Townhall...
The
Limit To Foolishness on Television
By Hugh Hewitt
7/29/2011
The
atmosphere in the green room at
the Sean Hannity Show was amped up. On ordinary days I will banter with
Beckel
and talk radio shop with Sean as we both tell Levin stories, a friend
of both
of ours for years.
But
Thursday night was tense. Juan
Williams and Ann Coulter weren’t yucking it up, but were watching the
House
maneuvers on Boehner 2.0. Once on set Coulter pushed for passage over
Hannity’s
serious objections, and then Juan and Sean went two pretty heated
rounds on the
issue of where responsibility lay for the unfolding fiasco.
A
truncated Great American Panel
followed with Carol M. Swain who has a new book out, Be The People,
pollster
Pat Caddell, and me.
The
segment began quietly enough.
Caddell was struggling to recall the name of Aba Eban which I gladly
supplied
him. Carol praised the Tea Party, and I declared support for the
Boehner deal
based on the unsettling and very large cash flows out of money markets,
an echo
of the panic of 2008.
Then
Caddell launched into one of his
rants about everyone being irresponsible, which is just absurd cant,
and when
Caddell resorted to the old trick of demanding the right to talk in
ever louder
volume, I kept saying no. Bullies on panels are like bullies everywhere
--give
them an inch and they will rant for an hour. Caddell’s schtick is old
and tired
but the crisis is real and immediate. The president and his Democratic
allies
have been radically irresponsible. Speaker Boehner is trying to lead
but
without any other serious leader in play save perhaps Mitch McConnell
and Jon
Kyl. When Caddell or anyone lumps in Kyl with Harry Reid, or Jim Jordan
and
Rand Paul with Bernie Sanders, and John Campbell with Barney Frank and
Chuck
Rangell, a gentleman rises to the defense of his friends. Caddell
objected to
be interrupted in his slander, and raged even to the point of grabbing
my arm,
an amusing breach of cable decorum.
Another
excitable ideologue eager to
impose some nonsensical theory on the simple problem of a president
committed
to a radical restructuring of the American economy no matter the chaos
it
requires.
Such
is the atmosphere around the
issue because the issue of the vast federal spending is genuinely that
important. A repeat of the panic of 2008 would take a weak recovery and
turn it
into a deep recession as consumer confidence crumbles. Representatives
should
rally behind the plan that signals a plan to move away from the cliff
the
president has forced us to. That’s the Boehner plan.
Cash
flows out of money markets have
been accelerating, including $9 billion on Thursday. The president’s
serial
assaults on every proposal other than massive tax hikes has clarified
his
willingness to take the economy down the panic road. Markets notice.
Consumer
confidence falls.
It
really is time to shut down the
Caddells and all the other talking heads who want to pretend all
politicians
are alike. They aren’t. Some are very good and some are very smart. And
others are
like the Senate Majority Leader and the president. The good ones need
to pass a
bill and then craft a law. Now.
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it at Townhall
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