In the aftermath of the guilt-by-association show trial that some persist in waging against Republican Rep. Steve Scalise, an interesting observation raised is that Scalise could have avoided problems of this nature by proactively disavowing extremist political figures and their messages. As it turns out, such advice applies only selectively and reflects a larger narrow-mindedness in the minds of those who give it.
Louisiana’s Scalise, then a state
representative in 2002 and along with the Red Cross and Jefferson Parish
Sheriff’s Office, addressed
a neighborhood association organized by one of its officers, his topic
being an impending tax vote. Yet that organizer also was an official in a white
supremacist organization that hours later would use the same room for its
meeting, and says some of the look-in audience to Scalise’s brief speech was
comprised of members of that latter group.
Gossip about that hit the media
last week. Scalise, barely remembering the episode and as most politicians of
the time having no idea about the racist group, allowed discretion to be the
better part of valor and apologized anyway, considering the odiousness of the
group’s views. No sane politician who wanted any kind of political career since
the 1970s knowingly would have anything to do with such a toxic group, such
would be the backlash if discovered. Indeed, testimonials by others in the
world of politics about his character and his record in office show Scalise
would be one of the last people not to be repelled by hanging around such a group.
Yet since then, voices from the
Angry Left have placed a fatwa on
Scalise’s political career, which seems unlikely to be carried out, arguing against
all evidence that either he must have known about and thereby tacitly endorsed
the group’s goals or he cynically used them to gain future votes, and therefore
must be disqualified from holding office. Attempting to bolster this argument
was the notion that if these were not the case, why did he not years earlier out-and-out
repudiate the group’s leader, former state Rep. David Duke, who years before
had been exposed publicly as an unreformed racist? Indeed, Scalise
once said he shared Duke’s philosophies on many issues, but made no
explicit publicly reported disavowal of Duke’s issue preferences on race.
The idea here is that politicians
who do not inoculate themselves against such toxicity by confessions of correct
belief about controversial issues or politicians early and often forfeit a
presumption of innocence. Unless, of course, you are a Democrat, especially of
the liberal kind.
While many
examples of the double standard suffice, going straight
to the top illuminates this the best. Just having been elected a Democrat state
senator, in 1995 now Pres. Barack Obama
joined anti-Semite and general bigot Rev. Louis Farrakhan in his march in
Washington, DC. Reportedly he was planned it with Farrakhan, who then was influential
in the black community in Chicago politics, and his pastor Rev. Jeremiah
Wright, an ally of Farrakhan’s, and Rev. Al Sharpton, who since has visited
Obama in the White House dozens of times. Until embarking on a presidential
run, for over two decades Obama had sat in Wright’s pews, listening to
innumerable anti-American and racially-charged sermons on a regular basis, apparently
never having walked out of or offering a peep of criticism to that hate speech.
Sharpton before and after has built
a career about race-based accusations and on racial acrimony featured racist
rhetoric.
Yet when his relationships with Farrakhan
and Wright came under media scrutiny (Sharpton’s frequent visits they seem
incurious about), Obama offered mild rebukes of both and the matter within the political
left and its ally the mainstream media was considered settled, contrasted with
Scalise’s tangential unknowing brush with racists where the media has yet to
let go completely of it and sanctimonious elements of the left call for his political
head. Understanding the self-image of the left explains why an obvious case of cavorting
with racists gets excused, while an accidental and unintentional one cannot be
and therefore draws condemnation.
That is, in regards to those who
mouth the party line of liberalism, there always is a presumption of innocence.
That’s because by definition those who parrot its tenets – regardless of how
much today’s liberalism has descended into intellectual mishmash and its
policies have been empirically discredited – are enlightened with good
intentions and therefore their innocence cannot be doubted as to their beliefs
and motives about these matters. On these same matters, by contrast they
presume figures on the political right are eternally guilty – precisely because
they fantasize that conservatives’ minds are not right because of some evil within
they resist the one true faith – and therefore these politicians, candidates,
and activists constantly and always must prove their innocence.
This is why that Scalise since did
not go around every hour on the hour for the last 20 years proclaiming he was
not a racist and disavowing Duke matters to these troglodytes and in their theology
justifies their outrage, seeing this episode as confirming him as a political
reprobate revealing his inner guilt for which he must be punished and, by
extension, rendering
any issue preference of his illegitimate. But thinking people recognize the
selectivity involved in this criticism and thereby discount tremendously its
value in having any significant or meaningful input to any discussions about
Scalise’s career specifically or Republican politics generally.
1 comment:
Check today's Baton Rouge Advocate, Prof. The "neighborhood group" never existed. Let's see your next excuse for Scalise.
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