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There is moral crisis afoot! So say the Republican candidates for president, their pals in Congress and in state houses. Abortion, gay marriage, contraception -- contraception, for Pete's sake -- things that so shock the conscience that it's a wonder The Washington Post can even print the words!

Here's something I bet you wouldn't think I'd say: They're right. There is a moral crisis in the United States. The only thing is -- they're wrong about what it is and who is causing it.
The real crisis of public morality in the United Statesdoesn't lie in the private decisions Americans make in their lives or their bedrooms; it lies at the heart of an ideology -- and a set of policies -- that the right-wing has used to batter and browbeat their fellow Americans.
They dress these policies up sometimes, give them catchy titles like Rep. Paul Ryan's "Path to Prosperity." But they never cease to imbue them with the kind of moral decisions that ought to make anyone furious. Ryan's latest budget really is case in point. It's a plan that says that increases in defense spending are so essential, that massive tax cuts for the wealthy are so necessary, that we must pay for them by ripping a hole in the social safety net. The poor need Medicaid to pay for medicine and treatment for their families? We care, we really do, but the wealthy need tax cuts more. Food stamps the only thing standing between your children and starvation? Listen, we feel your pain. We get it. But we've got more important things to spend money on. Like a new yacht for that guy who only has one yacht.
It's hard to point to a single priority of the Republican Party these days that isn't steeped in moral failing while being dressed up in moral righteousness. This week, for example, they are hoping the Supreme Court will be persuaded by radical (and ridiculous) constitutional arguments to throw out some or all of the Affordable Care Act. Sure, you could argue that it's really nice to make sure 31 million people who didn't have health care can get it. Sure you could make the case that lifetime limits are a bad thing, that women shouldn't have to pay more for health insurance just because they're women, that the United States shouldn't be a country where you die because you lost your coverage when you lost your job. But then again, liberty. Let's not forget liberty. Also, freedom.
It is a very strange thing that the people who lecture most fervently about morality are those who are most willing to fight for policies that are so immoral. They watch Wall Street turn itself into the Las Vegas strip, take the economy down and destroy people's lives and livelihoods. To that they say, "By God we need less regulation. Get me the hose, I have things to water down!" They see a CEO of a bank or a corporation, someone who passed off all of the risk and took on all of the reward, and they say, "Get that man a bigger bonus! In fact, get him two!"
They see corporate interests flood the political system with unfathomably large sums of money, they see lobbyists defining the terms of debate, and they say, "Now this . . . this is what democracy should look like."
They see an environmental crisis spinning out of control, the effects of climate change being felt already, the possibility of the biggest natural disaster in modern human history. To which they ask, "Anyone know if we can drill this hole any deeper?"
So yes, Rick Santorum. Yes, Mitt Romney. Yes, Paul Ryan and Republican politicians all over this nation. You are right, as right as you've ever been. There is a moral crisis in this country. A horrifyingly, back-breaking, bankrupt-the-core-of-this-nation style crisis. But it isn't women or the poor or the middle class or the gay community or health-care advocates or environmentalists that are causing it.
It's you.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
There is moral crisis afoot! So say the Republican candidates for president, their pals in Congress and in state houses. Abortion, gay marriage, contraception -- contraception, for Pete's sake -- things that so shock the conscience that it's a wonder The Washington Post can even print the words!

