Some fascinating reading from the world of political commentary. Frank Luntz, Republican media guru and among the men most responsible for poisoning American politics of the last twenty years, had a conference with the Republican Governors Association, where he gave them an interesting messaging symposium on how to talk about Occupy Wall Street and the economy in general.
Long story short, Luntz's assessment: taxing wealthy people is in fact really really popular, and the Republican party is boned if it doesn't minimize the sentiment as fast as possible. Calling people who espouse it dirty lazy hippies isn't getting the traction it did in the 1960s, so it's time to start
spinning spinning spinning. I'm not even going to bother quoting it, because every single sentence is quote-worthy in itself. The takeaway is that the guy the Republican party as an institution turns to for learning how to talk about issues is basically conceding that the American populace writ large does not trust his party to concern itself with anything other than providing for rich people.
I've said it before and it becomes more true all the time. If "Occupy" has a purpose, it's to change the attitude of American politics. As late as August, every politician and media outlet in America was obsessed with debt reduction at any cost, and it was up to the American populace to absorb whatever austerity it took to keep taxes, especially on the highest incomes, as low as possible. Three months later, the things on everyone's mind are the (considerably more nebulous) concepts of income and tax disparity, white collar crime and justice, and national economic solidarity (i.e. job creation that isn't top-income tax cuts). And the people whose job is to find ways to talk about these issues and diffuse them back to "suck it up so the wealthy don't have to" are finding all their old tactics running up against a wall.