Monday, July 14, 2008

C'mon!

See: New Yorker editor defends controversial Obama cover

.....We're officially hopeless.
.....(OK. If you believe that Jonathan Swift was a cannibal, you need to stop reading this post. Please go away.)
.....Over at YouTube, you'll find a number of people who have posted angry diatribes against the New Yorker, not for supposedly implying (via its infamous cover) that Obama is a Muslim terrorist, but for making fun of those who believe that!
.....Well, at least they "got" the New Yorker cover.
.....But how can so many Americans believe that Obama is an Islamic terrorist? WHENCE STUPID PEOPLE?
.....Recent polls suggest that many Americans believe specifically that Obama is a Muslim, that he refuses to say the Pledge, that he refused to be sworn in (as U.S. Senator) on a Bible, that he attended an Islamic school, etc.—when numerous news organizations have determined that these rumors are flat false. (See CNN on "Obama Muslim Myth".)
.....(—Not that there's anything wrong with being Muslim, etc.)
.....Q: So where do these ideas come from?

.....As you know (don't you?), a Rovian dirty trick ensured that George W. Bush won the crucial South Carolina primary against John McCain, back in 2000:

Wikipedia on Whisper Campaigns (See also Boston Globe):
During the 2000 Republican presidential primary, Senator John McCain was the target of a whisper campaign implying that he had fathered a black child out of wedlock. (McCain's adopted daughter is a naturally dark-skinned child from Bangladesh). Voters in South Carolina were reportedly asked, "Would you be more likely or less likely to vote for John McCain if you knew that he fathered an illegitimate black child?". McCain would later lose the South Carolina primary, and the nomination, to George W. Bush.

In addition, on the week of the nomination vote, dozens of radio stations were called on the same day asking talk show hosts what they thought of McCain's having fathered a black child out of wedlock.

McCain later said of the incidents:
"There were some pretty vile and hurtful things said during the South Carolina primary. It's a really nasty side of politics. We tried to ignore it and I think we shielded [our daughter] from it. It's just unfortunate that that sort of thing still exists. As you know she's Bengali, and very dark skinned. A lot of phone calls were made by people who said we should be very ashamed about her, about the color of her skin. Thousands and thousands of calls from people to voters saying, 'You know, the McCains have a black baby.' I believe that there is a special place in hell for people like those."
* * * * *
.....Here's some background re the "Obama as Muslim" whisper campaign:

Wikipedia on Barack Obama presidential primary campaign, 2008:
In 2004, conservative columnist Andy Martin issued a press release alleging that Obama had "sought to misrepresent his heritage," indirectly triggering one of the first viral emails spreading false rumors about Obama's background.

The issue lay fallow for almost three years, but picked up again in late 2006, as the announcement of Obama's presidential candidacy approached. In October, a conservative blog, Infidel Bloggers Alliance, reposted Martin's press release in response to a question about Obama's heritage. Then, on December 26, conservative activist Ted Sampley, co-founder of Vietnam Veterans Against John Kerry, posted a column suggesting Obama was a secret Muslim, heavily quoting Martin's original press release. Shortly afterward, many chain e-mails began circulating claiming that Obama was a hypothetical "Manchurian Candidate." According to [Christopher] Hayes, one of these emails was forwarded to Snopes [an "urban legend" site] within hours of Sampley's story. Hayes believes that the email was likely a slightly altered version of the Sampley article, which was in turn heavily based on Martin's 2004 press release. Martin told Hayes that he got numerous calls once the emails began circulating. When the callers asked him if he wrote the release, Martin replied, "They are all my children."
* * * * *
.....You might want to read A Tale of Political Dirty Tricks Makes the Case for Election Reform, which appeared in the New York Times in January.
.....This opinion piece discusses a tell-all book by Republican Party operative Allen Raymond, who went to jail for jamming phone lines on election day 2002 (for the benefit of Republican John Sununu). Raymond is bitter about the experience.
.....Raymond, who came from a privileged background, eventually made his way to the top of the Republican Party’s national organization:
.....It was a world in which, he claims, dirty tricks were the norm. When [he] opened a political telemarketing firm, he was hired by a Republican challenging a New Jersey Democratic congressman. Mr. Raymond’s company — in a plan he says he hatched with [the challenger's] advisers — called liberal Democrats and urged them to vote for the Green Party candidate.
.....Those same advisers, he says, gave Mr. Raymond another assignment: to call white households asking them to vote for the Democrat, using the voice of, as he puts it, a “ghetto black guy.” He also called union households, using voices with thick Spanish accents.
.....In the case of the Sununu election dirty tricks,
Mr. Raymond says his instructions came from James Tobin, the northeast regional director of the Republican National Committee. And he says a top official of the New Hampshire Republican Party provided the phone numbers of the Democratic get-out-the-vote banks. Mr. Raymond jammed the lines — placing hundreds of hang-up calls an hour — to five Democratic offices across the state and a phone bank run by volunteer firefighters.
.....Ah, but this effort was detected. The Republican Party then spent big money defending Tobin (successfully), but not Raymond, who went to the pokey. According to Raymond, the Party “not only threw me under the bus but then blamed me for getting run over.”
.....Congress seems uninterested in stopping the dirty tricks, which have been with us always in one form or another. Evidently, there is a decent bill that addresses dirty tricks. It the Deceptive Practices Act, and it is sponsored by Barack Obama and Charles Schumer, et al.
.....It doesn’t have a prayer.

4 comments:

torabora said...

"How many people believe Obama is a terrorist?" Not many, but I bet a few even believe he is a chimpanzee. This blogs last post has a comment about W to that affect. For years some folks have juxtaposed W's images with a chimp and referred to him as being a simian cousin. Now some folks don't like it when their own guy is similarly maligned as being something they aren't. The political discourse is raw and vicious. Thankfully there is still freedom of speech though. I am numb to the dumb.

Now no thinking rational person believes W is a chimp so the humor there is grade school. But Obama has a very real terrorist friend, one Mr. Bill Ayers. However Ayers is a terrorist of the Red kind, not an Islamist. And Ayers is not Obama by a mile. So the cartoon misses the mark in this case as well.

As Chunk has pointed out, politics is a race against policy vs perception to a population that doesn't seem too enlightened.

130 days to go folks!

Anonymous said...

Juxtaposing W with a chimp picture is a coment on the man's intelligence, not to imply that the man IS a chimp. Sheesh.

As Chunk said, though, the comparison is unfair to chimps. Chimps are not malicious liars by nature.

AOR said...

The main thing I want to know about The New Yorker is, Where's my copy?!?!?

Am I being paranoid that it hasn't been delivered yet?

Up until the mid-80s they used to send it in a brown sleeve. Maybe they should go back to that. At least then to be offended people would have to actually open it.

Chunk: how about a poll? We need a vote on which New Yorker event is more offensive: (1) the Obama cover, (2) the infamous Hasidic-man-black-woman-kiss cover of 2007, or (3) the killing off of its cryptic crossword.

Gotta go. I heard a seal bark.

Anonymous said...

Watching a bit too much Sean and Faux News, eh?

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...