Sunday, January 21, 2024

AMERICAN POLITICS HAS BECOME AN ECCCHHHOOO CHAMBER!

 Weekly Opinion Editorial 


WHO DEFINES EXTREMISM?

by Steve Fair

 

     Wasteful government spending is not new or a surprise.  The Heritage Foundation says the federal government has lost almost $2.4 trillion in simple payment errors over the last twenty years.  Improper/incorrect payments cost taxpayers $247 billion each year.  From 2011-2014, the late Senator Tom Coburn, (R-OK) published “The Wastebook.”  Coburn found taxpayers funded an $856,000 federal grant to train mountain lions to walk on treadmills.  During the war in Afghanistan, the Department of Defense erroneously bought $28 million dollars of forest camouflage uniforms to be used in the deserts of Afghanistan.  Opps! Squandering taxpayer money by not being a good steward is one thing, but when the government uses taxpayer money to attack political ideology and free speech, that’s something else.

     In February of 2023, the University of Rhode Island’s Media Education Lab (URIMEL) was awarded a $700,000 federal grant by the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) counterterrorism program to use propaganda to attack conservatives.    “Propaganda can also be used for socially beneficial purposes,”  URIMEL’s grant application read.  “The U.S. has long made use of beneficial propaganda during WWI, WWII, and the Cold War.” 

     URIMEL has used the grant money to write blog posts attacking former President Donald Trump and his supporters.  They conduct seminars (Courageous RI) for the stated purpose of countering disinformation, enhancing civic participation and improving media literacy.  They used tax dollars to pay young people to post on social media attacking conservative policies.  Three observations:

     First, tax dollars used to attack free speech should be a non-partisan issue.  No matter what political ideology, all Americans should be outraged their government is using tax dollars to attack free speech.  In America, a fundamental basic right is for each citizen to have a right to their opinion/values/convictions.  Their view may be wrong in other’s eyes, but the right to be wrong should be respected.  URIMEL’s stated mission is to prevent rising violence and extremism in Rhode Island with authentic and respectful conversation.  But who determines what is extreme?  What is considered authentic, respectful conversation and who makes that judgment?  If it is the Party in power, then extremism changes with who is in charge. 

      Second, it is not government’s function to dispense propaganda.  In America, government’s job is to make laws, implement and execute those laws and adjudicate them as necessary.  Government’s purpose doesn’t include publicizing a particular political point of view, promoting a political cause, or attacking fellow American’s perspective.  Governing policies may contradict one another from administration to administration, but using taxpayer dollars to brainwash fellow citizens is improper. 

     Third, politics has become an echo chamber.  Americans live in an environment where they encounter only beliefs and opinions that coincide with their own.  Alternative views are never considered.  Graciously allowing someone to disagree with a viewpoint is considered weak and lacking in character.   People are placated and told what they want to hear by media and politicos.  Considering a differing view could be right is considered sacrilegious and inexcusable.  People who agree 80% of the time are political enemies because they focus on the 20%.  Nothing gets done because no one will concede any ground or barter. 

     Edmund Burke said, “All government, indeed every human benefit and enjoyment, every virtue, and every prudent act, is founded on compromise and barter.”  Compromise and barter are dirty words in modern American politics.

      Taxpayers should be up in arms tax dollars are being used to attack conservatives.  The URIMEL grant should be revoked/repealed/canceled and the DHS officials who approved it should be held accountable.  Those bureacrats are the extremists.

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