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Keith Olbermann

Stewart eviscerates Olbermann

Why do conservatives pretend "racism is dead"?

When James Taranto whitewashes right-wing bigotry, what is he telling us about his movement - and himself?

Why do conservatives pretend
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The Wall Street Journal's James Taranto

It’s a shame to arrive late at a party, especially if you’re the designated piñata. But last Friday, when WSJ.com’s James Taranto tried to take down my New York Observer column, titled "The Racists Return," I had more pressing priorities.

What got the Journal blogger so wound up (along with others in the wingersphere) was my assertion that bigoted language uttered by the likes of Glenn Beck and Laura Ingraham has been echoed in racist “games” targeting President Obama on the Jersey Shore and in the Lehigh Valley this summer. What irked him even more was my suggestion that conservatives should at last repudiate such ugliness rather than encourage it.

Responding to those observations, Taranto accused me of misconstruing satire, tearing phrases from context, yearning for the '60s and, worst of all, lacking a sense of humor. No doubt he is among the most formidable wits on the right, but we just don’t share the same idea of funny. Unlike him, for instance, I wasn’t amused by the right-wing smear of Shirley Sherrod.

Of course, Taranto’s fervent denial of racial undercurrents on the right today exemplifies the problem that I urged conservatives to address. But first let’s take his complaints in order:

Criticizing me for omitting the full context of Glenn Beck’s notorious “Planet of the Apes” remark, he claims that because Beck mentioned Andrew Stern as well as President Obama, the reference contained no racial meaning. Perhaps the racist themes of that film are open to debate, but the people who run Fox News appear to agree with me that the context didn't matter. As revealed by Keith Olbermann on "Countdown," the right-wing cable network falsely edited the transcript of Beck’s show, removing his “Apes” rant and replacing it with fabricated text. Why would Fox take this extraordinary step unless it realized that what Beck had said was sickeningly offensive?

The broader point, which Taranto also lacks the honesty to address, is that the “Apes” incident was only the latest in Beck’s long record of incendiary racial commentary, including his wild accusations against President Obama of racism  and his repeated attempts to inflame hatred of the Obama family.

What we get instead -- and Taranto uses the same excuse for Laura Ingraham’s latest book, with its tin-eared stereotyping of Michelle Obama’s eating habits and its reference to the president as "uppity" -- is the old right-wing excuse deployed so many times to defend the likes of Rush Limbaugh. See, it’s all just satire! But what is the nature of “satire” that portrays the first lady as frantically consuming buckets of ribs?

 As for those nasty carnival games, Taranto say he can’t imagine why anyone would connect them with partisan attacks on the president, or even why anyone should “necessarily” regard them as racist. He munificently bestows the “benefit of the doubt” on their creators because he would rather not think they were motivated by “hatred or supremacy.”

It is remarkable that he would offer those alibis even after directly quoting my description of the games, taken from news sources that nobody has contradicted:

At the Big Time fair held by Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Roseto, Pa., last week, a game called "Alien Attack" featured "an image of a suited black man holding a health care bill and wearing a belt buckle with a presidential seal," at which players were encouraged to aim their popguns. Anybody who hit the cardboard figure in the head or the heart could win a prize. . . .

Meanwhile on the New Jersey shore, patrons of the Seaside Heights boardwalk could hurl baseballs at a black, jug-eared Obama figurine, winning a prize if they managed to smash it. As seen in a video posted on the Gawker website, this object closely resembles the grinning "lawn jockey" statuettes that used to festoon suburban lawns in a less decent era. 

According to Taranto, however, my concern is misplaced and only proves that liberals like me yearn to combat an evil that no longer exists:

Edgy commentary and satire about the president of the United States is not massive resistance, and an offensive carnival game is not a burning cross. Conason seeks cheap grace by denouncing trivial offenses because he longs for a moral glory in which he came along too late to partake. Racism is dead, and its killers were heroes. Nostalgia for racism lives on in the imagination of liberals who only wish they could be so heroic.

