Enlightened Belle

Enlightened Belle
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Hythe, Kent, United Kingdom
Birthday
August 29
Bio
Born and raised in Virginia. BA in Romance Languages from the University of Virginia 1976 and MA in Spanish from Universidad de Salamanca in 1978. Taught school in the States and for my sins, I married a British civil servant, no less. After more than twenty years of living in the UK and speaking Spanish, French and Italian for lazy Brits who can't, I'm hoping to go home for good later this year. Hey, I live in Kent, where two other Virginia girls, Pocahontas and Nancy Astor, are buried. I don't intend on being the third. Besides, I'm a left-wing Obama supporter. I beling in the Socialist Democratic Atheist Republic of the United States of America.

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JUNE 7, 2010 8:11PM

Make Mine a Double Standard

Rate: 9 Flag

Early in 2009, shortly after the President’s Inauguration, Glenn Beck took to the airwaves to warn people that soon the President would be coming for their guns; yes, indeedy, he’d be sending the police after people’s beloved guns. So urgent and heated was Beck’s warning that one poor, deluded man took his precious guns, went to the local copshop and blew away five policemen, before turning the gun on himself.

Immediately, cries arose from the Left that Beck, or his employer, Fox News, should be prosecuted. Although Freedom of Speech contains strictures against incitement to crime or riot, Beck’s diatribe did nothing of that sort, directly. In this regard, Beck is the master of the soupcon of suggestion. That’s his schtick. He didn’t tell the victim to take his guns and defend the Second Amendment, he planted a suggestion, and the fellow acted upon it.

Later, we witnessed the killing of a security guard at the Holocaust Museum by a white supremacist, and people, rightly, reckoned that this was a Rightwing reaction to a black man in the White House.

Still later on, we were introduced to the rather ludicrous Tea Party, with their “Don’t Tread on Me” peculiar interpretation of Jeffersonian democracy and their misunderstanding that their cries against perceived socialism might incorporate their Medicare, Social Security or disability allowances. When they appeared with their mis-spelled signs and pictures of Obama as Hitler or an African chieftan, we knew exactly what they meant to say when they cloaked their racism in terms like “socialist,” “communist,” or “Nazi.” And we were rightly offended.

So offended, that when Glenn Beck actually turned the tables and declared Obama a racist with a deep-seeded hatred of white people, no less an intellectual powerhouse (not) than Arianna Huffington, with her intense and expert knowledge of the Constitution, demanded that Beck be denied his First Amendment rights, irrespective of the fact that those same rights that allow Beck to declare the President of the United States a racist, also allowed this faux neocon disguised as a Progressive-for-Profit the right to demand that the Vice President of the United States resign in protest of the President’s as yet (then) undisclosed plan for the war in Afghanistan and lead a protest movement – something just about an inch short of sedition.

Such were the outcries, as the fundits from the Right got more and more outrageous, culminating in Glenn Beck’s disgusting parody of the President’s daughter a few weeks ago.

As stated, quite rightly, people vehemently protested against such behaviour from the Right.

But, what happens when someone not identified with the Right makes an incongruent statement?

Imagine several scenarios.

Imagine Rush Limbaugh in a broadcast, referring to President Obama as “President Sanford and Son.”

There would be hell to pay from the depths of the sofas of the sedentary Left. Blogspaces would implode. The cable news network – most likely CNN and MSNBC, for Fox would strategically ignore it – would obsess about it for weeks. Limbaugh, for the umpteenth time, would be Keith Olbermann’s “Worst Person in the World.” There would be calls for Limbaugh, at most, to be taken off the air, at least, to apologise. Of course, neither result would occur, but the Left, quite correctly, would never let Limbaugh forget about that verbal faux pas.

Or, imagine Beck opining that when he knew there was a black President elected, he wanted to see a black President in action, watch him swagger into the boardroom of some corporate CEO, with a gun on his hip, ready to kick ass and demand if this mothafucka didn’t wise up, he’d get shot in the leg. In other words, present a white person’s grossly exaggerated stereotype of a ghetto justice-dispenser and market that as how the President should behave as a black executive.

