THE NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL CORRECTNESS


Threats to freedom of speech, writing and action, though often trivial in isolation, are cumulative in their effect and, unless checked, lead to a general disrespect for the rights of the citizen. -George Orwell

Friday, September 28, 2012

SOMETIMES THE SEQUEL IS AS GOOD AS THE ORIGINAL!

One of my favorite adds of this campaign season was put out by American Crossroads and based on Obama's hot mic gaffe in which he informed Dimitry Medvedev that he'd have "more flexibility" in his second term.  The ad was done in the style of a spy thriller preview, a la James Bond.  Well... Now the sequel is out: Quantum of Easing. So I've put the two together so that they can be viewed one after the other. I think they're brilliant. Hats off to Ed Gillespie and Karl Rove. Their super pac is doing a good job raising awareness of the issues, of Obama's multiple failed and harmful policies and doing it with style and humor.
 

Thursday, September 13, 2012

OMG! OBAMA MEDIA GROUP IS BUSTED...AGAIN!

Jan Crawford of CBS News
Just when you thought the Obama Media Group couldn't disgrace itself any further, yet more evidence of their malpractice has come to light.

Members of the media who are covering Mitt Romney's campaign were caught on a hot mic colluding with each other as to what questions were to be asked.  When you listen to the audio it is clear that the plan was to make sure that whoever was called upon would ask the "right question."  In this case the "right question" was essentially to ask Romney if he stood by his earlier statements or did he now think that his earlier statements were a mistake.  Here are the seven questions asked:
1.  Reporter brings up that Romney had a "toughly worded statement last night,” and asks, "Do you regret the tone at all given what we know now?"

2. "Do you think, though, coming so soon after the events really had unfolded over night was appropriate, to be weighing in on this as this crisis was unfolding in real time?" Follow-up: "What did the White House do wrong then, Gov. Romney, if they put out a statement saying they disagreed with it?"

3. "The world is watching. Isn't this itself a mixed signal when you criticize the administration at a time that Americans are being killed? Shouldn’t politics stop for this?"

4. "Some people have said that you jumped the gun a little bit in putting that statement out last night and that you should have waited until more details were available. Do you regret having that statement come out so early before we learned about all of the things that were happening?"

5. "If you had known last night that the ambassador had died, and obviously, I'm gathering you did not know . . . if you had known that the ambassador had died, would you have issued such a strongly-issued statement?"

6. Reporter comments that Romney is running on his "economic know-how and private sector experience," and adds, "but now that foreign policy and the situation in the Middle East has been thrust into the presidential campaign, can you talk about why specifically you think you are better qualified than President Obama to handle these issues?"

7. "How specifically, Governor Romney, would a President Romney have handled this situation differently than President Obama did? You spoke out before midnight, when all the facts weren’t known. How would you have handled this differently than the president did?"
Note the repetitive nature of the questions.  Note the obvious attempts to portray the discussion as if it's an established fact that Romney had made an error in his earlier statement.  The questions assume that this is the case and so what does he, Romney, think about it now?  Note the usual weasel words such as "some people have said..." and "do you regret the tone..." 

Of course in the hands of Kool-aid drunk propagandists masquerading as "journalists" these kinds of questions remind one of the old joke: "So, have you stopped beating your wife yet?"  The "question" is not intended to elicit further details but rather to rebuke the person being questioned by implying that he has made a mistake. And starting with this premise, the answer will either be construed as a "denial" of making a mistake or acknowledgment of the "mistake."

When did rebuking the subject of an interview become the media's job? Or, if you think that issuing stinging rebukes is appropriate, then why doesn't the same media issue rebukes to Obama and other Democrats?  Questions designed to gather information or shed light are one thing. And sometimes tough questioning is called for.  But this was a clear case of the media promoting a specific agenda.  The conclusion is inescapable.  This was narrative-building.  This was an attempt to promote the idea that Romney is not a statesman, that he is not qualified and that the people should not vote for him. 

Generally speaking, when the same question is asked repeatedly, it has the intended effect of discrediting the answer.  In this case, by asking the question over and over again the implication was that Romney had not satisfactorily answered it.  This type of cynical ploy is designed to create the impression that the person being questioned is evasive while at the same time forcing him to repeat his answer and thus re-emphasizing it.  And since Romney's answer was put in a negative light, it was the negative spin that was highlighted for the rest of the news cycle. 

David Gregory of NBC tweeted:
Romney appears to have launched a political attack even before facts of embassy violence were known. Then uses day to issue vague FP vision
Then there was this, from TIME Magazine's Mark Halperin:
Romney's doubling down on criticism of the President for the statement coming out of Cairo is likely to be seen as one of the most craven and ill-advised tactical moves in this entire campaign.
As the Wall Street Journal pointed out, Romney's only "mistake" in this case was to irritate the pro-Obama punditry:
The Obama Presidential campaign jumped on the remarks Wednesday as inappropriate, yet a “senior Administration official” had told the website Politico later on Tuesday night that “The statement by Embassy Cairo was not cleared by Washington and does not reflect the views of the United States government.” So the White House can walk away from its own diplomats, but Mr. Romney can’t criticize them?