There is no shortage of evidence that despite great progress, including the election of Barack Obama, racial bigotry and hatred continue to thrive among certain elements in this country -- particularly among conservative activists and elected officials. Dissembling about the existence of racism may itself be considered a mark of racial hostility, just as genteel conservatives who once defended the South of the Klan and the White Citizens were acting out their own attitudes toward blacks.

On Monday, Taranto returned to the subject with a post disputing me on this issue, too:

Conason is imprecise in referring to the conservative movement's "opposition to civil rights." Goldwater, Reagan and Buckley were anti-civil-rights only in the sense that a pacifist or noninterventionist who opposed U.S. entry into World War II or the liberation of Iraq was pro-Nazi or pro-Saddam: Their adherence to principle led them to a position of indifference toward a great evil.

This was a moral error. Conason and today's liberals commit another moral error in casting today's conservatives as racists because yesteryear's conservatives were briefly allied with racists. It's guilt by association at two levels of remove.

Here again Taranto shows that he cannot confront unpleasant truths, both past and present. The moral error of conservative leaders during the civil rights era was not always simply an innocent devotion to libertarian principle, but often something far more disturbing. At Open Left, Paul Rosenberg quotes a National Review editorial reflecting on the real reasons behind William F. Buckley Jr.’s support of “massive resistance” to desegregation and voting rights – which had nothing to do with individual liberty and everything to do with the “cultural superiority” of the white race. Rosenberg’s entire post is well worth reading for a brisk, fact-filled refutation of Taranto. 

Tea Party isn't stalling, and Dems should be thankful

Tea Party isn't stalling, and Dems should be thankful
AP
A Don't Tread On Me flag flies over protesters during a rally in Macon, Mo.

On MSNBC last night, Keith Olbermann suggested that the momentum of the Tea Party movement may be stalling.

"In race after race," he said, referring to three state GOP primaries this week, "the Tea Party wing of the Republican Party was unable to win over even Republican wing of the Republican Party."

But that's not really a fair conclusion. There actually wasn't anything extraordinary in any of the results Olbermann cited.

Take the Kansas Senate primary, in which Rep. Todd Tiahrt was edged out by Rep. Jerry Moran. Sure, Tiahrt's Tea Party credentials were unimpeachable -- but Moran's weren't half-bad, either: He was endorsed by the Senate's preeminent Tea Partier, Jim DeMint, and he actually joined Michele Bachmann's Tea Party Caucus in the run-up to the primary.

The results in Missouri's Senate primary, where Rep. Roy Blunt, the establishment's favorite, crushed an unknown and underfunded challenger who claimed the Tea Party mantle, were no more remarkable, since we’ve seen other establishment Republicans post similar victories this year. And in Michigan's gubernatorial primary, a (sort of) moderate Republican used catchy TV ads to fend off three foes who'd spent the campaign battling each other for Tea Party supremacy.

This is all pretty much consistent with what we've seen this year. The Tea Party -- which, demographically, represents the disgruntled base of the Republican Party -- has united in several high-profile instances to stun the party establishment and win primaries: Sharron Angle in Nevada, Rand Paul in Kentucky, Marco Rubio scaring Charlie Crist out of the GOP in Florida, and so on. It has failed to unite and muster much of a fight in many instances, too -- which is why, for example, Mark Kirk coasted in Illinois' GOP primary, Dan Coats emerged in Indiana, and Mike Castle never had to sweat in Delaware.

In other words, the Tea Party has no more or less momentum now than it did a few weeks or even a few months ago. In fact, a Tea Party favorite, Ken Buck, may well be on his way to winning a Senate primary in Colorado next week.

To be sure, there may well be a Tea Party backlash this year. But it won't be in Republican primaries; it will be in the general election. In fact, we're already starting to see it. By all measures, Harry Reid should be losing by double digits in Nevada right now. But the fringe views and bizarre conduct of his Tea Party-championed challenger, Sharron Angle, have given him a slight lead -- a stunning development for an incumbent with poll numbers as poisonous as Reid's.

