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Posts Tagged ‘Jared Loughner’

How our “new civility” will guarantee Obama’s reelection

by Mojambo ( 178 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Hate Speech, Politics at January 21st, 2011 - 2:00 pm

Funny how I do not seem to recall any calls for “civility” from 2001 – 08 when George W. Bush (a nice gentleman) was in charge.  Instead we were bombarded by constant references and analogies to Nazi Germany not only thrown at Bush but at Dick Cheney, John Ashcroft,  and Republicans in general by the likes of Dick Durbin, Keith Olbermann, and various vapid Hollywood stars.  By toning down our legitimate criticisms of the Obama government we are succumbing to our fears and will give him a free pass on those things which need to be brought out.

by Victor Davis Hanson

An evil psychopath, Jared Lee Loughner — a man with no discernible ideology or political affiliation, and declared by those who know him to be both unhinged and unacquainted with contemporary media — shot a U.S. congresswoman, murdered a federal judge, and killed five other innocent people, while wounding several more.

Almost immediately, prominent liberal journalists and several politicians in the U.S. Congress and in state legislatures directly attributed Loughner’s rampage to the “climate of hate” in general and to the Tea Party, Fox News, Sarah Palin, conservatives in general, or the Republican party in particular.

[…]

In some ways, the most embarrassing demagoguery came from the secretary of state. While in Abu Dhabi, Mrs. Clinton — in a rather shameful sort of moral equivalence — apparently intended to impress her hosts and score political points at the same time. So without any evidence, she labeled Loughner an “extremist,” in a general call to quell political violence both in and outside the United States.

What was the evidence for the charge that Loughner was a product of the political fringe, or that his rampage was a logical extension of right-wing politics? The scene of the crime was Arizona, which had been the object of liberal vituperation, failed economic boycotts, and political censure because of its efforts to enforce federal immigration laws that the Obama administration was not enforcing. The suspect was a lone white male. And there was a vague memory that such ideological scavenging amid tragedy had worked well in the Timothy McVeigh case. I think that was about it.

So in less than 72 hours the legion of liberal pundits, bloggers, and newspaper editors that had rushed to demagogue the issue was reduced to embarrassed silence. Loughner was clearly unhinged and had no political affiliation. Many who had called conservatives out had themselves a long record of using inflammatory metaphors and similes. President Obama — unlike his sloganeering after the Skip Gates mess or the Major Hasan murdering — uncharacteristically kept quiet, processed public opinion, and than gave a fine speech, disavowing charges of a political connection to the tragedy. In Orwellian fashion, the New York Times now praised the new bipartisan civility without citing its own uncivil efforts a few hours earlier to politicize the shooting.

End of story? Hardly. Consider the present landscape and its logic.

We are all supposed to deny any connection between the Taxi Driver copy-cat Loughner and politics. But we are also supposed to use this occasion to insist on a new age of civility in which we all strive to curb the inflammatory speech that did not prompt Loughner at all.

Are we appalled by the repugnant efforts of an ideologue like Paul Krugman to capitalize on the killing of innocent people, while we nonetheless de facto accept his thesis that politics, as in right-wing politics, motivated Loughner, and thus must tone down? And once incivility is accepted as Loughner’s catalyst, who, after all, is going to protest a return to “civility”?

Why the weird disconnect?

After the November 2010 liberal meltdown, the progressive community privately accepts a number of realities. 1) The American people believe that never-let-a-serious-crisis-go-to-waste massive deficit spending made a bottoming-out recession far worse, and they want a stop to the leftist agenda of Obamacare, takeovers, more borrowing, and larger government.

2) The right-wing response (Fox News, talk radio, the Internet, the Murdoch empire, etc.) to the old left-wing media monopolies of the eastern and western coastal daily newspapers, the three television networks, NPR, PBS, and the weekly news magazines is no longer a “response,” but is in many ways far more effective in influencing and channeling public opinion.

[…]

In other words, the calls for a general toning down of rhetoric translate far more into a toning down of both an effective media opposition and a rising political obstruction to the Obama agenda. “Can’t we all get along?” in essence means, “Can’t we all just keep quiet and keep going on with the big-government, agreed-on politics of the last fifty years?”

Will that work? No.

[…]

That Obama is a postracial mellifluent Chicago politician does not mean that he is not a Chicago politician. That he blasts the “fat cats,” the “stupidly” acting police, and the limb-lopping surgeons, or that his attorney general calls the American people “cowards,” is typical, not aberrant. For 2012, President Obama will have raised $1 billion in cash. He knows from 2008 (“cling to guns or religion,” “typical white person,” “gun to a knife fight”) that his own emotionalism and polarization both earn him cash and create the “them” against “us” (minorities, youth, gays, women) binaries that might draw attention away from an agenda that a majority simply does not want. Obama has always used polarizing politics, coupled with calls for bipartisanship, to great effect, and he surely — as we just saw again in October 2010 (“punish,” “backseat,” “enemies”) — cannot stop now.

