In Sunday's New York Times, its far-left shotgun columnist Frank Rich has written a column with the title "The Axis of the Obsessed and Deranged," which is ironic, since the title so well describes most of his own articles! In a paper whose editors think of themselves as moderates or centrists, but in which most of the columnists and many of the news stories tilt so far to the Left that it approximates the style and contents of the 60's Village Voice, Rich stands out as the most extreme of their writers.
This time he goes after the tea party movement, and instead of a nuanced and balanced appraisal, he begins by trying to blame the murder suicide of Andrew Joseph Stack III, who flew his small plane into a building housing an IRS division in Austin, Texas, on Feb. 18th, on the new movement. Rich ignores what we know about Mr. Stack. He was furious about IRS rules that prohibited him from using knowledge he had as a software engineer to start his own business. In his rambling, sometimes , Stack attacks "organized religion" and different laws for the rich rather than the poor (standard leftist boilerplate), and goes after the late "neo-con" Senator Daniel P. Moynihan as his arch villain, all targets that distinguish him a great deal from today's tea party advocates. George W. Bush, whom certainly Frank Rich did his share of attacking for months on end, is described by Stack as "the presidential puppet" of the rich who pull the strings.
Tea partier indeed! Oh, Rich covers himself by writing that he was obviously "a lone madman," and that it would be "glib and inaccurate to call him a card-carrying tea partier or a "Tea Party terrorist.'" But then Rich, having made the accusation while pretending to disavow it, goes on to say that his manifesto is a "frothing anti-government, anti-tax rage" that "overlaps with some of those marching under the Tea Party banner." In other words, he was not formally a tea party member or advocate, but nevertheless well might have been because he shares their views! A distinction without a difference!
Next, Rich goes on to chastise all those Republicans whom he accuses of basically standing with or apologizing for Stack — and of course, chooses to quote those on the far right to smear all Republicans. Rep. Steve King may believe that the IRS of the movement.
Naturally, Rich then moves on to the affiliation of the tea partiers with "the unhinged and sometimes armed anti-government right," which to Rich is what really threatens our nation. While he never even mentions that some of us are worried about the inability of our institutions, even our armed forces establishment, to take on the documented threat of radical Islamists in our midst, to the mind of someone like Frank Rich the real threat is the nascent right-wing extremism that Republicans are failing to stand up to.
So enough of summarizing Rich. You can read his column yourself and get a good sense of how his conspiratorial mind works. Instead, I suggest two articles that should be read carefully for a good sober analysis of the real issues.
First, one should not miss Jamie Kirchick's in February's Commentary, on the very real threat of homegrown terrorism from Islamists whom the entire establishment — including of course Frank Rich — completely ignore. As Kirchik writes, liberals have drawn all the wrong lessons from the facts:
Despite all the available evidence pointing to the destruction that homegrown terrorists can wreak on free societies, some seem to have drawn the completely opposite conclusion about their proliferation and potential. They have interpreted Hasan's "loner" credentials as, in the words of Ezra Klein, a blogger for the Washington Post, "encouraging," for it indicates that his killing spree was not connected to a larger series of plots designed and carried out by an extensive, international network, all orchestrated from remote, hard-to-target locations in foreign countries.
He goes on to nail precisely the syndrome that Rich exhibits:
One would think that the increase in successful and near successful domestic-terrorism plots over the past year would engender some sort of recognition on the part of people who think and write about current events that a very real threat exists. And, to be sure, reading the mainstream press and listening to elite pundits over the past year, it is clear that the peril of domestic terrorism does occupy their thoughts. But it is decidedly not Islamist terrorism that they consider to be the great danger facing the country but rather violent extremism of an altogether different sort: "right-wing" extremism.
As Kirchick continues, "The not-so-subtle purpose of this campaign has been to associate the deplorable rhetoric of a handful in the right-wing fever swamp with the appreciable mass of conservatives, thus painting the president's critics as racists prone to violence." Is he correct? Yes, and the proof is that Rich writes: "Such violent imagery and invective, once largely confined to blogs and talk radio, is now spreading among Republicans in public office or aspiring to it."