And Nevada is just one example. There are a handful of key races this year in which the taint of the Tea Party could cost Republicans seats that, with generic, inoffensive candidates, they'd easily win. So, no, the Tea Party hasn't lost its momentum. It's alive and well. And Democrats should be thankful for that.

  • Steve Kornacki is Salon's news editor. Reach him by email at SKornacki@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveKornacki More Steve Kornacki

What should we do with TuckerCarlson.net?

What should we do with TuckerCarlson.net?
Courtesy of Matt Ortega

As you may have heard, Salon recently purchased the domain name TuckerCarlson.net. Because our definitive, years-in-the-making Tucker Carlson profile is not yet finished, we need to figure out what to put there in the meantime. Our readers have had many fine suggestions.

A lot of readers -- the vast majority, in fact -- would like TuckerCarlson.net to point simply to this video, of Jon Stewart on "Crossfire."

I enjoyed the simplicity of this suggestion, from Steven S.:

"my suggestion is that if there is a website out there that is nothing but a running video loop of some guy scratching his fingernails on a chalkboard over and over I think you should link tuckercarlson.net to that."

Matt S. writes:

"A simple picture of an actual living mule (jackass) wearing a bow tie."

Commenter blunderdog's brilliant suggestion:

I'd suggest assembling a user-submitted list, ranked by popularity, of the best constructive suggestions for how to recycle Tucker Carlson into resources which have social value.

Other suggestions:

  • RickRoll
  • Commenter synthybombast suggested Goatse (look it up -- but don't image search it)
  • "24/7 of babies crying"
  • This video.
  • Owen W. says it should feature "a very large, animated background image of tucker, preferably blinged out using blingee.com.."
  • Commenter nunsuch suggests his classic Dancing With the Stars appearance.
  • Debra L writes: "How about this one -- or any link to 'Another World'? They are all so apropos for our little Tucker."

And Matt Ortega prepared this adorable LolCat.

Keep 'em coming! (We also had a suggestion from reader Keith O. that we may try out. We'll keep you posted!) As always, please go to TuckerCarlson.net for the very best TuckerCarlson news and information the internet has to offer.

  • Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon. Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene More Alex Pareene

We Own TuckerCarlson.net

As you may have heard, Tucker Carlson's Daily Caller bought KeithOlbermann.com. That URL now takes you to a Keith Olbermann-focused version of the Daily Caller site. (Or, uh, the regular Daily Caller site, which is currently going with at least 7 Olbermann stories above the fold.) It did this purely to annoy Olbermann. No matter what you think of the "Countdown" host, this is childish, petty and boorish behavior for a formerly respected journalist like Carlson. And that is why we here at Salon are proud to announce our purchase of TuckerCarlson.net.

Tragically, Carlson has already reserved TuckerCarlson.com. But TuckerCarlson.net was there for the taking, and so we took it. At the moment, we're just pointing it at War Room. But what should we do with it?

Should it go to this famous clip, of Tucker Carlson admitting to physically attacking a man for "bothering" him (in a gay way) in a restroom?

Should it go to the famous "Crossfire" video?

Or this one?

Or should it just be pictures of adorable animals, like most other things on the Internet? Have your say! Leave suggestions in the letters or e-mail me your ideas.

  • Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon. Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene More Alex Pareene

Weigel joins MSNBC

Weigel joins MSNBC
MSNBC
Weigel joins MSNBC

The "Dave Weigel landing on his feet" process has begun. On Countdown last night, Keith Olbermann introduced former Washington Post reporter/blogger Weigel as an "MSNBC contributor." He'll be paid.

According to Weigel, this is just so he can keep appearing on MSNBC while he finalizes his next "main job." (Which will probably be with The Daily Worker, right?)

  • Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon. Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene More Alex Pareene

Olbermann on Obama's assassination program

Olbermann on Obama's assassination program
MSNBC

(updated below - Update II)

There are many legitimate criticisms voiced about Keith Olbermann, but he deserves substantial credit for his coverage last night of a story that is as self-evidently significant as it is under-covered:   Barack Obama's assassination program aimed at American citizens.  He not only led off his show with this story, but devoted the first two segments to it, and made many of the key observations and asked virtually all of the right questions.  The videos of those two segments, worth watching, are below. 

What's most striking to me about all of this is that -- as I noted yesterday (and as Olbermann stressed) -- George Bush's decision merely to eavesdrop on American citizens without oversight, or to detain without due process Americans such as Jose Padilla and Yaser Hamdi, provoked years of vehement, vocal and intense complaints from Democrats and progressives.  All of that was disparaged as Bush claiming the powers of a King, a vicious attack on the Constitution, a violation of Our Values, the trampling on the Rule of Law.  Yet here you have Barack Obama not merely eavesdropping on or detaining Americans without oversight, but ordering them killed with no oversight and no due process of any kind.  And the reaction among leading Democrats and progressives is largely non-existent, which is why Olbermann's extensive coverage of it is important.   Just imagine what the reaction would have been among progressive editorial pages, liberal opinion-makers and Democratic politicians if this story had been about George Bush and Dick Cheney targeting American citizens for due-process-free and oversight-less CIA assassinations.

Republicans are not going to object to any of this.  With rare exception, they believe in unlimited executive authority and denial of due process.  They see Obama's adoption of the core Bush/Cheney approach as a vindication of what they did for eight years (and also see it, not unreasonably, as proof that progressive complaints about Bush's "shredding of the Constitution" were not genuine but rather opportunistic, cynical and motivated by desire for partisan gain).  As a result, even the most Obama-hating right-wing extremists will praise him and cheer for what he's doing.  At the same time, the people who spent eight years screaming about things like this (when Bush/Cheney were doing them) are now mostly silent if not finding ways to justify and defend it (we don't need due process because the President said this is an American-Hating Terrorist).  As White House servant Richard Wolffe said in the second Olbermann segment below (and Wolffe's commentary was actually fairly good), the White House is "very proud" of its presidential assassination program, which is likely why they decided to leak it to the NYT and the WP yesterday.

Here again, we see one of the principal and longest-lasting effects of the Obama presidency:  to put a pretty, eloquent, progressive face on what (until quite recently) was ostensibly considered by a large segment of the citizenry to be tyrannical right-wing extremism (e.g., indefinite detention, military commissions, "state secrets" used to block judicial review, an endless and always-expanding "War on Terror," immunity for war criminals, rampant corporatism -- and now unchecked presidential assassinations of American citizens), and thus to transform what were once bitter, partisan controversies into harmonious, bipartisan consensus:

 

UPDATE:  Here's the segment I did yesterday on Al Jazeera -- along with The Weekly Standard's Bill Roggio and GWU Professor of Media and International Affairs Steven Livingston -- regarding the WikiLeaks/Iraq video:

 

UPDATE II:  The American Prospect's Adam Serwer has an interesting post reporting that civil rights groups have issued a joint letter opposing the closing of Guantanamo if it means -- as the Obama administration has suggested -- that Guantanamo and its defining injustices will simply be re-located to U.S. soil.  As part of his reporting, Serwer writes this:

[B]road assertions of executive power haven't even been limited to the last administration. Instead, we've seen the powers of the president expand, with the Obama administration asserting the right to assassinate American citizens without any due process or finding of guilt whatsoever.

From a civil libertarian point of view, we're in a much worse place than we were during the Bush administration, when Democrats were willing to oppose Bush's expansive claims of executive authority. Now we have only muted criticism from Democratic legislators and hysterical cries from Republicans that Obama isn't going far enough.

As far as I'm concerned, that's the point that cannot be stressed enough.  And it's particularly good to see its being highlighted in a liberal publication like the Prospect (though Serwer has been pointing out such things there for quite some time).

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