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Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Fantasyland
· Sunday, February 28, 2010
The villain in "A Time to Run," Sen. Barbara Boxer's first novel, is a conservative writer for The San Francisco Chronicle. A salvo at moi? Hardly. His name is Greg Hunter, and Boxer's alter ego, Ellen Fischer, also a Democratic senator from California, has a personal history with the scribe, including one special night when they were both students at UC Berkeley.
Alas, Hunter never got over Fischer's rejection of him in favor of his best friend, Josh Fischer, who winds up marrying Ellen. Years later, Hunter still carried a torch. He would ask himself, "Why did she choose Josh and not me?"
Did the perceptive Fischer see a flaw in Hunter that made him undeserving of her love? Or did her rejection move him from his enlightened youthful liberalism to the dark right side of politics and into the service of evil GOP Sen. Carl Satcher?
When chick lit turns into chick lib lit, the answer is: Whatever makes the liberal look pure and mistreated. Hence a story, co-written with Mary-Rose Hayes, of how the beloved Boxer/Fischer enters politics after Hunter digs up dirt on Josh Fischer, who was running against Satcher. Josh Fischer, in a rush to drive home in the tule fog to confess about a long-ago infidelity, dies in a car accident. The Democratic Party unites -- so you know the book is fiction -- to persuade a reluctant Fischer to run in her late husband's place.
You also know that the tale is fictional because Boxer/Fischer decides to run for office out of anger that the columnist and GOP politician "dug up the worst dirt and invented the worst lies to force" her husband out of the race.
In real life, Boxer first won her Senate seat in 1992 after a Democratic Party official confronted Republican rival Bruce Herschensohn at a campaign rally and asked him, "Is it typical for the voters of California to elect someone who frequently goes to strip joints in Hollywood?" Herschensohn -- who might not have won but was closing in on Boxer's lead -- lost.
Now you might think that after that dubious start, Boxer would hesitate to paint her alter ego as a squeaky-clean victim of political dirty tricks. Wrong. The fictional Chronicle conservative tells her, "Politics is not for the likes of you. It's dirty."
Apparently, Washington is the great sanitizer. And apparently, no one close to Boxer was able to warn her off of putting her name on books that smack of every liberal conceit.
You can forget the Bush-era lectures about how the right only sees the world in terms of black and white. In Boxerdom, all the villains are Republicans and all the Democrats are virtuous.
Her second book, "Blind Trust," also co-written with Hayes, is even more self-laudatory. Her new husband, Ben Lind, is a former "liberal Republican" congressman, who fell in love with his "cunning little vixen" after "she had changed his mind" on her legislation to confiscate guns from child abusers. When he proposed, Lind told her, "Listen, ever since I saw you across that room fighting for your children's bill with every nerve in your body, I've loved you and wanted you and I can't stand the thought of losing you."
Fischer heartily berates the Republican administration, which, she charges, has "trampled on individual liberties and jeopardized the Bill of Rights" in trying to prevent another large-scale terrorist attack. She dismisses them as "the fear detail."
So what does her husband do when he learns that someone has hacked into their blind trust? He had someone comb through the political affiliations, travel history, phone calls and "uncharacteristic behavior" of the many people who might have access to the Lind/Fischer finances. Now, he's not the government; he's just a rich lawyer. But it's amazing how Fischer is convinced it is wrong to use invasive surveillance techniques when Republicans want to prevent American deaths -- but it's OK if her career is on the line.
In the real world, Boxer is known as a far-left Democrat who has had her share of YouTube moments. Remember the one when she told a brigadier general to call her senator instead of ma'am? Her environmental committee has been hemorrhaging key staff and she has failed to produce an energy bill that can pass the Senate.
In the novels, Fischer is a solon in Washington's more deliberative body. Or as the Senate Democratic leader tells Fischer, she would be the right Democrat to fight the mean Republicans' nomination as Homeland Security secretary, because, "You're an inspirational leader who can think on her feet, and you've always had support from the party and so many of the American people -- which, of course, has been justly earned. You've proven yourself to be honest, tough and energetic, with the courage of your convictions."
And: "You've personally raised the integrity bar. People are asking themselves, if they can't trust you, then who can they trust?"
