Frank Rich and the State of Liberal Commentary
· Tuesday, February 9, 2010
If one had to read one columnist to appreciate the state of contemporary left-wing commentary, my nomination would be Frank Rich of the Sunday New York Times.
No well-known leftist columnist better exemplifies the worst aspects of today's left. Virtually every piece is filled with anger, filled with ad hominem responses to arguments, filled with insults of opponents and at the same time devoid of intellectual arguments. A Frank Rich column is essentially a weekly tantrum meant to make his readers nod in agreement and reinforce their contempt for those who differ with them.
I offer this past Sunday's column as an example.
The subject was the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy regarding gays in the military.
Not a single serious argument of proponents of DADT was cited, nor did Rich did offer a single argument on behalf of repealing it. Instead, the article was a smear of all supporters of that policy or of retaining the male-female definition of marriage. The article contains 71 sentences. Twelve sentences contained an insult. I suspect that Times readers who love his columns -- this was listed as the second most e-mailed piece in the New York Times -- are generally people who read Frank Rich so as to have their hatreds reinforced, not for cogent arguments.
The article's title is, appropriately, an insult: "Smoke the Bigots Out of the Closet."
It is commonplace for liberals and leftists to avoid refuting conservative arguments and just dismiss the conservative with one of seven epithets: "Racist," "Bigoted," "Sexist," "Intolerant," and the three phobias: "Homophobic," Xenophobic," "Islamaphobic."
Such ad hominem dismissals of conservatives and their arguments testify to the shallowness of those using these terms, meaning, unfortunately, most mainstream commentators and spokesmen on the left. The fact is that epithets substitute for thought -- and at the same time render it easy to write a left-wing column. It is the Frank Rich Formula: make believe the other side has no thoughtful argument, offer no argument of your own and debase your opponents.
Some examples from just this one column:
RICH: "... there is now little political advantage to spewing homophobia."
RICH: (CNN allowed conservative spokesmen to express) "old homophobic cliches."
RICH: "Such arguments ... are mere fig leaves to disguise the phobia that can no longer dare speak its name. ... (T)he flimsy rhetorical camouflage must be stripped away to expose the prejudice that lies beneath."
RICH: "Those opposing same-sex marriage are just as eager to mask their bigotry."
RICH: "The more bigotry pushed out of the closet for all voters to see ..."
RICH: "... the deep prejudice at the root of their (Republicans') arguments."
Here are the usual charges of "homophobia," "prejudice," and "bigotry."
But also note "spewing" because Rich almost never describes conservatives as speaking normally: In this column alone, they "spew," Sen. Orrin Hatch "vamped" and John McCain "huffed," "fulminated" and was "yapping." No conservative "says," or "claims" or "argues." Conservatives spew, vamp, huff, fulminate and yap. Do Charles Krauthammer, George Will, Thomas Sowell or any other conservative commentators meant to be taken as seriously as the left takes Rich use such verbs to describe the speech of prominent liberals? I doubt it. The gulf in depth of thought and sophistication of expression between Frank Rich and virtually every mainstream conservative columnist is enormous.
(I did a 30-day search of the words "spew" and "spewed" on the Washington Post and New York Times websites, and every single time they were used, it was by a liberal writer talking about conservatives.)
RICH: (Conservatives who oppose repeal of DODT are) "attack dogs."
RICH: (McCain is) "the crazy man in Washington's attic."
Rich also called McCain "unpatriotic" in his previous column -- a particularly ugly charge given McCain's heroic sacrifices for America.
RICH: "Karl Rove and George W. Bush ran a national campaign (in 2004) exploiting fear of gay people ..."
Rich provided no example. For good reason. Bush did not run "a national campaign exploiting fear of gay people" in 2004 (or any other year). What Bush called for in 2004 was a constitutional amendment to define marriage as the union of a man and a woman. In fact, Bush took his own party to task for not supporting civil unions for same-sex couples. It is mendacity -- indeed it is a smear -- to label what Bush advocated "a national campaign exploiting fear of gay people." But to Rich and his supporters anyone -- anyone -- who thinks marriage should be defined as the union of a man and a woman is a fear-mongering bigot.
RICH: "Now that explicit anti-gay animus is an albatross, those who oppose gay civil rights are driven to invent ever loopier rationales for denying those rights, whether in the military or in marriage."
RICH: "The arguments for preserving 'don't ask' have long been blatantly groundless."
