Tag Talking Points Memo

Maybe We Don’t Need Them After All

Earlier in the week, there was a blog post by a guy who calls himself American Dad posting at Talking Points Memo called “An Open Letter To Conservatives”. In it, he offers a vast laundry list of all the appalling behavior, thuggish tactics, and outright terrorist acts that have been committed by elected Republican officials, right-wing “political action” groups, straight-up right-wing wackos, and that gaggle of morons known as “The Tea Party”. It’s a pretty damning list of lies, hypocrisies, petulant behavior, and serious acts of violence, and yet he says “we need you” to them, arguing that somewhere, somehow there is something beneficial about trying to reason with these people and bring them back into the fold of normal, civil, rational political debate.

And that sounds all nice and fuzzy and conciliatory and such, but I am here to tell you that it’s totally wrong-headed. We don’t need any of that bullshit, and to pretend that just sitting down over a cup of coffee with these people will turn them back into rational, thoughtful people who just differ a little bit in opinion is not only foolish, it is quite likely dangerous.

Since the passage of the health care legislation Sunday night, right-wing groups have begun shattering windows, tried to blow up the house of a Democratic member of Congress (except they got the wrong house and almost killed the guy’s brother and his family), and have instigated so many death threats against members of Congress that no fewer than 10 of them have had to be given round-the-clock police protection. Just a couple of weeks ago I wrote about the looming threat of widespread right-wing violence and it’s beginning to look like the passage of the health care bill was exactly the match needed to set off their tinder.

So what can anyone expect to gain from trying to reason with people who have concluded that the best course of action is to threaten, intimidate, and kill? That’s not “meaningful political dialogue”, it’s terrorism plain and simple. “Conservatism” is a meaningless term in the present context, because there’s nothing conservative about the actions and agendas of these groups. Mollycoddling them with the notion that they might have something positive to offer is like hand-feeding steak to a starving grizzly bear.

The time has come to take a tougher stance in response to these people and instead of offering them a seat at the table, pushing them back under the rock they crawled out from.

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The Blogcrawl

A collection of assorted things I’ve seen on the blogs I read regularly:

Mark at Going Like Sixty is the only person I’ve read so far who noticed that Roy Scheider, who starred in “Jaws” thirty-odd years ago, died on the same day as the Discovery Channel’s “Shark Sunday” 

One of the best blogs ever, the inimitable Mister Pants, may or may not be back after a two-year hiatus. I sure hope he is, but that latest post is now almost a month old with nothing to follow up.

After Mitt Romney dropped out of the race for the Republican presidential nomination, a regular at Talking Point Memo wondered out loud if his military-age sons would now go and enlist. (Previously the Mittster, when asked why his sons weren’t serving in Iraq, said they were helping defend America by working on his campaign.) Oh, and by the by, did ANYONE notice that Ron Paul dropped out over the weekend so he could run for re-election to Congress? Didn’t think so.

Internet and marketing guru Seth Godin had a very interesting post about the business of marketing food, which was a totally non-existent field prior to World War II, but holds a dominant place in our economy and in our cultural perceptions of food. There’s a book brewing in this post, to be sure.

Lastly, fellow fountain pen aficionados will probably enjoy this essay by English professor Paula Marantz Cohen, wherein she considers the psychology and the symbolic potential of the fountain pen. She says a friend has been trying to convince her to buy one, so she writes from the perspective of someone who doesn’t own a fountain pen — some of her thoughts and observations are well-considered, but anyone who owns and collects them will probably recognize the clunkers right away. I hope she bought the pen.

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