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Now, the drive-bys will read on a website that I'm attacking liberalism bycomparing this guy to them. That's exactly what they do every day, ladies andgentlemen. I'm just pointing out a fact. I am making no extrapolation; I'm justpointing it out.
I was making a joke about the -- I was just setting everybody up to see how thisstuff works, although I do believe that it was liberalism that got a hold ofthis guy and made him hate things, professors and this sort of thing. [Emphasisadded]
Yes, Rush is equating paranoid schizophrenia with "liberalism;" a term for which he has an idiosyncratic and flexible definition. That's another way of saying he's lying.I remember when, years ago, he went into a long incoherent rant about letting "communists and hippies" take over the electrical grid. It was in response to a proposal about electrical cooperatives. He pandered to an illiterate audience who can't distinguish between a commune and a cooperative just as he's now pandering to an audience too stupid ( or too willfully dishonest ) to differentiate between insanity and a dislike of social inequality.He has a pattern of taking similar words as synonyms; conflating unrelated things to make some mendacious point or other and although it's fun to turn the technique against him, it doesn't do any good at all because people don't like him for his wit, they like him for bashing people they would like to bash, but don't know how. Like Reagan, he thrives by telling idiots they're smart.I would love to see a renewed focus on honesty in broadcasting and a return to checks and balances by requiring free rebuttal time in response to "editorial" broadcasts.I won't stop Rush or Ann or the other liars for profit, but it will help make them unprofitable for the media to sponsor.
I'm not sure that we actually need to "respond" to Rush Limbaugh-- or Ann Coulter or Bill O'Reilly-- at this point. I mean, I think we still need a record of all of the horrible things they say (which is why Media Matters is currently my favorite website). But doesn't it seem like these people are getting more and more outrageous? And doesn't it seem like the general public is less and less accepting of them? It seems to me, two years ago Rush Limbaugh would have simply said, "The Virginia Tech shooter was a liberal," and his loyal fans would have eaten it up. As he points out, we tend to assume that all of his listeners already agree with everything he says anyway.So what's with the "It was just a joke!" defense? Since when does Rush defend the hateful things he says anyway? I submit that people close to Rush are starting to warn him that the tide's turning, and that the current political climate in our country is less tolerant of rhetoric as hatefully divisive as his often is. And, while Rush may be devoted to conservative principles, he's much more devoted to his own self-interest. Hence, the half-hearted back-pedaling-- obviously, he can't quite disown what he's said (that would alienate his base) but he also can't quite own it, either (that could cost him advertisers and the influence he's enjoyed for the past several years).All this is to say that I think the far right is starting to implode on its own. I haven't heard anything from Ann Coulter in months, though it seems like, if a foreign-born college student who hates rich kids starts shooting people on some liberal state university campus, I'd expect Ann Coulter to be on Hannity and Colmes shrieking about Godless professors and Communist students. But nope. And, of course, Imus has been fired for making racist and sexist jokes. And O'Reilly? Jesus, he just gets crazier and crazier. Even his devoted followers can no longer pretend that he's a moderate independent who "shoots from the hip" in a "no-spin zone." So what do we do? Well, I think we need to keep a record of what these people say, point out when they're being dishonest or hateful, but also try not to come across as arrogant or condescending while we do so. I think a lot of people are inclined to believe in the idea of the arrogant, elitist, liberal intellectual, and I think-- too often-- liberals give people reason to believe in this. I'm firmly committed to liberal causes, but I don't do the cause any favors if I carry myself like someone who believes he's smarter than those who disagree with him.
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2 comments:
Yes, Rush is equating paranoid schizophrenia with "liberalism;" a term for which he has an idiosyncratic and flexible definition. That's another way of saying he's lying.
I remember when, years ago, he went into a long incoherent rant about letting "communists and hippies" take over the electrical grid. It was in response to a proposal about electrical cooperatives. He pandered to an illiterate audience who can't distinguish between a commune and a cooperative just as he's now pandering to an audience too stupid ( or too willfully dishonest ) to differentiate between insanity and a dislike of social inequality.
He has a pattern of taking similar words as synonyms; conflating unrelated things to make some mendacious point or other and although it's fun to turn the technique against him, it doesn't do any good at all because people don't like him for his wit, they like him for bashing people they would like to bash, but don't know how. Like Reagan, he thrives by telling idiots they're smart.
I would love to see a renewed focus on honesty in broadcasting and a return to checks and balances by requiring free rebuttal time in response to "editorial" broadcasts.
I won't stop Rush or Ann or the other liars for profit, but it will help make them unprofitable for the media to sponsor.
I'm not sure that we actually need to "respond" to Rush Limbaugh-- or Ann Coulter or Bill O'Reilly-- at this point. I mean, I think we still need a record of all of the horrible things they say (which is why Media Matters is currently my favorite website). But doesn't it seem like these people are getting more and more outrageous? And doesn't it seem like the general public is less and less accepting of them? It seems to me, two years ago Rush Limbaugh would have simply said, "The Virginia Tech shooter was a liberal," and his loyal fans would have eaten it up. As he points out, we tend to assume that all of his listeners already agree with everything he says anyway.
So what's with the "It was just a joke!" defense? Since when does Rush defend the hateful things he says anyway? I submit that people close to Rush are starting to warn him that the tide's turning, and that the current political climate in our country is less tolerant of rhetoric as hatefully divisive as his often is. And, while Rush may be devoted to conservative principles, he's much more devoted to his own self-interest. Hence, the half-hearted back-pedaling-- obviously, he can't quite disown what he's said (that would alienate his base) but he also can't quite own it, either (that could cost him advertisers and the influence he's enjoyed for the past several years).
All this is to say that I think the far right is starting to implode on its own. I haven't heard anything from Ann Coulter in months, though it seems like, if a foreign-born college student who hates rich kids starts shooting people on some liberal state university campus, I'd expect Ann Coulter to be on Hannity and Colmes shrieking about Godless professors and Communist students. But nope. And, of course, Imus has been fired for making racist and sexist jokes. And O'Reilly? Jesus, he just gets crazier and crazier. Even his devoted followers can no longer pretend that he's a moderate independent who "shoots from the hip" in a "no-spin zone."
So what do we do? Well, I think we need to keep a record of what these people say, point out when they're being dishonest or hateful, but also try not to come across as arrogant or condescending while we do so. I think a lot of people are inclined to believe in the idea of the arrogant, elitist, liberal intellectual, and I think-- too often-- liberals give people reason to believe in this. I'm firmly committed to liberal causes, but I don't do the cause any favors if I carry myself like someone who believes he's smarter than those who disagree with him.
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