"These are some of the things that keep American
conservatives awake at night.
Modern American conservatism is based on an almost endless
series of grievances. Author Thomas Frank coined a term for it: the conservative
"plenty-plaint" -- a long and ever-evolving list of personal and cultural gripes
dressed up as an ideology.
But there's also fear! And while it spans the breadth of the
movement, this is the year of the Tea Party revolt, when the grassroots right,
disgusted with the idea of semi-affordable health-care and tepid financial
reforms is rebelling against even its own establishment. And the divide between
the grassroots base and its leadership extends to the very fears that animate
them. As we'll see, the conservative movement's business-attired hacks and the
hard-Right tea Party types waving misspelled signs out in the streets have some
very different causes for alarm.
So, here are ten of the most interesting things that absolutely
terrify Wingnuttia. First, a few terrors of the real hard-core Right. For the
Tea Partier, the midterm GOP primary voter, it's not just the anxiety over
social change that typifies more traditional conservatism. A broad chunk of the
GOP base today is animated by wildly unrealistic terrors -- monsters stalking
them as the sun sets, perhaps hovering just beyond their peripheral vision."
For months, the problem for Democrats was correctly identified as the "enthusiasm gap"--the idea that the progressive base of the party was not excited about voting. The exit polls from Tuesday's vote confirm that many Democratic-tending voters failed to show up. How, then, does one square this fact with the idea that Obama and Democrats were pushing policies that were considered too left-wing? If that were the case, then presumably more of those base voters would have voted to support that agenda. It is difficult to fathom how both things could be true.