Thursday, May 13, 2010

My Problem with the Two-Party System

One of the most consistently annoying things about American politics is the lack of real choice in mainstream political parties and candidates. This is, of course, made even more frustrating by the equal lack of diversity in mainstream media coverage of these political parties and candidates. Essentially when people complain that an American news outlet is "biased," the problem is not that the news outlet is biased in a particular ideological sense, but rather that it is biased toward a particular political party and its candidates. For example, Fox News isn't really conservative; it's Republican. The neo-conservatism of Fox News is simply a means to an end, the end being the election of Republicans (or certain subsets of Republicans) to political office. The same goes for MSNBC, which many like to call the "liberal" alternative to Fox News. MSNBC's so-called "liberal" bias is also nothing more than a means to an end, in this case with the ultimate goal of making Democrats look good and Republicans look bad. Meanwhile, networks such as CNN and others attempt to fool people into thinking that they are unbiased simply because they are not clearly always backing Democrats or always backing Republicans. Instead, they alternate between Democratic Party supporters and Republican Party supporters, and dumb their hosts down so much that there isn't any substance to be biased in the first place. These hosts generally ask a set of incredibly stupid, dull, and narrow-minded questions that are intended to generate the largest amount possible of well-prepared party-line statements from the usual pair of a party-line Democrat and a party-line Republican. The quick succession of these party-line statements from what are generally considered a "Republican strategist" and a "Democratic strategist" is intended to give the impression of a debate. Yet anything that is not well within the mainstream of Republican and Democratic politics is completely ignored, even when highly relevant. This is easy and convenient for the mainstream corporate media because it presents an easy to follow narrative of "right vs. left" or "good vs. evil." No room is left for nuance or alternative ideas and perspectives. There has to be a good guy and a bad guy in every debate, and those roles are filled differently depending on which channel you're watching. Anything that challenges this simple, dramatized, dumbed down portrayal of politics is considered to be too complicated, unworthy of coverage, or not serious enough.

I won't go into the corporate hijacking of the media, extreme consolidation of big media conglomerates, and other reasons behind the poor quality of mainstream media. Those are all equally important problems, but I won't address them here.

I digress. All of this is to say that one of the most frustrating things about the tyrannical two-party system in America is its conscious painting of everyone outside of the two-party system as a radical, an idealist, or someone who just doesn't have their head on straight. I'm not talking about so-called "independents" who are so devoid of any real opinions or substance that they simply alternate between voting for Republicans and Democrats based on their current mood or something equally as superficial. These are the bipolar folks who the talking heads and political pundits on TV spend most of their time guessing about. These "independents" swing elections and like to feel as if they are unpredictable. In some senses they are; but you've always got a 50/50 chance at guessing correctly what they'll do next. I don't want to burst anyone's bubble, but I wouldn't call that too unpredictable or independent.

This country has been tricked into thinking that Republicans and Democrats are actually very different, and that there aren't any major ideas or issues those two parties don't address. So-called "liberals" are well conditioned and programmed to dismiss those who refuse to accept the failures and massive compromises of the Democratic Party. They adapt their views and opinions to fit within the Democratic Party, rather than the other way around because it is much more difficult to make an impact on the Democratic Party. For example, Markos Moulitsas of Daily Kos is quite guilty of this. He has often made light of those to the left of him, or anyone who supports progressive causes without compromising their ideals. Moulitsas harshly criticized Rep. Dennis Kucinich during the health reform debate for displaying just a small amount of independent thought. Moulitsas clearly believed it was more important to hand the Democratic Party a political victory than to actually help Americans who needed real reform. Then in a recent Daily Kos poll regarding Illinois politics, the sleazy and disgraced "independent" gubernatorial candidate Scott Lee Cohen (who initially ran as a Democrat for lieutenant governor) was included as an option but Green Party gubernatorial candidate Rich Whitney was not. Scott Lee Cohen has not even chosen a running mate yet, and it is questionable at best whether he will even be on the ballot. Rich Whitney, on the other hand, will be on the ballot due to the Green Party's "established" status as a political party in Illinois (even with all the unfair obstacles the two major parties purposely erected in order to avoid just that). Whitney received about 10.5% of the vote in the 2006 Illinois gubernatorial election, far more of a political feat than Scott Lee Cohen, an extremely wealthy pawnbroker, has to his name. Yet the Daily Kos refuses to acknowledge this and instead has decided to play it safe by conducting their polls in such a selectively biased manner.

Then there's the Tea Party movement, which largely exists within the context of the Republican Party, rather than acting as a real threat to it. The corporate media assists with this by speaking pejoratively of the Tea Party as if they should just "grow up" already and join the Republican Party. I despise the Tea Party and think it is a backwards, reactionary, racist movement - but I deeply admire the aspects of it that truly challenge the status quo, and dare to protest both Republicans and Democrats based on principle. I'm not saying that their motivations are correct or that they have any of their facts straight; I'm just saying it's admirable when people stand by their convictions and refuse to fall back in line as they are told to. It's my opinion that all protest is good protest. Authority should never be trusted on its word.

The result of all this is a very close-minded electorate and an extreme oversimplification of political issues and public policy. Those who would be considered centrist or moderate almost anywhere else in the world are considered radicals here in America. On any given political issue, a wealth of ideas and perspectives are completely left out of the mainstream discussion. Why is that? I really don't believe it is a cultural issue as much as it is a consequence of our particular political system. I don't believe there is anything inherent in the American people that makes us more likely to accept the illusion of choice, other than the fact that it's what we've always had. We're used to it.

Think about it. If all of us tried thinking outside of the box for once, we might get somewhere, collectively.

"The philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point is, to change it."
— Karl Marx

3 comments:

d.eris said...

Great post. Right on. My blog, Poli-Tea, is devoted almost exclusively to this precise issue. You might get a kick out of it.

Unknown said...

After the Allied Nations defeat the Palin-Romney Fascist State in World War III, you're gonna catch hell for that Tea Party statement.

primitive said...

Oh, that's why I made sure that I qualified and balanced that Tea Party statement very well.


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