Once again, the infotainment media would be rife with protest from all sections and factions of the Left, from the moderates to the loonies. And, again, they’d be right to be offended. Such a stereotypical depiction by Beck would be as offensive as the Tea Party’s mock-up post card of the White House watermelon patch.

But, although both of these aforementioned incidences occurred, it was neither Rush nor Beck who uttered the words, and this, perhaps, is the reason why you’ve heard no comments, no protests, no outrage from the Left.

They were spoken by Bill Maher.

Three weeks ago, in a meltdown episode of Real Time, when Bill’s faux atheism was revealed by quirky conservative atheist, S E Cupp, he ended the program with his signature editorial, this time criticizing the President as a backward-looking, underachieving, bumbling black man, out of his depth in governing a country. By pointedly referring to Obama as “President Sanford and Son,” Bill channeled the ultimat 70s image of a man so laid back and incompetent, he couldn’t even manage a junkyard.

Instead, Bill called for corporate mogul, Steve Jobs, to govern America, the same way he managed Apple, and thus, move the country foreward. Never mind that the editorial had been based on a commencement speech the President had made or that one sentence from that speech had been removed and spun centrifugally by Bill and his writers in order to obtain a totally different meaning than originally intended, the “Sanford and Son” reference drew a gasp from the audience, but nothing from anyone else on the Left.

Huffington strategically left this part of the editorial off her aggregate. Olbermann said nothing. Bill’s icon, Chris Matthews, a man who sometimes admits that he “forgets Obama is black”, was curiously mute.

Silence.

In the program which aired on May 28th, Bill admitted in his opening monologue the real reason why he was disappointed in Obama. Obama, he said, was too professorial. When Bill voted for a black President, he wanted a black President delivered. An articulate rapper, with a ghetto mind and sense of justice, who kicked ass at the point of a gun worn on his hip. That’s the man he voted for.

Well, sorry, Bill. I didn’t vote for a stereotype, I voted for the person best qualified to do the job.

I was actually grateful that Bill as much as admitted his cognitive dissonance in this regard, because I think this has been a disconnect with a great many so-called Progressives with regard to Obama and his cool, calm, demeanor. They voted for John Shaft and, instead, they got a cross between Carlton from The Fresh Prince and Dr Cliff Huxtable. And, so, like Bill, they didn’t get the man whom Bill referred to in his post-Electoral editorial as a “kickass black ninja.”

Stereotyping is a form of racism too.

This time, various fans of Maher made protest about this remark, but from the mouthpieces of the Left … crickets. Lots of excuses, mind you, from his dittoes … Bill’s a comedian … it’s supposed to be funny.

Sorry, Bill’s a comedian only when his mouth doesn’t engage with his brain and he says something that backs his ass against a wall. That’s when he reverts to “I’m a comedian” mode.

Witness: “If u get a flu shot, u r stupid.” (But that’s a joke, funny ha-ah.) Sorry, not even close.

And, sorry, again, but stereotyping isn’t funny. Not for African Americans, not for women and not for any ethnic minority.

Which leads me to another anecdotal incident.

Imagine, if you will, Glenn Beck or Rush Limbaugh attending a public function, during Jewish Heritage Week. Imagine a Jewish broadcast unit with camcorder and microphone, calling one of them over and asking for some thoughts or message to the Jewish community during this week. Imagine either man saying his message would be for the “Jews” to get out of Palestine. Get out of Palestine and “go home.” When asked to qualify where, exactly, “home” was, imagine either Beck or Limbaugh, replying, “Germany. Poland.”

There would be a shitstorm of protest from the Left. Beck’s remaining sponsors would fold up their merchandise tents and slope away. Limbaugh would be vilified.