As for the tea parties, the second essay Frank Rich should read – as quickly as possible — is that by a distinguished commentator whose perch is at the Council on Foreign Relations, Walter Russell Mead. Writing on his blog at the site of The American Interest, Mead says:
A very different kind of Tea Party has my friends in the upscale media and policy worlds gravely concerned. To hear them talk, all the know-nothings, wackadoo birther wingnuts, IRS plane bombers, Christian fundamentalists out to turn the US into a theocracy, the flat earthers and the racists have somehow joined together into a force that is as politically formidable as it morally and intellectually contemptible. These Tea Partiers, I am frequently told, are 'reactionaries'. They long for an older, safer and whiter America — a more orderly place where their old fashioned values were unchallenged, one in which ethnic minorities weren't in their faces, gays weren't demanding acceptance, and in general life looked more like "Ozzie and Harriet" and less like "South Park."
Perhaps Rich read this, and thought he may as well prove Mead correct! But no, because Mead goes on to present a nuanced, thoughtful and interesting essay about the tea partiers, precisely the opposite of what one gets from what used to be the newspaper of record.
What inspires their members, he says, is "the value of revolutionary change." Rather than portray them as Frank Rich and the MSM does, Mead puts the movement in perspective as part of a long tradition of American populism, one that sometimes comes from the left and at other times from the right. In both cases, they see their opponents as an "elite," that is opposed to "the deep political, cultural and institutional changes that from time to time the country needs and which the ruling elites cannot or will not deliver." And, although one might oppose some of what the tea party movement stands for, he notes its potential:
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Contrary to Rich and the NYT, Mead notes that the Somehow, this little fact did not get into Rich's column, since it would refute the argument he tries to make. Mead notes that at present, "many Tea Partiers seem to want a populist coalition that focuses on economic and government reform while moving more slowly on social issues. Perhaps the movement is pulling itself together more quickly than past populist upsurges have done because the combination of higher education levels and better communications make today's populists a little more ready for prime time than some of their predecessors."
Mead understands, as Rich does not, that much is wrong today. He puts it this way. "Today in the United States many of our core institutions are fundamentally out of sync with reality: they cost more than we can pay but they don't do what we need." He continues with the hard evidence of this. And as the case is with the proposed ObamaCare, it will increase government control over a great portion of the economy without allowing for the ability of our nation to pay for it, since its proponents seem to care less about the looming catastrophic effects of the deficit on future generations.
Yes, the Obama crew says. We know the answers. Trust us. We are the experts. "Wise policy wonks," as Mead writes, "must rejigger the health care system. … They dream of intricate, finely crafted reforms whose beauty can only be appreciated by a few." And, he adds, they are not far from the mark: "They suspect on good evidence that whatever delicately balanced, intricately designed policy proposals go into the legislative process, something much cruder and more, well, porcine will inevitably come out at the other end."
The result has been, then, and could be again, a very different kind of transformation of the political system — and not one favored by the administration currently in power. That, Mead suggests, is what the tea party movement is all about, part of a big wave, described by him as a movement based on a "right of center populism that now seems to be taking shape, and potentially this movement could have the kind of impact on the country that the original Jacksonians did."
They are, he thinks, ready for prime time, if they find a smart and knowledgeable leader, someone, Mead thinks, from the military like Stanley McChrystal or David Petraeus. Mead, unlike Frank Rich, takes the movement seriously, and while acknowledging its pitfalls, treats it fairly and seriously. Once, so long ago, we might see an essay like his in the pages of The New York Times. That, of course, was long, long ago. No wonder it loses circulation and influence. In the meantime, those of us who still can't give up our traditional Sunday paper with its Arts and Leisure section, book review and crossword puzzle, have to put up with the likes of Frank Rich.