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AJ
DiCintio
Hyperpartisanship, Propaganda & Hypocrisy
October 7, 2009
It’s all the rage these days for
liberals to put on their makeup, make up a long face, and star in mini,
moldy morality plays that warn of extremism, an evil they perceive only on
the political right.
Of course, as is the case with the product of all human endeavors, these
perverse dramas are not equal, with the one-woman show written and
performed by the doyenne of American liberalism hands down deserving to
be labeled "Worst in Class.”
In a not so remarkable coincidence, the same person (often referred to
as "Madam Speaker”) should also run away with the award for "Worst
Performer” — if only for her delivery of every line with ridiculously
fake facial contortions that make a Barrymore of the least talented hack
ever to insult the silent screen.
Why this harsh review?
First of all, these political thespians either know or ought to know
that most of what they denounce as hyperpartisanship represents either
adherence to principle or expressions of strong emotions that have
always characterized political discourse. Therefore, they are not
seeking to engage the nation in a discussion of morality but are simply
pumping out propaganda.
Think of it.
Jefferson was not a dangerous "wingnut” (Wonkette) because he was
fiercely uncompromising in his opposition to judicial activism.
Neither, because of the following provocative language, was the great
Founder guilty of inciting people to violence (Nancy Pelosi).
...[Just as] we commit honest maniacs to Bedlam, [activist judges]
should be withdrawn from their bench...
In the same way, contemporary Americans are not "evil-mongers” (Harry
Reid) because they use strong language (emotional or not) to express
their opposition to a stunning expansion of the Federal Government that
requires an astonishing spending, borrowing, and printing of money today
and will require the piper to be paid a fearsome sum tomorrow — and not
just in cash.
The second reason these dramas deserve condemnation is that their
writers/performers are almost always guilty of shameless hypocrisy.
For example, consider that Sandra Bernhard’s attack on Sarah Palin was
done with an ocean of vulgar hate, vicious sexism, and a particularly
contemptible racism, as evidenced by one of her ugly, hateful riffs
suggesting that if Palin were to travel to New York City, she would be
gang raped by Bernhard’s black brothers.
Moreover, consider that the "performance” (that was supported by public
funding) took place in the nation’s capital and was widely reported.
Then consider that it didn’t prompt a stricken-faced Nancy Pelosi to
rush on stage to condemn Bernhard’s language as the "kind of rhetoric”
that is "really frightening” and creates "a climate in which...violence
[takes] place.”
But enough about a politician to whom hypocrisy comes as naturally as
breathing.
So, let’s move on to the NY Times’ Tom Friedman, who frets that the
degeneration of political discourse by "the right fringe” is preventing
the nation from addressing its problems.
How is it Friedman doesn’t analyze the harmful effects created by a
"left fringe”? The reason is most likely this:
Working in the Gray Lady’s incestuous environment is almost certain to
result in a psychological graying of the brain that causes one to
perceive liberals, even radic-libs, as "moderates,” "centrists,” or even
"mainstream folks.”
That surely explains why Friedman didn’t become a bubbling cauldron of
angst when, not a "fringe” group, but one as important as the 2008
Democratic presidential aspirants deemed it essential to attend a
convention of the Daily Kos but later refused to debate on the
apparently extremist Fox News Channel.
It also explains why Friedman wasn’t moved to produce a morality play
when MoveOn ran its "General Betray Us” ad in his own paper — with help
from a hefty discount provided by Lady Gray herself.
Of course, whatever hypocrisy can be attributed to Tom Friedman must be
multiplied a trillion times when one speaks of Maureen Dowd, who, in a
recent piece honoring the late William Safire, couldn’t resist knocking
"today’s howling pack of conservative pundits” who spew "vile and
vitriol.”
So, Maureen Dowd represents herself as possessed of a powerful moral and
intellectual aversion to howling wolves who slash innocents with vile
and vitriol?
Well, then, (just for one example) why don’t we know her as a citizen,
woman, and writer who, devoted and courageous as the holiest nun, avails
herself of every opportunity to denounce the cruelly vicious, insatiably
rapacious Bill and Hillary Clinton, who ran a "nuts and sluts” terror
campaign out of the Oval Office, directing, among other dirty things,
their minions to foul the nation with sexist, elitist smut that included
"bimbo,” "bimbo eruption,” and "If you drag a hundred dollar bill
through a trailer park, you never know what [kind of woman] you’ll
find.”
Finally, there is the White House Blog, which recently shouted "You
lie!” at Glenn Beck.
Fair enough — but only if the White House admits that what is good for
the goose . . .
However, in an act that reeks of the worst kind of propaganda, the Blog
goes on to equate Beck’s "lies” with the entirety of Fox News:
For even more Fox lies, check out the latest ‘Truth-O-Meter’ feature
at Politifact.
Furthermore, the charge against Beck and the invitation that follows it
stir up suspicions of hypocrisy regarding the White House and a huge
number of other individuals and organizations.
Readers are fully capable of developing this list on their own; but just
to get the ball rolling, a few are presented below:
Brian Williams, Katie Couric, Charles Gibson, Keith Olbermann, James
Carville, Paul Krugman, Arianna Huffington, Jon Stewart, Bill Moyers,
NBC, CBS, ABC, MSNBC, CNN, NPR, PBS, and the NY Times.
Finally, the White House’s choice of PolitiFact as its arbiter of truth
demands the following observations:
...PolitiFact is a project of the St. Petersburg Times, a newspaper at
least as far left as, say, the bosses of the Chicago Political Machine.
...PolitiFact doesn’t list ACORN under its catalog of "People and
Groups.”
...the catalog does list Representative Michele Bachmann, who has been
rated on the Truth-O-Meter six times, two of which are ACORN related,
with the following results: Three "False” and three "Pants on Fire.”
It all causes us to wonder what odds Vegas would assign to the bet that
PolitiFact will give Obama one "Pants on Fire,” not to mention what odds
will be laid down if the "one” is changed to five, ten, or a hundred.
Which brings us back to the idea that liberals who are sickening us with
their dramatic worrying, weeping, and warnings about hyperpartisanship
have no idea what Mark Twain was up to when he had his beloved Huck say
this:
Pretty soon I wanted to smoke, and asked the widow to let me. But she
wouldn’t. She said it was a mean practice and wasn’t clean, and I must
try to not do it anymore...[But] she took snuff...of course that was all
right, because she done it herself.
About AJ DiCintio
A.J. DiCintio is a Featured Writer for The New Media Journal. He first exercised his polemical skills arguing with friends on
the street corners of the working class neighborhood where he grew up.
Retired from teaching, he now applies those skills, somewhat honed and
polished by experience, to social/political affairs.
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