Helen Thomas, octagenarian doyenne of the Left, knew very well what she was saying when she uttered the above sentiment, and she knew how it would play. The new babes of the ueber Left would associate “Palestine-Left Bank-Gaza” and have her back. But this has nothing to do with either the Left Bank or Gaza, and it happened a few days before the initial Gaza flotilla incident.

Thomas would have been 28 when the UN created the State of Israel from a territory heretofore known, loosely, as Palestine. Prior to that official act, the British government, big guns in the Middle East, during their raj, set the wheels in motion for the establishment of a Jewish state with their British Mandate for Palestine in the 1930s. She certainly would have remembered that, also.

Thomas, a professional wordsmith, was honing her art at its best, using the utmost double entendre to convey subtly that she really didn’t approve of Jews being in the area formerly known as Palestine at all and that the few elderly who’d made the actual transition from holocaust to Haifa, as well as any of their descendents, and various other assorted immigrants, should just go back from whence they came – even if that meant going back to places where they were labelled personae non gratae, tortured, imprisoned and displaced.

We on the Left freely label people in Arizona “Nazis”. Some of the people still alive who remember the formation of Israel had first-hand experience with real Nazis.

Within the past week, and many times before during the Netanyahu government, Israel has done a fair enough job touting herself as her own worst enemy in the eyes of the world. Criticizing that would have been justifiable, but being clever and inching across a message that the country doesn’t deserve to exist at all, not good. Just as Pat Buchanan’s suggestion that the status quo prior to the Civil Rights amendment was preferable to the present day.

Bill Maher is as constant in his unwavering support of Israel as he is in his equally unwavering support of the death penalty, both ideals giving the lie to his touted Progressivism. It will be interesting to see if he touches upon this incident with Thomas in his show this week, and to see how it plays against his own much-stated belief in freedom of speech, which is about as valid as his Progressive politics … not.

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chris matthews, bill maher

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A well articulated, thoughful, provocative post, E.B. Thank you for this.
The President of the United States is not a Black Man from America, or a man of any color who came from "Da Ghetto". Despite many, many reports on who he is, there is just no way Americans can figure it out, they simply just can't- despite all the locals here, considered remote and exotic by most on the Mainland, knowing exactly what he is and whats going on.

The Prez is a Local Hawaiian- our way of understanding race, by far the most advanced in the world, studied by corporations to improve their bottom line, is little known or understood.

The Prez is Hapa, a mixed race individual from Hawaii. But, perhaps more importantly, he is not from the Hood ... despite his Mom being a single parent, he was given by his Haole family an education at Punahou, perhaps the most elite institution of its kind in the whole world. Skull and Bones stuff, but without the ridicules medieval ceremonies. The Buf n Blu roll like no others, and they do it in a Rainbow. They have already created the present- where do you suppose the consumer Internet started? And their entirely race-less yes completely cosmopolitan nature poises them to stay on top of the whole world for centuries to come.

Grass shacks indeed!
Bill Maher, the man who lauded the 9-11 Terrorists for being "brave?" Yes, Bill, so brave they cut stewardesses throats with box cutters on airplanes. So brave they killed 3,000 civilians in the World Trade Center. Yes, I stopped listening to Bill at that point. He is the quintessential asshole.
Terrific article. Fools are fools and phonies are phonies. Glad to see that the editor of OS is presenting all viewpoints.
Two things: As far as I know, Bill Maher actually refers to himself as a libertarian, not a progressive. He is obviously not one who follows the herd, so you should not expect him to be perfectly aligned to the majority of either group in every case. And his comments on recent events are far more valuable than his opinions.

Secondly: Implying that Bill Maher is a racist stretches the term beyond any reasonable limit. He is a comedian, which means it's his job to skirt the edges of what is socially acceptable. As such, he can get away with things like "Sanford & Son" and "kick-ass ninja" because we know his intent is to highlight some racial stereotypes and make fun of them, while showing his preference for the one that is actually quite cool.

