“They have made common cause with the left-wing
and Islamist antiwar movements in this country and in Europe.
They deny and excuse terror. They espouse a potentially self-fulfilling
defeatism. They publicize wild conspiracy theories. And some of
them explicitly yearn for the victory of their nation's enemies.”
– “Unpatriotic Conservatives,”
National Review, April 7, 2003
Who was guilty of such perfidy? Was it anti-war
protesters, the Dixie Chicks, or the French? The answer was none
of the above. The targets of this diatribe from David Frum, former
Bush speech writer who gave us the Axis of Evil, were prominent
conservatives who opposed the invasion and occupation of Iraq.
Right wing columnist Robert Novak was among those caught in the
war hawk cross hairs.
The
mistreatment of white Americans arouses fear, suspicion and a
flight or fight response so high that it can’t be measured. When
white people are victims of police brutality or medical malpractice
the society at large sits up and takes notice. Black people do
too, but not because we feel less worthy of justice or proper
treatment. We know that the system is designed to benefit white
people, so their mistreatment sends an extra measure of alertness
into the black mind. We are outraged by the abuses heaped upon
us and yet part of us is not surprised when we are mistreated
and humiliated.
All of those reactions are heightened when the wrath
of the powerful falls upon white people. Black people are never
allowed to forget missteps, bad decisions or poor choices of words.
If discredited we are drummed out of public life, made to disappear
like those out of favor in totalitarian states. As the song says,
however, the times are changing. White people who don’t toe the
line are treated like black people, dismissed and demonized unless
the slate is wiped clean by contrition and groveling.
Robert Novak has been a conservative columnist for
the Chicago Sun-Times for 40 years. His face is seen on nearly
every pundit-filled public affairs talk fest where he waxes grandiloquently
on the right wing point of view. Novak’s membership in the conservative
movement made little difference when he spoke against the war
in Iraq. If the mistreatment of white people causes fear, the
mistreatment of a card-carrying white conservative by other white
conservatives is perhaps a sign of Armageddon.
At first Novak tried to
defend himself but it wasn’t enough. The right wing had passed
its own internal Patriot Act and Novak was the first defendant.
His treatment was akin to what happens when poor people are arrested.
An attorney is provided but he or she usually advises a guilty
plea to minimize the sentence.
Novak gave up proclaiming that he was a conservative,
too. Like a junior Mafioso he had to whack someone to earn his
stripes as a made man. In a July 14, 2003 column he revealed that
Valerie Plame was a CIA analyst. Her husband, Joe Wilson, had
also chosen the wrong side. Wilson’s years of work for the State
Department were quickly disregarded when he told the world that
the Bush administration was lying
about Iraqi attempts to obtain uranium for nuclear weapons.
If hard core conservatives like Novak
aren’t safe then middle of the road DLC Democrats like Al Gore
have to be crushed, too. Of course, Gore is a very great danger
to the right wing. They cannot allow the American people to remember
that they actually elected him instead of Bush. As a result Gore
fills a very special role as the white punching bag du jour for
useless journalists and other opinion makers. He recently gave
a speech outlining his reasons for believing that the war in Iraq
was a mistake. The speech was classic Gore, smart, to the point
and punctuated by the occasional ovation.
What did our pundit class think of the
speech? Conservative columnists called him “insane”, “nuts”
and
theorized that he was “off his lithium” all because he dared
state what we know to be true. There was no WMD threat from Iraq,
the CIA was misused (it is scary when progressives feel for the
CIA), and Americans have died needlessly in a cynical effort to
seize oil and power in the Middle East.
Proving
that black pundits are of no more use than white ones, Gwen
Ifill of the PBS series Washington Week said that Gore, “…
took the far left point of view about this.” In fact Gore made
no suggestions at all for extricating the military from Iraq and
advised John Kerry to do likewise. Gore didn’t advocate leaving
Iraq and he expressed his outrage over the Abu Ghraib prison abuse
because of the effect it had on U.S. troops and America’s image
abroad, not because of the effect it had on the victims and the
rest of the Iraqi people. If Gwen Ifill doesn’t know the
meaning of the term left wing and she didn’t bother watching the
speech then perhaps she should resign from her job and give it
to someone who knows something about being a good journalist.
Of course, Gwen Ifill and her media colleagues have
a very special job description, it is to support the powerful.
The result is the discrediting of anyone who threatens them. A
presidential front runner like Howard Dean is beaten down and
thrown out like yesterday’s news. Gore is still treated as a figure
of amusement or derision. As for black people, we should be very,
very afraid.