SPREADING THE MANURE
McCain occasionally
makes little noises about trying to rein in the rabid rightwing pundits
and agitproppers out there acting on his behalf, but he takes no
practical steps, for example, to stop the filth from spewing out
against Obama. The clear implication is that he's happy to seem to be
keeping his hands clean, while he gains from the noxious bile and lies
spread by those supporting a McCain presidency.
It's the
tried-and-true dirty politics tactics perfected by the GOP masters of
the trade: Roger Ailes, Lee Atwater, Karl Rove, et al.
Rove,
by the way, is not as divorced from the political campaigns as he
pretends to be; he is serving the McCain campaign as a consultant.
Staring at a possible Democratic sweep in November and facing
increasing unpopularity in the electorate, GOP strategists are using
all the old Roveian techniques of smear and distortion against Obama,
hitting him and wife Michelle with all sorts of claptrap bullbleep
("terrorist fist-jab," "flag-lapel pins," "baby mama," "whitey,"
"Pastor Wright," "not reciting the Pledge of Allegiance," "not born in
America", etc.)
All that nonsense about Obama being a Muslim,
or not being a native-born American citizen, or not reciting the Pledge
of Allegiance, or not supporting Israel with enough fervor — all the
effects of those false rumors could be stopped in their tracks if
McCain, supposedly Mr. Integrity, stepped up to the plate and
forthrightly condemned them and those passing them around the internet.
But he doesn't, and, sad to say, he probably won't.
ROVE'S BIG-LIE TECHNIQUE
Rove's theory of how to ruin your opponent goes something like this:
It's OK to tell the most outrageous lies about someone, even if those
rumors can be countered by actual facts, because you're not after
voters necessarily believing what you say. What you want to do is to
confuse them over time — so that eventually they might think where
there's smoke, there might well be fire, that type of reasoning. It's
propaganda chaff you're dispersing. Some of it will stick and be
believed, some of it will simply be ignored, some of it will remain
floating out there in peoples' minds. Since most voters don't pay
attention all the time, the meme might actually influence what and how
they believe and could pay off on Election Day.
For example,
I don't know about you but I've received countless anti-Obama emails
aimed at voters, especially Jewish voters, that assert that Obama is a
Muslim ("check out his middle name"), and that he got
hate-indoctrinated in extremist "madrassa" schools in Indonesia.
When I was in South Florida recently, I asked a politically-connected
Jewish leader how Obama was doing among Jewish voters in that state.
"Not well," he said. "A lot of Jews, especially older Jews, will not
vote for him." "Is it because he's black?" I asked. "Yes, many believe
that way. But so many also believe Obama is, by association,
anti-Semitic, that he's Muslim, and/or that he would sell Israel down
the river to placate militant Islam. The facts don't matter. They want
to believe all this nonsense." The beneficiary of this way of thinking,
of course, is McCain, even though some of his religious advisors have
made clearly anti-Jewish (and anti-Catholic) statements, which, of
course, were not well-reported by the mainstream media. The point for
many older Florida Jews seems to be that McCain is white, old, and a
gung-ho advocate of wars against Muslims in the Middle East. Ergo, even
though Jews historically have voted overwhelmingly Democratic, there
will be fewer such Florida votes than expected for Obama in November,
though the Illinois senator is picking up much of the younger Jewish
vote.
More examples of Rove's technique of spreading the Big
Lie have surfaced in recent days. So desperate is the lame-duck
CheneyBush Administration and its huge energy conglomerate supporters
to start pumping for oil offshore and in the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge (ANWR) that such GOP luminaries as Dick Cheney, George Will and
Congresswoman Jean Schmidt last week stated unequivocally that China
was now drilling for oil 60 miles off the U.S. coastline. Pure B.S.,
not happening, but these GOP heavies just say whatever they want in an
effort to move their extreme agenda. Even if they have to retract, the
time-release meme is already located deep in the recesses of the
collective mind of the electorate and, they hope, could pay off down
the line.
THE INCITEMENT OF MURDER
But often,
using such national leaders as Cheney, Bush and Rove as role-models
(after all, they were able to lie and deceive America into an
unnecessary war and occupation), it's not just lies and innuendo and
rumor being peddled by the agitprop pundits of the HardRight. Sometimes
the activity and speech of the GOP operatives crosses over the line
into downright incitement of illegal acts, for which nobody ever is
criminally charged, of course.
