Screeling wrote:
When the ruling elite seems to have no regard for their concerns, the time for compromise is over. The people are tired of political sophistry and they want elected officials that will listen and speak frankly with them. They want elected officials that actually stick to their guns rather than toe the party line. You say its hurting their own cause, but its resonating with more and more people.
Like I said, they remind me of the far Left in the 1960s. The difference is that in the 60s, the far Left out in the streets was offset by a comparatively moderate Left that was electorally insulated from the protest wing and therefore had the freedom to change the system from within. My theory is that the moderate Right today is not similarly insulated from its more radical wing and therefore can't engage the system in a way that will actually shift the policy landscape. Rather, they're forced to pander to the radicals in order to protect their own jobs.
Health care reform is a perfect example of this. There were plenty of opportunities in the process for Republicans to force a compromise that would have moved the bill further to the right in exchange for some bipartisan cover, but instead, they never wavered from their strategy of 100% rejection. Why? Because any Republican who voted for it, no matter what compromises they got in exchange, would have been toast when the base got done with them. As a result, the Republicans had no bargaining power on the bill (why compromise with them if you're not going to get their support anyway?), and we ended up with health care reform that's less conservative than it could have been.
Maybe you're right that a purist message and uncompromising protest will resonate with more and more people in the long run, but it didn't work for the far Left (or for Goldwater conservatives, for that matter). Instead, the far Left's excesses in the 60s bought them 25 years in the political wilderness and a cultural retrenchment in the Reagan era.