More Evidence That Liberalism Is Dead
The evidence mounts that liberalism is dead.
The liberal wizards, working their wonders at The New York Times and its clearinghouses in the major networks, cannot even dupe the American people with an absurd conspiracy theory anymore. In Dallas back in 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald, a pious communist awash in the Marxist-Leninist bilge, shot President John F. Kennedy. In no time, the liberals had the nation focused on the "dangerous right-wing atmosphere" supposedly pervading Dallas. Soon all the talk was of "the paranoid style" of American politics. Oswald was almost forgotten. Doubtless, today there are fervent liberals living in haunts in Massachusetts and in Berkeley, Calif., who believe in their heart of hearts that the president was felled by Texas Republicans.
This time around, an obvious lunatic shoots 19 people in Tucson, Ariz., killing six (one of whom was a Republican judge) and wounding 13 (one of whom is a Democratic congresswoman), and the liberals try again. With artifice and craft, they try to focus the nation's attention on the "heated rhetoric" of the right. Sarah Palin is trotted out. The tea partyers are cited. The venerable Times editorializes, "It is legitimate to hold Republicans and particularly their most virulent supporters in the media responsible for the gale of anger (remember the Times' cosseting of the Angry Left back in 2008?) that has produced the vast majority of these threats, setting the nation on edge." Today, however, the average American has had enough of this liberal garbage spiel, and so in a CBS poll, nearly 6 in 10 Americans deny that the "country's heated rhetoric" had anything to do with the shooting. Liberalism has come to the end of the line. It is a bore.
Yet what kind of person directs our attention to the meaningless madness of a lunatic and tries to lecture us on the random concreteness of nouns appearing in the chaos of the poor wretch's attempts at thought. The man police say was the gunman, Jared Loughner, mentions "Mein Kampf." He mutters something about the gold standard. And my favorite: He advocated proper grammar, or perhaps he abominated proper grammar. He was not very clear. At least there was something about grammar. Hear! Hear!
Loughner is obviously a schizophrenic. I am no psychiatrist, but I would bet he is a paranoid schizophrenic. That is the most dangerous kind of schizophrenic. What he says might matter to his psychiatrist, but it has little significance to the outside world. Yet apparently, it mattered greatly to Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman. This week, he wrote in the Times: "Where's that toxic rhetoric coming from? Let's not make a false pretense of balance: it's coming, overwhelmingly, from the right." And he continued, "It's hard to imagine a Democratic member of Congress urging constituents" to violence. Now, Krugman has been a columnist for the Times for a long enough time, covering a sufficient variety of political events, for us to deduce that he is a political nitwit. Other Nobel laureates have been nitwits, for instance, Bertrand Russell. There are a lot of political nitwits in this world. Perhaps the Times could give Krugman a cooking column. He would be its Nobel Prize-winning cooking columnist.
Of course, examples of Democrats speaking loosely about violence toward Republicans have now been piling up in blithe contradiction to this nitwit's asseveration. The inimitable James Taranto of The Wall Street Journal cites Sen. John Kerry joshing with Bill Maher about how he "could have gone to 1600 Pennsylvania and killed the real bird (George W. Bush) with one stone." Taranto adds that in 1988, Kerry joked about the Secret Service's being under orders "to shoot Quayle" if George H.W. Bush were killed. And he quotes then-Rep. Paul Kanjorski as saying in October (as Jeffrey Lord first reported in The American Spectator), "That (Rick) Scott down there that's running for governor of Florida. Instead of running for governor of Florida, they ought to have him and shoot him. Put him against the wall and shoot him." Kanjorski alleged that Scott's transgression was stealing "billions of dollars from the United States government." He was defeated in 2010. Scott was elected. Yet Kanjorski resurrected marvelously. On the op-ed page of the Times, he appeared Tuesday counseling on the proper response to the Tucson shooting.
As I say, liberalism is dead. This hitherto unthinkable effort to blame the unhinged act of a lunatic on the language of the right without respect to the often more inflammatory language of the left is a cry from the grave. Rigor mortis has set in, comrades, and even your president suffers. On the campaign trail in 2008, Barack Obama said, "If (Republicans) bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun."
I am eager to read what Krugman does with broccoli.
R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. is the founder and editor-in-chief of The American Spectator and an adjunct scholar at the Hudson Institute. His new book is "After the Hangover: The Conservatives' Road to Recovery." To find out more about R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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Comments
waking up on the wrong side of the bed
Submitted by MidAmerica on Fri, 01/14/2011 - 7:31pm.
