That's the fundamental question I ask, in this the final installment of the series that has taken up my last three articles on EveryJoe.com.
Some people think not, because the "division" in the country is so close (almost 50-50) so that losing any votes could ruin the Republican's chances.
But what if the Republican party's Faustian Bargain with the Religious Right is the REASON why that split is so close? What if, instead of being a party that talks about small government and personal freedom while trying to accommodate a group of Collectivist Theocrats, the Republican Party could remake itself into actually really being the party of "don't tell me how to live"?
As always, please feel free to RESHARE, send it to your friends, be the crazy annoying uncle on Facebook that posts political articles, just make it THIS political article!
And as always, if you want me to reply to your witty remark, go post it THERE on the comments, and not here, where it doesn't make me more popular. Thanks.
Some people think not, because the "division" in the country is so close (almost 50-50) so that losing any votes could ruin the Republican's chances.
But what if the Republican party's Faustian Bargain with the Religious Right is the REASON why that split is so close? What if, instead of being a party that talks about small government and personal freedom while trying to accommodate a group of Collectivist Theocrats, the Republican Party could remake itself into actually really being the party of "don't tell me how to live"?
As always, please feel free to RESHARE, send it to your friends, be the crazy annoying uncle on Facebook that posts political articles, just make it THIS political article!
And as always, if you want me to reply to your witty remark, go post it THERE on the comments, and not here, where it doesn't make me more popular. Thanks.
Everyjoe Tuesday: Can Republicans Split From the Religious Right and Still Win?
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire