Strangers
to Dissent, Liberals Try to Stifle It
by
Michael
Barone
TownHall.com
It is an interesting phenomenon that the response of the left half of our
political spectrum to criticism and argument is often to try to shut it down.
Thus President Obama in his Sept. 9 speech to a joint session of Congress told
us to stop "bickering," as if principled objections to major changes in public
policy were just childish obstinacy, and chastised his critics for telling
"lies," employing "scare tactics" and playing "games." Unlike his predecessor,
he sought to use the prestige of his office to shut criticism down.
Now, no one likes criticism very much, and most politicians would prefer to
have their colleagues and constituents meekly and gratefully agree with them on
pretty much everything. And yes, Rep. Joe Wilson did seem to have broken the
rules and standards of decorum of the House (though not of the British House of
Commons) when he shouted, "You lie!" in the middle of Obama's speech.
But none of this justifies the charges, passed off as cool-headed analysis,
that Obama's critics are motivated by racism. There are plenty of non-racist
reasons to oppose (or to support) the Democrats' health care proposals.
I would submit that the president's call for an end to "bickering" and the
charges of racism by some of his supporters are the natural reflex of people who
are not used to hearing people disagree with them and who are determined to shut
them up.
This comes naturally to liberals educated in our great colleges and
universities, so many of which have speech codes whose primary aim is to prevent
the expression of certain conservative ideas and which are commonly deployed for
that purpose. (For examples, see the Website of the Foundation for Individual
Rights in Education, which defends students of all political stripes.) Once the
haven of free inquiry and expression, academia has become a swamp of stifling
political correctness.
Similarly, the "mainstream media" -- the old-line broadcast networks, The New
York Times, etc. -- present a politically correct picture of the world. The
result is that liberals can live in a cocoon, an America in which seldom is
heard a discouraging word. Conservatives, in contrast, find themselves
constantly pummeled with liberal criticism, on campus, in news media, and in
Hollywood TV and movies. They don't like it, but they've gotten used to it.
Liberals aren't used to it and increasingly try to stamp it out.
"Mainstream media" try to help. In the past few weeks, we have seen textbook
examples of how MSM have ignored news stories that reflected badly on the
administration for which it has such warm feelings. It ignored the videos in
which the White House "green jobs czar" proclaimed himself a "communist" and the
"truther" petition he signed charging that George W. Bush may have allowed the
Sept. 11 attacks.
It ignored the videos released on Andrew Breitbart's biggovernment.com
showing ACORN employees offering to help a supposed pimp and prostitute evade
taxes and employ 13- to 15-year-old prostitutes. It downplayed last spring's Tea
Parties -- locally organized demonstrations against big government that
attracted about a million people nationwide -- and downplayed the Tea Party
throng at the Capitol and on the Mall Sept. 12.
Actually, "mainstream media" are doing their friends in the Obama
administration and the Democratic Party no favors, at least in the long run.
Obama comes from one-party Chicago, and the House Democrats' nine top leadership
members and committee chairmen come from districts that voted on average 73
percent for Obama last fall. They need help in understanding the larger country
they are seeking to govern, where nearly half voted the other way. Instead, they
get the impression they can dismiss critics as racist or "Nazis" or as indulging
in (as Sen. Harry Reid said) "evil-mongering."
Speaker Nancy Pelosi has warned us that there's a danger that intense
rhetoric can provoke violence, and no decent person wants to see harm come to
our president or other leaders. But it's interesting that the two most violent
incidents at this summer's town hall meetings came when a union thug beat up a
65-year-old black conservative in Missouri and when a liberal protester bit off
part of a man's finger in California.
These incidents don't justify a conclusion that all liberals are violent. But
they are more evidence that American liberals, unused to hearing dissent, have
an impulse to shut it down.
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