And people wonder why Richard Mourdock lost his Senate race in 2012 to Joe Donnelly? Maybe it has to do with Mourdock being a stark raving lunatic.
Reaction ranged from anger to shock to befuddlement after Indiana Treasurer Richard Mourdock compared the nation's direction to Hitler's Nazi Germany during a farewell speech at the Indiana Republican Convention on Saturday.
"The people of Germany in a free election selected the Nazi Party because they made great promises that appealed to them because they were desperate and destitute. And why is that? Because Germany was bankrupt," he said.
Mourdock, who has stoked outrage with incendiary comments in the past, then alluded to the 70th anniversary last week of the D-Day invasion during World War II, saying, "The truth is, 70 years later, we are drifting on the tides toward another beachhead and it is the bankruptcy of the United States of America."
See, because Democrats are just like Nazis because government spending. Jesus. Oh, here's the best part:
The speech received a standing ovation from the nearly 1,700 delegates from across the state.
Because this is what passes for big, new ideas in the Indiana GOP.
But by the end of the day, even the party's state chairman was distancing himself from the treasurer's comments.
His references Saturday to the Nazi regime drew sharp objections from Democrats, members of the Jewish community and even some Republicans.
Indiana Democratic Chairman John Zody said Mourdock's words were "ugly" and should be denounced by Republican leaders.
Shelby Anderson, president of the Indianapolis Jewish Community Relations Council, said comparing the rise of Hitler and the heinous acts of the Nazis in comparison to America's national debt is "highly offensive and trivialize both the suffering and memory of the six million Jews and millions of others who perished under the Nazi regime."
Stephen Klapper, vice president of the council, called it "deplorable to suggest that a nation in debt is somehow one step away from perpetrating crimes reminiscent of Nazi Germany. And it's outrageous to equate our nation's legitimate public policy challenges, and the way we choose to address these issues – ideally through civil discourse and rigorous debate – with the way Hitler and his Nazi regime propagated one of civilization's most reprehensible atrocities through lies, terror, and ultimately genocide."
But that's what Republicans think of those who disagree with them. Those who dissent have to be Nazis, because they clearly can't be Americans who should have the right to vote. Hell, they're just pure evil, they're not even human, so if we have to break a few eggs taking the country back from them, well that's just gonna have to happen, right?
But let's just add for the record that the German people did NOT elect the NSDAP. The Nazis won 33% in November 1932, when President von Hindenburg AS A REPRESENTATIVE OF THE CONSERVATIVE INTEREST invited Hitler and his large minority to form a government IN COALITION WITH CONSERVATIVES. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_election,_November_1932
ReplyDeleteAh, conservatives - consistent across the continents and the years. Running on stoking up national pride, enforcing the current dominant religion's beliefs, and hating on those foreign devils who seek to corrupt our youth with their immoral beliefs.
ReplyDeleteHindu conservatives in India, Buddhist conservatives in Myanmar, Shi'ite conservatives in Iran, Christian conservatives in the US... the religion and the nation's name change, but the methodology remains constant.