The manufacturing of outrage
against Rep. Steve
Scalise tells us far more about the fortunes, strategy, and tactics of
Democrats in an era of decline than provide any useful information about issues
of the day.
Essentially (an excellent summation
of the events is here),
the Republican was invited 12 years ago to give a speech to a civic association
in Metairie by his next-door neighbor who ran the group. What he didn’t know
what the same guy also headed a small group that endorsed former state Rep.
David Duke’s white supremacist philosophies and had booked in the same room
later that day a meeting of the group. The room had no paraphernalia regarding
that group visible at the time, and while the majority of the audience that
heard Scalise’s 15-minute speech on state and local issues dealing with
taxation, a pitch he apparently gave often that year as the state House of
which he then was a member was dealing with controversial changes, some
participants from the other group also wandered in. Joining Scalise were
representatives of the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office and the American Red
Cross.
Scalise did not remember the event
(not surprisingly given its datedness and that he probably has spoken at
thousands of similar events), and upon jogging his memory really only recalled
the subject matter and that he saw no visible sign that any white supremacists
lurked about. Even if he had known the group would be using the room later, he didn’t
know specifics about the group, with this lack of knowledge being commonplace
among Louisiana politicians (if former
Sen. J. Bennett Johnston is any indicator), with the only public
information about it apparently having been circulated in a lightly-read local
shopper. The rest of the details reported in the media were filled in by the
guy who invited him. This was why he
made a blanket apology about the appearance even as he didn’t know of the
presence of group members at the time.