► Show Top 10 Hot Links

Posts Tagged ‘Maureen Dowd’

Channeling her inner “Der Sturmer”, Maureen Dowd of The New York Times resorts to anti-Semitic imagery

by Mojambo ( 186 Comments › )
Filed under Anti-semitism, Elections 2012, Hate Speech, Iran, Israel, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Liberal Fascism, Media, Mitt Romney at September 19th, 2012 - 8:00 am

Maureen Dowd recently resorted to anti-Semitic stereotypes in order to bash Mitt Romney’s foreign policy and his advisers. This is the end result of the Left feeling that their  hold on power is slipping. “Slithering,”  “puppet-master,” “powerful,” “neocons” – she touches all bases.

by Jonathan Tobin

After all these years of endlessly repeating the same tired tropes on the New York Times op-ed page, taking Maureen Dowd’s columns seriously requires a suspension of disbelief that is normally only needed to watch science fiction. But though the Queen of Snark lacks the credibility to discuss virtually any issue in an intelligent manner, she does have a knack for picking up on whatever hateful viruses are circulating through the circulatory system of our body politic. Worried about prejudice against Mormons? [……..] Dowd again is the one to ensure this nasty piece of business gets another airing by arguing that Romney wants to fight wars for the sake of the Jews.

In her column in today’s Times Sunday Review, Dowd picks up on the same theme explored on the paper’s website on Thursday that I discussed earlier today. While it can be argued that she can always be relied upon to seize upon any point, no matter how trivial, to heap scorn on any Republican (her brief stint as a bipartisan basher of Bill Clinton during l’affaire Lewinsky may have earned her a Pulitzer but since then she has stuck to snarking conservatives), her attack on Mitt Romney’s foreign policy stance is particularly creepy. Unlike the rest of the Obama cheerleading squad that occupies the Times opinion pages, she is not content to just bash him for attacking Obama’s apologies, weak leadership and disdain for Israel. Dowd sees him and running mate Paul Ryan as the cat’s-paws of a shadowy group of “powerful” Jewish “neocons” who are out to seize the country in his name and enforce, “a duty to invade and bomb Israel’s neighbors,” on Americans. In a perfect illustration of how hate for Israel shows where the left and right meet, Dowd channeled Pat Buchanan in arguing that Romney/Ryan are the “puppets” of neoconservative conspirators who want Americans to die for Israel.

Dowd doubled down on Eric Lewis’ point that it is “outrageous” for Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu to demand that the president state some red lines about Iran. But all Netanyahu is doing is asking the president to show us that he has some intention of doing something about Iran other than talking about the threat.  [……….]

Dowd’s biggest target is Dan Senor, an author and former Bush administration staffer who is one of Romney and Ryan’s top advisors. But neither Senor nor Romney nor any American supporter of Israel needs to apologize to the likes of Dowd for their belief that the U.S. should keep its word to stop Iran. Though those who write about “neocons slithering” are clearly intending to stoke prejudice, even Obama has paid lip service to the fact that a nuclear Iran is a deadly threat to the entire Middle East as well as to the interests of the United States. […….]

President Obama came into office determined to try to distance the United Stats from Israel and to appease the Muslim world. He accomplished the former but failed miserably with the latter as the spectacle of besieged U.S. embassies in the Middle East this week has shown. Throughout the last year, Obama’s critics have noted that he seemed more interested in stopping Israel from defending itself than in halting Iran’s nuclear program. Now his supporters seek to suppress any pressure for action on Iran by branding it the work of neocon conspirators.

The bottom line here is the same despicable “Israel Lobby” smear that seeks to silence friends of Israel through the use of traditional anti-Semitic stereotypes. Dowd’s column marks yet another step down into the pit of hate-mongering that has become all too common at the Times. This is a tipping point that should alarm even the most stalwart liberal Jewish supporters of the president.

Read the rest – Liberal Smear:  Romney’s War for the Jews

 

Let’s send this to selrahC!

by Deplorable Macker ( 238 Comments › )
Filed under Art, LGF, Media, Satire at December 3rd, 2010 - 9:00 pm

I hear he loves comic books. If that’s the case, then he’ll be pleased to know that one particular person he admires now has a comic book of her own, thanks to some guy twenty-plus years her junior.
Yes. Maureen Dowd.

