By Kyle Smith
Tuesday, November 6, 2018
Comics who make incredibly insensitive jokes about
combat-wounded veterans shouldn’t be fired from outfits like Saturday Night Live. But they should
understand the damage they’re doing. Their contempt for ordinary Americans
amounts to an internal wall. The Pete Davidsons of the land keep building it
higher, and those who are on the wrong side of it feel increasingly cut off
from the cultural swells.
Davidson, the comedian who seemingly was best known for
dating (until recently) the pop star Ariana Grande, did a strange and terrible
thing the other night when, during SNL’s
“Weekend Update” segment, he posted a picture of the Republican candidate for
Congress in Texas’s second congressional district, Dan Crenshaw, a former Navy
SEAL who lost his right eye to an IED while on active duty in Afghanistan.
Crenshaw wears a patch over the eye. “This guy’s kinda cool, Dan Crenshaw,”
Davidson said. “You may be surprised to hear that he’s a congressional
candidate from Texas, and not a hitman in a porno movie.” The audience roared,
not quite getting that it isn’t all that funny to lose an eye, even if you
happen to be a Republican. Then Davidson made things considerably worse for
himself when he added, “I’m sorry, I know he lost his eye in war, or whatever.”
War, or whatever. Davidson is not an elected
official. What he has to say isn’t really important. Nevertheless, war or whatever contained so much condescension, so much disrespect, so
much callous dismissal, that those three words will last and reverberate.
People between the irony-saturated coasts don’t feel that casualties suffered
in war should be reduced to a giggle. To them, this kind of talk is absolutely
infuriating. Squads of writers and actors on SNL strive mightily to come up with catchy bits that will get
airplay on social media and the news, but this seemingly ad-libbed quip may go
down as the single most viral moment of the entire season.
Crenshaw had the right response. He didn’t call for
Davidson to get canned or for advertiser boycotts. “I want us to get away from
this culture where we demand apologies for every time a person misspeaks,” he
said. “I think that would be very healthy for our nation, to go in that
direction.” In a tweet, he wrote, “Good rule in life: I try hard not to offend;
I try harder not to be offended. That being said, I hope @nbcsnl recognizes
that vets don’t deserve to see their wounds used as punchlines for bad jokes.”
Crenshaw was wounded on his third tour of duty when he was hit by the explosive
blast. Initially, he was blinded in both eyes before doctors managed to save
his left one. He deployed twice more in non-combat roles and received the
Purple Heart, two Bronze Stars (one with valor), and the Navy Commendation
Medal with valor. This year he received a master’s in public policy from
Harvard.
When it comes to the sacrifices of veterans being made
punchlines for bad jokes, the most salient example remains Donald Trump’s vile
mockery of John McCain in 2015: “He’s a war hero because he was captured. I
like people that weren’t captured.” As my colleague David French pointed out,
also on Twitter, don’t condemn Davidson’s joke if you condone Trump’s.
Moreover, what presidential candidates (as Trump was when he said the above)
say matters a bit more than “Weekend Update” gags.
Nevertheless, Pete Davidson matters. Davidson knows more
than most about what a hero’s sacrifice; his own father, a firefighter, died at
the World Trade Center on 9/11. Yet partisanship, these days, seems to come
above all else, and comedy is as partisan as AFSCME. Saturday Night Live and the rest of the late-night-comedy blob are
such open allies of progressivism that virtually every episode of these shows
function as an-kind contribution to the Democratic party. Late-night comedy’s
mockery of Republicans and its obverse, promotion of Democrats, is one of the
most reliable and effective weapons in the party’s propaganda arsenal. Having SNL, Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert, The Daily Show, and even, increasingly,
Jimmy Fallon ridiculing Republicans all the time, often in bits that go viral
and hence reach many who don’t even tune in to these shows, is worth more than
practically any paid-advertising scheme the Democrats could possibly come up
with.
Viewers can be forgiven for not drawing much of a
distinction between Democratic officials and the comedy-industrial complex.
This matters because a large swathe of the country feels that the Democrats and
their friends in the culture combine to launch non-stop attacks on their
values. Formerly noncontroversial ideas such as respect for wounded warriors
keep getting redefined as outside the mainstream and even worthy of ridicule.
Marsha Blackburn, the Republican candidate for Senate in Tennessee, didn’t
hesitate to connect the dots for voters: “The unhinged Left has respect for no
one, including our nations [sic] war
heroes,” she tweeted, mentioning SNL’s
take on Crenshaw. The National Republican Congressional Committee, GOP
chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, and Texas land commissioner George P. Bush (Jeb’s
son) also weighed in via tweet.
War, or whatever. Feeling alienated from
Hollywood and the media is a big reason why Americans between the coasts have
moved strongly toward the Republican party, and Davidson’s remark is one more
brick in the wall between the progressive coasts and the rest of the country.
Between the coasts, Americans feel hated, scoffed at, disregarded, forgotten,
or worse. They’re angry about it. Prominent showbiz types who tend to be richer
and more beautiful than the average American aren’t content with their high
perches atop their beloved cultural wall; they have to keep building the wall
higher, and to spit on those below.
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