Second, the country is center-right. A Watergate, a Perot candidacy, an insurgency in Iraq, or fear of a 1929-style meltdown can on occasion elect a Democratic president, usually one with a southern accent that suggests latent conservatism. In other words, crises, costly wars, and scandal are the necessary roads to power for contemporary liberalism. Hysterical speech in accentuating the climate of collapse pays dividends.

The Bush–Hitler/Brownshirt invective used by the likes of Robert Byrd, Al Gore, and John Glenn, or the Howard Dean “I hate Republicans and everything they stand for,” is rarely directly rejected by the liberal community since it really does pound away in insidious fashion in associating sensible conservative ideas with diabolical ogres who mouth them. Are we all to be in a sort of national Jimmy Carter mode, in which toothy smiles, a preacher’s voice, and biblical references sugarcoat incendiary talk (cf. the benevolent Carter’s description of Dick Cheney as a “militant,” the elder Bush as “effeminate,” Israel as an “apartheid” nation, George W. Bush as the “worst” president)?

Indeed, hours after President Obama’s calls for a new landscape of civility, Rep. Steven Cohen (D., Tenn.) was comparing Republican opponents of the health-care legislation to Nazis from the House floor, while Slate published a screed by Emily Bazelon on  “Why I Loathe My Connecticut Senator,” with serial expressions of how she “loathed” and “despised” Sen. Joe Lieberman.

[…]

So I predict that 18 months from now the president himself will still be calling for a new civility in the manner of his speech at the 2004 Democratic convention — and will once again adopt the sorts of over-the-top metaphors, similes, allusions, and rough-stuff politics that got him elected senator in 2004 and president in 2008, and pushed his health-care legislation through in 2009. If anything, the language of division will be shriller even than in 2010, as  the administration grasps that loaded language, coupled with calls for an end to rancor, must now do what a record of unpopular governance cannot.

Read it all here: Civility for thee

The Totalitarian agenda of the Progressive media

by Phantom Ace ( 277 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections 2012, Fascism, Hate Speech, Liberal Fascism, Progressives, Socialism, Tranzis at January 12th, 2011 - 1:30 pm

( Picture Update: Huckfunn)

The shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords is being milked for political gain. Without waiting for all the facts to come out, the media was blaming the Tea Party, Glenn Beck, Michael Savage, Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin. The Democrats joined in the chorus and began to jump on this tragedy for political gain. Then the facts came out about Jared Loughner. It turns out he was into the occult and had a 4 year grudge on this congresswoman. He had no connection to any Rightwing group and people who knew him said he was a Leftist.

Now it turns out the police had known about his threats and even visited him before the shooting. But it doesn’t matter, the Progressive media machine is still pushing the Rightwing extremist theme, just like they push the Obama Boom theme.

To describe the Tucson massacre as an act of “political violence” is, quite simply, a lie. It is as if, two days after the Columbine massacre, a conservative newspaper of the Times’s stature had described that atrocious crime as an act of “educational violence” and used it as an occasion to denounce teachers unions. Such an editorial would be shameful and indecent even if the arguments it made were meritorious.

The New York Times has seized on a madman’s act of wanton violence as an excuse to instigate a witch hunt against those it regards as its domestic foes. “Instigate” is not too strong a word here: As we noted yesterday, one of the first to point an accusatory finger at the Tea Party movement and Sarah Palin was the Times’s star columnist, Paul Krugman. Less than two hours after the news of the shooting broke, he opined on the Times website: “We don’t have proof yet that this was political, but the odds are that it was.”

This was speculative fantasy, irresponsible but perhaps forgivable had Krugman walked it back when the facts proved contrary to his prejudices. He did not. His Monday column evinced the same damn-the-facts attitude as the editorial did.

Read the rest: The Authoritarian Media

The same media that urged caution after the Major Hassan incident has the audacity to to the speculate about motives here? This is pure hypocrisy and one that needs to be called out. This shows the Totalitarian agenda of the Progressive movement and its media arm. They are trying to create a false narrative about this tragedy to get political gain. So far it’s not working as polls show the majority of Americans don’t think it was politically motivated or that political rhetoric was the cause.

Some politicians are now even proposing Gun Bans of a 1000 feet from politicians. As always, the gun control crowd tries to take advantage of a tragedy. Killers like Jared Loughner could care less about gun laws and would do their crimes anyway. The result of this talk are that gun sales are going up. Some Progressives like Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) even using the tragedy to raise money for political campaigns. This shows how low the left will go.

Progressives are ecstatic when tragedies like this happen. Following the Alinsky playbook, they take advantage of a situation. The Left is gleeful about this murder and the opportunity it can give em. Like all Totalitarians, the American Progressive movement don’t care about death, just how it may help them.

Addendum: Trump on the Michael Savage show.

I speak only for myself and not the Blog.

Donald Trump whom I will support for the Republican nomination should he run was interviewed on the Michael Savage Show. Trump lays out the economic challenges America is facing and how some of our allies are really leeches.

Trump is spot on with his analysis. America is the world’s sucker and it needs to end.