Former Republican professional staff member on Capitol Hill, Mike Lofgren has an informative article about how the Republican hard liners are harmful to the US: 
Goodbye to All That: Reflections of a GOP Operative Who Left the Cult
To those millions of Americans who have  finally begun paying attention to politics and watched with exasperation  the tragicomedy of the debt ceiling extension, it may have come as a  shock that the Republican Party is so full of lunatics. To be sure, the  party, like any political party on earth, has always had its share of  crackpots, like Robert K. Dornan or William E. Dannemeyer. But the  crackpot outliers of two decades ago have become the vital center today:  Steve King, Michele Bachman (now a leading presidential candidate as  well), Paul Broun, Patrick McHenry, Virginia Foxx, Louie Gohmert, Allen  West. The Congressional directory now reads like a casebook of lunacy. 
It was this cast of characters and the  pernicious ideas they represent that impelled me to end a nearly 30-year  career as a professional staff member on Capitol Hill. A couple of  months ago, I retired; but I could see as early as last November that  the Republican Party would use the debt limit vote, an otherwise routine  legislative procedure that has been used 87 times since the end of  World War II, in order to concoct an entirely artificial fiscal crisis.  Then, they would use that fiscal crisis to get what they wanted, by  literally holding the US and global economies as hostages.
The debt ceiling extension is not the only  example of this sort of political terrorism. Republicans were willing to  lay off 4,000 Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) employees, 70,000  private construction workers and let FAA safety inspectors work without  pay, in fact, forcing them to pay for their own work-related travel -  how prudent is that? - in order to strong arm some union-busting  provisions into the FAA reauthorization.
Everyone knows that in a hostage situation,  the reckless and amoral actor has the negotiating upper hand over the  cautious and responsible actor because the latter is actually concerned  about the life of the hostage, while the former does not care. This  fact, which ought to be obvious, has nevertheless caused confusion among  the professional pundit class, which is mostly still stuck in the Bob  Dole era in terms of its orientation. For instance, Ezra Klein 
wrote  of his puzzlement over the fact that while House Republicans  essentially won the debt ceiling fight, enough of them were sufficiently  dissatisfied that they might still scuttle the deal. Of course they  might - the attitude of many freshman Republicans to national default  was "bring it on!"
Better yet:
The GOP cult of Ayn Rand is both revealing and mystifying. On the one  hand, Rand's tough guy, every-man-for-himself posturing is a natural fit  because it puts a philosophical gloss on the latent sociopathy so  prevalent among the hard right. On the other, Rand exclaimed at every  opportunity that she was a militant atheist who felt nothing but  contempt for Christianity. Apparently, the ignorance of most  fundamentalist "values voters" means that GOP candidates who enthuse  over Rand at the same time they thump their Bibles never have to explain  this stark contradiction. And I imagine a Democratic officeholder would  have a harder time explaining why he named his offspring "Marx" than a  GOP incumbent would in rationalizing naming his kid "Rand."
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