The broader point is that the attacks on the embassies do raise questions about how America has fared in the world in the last four years. Throughout his candidacy, Mr. Romney has supported the necessity of America’s global leadership, sometimes against the wishes of Republican voters. His comments this week are consistent with that worldview, which is also consistent with that of every recent conservative President.

His political faux pax was to offend a pundit class that wants to cede the foreign policy debate to Mr. Obama without thinking seriously about the trouble for America that is building in the world.
This is why the reputation of the Establishment Media, a totally reactionary cadre determined to protect Barack Obama at all costs and maintain the status quo in Washington, has plummeted to troubling new lows this campaign cycle.  Think of the Establishment Media as being like a casino: Once people realize that the game is rigged, they'll simply ignore it altogether.  And like most fantasies, when belief goes, so does the fantasy itself.




UPDATE:

Even those Democrats who sincerely feel that Romney spoke out of turn have no right to point fingers.  In 2004, they not only nominated a 1%er in John Kerry but they applauded him for attempting to score political points against the incumbent.
On a busy Labor Day dash across the swing states of Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio, Kerry assailed the president's economic policies and paid special attention to the war in Iraq, calling it "the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time." He said he aimed to withdraw U.S. troops from the country during his first term.
And as Ed Morrissey at Hot Air points out, there was a time when Barack Obama was a candidate who also had no qualms about doing the same thing.
Remember that time when a major-party presidential nominee went on television immediately after the deaths of several Americans abroad to attack the policies of the current administration and his opponent?  Remember how the media repeatedly demanded to know whether he regretted the timing of that criticism, and whether he was ashamed at not providing a united political front in the face of tragedy? Yeah, neither do I.
This CNN interview took place in July 2008, immediately after the deaths of nine US troops in Afghanistan: 

Monday, September 3, 2012

THE BRILLIANCE OF EASTWOOD'S REBUKE OF OBAMA

There was an excellent article by Karl in the Green Room at Hot Air in which he points out that not only was Eastwood's performance not "weird" or caused by "dementia" as the Left (and certain back-stabbing so-called Eastwood "friends") would have you believe but was, in fact, really quite brilliant.  It may have even had an immediate effect on Florida voters.  Eastwood's monologue has also given rise to "Eastwooding," and National Empty Chair Day.   
This was the first part of Eastwood’s simple and effective argument. Eastwood points out — in a prodding, joking manner — that Obama was elected to bring peace and prosperity, but failed to bring either. That Eastwood may disagree with the GOP on some war issues is perfectly alright in this context, because, as suggested earlier and explored further below, Eastwood is not really targeting Republicans.

Eastwood then arrives at his Joe Biden joke: “Of course we all know Biden is the intellect of the Democratic party. Just kind of a grin with a body behind it.” That last part is not accidental in a performance featuring an empty chair. But the first part is even more dangerous. For the last 3+ years, we have been accustomed to having Biden as safe material for humor, while Obama has been kept off-limits. Eastwood leverages the latter into the former, suggesting that Sheriff Joe is the real brains of the operation. Ouch! No wonder Team Obama got annoyed enough to respond.
But perhaps the best indicators of how powerful Eastwood's debate with the empty chair really was can be found in the frenzied attempts to defend Obama by ridiculing Eastwood. The wicked satire even caused the Left's favorite comedians to pick sides in the argument, with Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert mocking the monologue but Bill Maher (of all people) admitting that Eastwood "killed."  That's the highest possible praise one can receive from a comedian.  And for those who follow the Maher link and watch the clip, what's more ridiculous: Jason Alexander's objection to Maher's praise of Eastwood's performance...or the fake hair Jason has bought himself? He's become the kind of caricature that the Seinfeld show used to mock mercilessly.  


Sunday, September 2, 2012

PREVIEW OF COMING ATTRACTIONS


MEET BOB THE "RACIST"

I came across this video and wanted to share it right away.  If a picture is worth a thousand words than this video is worth ten times that amount.  It perfectly captures the increasingly outlandish hypocrisy of political correctness, in this case focusing on the presidential election.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

THIS IS WHAT OCCUPY WALL STREET IS ALL ABOUT

For anyone who is foolish or dishonest enough to say that the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street are merely two sides of the same coin, I suggest you either educate yourself or stop lying to yourself and others.  THIS is Occupy Wall Street and this is what Occupiers do on a regular basis.  Listen to the irrational rhetoric and impotent rage from those who have to be kept "peaceful" by a police presence.