On a sidenote: I don't know if you watched the show were he interviewed Ron Paul. Paul stated that he didn't think the US should care whether Israel was wiped out or not. Bill Maher pointedly disagreed (I actually think that was one rare occasion where he was quite shocked). But I haven't heard any blowback from that towards Ron Paul.

As for Helen Thomas, she fucked up, and she paid the price. I'm sad that it happened, as she was the last remaining reporter in the WH press corps. But I won't defend her remarks, as I find them insensitive and stupid, possibly even a sign of some antisemitic streak in the lizzard part of her brain. And she has not lost her freedom of speech, just her job at the WH press corps, and that was not an inalienable right.

Had she been a right-winger, she would probably get away with remarks like that, but then we don't want to imitate their standards, do we?
The difference between Bill Maher and Rush and Beck are that Maher is a comedian-very shrill at times, featured on an entertainmert network(HBO). Glenn Beck is always prominently featured on Fox 'news' as a political commentator. Rush's radio show is packaged as the same. I don't like Maher's shrillness or many of his comments. Yet, I abhor what Beck and Rush have to say, and they hide behind some faux credibility that the republican party and, therefore, Fox'news' gives them. R
We really need to do away with the whole concept of "race" and "racism." Just saying the word implies that we are separated into different races, and that should be offensive to us all. The day when skin color is treated the same as eye color, hair color, and height is a day that can't come fast enough.
I have never taken Maher to be an astute political/cultural guru. He's an opinionated comedian who sometimes hits the mark on a satirical exposure of a truth, sometimes misses by a mile. He says he's a libertarian, but must not grasp the full meaning of the philosophy. If he's libertarian, he's a smorgasbord version.

"Sanford and Son" and the ass-kickin' MoFo angle was, I'm sure, meant to make ha-ha from a comparison to blacksploitation movies and shows. However, without the "Some seem to think," and a balancing with some reference to the reality of why Obama isn't transformative or a reformer...it is gratuitous as is most of his ridicule of religion. He missed the mark, again.

The difference is Maher doesn't set the tone and policy for a political party or movement. Beck and Limbaugh do. Maher isn't part of a long tradition of exploiting racism and resentment. Beck and Limbaugh are examples of today's version of a 50+ year conservative tradition.

That aside, your perception of a double standard is correct. With his attempt at blacksploitation humor, Maher feeds the true racists and "leaners" (less overt, more prone to describing it in other terms). In that, somebody in the too often pointless cable outrage industry should try to up their leftist "shriek cred" by finding the valid criticism.

But the enemy of my enemy is my friend, too often, in politics. Partisan-minded people will play down or overlook much of what they find disagreeable because of what they do agree upon. The Dems and Repubs will always downplay the reality of a Congressional Rep's screw-ups if it isn't 'too" egregious. That's an American tradition with a long history.
To excuse Maher's behavior because he happens to be a comedian is just plain ignorant.

The left loves to toss around the word "racist" because they know there is not a good response to being called a racist. They put it out there to stir up their base.The race pimps, Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson follow right along.
Just a point and a nod to a "Paul": in the episode where Bill went out of his way to highlight Rand Paul, even likening him to Sarah Palin in medical school, he pointedly stated that, although he "flirted" with libertarianism in the early 1990s, he soon came to see the necessity of government. He said that on the panel at the beginning of the discussion period.

That was a blatant lie.

Maher identified himself as a Libertarian right up to the time when Ron Paul made that remark about Israel, which was also the time when he made the remark about the Civil War not having to be fought. I think that's when Bill realised exactly what Libertarian philosophy was all about. Heretofore, I think he made a fairly common mistake and thought that the root "lib" in "libertarian" meant "liberal" and that Libertarians were, actually ueber liberals. He liked the term; it sounded cool and he used it.

