Neil Armstrong went to college on the GI Bill. It seems fitting that we remind ourselves of that on the day after his death and on the eve the GOP national convention with the stupid, chest-puffing slogan, "We Built It."
The slogan, of course, is built upon yet another Republican lie about President Obama, who was just reminding us how much we rely upon one another for everything from highways, to the FDIC, small business loans, education, health care etc. etc. Idiot America, to use Charles P. Pierce's felicitous phrase, twisted it to mean "the government built it for you."
Since the Republicans are mounting this slogan in an arena built by the government, there are plenty of ways to mock them. But there is a destructive belief behind their words, the belief that each of us floats alone in the universe, that whatever we do, we do without connection to others.
This hyper-individualism, in both its folk and its Ayn Rand, pseudo-philosophical guises, is unique to America. I suppose it grows from the Myth of the West and the idea that some pioneers carved there lives on the lonely prairie without help from anyone. Of course, most of those pioneers planted their crops on a farm they received because of the federal Homestead Act. But facts have very little influence on such myths.
George Lakoff and I co-authored a Huffington Post essay last week, "Romney, Ryan and the Devil's Budget: Will America Keep Its Soul," which discussed these issues in the context of the catastrophic damage the Romney/Ryan budget plans would do to the country. The piece received an enormous amount of attention. One of the most interesting things, though, could be found in the comments. There, those who disagreed with us consistently – even willfully – misrepresented our thoughts in order to then disagree with them.
rest at http://firedoglake.com/2012/08/26/goodnight-moon-no-more-neil-armstrongs-in-a-conservative-future/
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