If you are (a) a professional comic-book creator and (b) fairly a moon-eyed fan of New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, then your artistic mission becomes clear: You must pay tribute to her in cartoon form. And in the case of a new comic, that form has the sultry overtones of Brenda Starr meets Jessica Rabbit — with the lethality of a gun-toting Sarah Connor.
Benjamin Marra, a 33-year-old Brooklyn-based artist, has wedded twin passions with a comic book that will have its official debut this Saturday at the Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Fest.
Marra’s comic about the Pulitzer-winning pundit is titled, “The Incredibly Fantastic Adventures of Maureen Dowd (A Work of Satire and Fiction).” And apparently Clark Kent and Peter Parker — or even “Transmetropolitan’s” cyber-gonzo reporter Spider Jerusalem — have nothing on Dowd’s journalistic superpowers.
“My inspiration for the comic was Maureen Dowd herself,” Marra tells Comic Riffs. “Like most learned men, I have a deep affection for Ms. Dowd and her writing. She’s a thinking man’s sex symbol. The comic, while satiric in nature, is intended to be a tribute to her.”

Sounds to me like selrahC has got some competition here. If he wants a date with Maureen (and get further than he ever did with Pamela Geller!), he’d better start laying off the Cheezy Poofs!

Maureen Dowd’s Brother Rubs It In

by Mojambo ( 92 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections, Elections 2010, Politics at November 11th, 2010 - 1:30 pm

Maureen Dowd’s brother Kevin (who believe it or not is a conservative) gets a chance to stick it to his liberal sister and her fans. Thanksgiving at the family Dowd should be fun!

hat tip – loppyd of Spitfire Murphy

by Maureen  Dowd

My Mom used to say, “When you’re blue, wear red.” America took that advice on Election Day, and you can color Kevin happy. My conservative brother celebrated by doing his year-end political letter early. Here is his tour d’horizon:

As a semichastened Barack Obama appeared at the press conference following the election, he conjured up the image of the curtain opening in “The Wizard of Oz,” revealing a little old man working the controls, not the great and powerful Oz.

The president had to wonder how this could happen in two short years. He must long for the days when the media routinely referred to him as “cerebral and brainy” (savvy was never mentioned) and salivated over “Michelle’s amazing arms.”

The voters left no doubt about their feeling for his super-nanny state where the government controls all aspects of their lives and freedoms. Warning signs were up in the three elections held in Massachusetts, Virginia and New Jersey and with the noisy birth of the Tea Party. But the president, swathed in the protective cocoon of adulation and affirmation from the media and his own sycophants, soldiered on in his determination to turn our country into just another member of the failed European union — France without the food.

No one should be surprised by this. The president is a devoted disciple of the teachings of Saul Alinsky and a true believer in a redistribution of wealth controlled by big government. We can see how well that is working in Greece, Portugal, Spain and France. Instead of focusing on jobs and turning the private sector loose to provide them, he insisted on giving the American people things they did not want: expensive health care, more regulation and higher taxes. He clumsily interjected himself on behalf of the mass-murdering Muslim Army major, the ground zero mosque, the civil trials of enemy combatants and the lawsuit against Arizona. His theme song could have been “Who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes?”

On Nov. 2, voters across every spectrum loudly stated their preference for a return to American exceptionalism, self-reliance, limited government and personal freedoms. They delivered a message that they would demand that their representatives start reflecting their wishes. They showed their muscle to shocked elitists who had dismissed their dissent as ignorance, bigotry or racism. It is probably a product of the revisionist history we now teach in our schools that the Tea Party, a replica of the beginnings of the American Revolution, was marginalized and mocked as a lunatic fringe group by a dismissive news media.

[…]

I once had a Jesuit English teacher who asked for an example of irony. A classmate raised his hand and wondered if Othello mistakenly killing Desdemona qualified. The old priest shook his head, noting, “That is not irony, bud, that is tragic irony.” So it is with the idea being floated that Hillary might join Obama on a dream ticket as V.P. to save his presidency. Hillary, the only member of the cabinet with any political savvy, saving the guy that jumped line on her. I don’t think so.

Here are my random thoughts for 2010:

To Sarah Palin: Mirror, mirror on the wall, you’re the fairest of them all. You don’t need to run for the presidency.

[…]

Read the rest here: Kevin Rubs It In