<p>"But the conservative movement doesn't deserve what this kind of discourse is doing. Because arguments and indignation are starting to define the limits of conservative ideas — and defiant gestures are increasingly what the party has in place of policy," McArdle wrote Sunday. </p><p>She argued that there are legitimate arguments to have over issues before the House and Senate. There are even arguments that can be had over reopening, vaccines and when schools should reopen. But instead of having debates or discussing the issues, the GOP has gone to the extreme.</p><p>"Complain all you want that the COVID-19 relief bill has been packed with all sorts of unrelated stuff from the Democratic wish list — at least the Democrats <em>have</em> a wish list," McArdle said. "What's the Republican equivalent? Often it seems to be literally a bunch of wishes — that the media wouldn't be so liberal or so mean, that corporations wouldn't go Full Woke in their diversity trainings, that social media platforms would stop wielding the ban-hammer so enthusiastically against conservatives. The closest thing this has produced to a real, live governing agenda is 'Repeal Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act,' which wouldn't really fix the problems with social media that Republicans want to address and might do a bunch of things they don't want, and at any rate is not, by itself, enough to run a country."</p><p>These aren't legislative issues. This isn't a party agenda and it isn't something that would help the voters in their districts. However, it is something that their base is talking about on social media. They're also <a href="https://www.rawstory.com/republicans-making-money-big-lie/" target="_blank">issues that raise a lot of money in fundraising</a> for Republican officials, said a former GOP official. </p><p>"A once-proud movement risks turning into one perpetual, primal scream: "'I'm not gonna, and you can't make me,'" she closed. "That is not a movement; it is a second adolescence. And whatever the merits of masks or reopening, that reflexively oppositional impulse is unhealthy — for conservatives, and for America."</p><p><a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/03/07/i-get-indignation-where-are-ideas-republicans/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Read the full column at the Washington Post. </a></p>
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