Once again it is important that as many people as possible see this article that was published yesterday in the NY Times. It is reprinted here, without permission, in its entirety.
The G.O.P. Fact
Vacuum
By CHARLES M. BLOW
Published: August
31, 2012
Honesty is a lost
art. Facts are for losers. The truth is dead.
Pick one.
Whatever the term of
art, they all signal a dark turn, and, this week, the Republican Party took
that turn with reckless abandon.
Lying is certainly
nothing new in politics. One could even argue that it’s fundamental to politics.
Saying incredible things in a credible way is the art; using math of vapors to
sell dreams of smoke is the craft.
But Paul Ryan’s
acceptance speech on Wednesday took things up a notch.
Sally Kohn, a
contributor to Fox News, said:
“Ryan’s speech was
an apparent attempt to set the world record for the greatest number of blatant
lies and misrepresentations slipped into a single political speech. On this
measure, while it was Romney who ran the Olympics, Ryan earned the gold.”
Business Insider
called it “factually shaky.” A Washington Post blog called it a “breathtakingly
dishonest speech.” Salon’s Joan Walsh said the speech was “stunning for its
dishonesty” and contained “brazen lies.” Jonathan Cohn at The New Republic used
the headline: “The Most Dishonest Convention Speech ... Ever?” You get the
picture.
So much was written
about this and other Republican attempts to distort and deny the truth this
week. But I’m beginning to worry that
many Americans are growing weary of isolating the lies, coming as they did in
torrents.
The Romney campaign
seems to be banking on this fatigue and counting on The Fourth Estate being
reduced to little more than a fifth wheel in the political zeitgeist. One of
its pollsters said this week that the campaign would not be dictated by
fact-checkers.
Romney’s speech at
the convention on Thursday avoided the flat-out falseness of Ryan’s, containing
what FactCheck.org called only a “few bits of exaggeration and puffery.” The
greatest transgression Thursday night was the bizarre scene of Uncle Clint
babbling back and forth with an empty chair that contained an invisible Obama.
But Romney’s
restraint does not erase the damage already done.
Mediaite’s Tommy
Christopher looked at the fact-checking site PolitiFact’s tallies on Aug. 10
and found that:
“Mitt Romney’s
statements have been judged Mostly False, False or Pants on Fire 46 percent of
the time, versus only 29 percent for President Obama. In the Pants on Fire
category alone, Romney is more than four times as likely to suffer trouser
immolation than the president. Nearly 1 in 10 statements by Romney earned
flaming slacks, versus 1 out of every 50 for Obama.”
On Friday,
PolitiFact still had Romney’s statements as Mostly False, False or Pants on
Fire 42 percent of the time, compared with 27 percent of the time for Obama.
Propaganda is one
thing; prevarication is another.
There is some degree
of mythmaking and truth-stretching in every campaign, but the extent to which
Republicans have embraced ignobility in this campaign is astounding. They have
used their convention podium to unleash a whole lot of half-truths, so many
that fact-checkers have been working overtime. But trying to chase down every
lie is like trying to catch every bug in a log. It’s almost impossible.
If the news media
has to pour so much energy into fact-checking, which is noble and necessary, I
worry that the big picture gets short shrift. The convention itself was
shockingly low on vision and high on venom.
Yet the candidates
are virtually tied in most polls. What does this portend for the republic? I
worry deeply about this, not simply because I work at a newspaper, but because
I am an American.
If we allow our
leaders to completely abandon any semblance of honesty, what do we have left?
When rancid disinformation stands in the space where actual information should
be, what will grow?
And how can a party
that incessantly repeats the mantra that our rights were granted by God
repeatedly violate a basic tenet of almost every religion: truth-telling? What
does it mean when a party that trafficks in American greatness trades in human
horridness?
Romney long ago
demonstrated that he was willing to do anything and take any position — even if
they contradicted previous ones — to make it to the White House. And while that
may be fine for him, it shouldn’t be fine with us.
We deserve better
and should demand better. We deserve better than a weather-vane candidacy that
doesn’t care whether it’s being candid. We deserve better than a party and a
presidential aspirant so wanton that they refuse to let facts get in the way of
a fairy tale.
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