Where is this mainstream conservative "explicit anti-gay animus?" And why are the arguments that gays in a military unit may fall in love with one another (or with a straight person) or that for the same reason -- sexual tension -- that we do not have men and women in the same units, showering and sleeping together, we might not deem it a good idea to have sexual tension in an all-men's unit -- why are these arguments "loopy" and "groundless"? This conservative columnist and talk show host does not find liberal arguments for admitting open gays into the military either loopy or groundless. But contrary to the left's self-image, conservatives are far more likely to acknowledge two sides to this and so many other issues.
The truth is that it is Frank Rich who spews, fulminates, yaps and huffs. Every Sunday in the New York Times. His column is idea-free, but his readers want catharsis, not ideas.
COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM
Opinion
- R. Emmett Tyrrell: The Angry Left Joins Talk Radio
- Michael Barone: Dems Are Stuck With a Mess of Their Own Making
- Cal Thomas: Unprotected Speech
- Ann Coulter: What's Arabic for 'You're No Atticus Finch'?
- Larry Elder: Republican Collectivism
- Debra Saunders: Meg Whitman Can Run a Company, but Can She Govern?
- Victor Davis Hanson: Our Reset Reset Foreign Policy
- George Will: In the Wilsonian Tradition
- Michael Reagan: America's Security Put in Peril by Failing Schools
- Jeff Jacoby: Mission Accomplished, Indeed
- Ken Blackwell: Hidden Dangers in ObamaCare
- Jonah Goldberg: Where Feminists Get It Right
- L. Brent Bozell: The Shameless Abortion Carnival
- Austin Bay: Aftermath of the Iraqi Elections
- Terence Jeffrey: An Obama Nominee and Disappearing Persons
Columnists
- Michael Barone
- Austin Bay
- Ken Blackwell
- Tony Blankley
- L. Brent Bozell
- Mona Charen
- Linda Chavez
- Ann Coulter
- Larry Elder
- Roy Exum
- Edwin J. Feulner
- Suzanne Fields
- Michael Gerson
- Jonah Goldberg
- Paul Greenberg
- Rebecca Hagelin
- Victor Davis Hanson
- Jeff Jacoby
- Terence Jeffrey
- Charles Krauthammer
- Lawrence Kudlow
- David Limbaugh
- Michelle Malkin
- William Murchison
- Peggy Noonan
- Oliver North
- Dennis Prager
- Burt Prelutsky
- Michael Reagan
- Debra Saunders
- Ben Shapiro
- Thomas Sowell
- John Stossel
- Jacob Sullum
- Cal Thomas
- Matt Towery
- R. Emmett Tyrrell
- George Will
- Walter E. Williams
The Patriot is not sustained by any political, special interest or parent organization, and we accept no advertising. Our mission and operations are funded entirely by the voluntary financial support of Patriots like you!



MichaelSSEC
Well said, Mr Prager. It's not just Frank Rich, obviously. It's most Liberal pundits. They can't make a coherent argument based on facts, evidence, logic and morals, so they resort to attacks. I believe it was Mr Prager himself who said they have to make monsters out of us in order to justify shutting us down.
The Left starts with the assumption that their own positions are morally superior. They must be morally superior because their intentions are always pure. They are saving the Earth, championing minority rights, saving the poor, etc. They are the party of causes, righting every wrong. Therefore anyone who opposes them on ANY issue MUST be morally wrong because they must be opposed to the righting of wrongs. Thus they don't even need to know what our objections are. The fact we object to their positions is PROOF that we're monsters.
So they don't care what we have to say, what we write, what we argue. It makes no difference to the Left. We could prove to them using geometry, science, mathematics, physics and the logic of Mr Spock, and Liberals would dismiss all of it because simply disagreeing with them MAKES us wrong. It's a godlike self-assurance not unlike that found in little children who haven't yet learned why they're not supposed to touch the stove.
Frank Rich attacks because that's all he's got.
Posted February 9, 2010 at 11:46:44 AM
Alessandra
I just saw your article! Excellent. This after having just finished replying to a series of attacks on a blog where I said the same thing: how unmistakeably clear the hatred from pro-homosexuals is towards social conservatives and Christians.
Of course, I was treated as a loony and accused of not basing my observations on reality. Just a cursory reading of the liberal blogsphere shows that liberals express venom and epithets towards social conservatives in tall orders.
http://onlineathens.com/stories/020910/let_560249768.shtml#mdw-comments
Posted February 9, 2010 at 1:10:53 PM
Colorado Pete
Back in the mid '90's, the news came out that Charleton Heston was elected president of the NRA. Within about 3 days Frank Rich had an appalling hatchet job on Heston published. No argument, no point, just a ranting, raving, mouth-foaming sheet of continuous insult which told nothing about Mr. Heston but everything about Mr. Rich.
Posted February 10, 2010 at 8:59:47 PM