Santorum rallied around radical rhetoric, the GOP continued their war on women, Obama responded to a campaign of diversions, Sarah Palin made a surprising forecast, a Conservative character slammed “The Lorax,” and the Ed Show covered it all.
It was a week stuffed with radical rhetoric, as unlikely Republican frontrunner Rick Santorum served up his ultra-conservative message to hungry fundamentalist voters. As the convention approaches, GOP presidential candidates are ramping up assaults on each other and on the president, with the former Pennsylvania Senator offering a buffet of outrageous statements.
Santorum came out preaching on Sunday, attacking everything from Obama’s religious faith to the public education system. Appealing to the same constituents that labeled Obama as a Muslim terrorist in 2008, radical Rick claimed that the president’s policies are grounded in “some phony ideology…not a theology based on the Bible, a different theology.” While he didn’t manage to define Obama’s clandestine theology, a Santorum spokeswoman “accidentally” referred to the President’s “radical Islamic policy” during an appearance on msnbc. On Monday’s Ed show, Joy-Ann Reid explained that Santorum “feels the country should be governed…by the rules of the Catholic Church.”
In addition to his vision for a Catholic-American theocracy, Santorum also lectured voters about his views on education. We learned that his radical plan is rooted in the belief that a family should be able to pick and choose their child’s curriculum. It calls for the expulsion of all federal and state funding from public education. msnbc Contributor E.J. Dionne told Ed that taking government money out of education would essentially flunk the American dream.
But it was Santorum’s remarks at a Georgia rally on Sunday that fully exemplified the extent of his extremism. In a lengthy rant, Rick puzzlingly equated America’s current condition to that of the pre-WWII era, saying that a major threat to the country is being ignored. Part of his analogy drew an unmistakable comparison between Adolf Hitler, as the leader of the bygone-threat to America, and Barack Obama, the nation’s alleged biggest danger today. E.J. Dionne said that he “cannot believe the Hitler metaphor” was used, and wisely called for a ban on such comparisons in American political rhetoric.
Rick Santorum wasn’t the only one pushing a radical agenda this week. Republicans also sustained their war on women’s reproductive rights. A newly proposed Virginia bill would require women seeking an abortion to first undergo a highly invasive trans-vaginal ultrasound. Ed asked President of the National Organization for Women Terry O’Neill on Monday what her thoughts were on the procedure. O’Neill said that because it would be non-consensual, she considered the intrusive practice to be rape.
Perhaps former SNL cast member Amy Poehler said it best Saturday, when she shouted “Don’t tell me what to do!” to conservative legislators.
On Tuesday, Ed deconstructed the reasons behind the intensified attacks on the president, and the GOP’s new focus on contraception, abortion and even gas prices. With the Dow Jones breaking the 13,000 mark for the first time since 2008, Republicans no longer have recession-laden fuel to power their campaign against Obama. According to Ed, “The economy is not the President’s weakest spot right now.”
In a diversionary campaign, right-wingers are taking the focus off of real issues and are parading social conservative flags in an effort to rally a small fundamentalist population. But in doing so, GOP leaders have alienated a massive portion of the electorate, including moderates and independent women.