And he has, on numerous occasions, identified himself as part of the Progressive movement, the first time this year during his interview in February with Larry King. I agree that he is anything BUT a Progressive. He supports the death penalty, is virulently anti-union, is against government funding for the arts, let slip during his infamous interview with Bill Frist last year that he was against government-controlled healthcare, supported Bush's surge in Iraq, and is pro-Israel. Sounds a lot like Joe Lieberman to me. At best a Blue Dog, at worst a Republican - and he has the track record to prove that, having openly admitted to having voted for Reagan in 1984 and Dole in 1996.

Again, all that is a part of the aura of "cool." Bill wants to be in with the In Crowd, and those are the ueber liberal Hollywood types.

Let's deal with the "comedian" part now. Bill wasn't trying to emphasize stereotypes or be funny. In the first incident, he was trying to criticize the President as being ineffectual and lazy and likened him to Fred Sanford. In the second, he admitted his cognitive dissonance. Since day one of this administration, he's been hinting that Obama's not been "black enough" - for someone to dwell in a pejorative stereotype of a race is just unacceptable - even moreso, coming from someone who's supposed to be from the tolerant Left. Bill thinks that because he's used several black women as escorts and pals around with Chris Rock, this gives him leave to make dodgy remarks and people will laugh at them. They don't.

And, you know what? He's not even the atheist he proclaims he is. S E Cupp sussed that in less than five minutes and threw the fact that he was angry with God right back in his face that evening, not once, but twice.

Somewhere along the line, Bill's psychologically stunted at a 13 year-old level. That's why he obsesses so much about masturbation. I blame the parents.
Belle,
The "liber" root does come from the same "liberty" source in liberalism and libertarianism. 60-70 years ago, what became libertarian thought was described in terms of liberalism. They referred to themselves as liberals. New Deal liberalism motivated the change in terms.

However, since then they have quaffed the ale of philosophy, and "epistemologized" out a different definition of liberty, thus creating a somewhat derivative but different philosophy. If Maher thinks "Uber Liberal" he missed the mark again.

I saw a recent vid clip where Maher again identifies as a libertarian. He needs to learn more about it so he can apply the proper hyphenation. If libertarian, then left-libertarian.

He's using that word as most do...as a vague set of sentiments.

I don't think he meant "Sanford and Son" in a meaning of lazy and shiftless...perhaps discombobulated. It seems to be more about setting up the "Shaft" angle, as S&S was not blacksploitation, but merely a vehicle for Red Foxx' humor. The "impact" is in recalling the show, not the comparison. Show funny = joke funny?

Oh well.

It does make for a valid calling out of double standards, but I would be cautious in trying to extract too many conclusions about Maher from it. Maybe I'm being reasonable; maybe I just don't give a rat's ass about what he thinks.
Most of the comments do not seem to recognize the style of comedy Bill Maher practices. He makes outragious statements that caricature the political reality. He appeals to a small part of the populace who can take the absurdity out and think about yhe substance represented. Rush and Beck do the same thing, take ordinary concepts and twist them to the extreme until they do not resemble the original and throw them out as red meat for thought. I watch them as comedy, twisted as it may be and see some kernel of truth or propaganda, as the case may be. I strongly believe in the principle that I am not forced to watch any of them. I can choose. I also wonder what compels people to watch programs they abhor, as some of the commentors do. Although I disagree strongly with Beck, I love to watch the slapstick expressions and postures. He is best watched with the sound muted. If you feel compelled to watch Maher and don't like what he is saying, mute the sound and just enjoy the visual insanity.
I recognize the comedic intention, but it didn't land. Simple as that. I like Maher, and watch him for the interesting guests and conversation, and the times I agree with what he says. I don't see him as poliGuru, but that is true of my opinion of a lot of people. Most people. Alright, everyone but me. So there!
Don't follow leaders.
And watch the parking meters.
It is wrong that Bill Maher has gotten such a pass on his Real Time show. On more than just the two occasions you mention he has been so outrageous that I have shut the show off. Do you really think that Helen Thomas didn't pay at least the price a Limbaugh or Beck would for the same offense? She is out of the game and it may be forever before she can be mentioned as the heroic journalist she was.