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"A
group like ours could lie through its teeth"
by
P.M. Carpenter
Akin
to politically motivated charges of rising liberal incivility is the
seductive, if not surprising, topic of very real liberal anger:
seductive, because pondering its origins is fun; surprising, because
anger seems so out of character with liberals’ rather spineless image
they themselves allowed to prevail. When liberals got fingered by
militant detractors for unraveling America's
moral fiber (a neat trick the liberals pulled off with satanic glee,
of
course), they abruptly laid low and even cowered to the point of
denying
their identity.
But no longer. Liberals are pumped -- and p-oed.
Some say liberals are ticked because the rest of the country hasn’t
yet conceded that George W. is a duplicitous bumbler with emperor envy.
Some say it’s only because liberalism has suffered a long decline.
Others say a stolen election, a seedy impeachment, an illegal war and
the pack-mentality media account for liberal wrath.
All these are true. But there’s a more seminal cause of liberal anger.
In view of it, the only surprise is that the anger took so long to
erupt.
The post-Watergate movement of the "New Right" -- a well-orchestrated
confederation of political action committees, think tanks, neoconservatives,
religious rightists, social-conservatives and libertarians -- introduced
into American politics a fresh supply of advanced disingenuousness.
In a 1980 Washington Post interview, one of its founding strategists,
John Terry Dolan of the National Conservative Political Action Committee,
described its tactical approach as "the cutting edge of politics."
New Right activists fueled by massive infusions of cash, Dolan injudiciously
bragged in a self-satisfied and rare moment of truthfulness, "are potentially
very dangerous to the political process." We "could be a menace," he
boasted. We "could amass this great amount of money and defeat the
point of accountability in politics. We could say whatever we want....
A group like ours could lie through its teeth."
And
that’s just what Dolan’s group, "Nickpack" -- along with dozens of
like-minded groups -- did. To discredit what it liked to call the
failed Liberal Establishment, the New Right bullied opponents with
outrageously false attack ads, painted differing opinions as disloyalty
and contaminated America’s political consciousness with an unprecedented
barrage of innuendo, half-truths and whole untruths about liberal motives,
the "liberal media" and the liberal agenda in general.
Paul Weyrich, a right-wing PAC-man contemporary of John Terry Dolan,
effused in 1980 that the fight against liberalism was "the most significant
battle of the age-old conflict between good and evil ... that we have
seen in our country." That zealous excess inspired the right to bar
no holds. Any expediency drafted in the cause against godless liberalism
was legitimate. The end, quite simply, justified the means.
Success soon followed. The new conservatism flourished like no political
movement ever flourished before -- leading to the Reagan and Gingrich
revolutions and the revolution now in progress -- because the New Right
"could," and did, "lie through its teeth."
There are, of course, softer and more diplomatic terms than "lies"
to describe the right’s
rhetorical record, but none so plainly accurate. Intimidated liberals
used to call them "fabrications" or "distortions." All that’s over:
hence best-selling titles like Al Franken’s Lies and the Lying Liars
Who Tell Them, David Corn’s The Lies of George W. Bush and Joe Conason’s
Big Lies.
Today it’s no more Mr. Nice Guys, but their angry lingo was long in
the making.
In their rush to political supremacy, conservative strategists such
as Weyrich and Dolan forgot a basic law of human behavior: Even the
intimidated, the vanquished, will take bullying just so long. In time
they’ll get mad and push back. In time they’ll explode.
Paul Weyrich forgot, that is, until the recent avalanche of published
liberal anger triggered a wake-up call. "Republicans had better worry,"
he acknowledged a just few days ago. "Angry people are motivated to
get out to vote."
He oughta’ know.
Sure, liberals still seethe from a doubtful election, an illegal war
and political prosecutions. But there’s a genuine anger out there engendered
by something rooted far deeper in the past: a quarter-century of callous
right-wing tactics. Its purveyors now carping about liberal anger have
no one to blame but themselves.
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