Here's something I bet you wouldn't think I'd say: They're right. There is a moral crisis in the United States. The only thing is -- they're wrong about what it is and who is causing it.
The real crisis of public morality in the United Statesdoesn't lie in the private decisions Americans make in their lives or their bedrooms; it lies at the heart of an ideology -- and a set of policies -- that the right-wing has used to batter and browbeat their fellow Americans.
They dress these policies up sometimes, give them catchy titles like Rep. Paul Ryan's "Path to Prosperity." But they never cease to imbue them with the kind of moral decisions that ought to make anyone furious. Ryan's latest budget really is case in point. It's a plan that says that increases in defense spending are so essential, that massive tax cuts for the wealthy are so necessary, that we must pay for them by ripping a hole in the social safety net. The poor need Medicaid to pay for medicine and treatment for their families? We care, we really do, but the wealthy need tax cuts more. Food stamps the only thing standing between your children and starvation? Listen, we feel your pain. We get it. But we've got more important things to spend money on. Like a new yacht for that guy who only has one yacht.
It's hard to point to a single priority of the Republican Party these days that isn't steeped in moral failing while being dressed up in moral righteousness. This week, for example, they are hoping the Supreme Court will be persuaded by radical (and ridiculous) constitutional arguments to throw out some or all of the Affordable Care Act. Sure, you could argue that it's really nice to make sure 31 million people who didn't have health care can get it. Sure you could make the case that lifetime limits are a bad thing, that women shouldn't have to pay more for health insurance just because they're women, that the United States shouldn't be a country where you die because you lost your coverage when you lost your job. But then again, liberty. Let's not forget liberty. Also, freedom.
It is a very strange thing that the people who lecture most fervently about morality are those who are most willing to fight for policies that are so immoral. They watch Wall Street turn itself into the Las Vegas strip, take the economy down and destroy people's lives and livelihoods. To that they say, "By God we need less regulation. Get me the hose, I have things to water down!" They see a CEO of a bank or a corporation, someone who passed off all of the risk and took on all of the reward, and they say, "Get that man a bigger bonus! In fact, get him two!"
They see corporate interests flood the political system with unfathomably large sums of money, they see lobbyists defining the terms of debate, and they say, "Now this . . . this is what democracy should look like."
They see an environmental crisis spinning out of control, the effects of climate change being felt already, the possibility of the biggest natural disaster in modern human history. To which they ask, "Anyone know if we can drill this hole any deeper?"
So yes, Rick Santorum. Yes, Mitt Romney. Yes, Paul Ryan and Republican politicians all over this nation. You are right, as right as you've ever been. There is a moral crisis in this country. A horrifyingly, back-breaking, bankrupt-the-core-of-this-nation style crisis. But it isn't women or the poor or the middle class or the gay community or health-care advocates or environmentalists that are causing it.
It's you.
There is moral crisis afoot! So say the Republican candidates for president, their pals in Congress and in state houses. Abortion, gay marriage, contraception -- contraception, for Pete's sake -- things that so shock the conscience that it's a wonder The Washington Post can even print the words!

Here's something I bet you wouldn't think I'd say: They're right. There is a moral crisis in the United States. The only thing is -- they're wrong about what it is and who is causing it.
The real crisis of public morality in the United Statesdoesn't lie in the private decisions Americans make in their lives or their bedrooms; it lies at the heart of an ideology -- and a set of policies -- that the right-wing has used to batter and browbeat their fellow Americans.
They dress these policies up sometimes, give them catchy titles like Rep. Paul Ryan's "Path to Prosperity." But they never cease to imbue them with the kind of moral decisions that ought to make anyone furious. Ryan's latest budget really is case in point. It's a plan that says that increases in defense spending are so essential, that massive tax cuts for the wealthy are so necessary, that we must pay for them by ripping a hole in the social safety net. The poor need Medicaid to pay for medicine and treatment for their families? We care, we really do, but the wealthy need tax cuts more. Food stamps the only thing standing between your children and starvation? Listen, we feel your pain. We get it. But we've got more important things to spend money on. Like a new yacht for that guy who only has one yacht.
It's hard to point to a single priority of the Republican Party these days that isn't steeped in moral failing while being dressed up in moral righteousness. This week, for example, they are hoping the Supreme Court will be persuaded by radical (and ridiculous) constitutional arguments to throw out some or all of the Affordable Care Act. Sure, you could argue that it's really nice to make sure 31 million people who didn't have health care can get it. Sure you could make the case that lifetime limits are a bad thing, that women shouldn't have to pay more for health insurance just because they're women, that the United States shouldn't be a country where you die because you lost your coverage when you lost your job. But then again, liberty. Let's not forget liberty. Also, freedom.
It is a very strange thing that the people who lecture most fervently about morality are those who are most willing to fight for policies that are so immoral. They watch Wall Street turn itself into the Las Vegas strip, take the economy down and destroy people's lives and livelihoods. To that they say, "By God we need less regulation. Get me the hose, I have things to water down!" They see a CEO of a bank or a corporation, someone who passed off all of the risk and took on all of the reward, and they say, "Get that man a bigger bonus! In fact, get him two!"
They see corporate interests flood the political system with unfathomably large sums of money, they see lobbyists defining the terms of debate, and they say, "Now this . . . this is what democracy should look like."
They see an environmental crisis spinning out of control, the effects of climate change being felt already, the possibility of the biggest natural disaster in modern human history. To which they ask, "Anyone know if we can drill this hole any deeper?"
So yes, Rick Santorum. Yes, Mitt Romney. Yes, Paul Ryan and Republican politicians all over this nation. You are right, as right as you've ever been. There is a moral crisis in this country. A horrifyingly, back-breaking, bankrupt-the-core-of-this-nation style crisis. But it isn't women or the poor or the middle class or the gay community or health-care advocates or environmentalists that are causing it.
It's you.