Rep. Marsha Blackburn, a far-right Republican from Tennessee, spoke to msnbc’s Chris Jansing about the Republican debt-ceiling crisis yesterday, and the congresswoman said a couple of things that stood out for me.
For one thing, Blackburn kept using one word over and over again: Republicans want to be “thoughtful in what is done.” The GOP leadership team will “move forward on this with a very thoughtful plan.” Congress should “be very thoughtful,” and the process “requires thoughtfulness.”
To borrow an Inigo Montoya line, Blackburn keeps using that word, but I do not think it means what she thinks it means.
Not to put too fine a point on this, but there’s nothing “thoughtful” about a hostage crisis. Blackburn and her colleagues are threatening to hurt Americans on purpose unless their still-undefined demands are met, and though GOP focus groups may responded well to the word “thoughtful,” it doesn’t change the fact that Republicans’ tactics fall well outside the norms of the American political tradition.
Blackburn’s rhetorical strategy seems to be, “If I keep saying we’re being ‘thoughtful,’ maybe the public won’t notice how completely insane the hostage strategy really is.”
But even putting rhetoric aside, there’s a related substantive problem.
Take a look at this exchange:
JANSING: Would you be willing, if you don’t get the kind of cuts that you think are necessary, would you be willing to go into default or to shut down the government?








