a-rabid-frenzy

Yuna Shin: Mike Duncan’s Silence and The Republican Party of Exclusion

This morning, NPR’s Steve Inskeep interviewed the chairman of the Republican party, Mike Duncan, who is trying to hold on to his chairmanship despite the massive GOP loss in November. The most interesting part of the interview wasn’t anything Duncan said. Rather, it was Duncan’s long silence when asked about the perception of the GOP as the party of exclusion. His silence spoke louder than anything that he had said in terms of how incapable the Republican Party still is of recognizing what it did wrong and what it needs to do in order to gain Americans’ trust.

AKMuckraker: Palin, Powell and Polarizing Politics.

Welcome to your daily alliteration. Colin Powell said on CNN that Sarah Palin was polarizing. Thank you, General Obvious. (I was going to say “Captain Obvious” but I don’t feel right demoting him before I’ve even had my coffee). I think she had something of a polarizing effect when she talked about small town values are good. Well, most of us don’t live in small towns. I was raised in the South Bronx and there’s nothing wrong with my value system from the South Bronx.

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