years to come.
This column appeared in many places, including National Review. But the reason I'm posting the Townhall link is the comments. I know, I know....you never look at the comments, but it's downright stunning in this case. Mona is being absolutely flayed alive for daring to suggest that Republicans might not want to throw their lot in with
Nazis.
I've been following politics since the mid 90s, and in that time (and for a good 15 years before that) the country has marched steadily to the right politically, even as the left enjoyed significant cultural victories. I've come to expect more of the same. But I did not expect to see the day when a Republican president would refuse to denounce crowds of men carrying torches screaming about Jews, and I'm even more shocked at how many in his party, both in office and among the rank and file, appear to be ok with this.