We hear lots of laments about the general coarsening of our culture and of political
speech in particular. Few ever actually do anything about it, of course. All the more
noteworthy, therefore, was the very public response of Senator John McCain and
others to Michelle Bachmann’s bizarre attack on Muslim-American State
Department official Human Abedin, the long-time aide to Secretary of State
Hilary Clinton, who is also the wife of former NY Congressman Anthony Weiner.
Bachmann, along with four other Republican congressmen have apparently based
their comments on an organization called The Center for Security Policy, which
purports to oppose supposed Muslim Brotherhood influence in the U.S. government
McCain’s criticism did not mention Bachmann by name, but
he didn’t have to. Speaking in the Senate last week, McCain, who in the past
had traveled abroad with then-Senator Clinton and Human Abedin, said that the
“allegations about Human and the report from which they are drawn are nothing
less than an unwarranted and unfounded attack on an honorable woman, a
dedicated American and a loyal public servant.” Such attacks, McCain insisted,
“have no logic, no basis, and no merit. And they need to stop now.” Besides defending the reputation of a fellow citizen and
public official, McCain also addressed the larger picture of why this is so
important. He said: “When anyone, not least a member of Congress, launches
speeches and degrading attacks against fellow Americans on the basis of nothing
more than fear of who they are and ignorance of what they stand for, it defames
the spirit of our nation, and we all grow poorer because of it.”
Hooray for John McCain! His remarks remind us of his
readiness to rebut lies about Barack Obama during the 2008 campaign - in sadly
conspicuous contrast to the current Republican candidate’s cozy relationship
with the likes of “birther’ Donald Trump and “I wish this President would learn
how to be an American” John Sununu.
Republican Senator Lindsay Graham also condemned the
attacks as “ridiculous, really off-base, inappropriate,” and Republican Senator
Scott Brown said of Bachmann’s accusations, “This kind of rhetoric has no place
in our public discourse.”
Of course, in a society which is increasingly abandoning
any common understanding of facts and truth in favor of pseudo-“facts” and
ideologically filtered “truths,” whose only function is to distort reality for
short-term partisan gain, why would anyone be surprised by this sort of rhetoric?
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