Liberalism all over the world has run out of answers. All that's remaining are people who still dream of personal power but the dream of a Progressive utopia has vanished. They are angry and vindictive. They have no where to go. Their world view has dissolved like morning mist.
Of course that doesn't mean they are going away any time soon. Progressives have been able to promote themselves by the artful manipulations of taxes, using one persons money to buy votes of others. Now the money has dried up. Nobody is going to willingly give up their freedom without a payoff so the Progressive scam has collapsed. The actions of the media in the shooter episode has exposed their dark and ruthless side, they will stop at nothing now for the aquisition of power. No more Mr. Nice Guy.
If this anger and venom is
Submitted by ant on Fri, 01/14/2011 - 10:03pm.
If this anger and venom is the swan song of the turkey that is liberalism, I have to say it couldn't have happened to a more deserving group of people.
I agree, ant---
Submitted by matthewdean on Fri, 01/14/2011 - 10:49pm.
but I truly believe that the end of liberalism is more of a wish on our part than a truism that we can celebrate. Zombies, dontcha know? MDI,like you, would be hesitant
Submitted by ant on Sat, 01/15/2011 - 12:12am.
I,like you, would be hesitant to turn my back on the corpse. I agree, they do still hold much sway especially in strongholds, like Universities and obviously the media, but I don't believe their numbers are anywhere as strong as they would have liked us to believe. And remember hit them with facts, just like zombies, their brains are their weak points.
Mmmm BrainZ.... lol Wish
Submitted by scarebear83 on Sat, 01/15/2011 - 4:54am.
Mmmm BrainZ....
lol Wish there was a "like" button. The universities are the ones that scare me the most, simply because finding a true conservative on most campuses is almost like trying to find a needle in a very large haystack.
scarebear83
Submitted by ant on Sat, 01/15/2011 - 11:30pm.
Yea, could be scary on campuses... even a stubborn, opionated, loudmouth like myself would probably be wise to groan and walk like the dead in such situations... I'd bet they're there. they're probably just sorta going along to get along, which is all good, unless the people send you to Congress.
Unfortunately...
Submitted by beauxdog on Sat, 01/15/2011 - 1:47am.
the death of liberalism has been declared before... as has the death of conservatism. The problem is, that our illustrious political leaders are not statesmen... they are politicians seeking power.
"Conservatism" might have brought them to the party, but it doesn't sleep with them on the first date.
We need a grassroots movement to return us to the power balance the forefathers created.
The House of Representatives should be a citizen legislature. People give up their farm, business, job for two years to serve the country, then return to their lives. In other words, a one term limit with no lasting benefits. We also need to lower the representative to constituent ratios which haven't been touched for a hundred years.
The Senate should be appointed by the state legislatures. This makes them the representatives of the state which then represents the people. This gives them a layer of protection from the voting public so they can make the hard decisions needed. These decisions should continue to need a super-majority for the big stuff.
The federal government has no business being in the charity business. Return to the enumerated powers and let the states be in the charity business if they want to... but no bailouts available, thank you.
Yes!. Exactly right.
Submitted by Red Jeep on Sat, 01/15/2011 - 9:54am.
In 1913 Amendments were passed that made Senators elected, not selected and gave the Federal Government the ability to tax income. With that Senators became panderers and the result is what we see now, the explosive growth of the Federal government with its 2 MILLION employees.
I respect your position...
Submitted by beauxdog on Sat, 01/15/2011 - 4:48pm.
but don't exactly agree with you.
House of Representatives... I agree with you 100%... no professionals... one term limit.
The Senate, however, it appointed by the state legisltures... I would have no problem with pros... as long as they aren't directly beholding to the public.
The president, by nature, would be a pro, but not necessarily a federal pro. Two terms I think is about right, but I am open to other opinions.
Also, the expenses generated by the Representatives and the Senators should be picked up by the states. This includes, salary, benefits, staff, supplies, postage, real estate, services and all those wonderful "fact finding" tours with their families and inner circle to study the affect of global warming on horney toads on ski slopes in Switzerland.
I agree with you.
Submitted by Red Jeep on Sat, 01/15/2011 - 10:53pm.
If Senators go back to being appointed we probably won't need term limits for them. Hopefully states would appoint people with business interests to look out for their best interests.
Like the idea too of states paying the expense tab on their elected officials.