In the first book, Fischer's chief of staff reminds the petite senator of her role as "the conscience of the liberals."
Does Boxer think people really talk like that? If so, she has spent too much time on her pedestal in Washington.
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veritaseequitas
I suppose she is exploring writing as a second career...that is, after she is dethroned from her Senate seat. Sounds like she will be just as crappy at that as she is as an elected "leader."
Posted February 28, 2010 at 8:04:49 AM
Alex Torello
Let me get this straight. A sitting senator in a time of unparalleled turmoil, finds the time and energy to write not 1 but 2 novels of fiction?
She plays on her guaranteed income, her "status" as a deliberative and sober member of Congress to use a medium of fancy to demean and malign the other party.
Can it get any worse!?
Posted February 28, 2010 at 2:40:38 PM
MichaelSSEC
Conceit is the word, all right. She can't have a real world in which the GOP is the evil villain and every Liberal oozes pure integrity, because in the real world the Liberals are the monsters and the comparatively virtuous GOP is all too human. Her fantasy land can't exist in real life so she manufactures it in novels.
Certainly fiction is meant to be somewhat escapist, much of it is 100% escapist, but for a sitting US Senator to so blatantly put her fantasies out there for public consumption -- self-serving, self-edifying fantasies that glamorize one side while demonizing the other -- is simply proof that Liberalism really is a mental disorder.
In Barbara Boxer's imaginary world, Republicans are fire-breathing monsters who eat children for the sheer fun of it, while Democrats are the smiting angels of Virtue who eat evil for breakfast and crap rainbows. What's disturbing about this is that it's really how the Left sees the world. Boxer isn't simply writing a story. She's novelizing the Democrats' actual world view. They really do see themselves as the superheroes crusading to save Americans -- those imbeciles who just aren't bright enough to grasp that Liberals' agenda is for their own good -- from themselves.
But it's okay because the voices in her head told her to write novels to help get the Liberal message out. After all, it's not as though they control the mainstream media or Hollywood or the entire entertainment industry, so one can see how it would be quite difficult to get that message out otherwise. Then again I suppose we should be grateful the voices are only telling her to write books. They could be telling her to fund abortions or vote for radical Leftist ideas.... oh wait...
Posted February 28, 2010 at 4:12:42 PM
JimmyD
Seems her main fantasy is that anyone wants to read her stuff.
"Readers didn't exactly swarm the bookstores for the senator's debut title or jam up Amazon with orders. "A Time to Run" sold 8,980 copies in hardcover and 1,972 in paper, according to Nielsen BookScan."
Posted February 28, 2010 at 6:24:41 PM
Kevin
And how many books did Palin sell? Must drive Boxer and other liberals crazy!
Posted March 1, 2010 at 10:31:33 AM
Margaret Rapponotti
Let's hope wevoters of CA can knock her down off that pedestal this Nov. This is our best shot, howeverwe risk a split with Repubs and the tea-baggers. We need to unite on this cause. Patriots unite!
Posted March 2, 2010 at 11:04:37 AM
Julie
My dad keeps telling of the Topanga Canyon Hippies that hated the controling establishment. Now California is drowning in rules, laws, fees, regulations,cameras on the street, you try to control every cituation, down to the word. You used to be able to go to the beach, the mountains, the desert, now fee for this permit for that, check in , show your ID, I cannot think of one thing that is free. We are not, thats for sure. Between the paperwork and money you have got us by the barrel, funneling us into managible groups, your constant intolerance of Americans and our individuality. Too me it is amazing the difference between what I grew up believing in America and enjoying the feedom that we did have then. Embracing these other cultures like Mexicos gangs and big business you are sucking the spirit out of us and then who will be the ones that at least somewhat try to help other peoples in poverty around the world, at least we make an effort, name another country that is making so called progress anywhere Anyways my point was that your progressivness is way to fast for me and it seems to backfire times ten with your every bright idea. Leave us alone so we can catch up. Your briliance is not as evident to us as it is to you. I could've gone on alot longer tried to be short and sweet. Ps. Someday tells us what America means to you in your own words.
Posted March 6, 2010 at 9:45:10 PM