by Ruth A. Sheets
We hear and read a lot about Trump's "Big Lie"
these days. We are regularly reminded that this is unprecedented, and it
is, but it is still a lie. The "big lie" is a betrayal
of the trust of the American people and a forced complicity among Republicans
who actually know it is a lie, but to fit in, they must swear to
it. The Lie is the story of a former president who can't let go of the
power he believes he obtained fairly, deserves, and was cheated out of in the
2020 election. Of course Trump is a liar in every way, but it is
important to remember that Trump's lying and Trumpian Republicans did not
spring from nowhere and nothing. The "Big Lie" and the January
6th insurgency it engendered have been brewing for decades
A beginning can be seen in the anti-New Dealers of the 1930s
and beyond, calling the New Deal Communist and a variety of other false names,
trying to sink the programs that were rescuing families and workers from the
worst of the Great Depression. The claim was the programs would bankrupt
the country, and worse. Since Republican officials were doing well, they
dismissed the suffering of their desperate fellow citizens as just an
unfortunate temporary setback. (I'd rather think this than that they just
didn't care.)
Republican political lying stayed somewhat under the radar
during WWII, but after the war, Republican activists tried to bring down the
New Deal by lying about the programs' effectiveness. For example, they
targeted unions calling their union-busting Taft-Hartley Act "Right to
Work." Naming things exactly opposite of what they are/do is a
continuing Republican practice – The "Freedom Caucus" strategizes to
take away rights like voting from people they dismiss, to insure Republicans
will stay in power. Freedom for whom? Perhaps, freedom from
accountability for themselves?
Joe McCarthy, Republican Senator from Wisconsin, in
the 1950s, destroyed many people's lives with his lies and only a rare few
Republicans said anything for fear he would go after them. McCarthy and
Trump have a few obvious things in common: lying regularly, blaming
people for things with no evidence, holding blank folders or papers pretending
they contain names of the accused or other important information, being
power-hungry narcissists. His lying brought McCarthy down but not until a
lot of people's lives were permanently damaged. Trump's lying has only
gotten him voted out of office, so far.
It is important to remember that Democrats can lie
too. Some Democrats joined Republicans in lying during WWII about the
danger posed by people of Japanese descent in this country, and forced 120,000
of them into "internment" camps in some of the worst places that could
be found in this country to imprison them, even American citizens!
President Lyndon Johnson and his team lied about staying involved in Vietnam
reiterating and expanding the lies of the Eisenhower Administration's belief in
our need to fight Communists there. The Dems could have said
"no" to the lies.
Richard Nixon honed Republican lying and surrounded himself
with liars. He did some good things during his administration, like
establishing the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and resuming relations
with China and the Soviet Union, but the lies were mixed in, and ultimately
drove him from office. It is a positive that Republicans as well as
Democrats called him out on his lying and cover-up, but they should not be seen
as heroes as some want to claim; they were elected officials living their
oaths. Maybe those Republicans look heroic because so few congressional
Republicans today show any courage.
President Gerald Ford decided people didn't need to know
what Nixon was really doing and where all the lies led, so pardoned him.
Nixon was not held accountable just as Donald Trump will most likely not
be. I suspect Nixon's resignation was the product of a deal with Ford and
Congressional Republicans.
The lying did not stop after Nixon, it just added targets,
particularly women, and women were recruited to do a lot of the lying.
Efforts arose to undermine the Civil Rights movement too and lies worked
well, just make up stuff, put people in their place, wherever white men
wanted them to be.
Ronald Reagan and his crew were somewhat more sophisticated
and careful with their lies than Nixon had been. When called out, they
whined that either they didn't know or that the accusers were the liars
(Iran-Contra and "Trickle Down Economics" for example). Despite
his lying, Reagan is often seen as saintly even by some Democrats. I
guess if you smile a lot and lie with conviction you can earn a halo.
Starting with Reagan, justices were appointed to the Supreme
Court by Republican Presidents who claimed some kind of "Originalist"
position (Antonin Scalia for example). "Originalist" justices
claim to see the Constitution the way our Founders had planned it and the
founders' version of the Constitution somehow anticipated the 20th
and 21st centuries. I think of this as a "smart guy"
lie disguised to look like a profound truth. It is really a way to defend
racist, misogynistic, xenophobic, homophobic and other rights-warping rulings
reflecting the justices' own personal beliefs, giving those "beliefs"
more weight than they deserve. Liberty and justice for all" for
"originalists" meant liberty and justice for rich, gun-toting,
Christian white men and corporations.
So many Republicans were sharpening and test-ballooning
their lying, even cheating skills during the 1990s it would be impossible to
name them all, but Newt Gingrich was a leading practitioner. A serious
expansion of the lying occurred under George W. Bush. His intense
ignorance allowed some of those smart liars to deceive our nation, lying us into
the invasion of Iraq being the most deadly example.
Then, the worst of all things happened for white
Republicans, a Black man was legitimately elected president, TWICE!
Republicans scrambled to respond, recruiting Donald Trump and others, preparing
them for the next phase. There was no certainty in 2009 that trump would
ever be a candidate, but he established his Bonafides by lying about President
Obama's birth. The Tea Party lied that they were the true inheritors of
the American Revolution and a Black president just didn't represent them.
Republicans either said nothing to refute these claims or whole-heartedly
jumped right in supporting the lies.
Through lying and cheating, Trump got elected and lied in
office more than 30,000 times according to dependable media sources. Some
of his biggest lies came after he was voted out of office, when he should have
been put out to pasture. The Republican Party with few exceptions, a year
and a half later repeats Trump's big lie every day along with uncounted new
lies. The groundwork has been carefully laid over decades, so it is no
surprise to me that 85% of Republicans say they believe Trump's "big
lie" and all the other lies Republicans have been pushing to their
falsehood-addicted base. Most of that base has been carefully trained to
believe all the lies, all their lives, and to faithfully follow the Republican
Liar in Chief, whoever he is and wherever he leads, even if he is inept
and hardly functioning.
Lying, since Trump entered the campaign for president in
2015 has been ubiquitous even in the "mainstream" media. The
perpetrators of the lies "plant" them somewhere, perhaps social
media, perhaps Fox "News," and by evening they are in the nightly
news as facts or claims that must be refuted, of course, after they have been
carefully stated. It may be too late to stop that practice because the
liars cleverly create situations they can slip the lies into so they are sure
to be repeated and covered. Even if the reporter says it is not true, it
is out there and the base can say "see, the media claims it isn't true,
but they wouldn't tell the truth about that anyway."
The media does have themselves partially to blame though,
because when Trump and other candidates blatantly lied, the media would not
even say the word "lie." They even had trouble with "not
true" and "falsehood." They did manage a "not
verified" or "no evidence of that yet" now and then.
Things have improved somewhat, but the damage has been done and will take a lot
of concentrated effort to correct. The lying continues at full speed and
nearly everything for Republicans deserves a lie or ten, and the
"base" will believe it all, and that base is being courted by willing
liars.
I wonder, can the dependence on lies by Republicans be
reversed and a major political party saved from disaster both for themselves
and for our nation? Remember, political lies are mesmerizing. They
temp people to believe they are getting some kind of private knowledge that
makes them special and worthy of something, even if the receiver of the lie does
not know what that something is. They belong to an exclusive club, in
this case mostly white, straight, and Christian.
So, is this Republican Party of lies salvageable before it
brings down our democracy? The jury is still out on this one.