Redstate...
Jonah
Goldberg is tired of the vicious
hypocrisy of these people…
...for that matter, so am I.
Posted by Moe Lane
Tuesday,
August 2nd
‘These
people’ being the media, and
their contemptible willingness to accept a double standard when it
comes to
violent rhetoric. After screaming for so long about every possible hint
of a
suggestion of a possibility of violent speech from the Right, it’s
amazing what
will be forgiven when it comes from the Left:
Tom
Friedman — who knows a bit about
Hezbollah — calls the tea partiers the “Hezbollah faction” of the GOP
bent on
taking the country on a “suicide mission.” All over the place,
conservative
Republicans are “hostage takers” and “terrorists,” “terrorists” and
“traitors.”
They want to “end life as we know it on this planet,” says Nancy
Pelosi. They
are betraying the founders, too. Chris Matthews all but signs up for
the “Make
an Ass of Yourself” contest at the State Fair. Joe Nocera writes today
that
“the Tea Party Republicans can put aside their suicide vests.” Lord
knows what
Krugman and Olbermann have said.
Then
last night. on the very day Gabby
Giffords heroically returns to cast her first vote since that tragic
attack six
months ago, the Vice President of the United States calls the
Republican Party
a bunch of terrorists.
Regardless,
No one cares.
After
making a probably-accurate
prediction that the media will leap on the next opportunity, however
tenuous
and/or mendacious, to attack the right’s rhetoric as being violent,
Jonah concludes
‘Well, go to Hell. All of you.” To which I append: right on. But I’ll
add a
suggestion for those quote-unquote ‘moderate’ or ‘reasonable’
Republicans out
there who are legitimately interested in repairing their reputations
with their
more conservative brethren*; calling out egregious Lefty violators of
the
civility principle on either the talk shows – or the cocktail party
circuit –
will do wonders for their relationship with the rest of the party.
If
not their social life – but then,
the rest of us have suffered socially for our beliefs and our
affiliations; why
the heck should they be immune to that?
Moe
Lane (crosspost)
*No,
there really are. I am a moderate
Republican on social issues, after all. I’ve just simply avoided the
subtly
insidious trap of getting into the unethical habit of sneering at more
socially
conservative friends in order to try to curry favor with socially
moderate
enemies. I am not the only squishy Republican in the United States of
America
who is capable of making that choice.
Read
it at Red State
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