By Derek Hunter
Sunday, February 23, 2014
The thing I like about most sports are the rules and how
the winner is determined are pretty unambiguous. Score more points, cross the
finish line first, jump higher, whatever, and you win. Should there be any foul
play or skirting of the rules, there’s an official or referee there to cry
foul. It’s simple and, to borrow a word from President Obama, fair.
Politics, on the other hand, is quite different. Truth
used to be the most potent weapon in the game of politics. It was the best tool
with which to garner the most votes, and whoever got the most votes won.
Whoever gets the most votes still wins, but getting to that finish line is no
longer even remotely restrained by rules of the truth.
Politicians always have lied, to be sure. But the media
was there to, if not serve as an impartial referee, at least hold the players
to some sort of standard. No more.
Putting aside the 2008 election, when Barack Obama was
vetted with all the gusto guys use to vet pretty girls at the singles bar, the
media has been a co-conspirator with Democrats in an unprecedented way the last
five years.
It started with the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009. The White House and Democrats laid out specific promises should
the bill become law. We were told the unemployment rate would not go above 8
percent and the economy would be boosted by the hundreds of thousands of
“shovel-ready jobs” the bill would create. None came close to happening.
The White House was nervous. This was early on, when the
administration was not quite sure how supportive the media would be. Their
political friends and donors were cashing their stimulus checks, but nothing
was happening. What if the stimulus did not stimulate?
Turns out they needn’t have worried. To this day,
progressives and their handmaidens in the media believe either that the
stimulus saved the country or would’ve been more effective if it had been
larger.
But non-believers were looking at the numbers and getting
suspicious. Democrats had to act quickly. They had move the goalposts for
“success.”
The professional obfuscators on the public payroll, also
known as the president’s advisors, cooked up a new unit of measure – jobs saved
or created. The beauty of this number was it couldn’t be proven, but it
couldn’t be disproven either. It wasn’t perfect, but it was the best they could
do under such obvious failure.
But it’s one thing to fool average people. They have
lives and don’t pay close attention to these things. But the watchdogs of
democracy should have known better. They should have blown this new unit of
measure out of the water. But they didn’t. They reported it like it was the
plan all along.
It was then the White House, Democrats and progressives
in general knew beyond a doubt that the old rules were gone. Truth was no longer
something written in pen, or even pencil, it was written in sand and could be
rewritten on a whim whenever needed. And they rewrote.
After all, if you can create a new unit of measure every
time you’re in trouble, you can’t lose. Especially when you have the referees
on your team.
We’ve since been inundated with unprovable declarations
of success, such as “It would have been worse if we hadn’t…(insert any economic
claim here).” The media referees played along as though they had seen this
alternate future and determined the president was right – it could have been
worse.
It is shameless. The only thing worse is Republicans’
inability to recognize the futility of complaining to those media referees and
do an end-run around them directly to the people.
Now we come to this week, and another example of a
malleable rulebook written in sand when it comes to how progressives and
conservatives are treated by the media.
Ted Nugent, someone I grew up with on the radio in
Detroit, called the president a “subhuman mongrel” at an event for Republican
gubernatorial candidate Greg Abbott of Texas. The offended class in the media
sprang into action, drooling like heroin junkies when they hear that flame hit
the bottom of the spoon.
It was deemed one of the worst things ever said, by
people who make their living declaring things said by others awful – one of the
few growth industries in Obama’s economy.
CNN dedicated hour upon hour of coverage to the words of
a man whose actions for charity they’ve ignored for decades. Current Texas Gov.
Rick Perry went on with Wolf Blitzer and was badgered for 2 1/2 minutes to
denounce these words, then denounce them in stronger terms, and again, as if
Perry has said them himself. Republicans were nearly trampled by “journalists”
demanding they react to and answer for something said in an entirely different
time zone.
Meanwhile, taking a break from calling Republicans all
manner of potty-mouth names, Bill Maher has made the rounds of cable television
as if he knows anything about this beyond what he read on Daily Kos. Imagine
the feigned outrage if Maher talked about progressives – any progressives – the
way he has talked about Sarah Palin and her children.
This misogynistic bigot gives $1 million to President
Obama’s reelection PAC, yet he is greeted as an insightful and unbiased
commentator by Blitzer and others. And no progressives – not him nor any of the
others – ever is demanded to denounce his attacks. When it comes to progressive
racism, misogyny, hatred and violent rhetoric, the referees swallow their
whistles, as they say in basketball.
Greg Abbott and Rick Perry are no more responsible for
the words of Ted Nugent than progressives are for the words of Bill Maher. But
although Abbott and Perry were forced to answer for Nugent, President Obama
cashes Maher’s check and his cabinet secretaries, advisors and elected
Democrats from Nancy Pelosi on down beat a path to the stage of the man who
calls conservative women “c@nt” without question or repercussion.
That’s what happens when you are the one who gets to
choose what is offensive. As Mel Brooks said, “It’s good to be the king.”
Republicans need to recognize this and do more than
complain about it. They need to refuse to play by these rigged rules. They
should start by calling out the gatekeepers of outrage when forced to answer
for others. Newt Gingrich scared the hell out of moderators in the 2012
primaries by simply calling a garbage question what it was. If you don’t play
the progressives’ game, their rules don’t matter. No matter how often they
change them.
A simple, “Did you invite me here to talk about something
I had nothing to do with? It wasn’t me, I wasn’t there. I’ll answer for
something I had nothing to do with when you answer for Dan Rather. Until then,
how about we talk about jobs?” would go a long way toward shutting up these
arbiters of offense.
The new rules are there are no rules. The other side is
making them up as they go along. Conservatives can’t control the questions
they’re asked, but they can control the answers they give. Quick thinking and
preparation can turn the tables on the outraged media class, turn the tables on
their inquisitors and expose them for the frauds they are.
Of course, it also would be nice if people would stop
saying stupid things.
No comments:
Post a Comment