For example, taking off from
Ann Coulter's earlier incitements (she said that liberals are
"traitors" who deserve to be shot, a Supreme Court justice should be
poisoned, the New York Times building should be bombed with the
reporters and editors inside it, etc.), two noted conservative pundits
in recent weeks seemed to be suggesting that assassination of political
opponents was a reasonable political option in the name of victory.
Fox News' veteran reporter Liz Trotta recently said: "If it could," the
U.S. should "take out" both Barrack Obama and Osama bin Laden. And
radio talk-show host Michael Reagan (Ronald Reagan's son) said that an
anti-war activist trying to influence U.S. military forces in Iraq
should be tied to a post on a firing range and shot by the American
troops.
In a similar vein, Andy McCarthy at National Review
said, in response to the Supreme Court ruling that Guantanamo detainees
have the right to contest their imprisonment in civilian courts, the
U.S. should round up all the detainees there and just slaughter them en
masse.
Laura Ingraham on Fox News was more circumspect about
the court's decision last week, confining her opposition to
recommending a violation of the presidential oath to faithfully execute
the laws of the land: If she were President, she averred, "I would have
said at this point, that's very interesting that the court decided
this, but I'm not going to respect the decision of the court because my
job is to keep this country safe."
CAN WE ASSUME AN HONEST ELECTION?
There are more such examples, but you see the pattern. The Far Right,
which has had its way with the law and with controlling the ideological
parameters during the past eight years, could well lose those powers
via the ballot box, so it's pulling out all the stops in a desperate
attempt to stop the future or, at the least, to minimize GOP losses.
We all, but especially Republicans this time out, have to expand our thinking beyond the damage we can do to our opponents.
A former McCain stalwart parses it this way:
"Simply
put: Republican strategists who think that business-as-usual — i.e.,
the slanderous politics of the past 30 years — will take care of
matters this time around are deluded. Worse than that, they will doom
the reputation of the Republican Party and turn it into a marginal
footnote of American history if they keep trivializing this historic
event. That is too bad because, as I said, we need a two party system."
As everyone understands, there is so much riding on the November
election, which, one would think from the early polls, should yield a
major defeat for the Republicans. But this assumes that the November
election is reasonably honest and that, despite the GOP's
voter-suppression maneuvers, Democratic or third-party voters come out
in such massive numbers that, seeing the overwhelmingly anti-GOP
pre-vote polls and the post-election exit polls, vote-manipulators
would not dare fiddle with the tabulations. But if that
Democrat/third-party surge doesn't happen and McCain were, say, to take
45% of the actual vote, the mainstream-media spinners could hype the
possibility of a GOP victory in key states and the Republican
corporations that tabulate the votes with their secret software could
serreptitiously make up the needed percentage points for victory. (For
more on all this, see Mark Crispin Millers' new book,
"Loser Take All: Election Fraud and The Subversion of Democracy," and Ernest Partridge's articles
"Where's the Outrage?" and
"According to Plan?").
Would Bush&Co. be willing to try something fraudulent like that in
November? Aside from the fact that the evidence suggests they already
have in previous elections, imagine yourself facing possible criminal
indictments and time in the federal slammer, standing in the war-crimes
dock at The Hague, and losing all the riches and power you've built up
over eight years — you might be tempted, too.
MR. FLIPPITY-FLOPPITY
Even John McCain, supposedly Mr. Straight-Talker, has turned into Mr.
Flippity-Floppity, as he, desperate to nail down the GOP base vote,
tries to run from his former, somewhat more moderate positions.
As
Digby writes: "There is nothing — -
nothing
— - that John McCain won't do or say to get elected." It's clear that
McCain sold his political soul to the Dark Side when he decided in 2006
to make another run for the White House, and he isn't going back to the
principled GOP maverick so many once knew and admired. How he lives
with himself these days, I can't even guess.
The lesson in
all this is that when a candidate or party is staring at likely defeat,
it is not uncommon for them to flail out in desperation against their
opposition. That either works or, in this case, is so obvious and
short-sightedly mean-spirited that the public, in revulsion against
such tactics, turns against them even more eagerly at the ballot box.
Let it be so.