Investors.com
Roberts,
Blankenhorn And The Power Of Liberal Intimidation
By Dennis
Prager
07/03/2012
Given how
many more Americans define themselves as conservative rather than as
liberal,
let alone than as left, how does one explain the success of left-wing
policies?
One answer
is the appeal of entitlements and a desire to be taken care of. It
takes a
strong-willed citizen to vote against receiving free benefits.
But an even
greater explanation is the saturation of Western society by left-wing
hate
directed at the right. The left’s demonization, personal vilification,
and
mockery of its opponents have been the most powerful tools in the
left-wing
arsenal for a century.
Since
Stalin labeled Leon Trotsky — the man who was the father of Russian
Bolshevism!
— a “fascist,” the Left has labeled its ideological opponents evil. And
when
you control nearly all of the news media and schools, that labeling
works.
The liberal
media even succeeded in blaming the right wing for the assassination of
President Kennedy even though his assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, was a
pro-Soviet, pro-Castro communist.
Similarly,
just one day after a deranged man, Jared Loughner, attempted to kill
Rep.
Gabrielle Giffords and murdered six people in the process, the New York
Times
columnist Paul Krugman wrote that it was right-wing hate that had
provoked
Loughner.
Bullied
Into Quitting
Krugman
made it all up. But what matters to most of those who speak for the
left is not
truth. It is destroying the good name of its opponents. That is the
modus
operandi of the left. It works.
Two
examples in the last month bear testimony to its efficacy. One was the
overwhelmingly likely motivation of Chief Justice John Roberts to
declare the
ObamaCare individual mandate constitutional despite his ruling that, as
passed,
the mandate was in fact unconstitutional.
The other
was an op-ed column that David Blankenhorn, the prominent conservative
advocate
for marriage and against same-sex marriage, wrote for the New York
Times.
Blankenhorn
has committed his professional life to fighting for the institution of
marriage. And as recently as 2010, he testified on behalf of California
Proposition 8, which, in 2008, amended the California Constitution to
define
marriage as the union of one man and one woman — and which was
immediately
challenged in the courts, where liberal judges overturned it.
Blankenhorn
was vilified throughout the liberal and gay media. As Mark Oppenheimer,
editor
of the “Beliefs” column in the Times wrote:
“During the
trial (over the constitutionality of Proposition 8) and in the
immediate
aftermath, Blankenhorn became a national figure; he was ... the butt of
ridicule. ... And now, he has decided to give up that fight.”
‘Just A
Bigot’
Blankenhorn
told Oppenheimer:
“I had an
old community-organizing buddy who wrote a note to me after the trial
and said,
how does it feel to be America’s most famous bigot? I used to think you
were a
good person. Now I know you’re a bad person. How does it feel to know
that your
tombstone will read that you’re just a bigot.”
Two weeks
ago, Blankenhorn wrote an op-ed piece for the New York Times in which
he
announced that he now supports same-sex marriage.
As for
Roberts, he and his conservative colleagues on the Supreme Court have
been the
targets of media and academia vitriol and personal invective for years,
and in
some cases, decades. But while his conservative colleagues don’t care,
Roberts
does.
As reported
by CBS News:
“Some of
the conservatives, such as Justice Clarence Thomas, deliberately avoid
news
articles on the Court when issues are pending ... . They’ve explained
that they
don’t want to be influenced by outside opinion or feel pressure from
outlets
that are perceived as liberal.
“But
Roberts pays attention to media coverage. As chief justice, he is
keenly aware
of his leadership role on the court, and he also is sensitive to how
the court
is perceived by the public. (“The public” means liberal media and
academics.)
“There were
countless news articles in May warning of damage to the court — and to
Roberts’
reputation — if the court were to strike down the mandate.”
Blankenhorn’s
change — he has admitted he is tired of fighting the culture wars, and
he has
gone from being the object of New York Times derision to being a New
York Times
hero — and Roberts’ change — New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman
wrote a
column lauding Roberts for his “statesmanship” — reassure progressives
that
ridicule, demonization, and character assassination work. With the
stakes so high
in the forthcoming election, expect it to only increase.
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