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Here's why they hate Palin so intensely

Not since Dan Quayle did the happy puppy dance at the side of the first George Bush have Democrats and their allies in the mainstream media, and the non-profit, union and academic communities gone so completely off their rockers.

Actually, this has been even worse than the reaction to Quayle. Forget merely unbiased or unfair. The hateful vitriol and ridicule that has been spewed upon Sarah Palin and her family reached execratic levels almost before the sun set on her first day as John McCain’s vice-presidential running mate. And it’s still spewing forth.

How do we explain such spittle-laden purple outrage? It’s not merely that Palin is an attractive, immensely personable, patriotic and successful conservative politician, who happens also to be the wife of one man and the mother of five kids, including a Down’s Syndrome baby.

No, vituperation of such intensity goes way beyond political calculation and straight into the realm of something closely resembling mass psychosis.

Nick Cohen, a Brit journo, noted in The Guardian that pre-Palin, the Obama campaign and the Democratic political establishment had every reason to be confident of a smashing victory in November.

But when Palin was announced, “they succumbed to a spasm of hatred and threw the vase, the crockery, the cutlery and the kitchen sink at an obscure politician from Alaska.”
And he pointed to “the post-modern theories so many of them were taught at university” to explain the reaction:

“As a Christian, conservative anti-abortionist who proved her support for the Iraq War by sending her son to fight in it, Sarah Palin was 'the other' - the threatening alien presence they defined themselves against.” And having encountered the living, breathing embodiment of their worst nightmare, “they went berserk.”

Where Cohen is especially on the mark is in identifying this phenomenon as coming from the academy of recent decades. But it didn’t originate there. Disdain for Middle America has long been a staple of left-wing prejudice, especially among the elite. Think Levittown critiques in the 1950s and the Babbitt School of Mockery established by Sinclair Lewis in 1922.

But something happened in the 1960s when the Baby Boomers were on campus to transform the prejudice from the sophisticates’ dismissive critique to a bloody impatience. We can even track this in the life of William Ayers, Obama’s buddy in the Chicago Annenberg Challenge.

As a campus prophet of the New Left in the 1960s, Ayers and others of his ilk became dissatisfied with the Students for a Democratic Society because, they believed, merely demonstrating and organizing wasn’t bringing Amerika down fast enough.

So they created the Weather Underground of the SDS and began planting and detonating bombs in public places, robbing banks and killing cops. In doing so, Ayers and his fellow travelers were giving in to the same dark urges that in their ultimate form moved Mao, Stalin and the Khmer Rouge to exterminate millions of “enemies of the revolution.”

But then in the 1970s and 1980s William Ayers - along with multitudes of other former SDSers and denizens of the 1960s New Left - cleaned up his act and became a credentialed member of the education establishment.

Why? Because bombing the Pentagon and living underground versus big salaries, fancy academic titles, classrooms stuffed with captive students and access to millions of foundation dollars for your pet projects is an easy choice.

The problem is that deep in the heart of every progressive beats the desire to remake society according to some abstraction or ideology. It always defines the present reality as some variant of the familiar oppressive-corrupt-capitalist machine that has made ignorant, alienated drones of the lower and middle classes (Such a litany has been standard fare in most classrooms on most campuses since the 1960s.)

Since he only wants to make things better and those who oppose him must by definition be profiting from the oppression he seeks to end, it is all-too-easy for the progressive to feel justified in employing even the most extreme measures to silence the opposition.

And the worst kind of opposition – the nightmare - is the surprise political star who epitomizes the oppressive ruling class and who has the potential of winning the hearts and minds of voters and thus obstructing “progress” and “change.”

That is why the intensely personal and groundless vilification of Palin was entirely predictable and will continue. Let us hope and pray she and her family are truly prepared because the worst may still be coming.

Mark Tapscott is editorial page editor of The Washington Examiner and proprietor of Tapscott’s Copy Desk blog on dcexaminer.com. This column is cross-posted at dcexaminer.com.
 

What the myrmidons of conventional wisdom just don't get about Palin

This column should be posted on dcexaminer.com early tomorrow morning. In the meantime, here's an advance posting:

Oh, this is going to be fun, watching the myrmidons of conventional wisdom getting their well-dressed derrieres kicked from one end of America to the other between now and November.

No, not Achilles and his Thessalians at Troy. I’m talking about members of America’s political class. You know the type I mean — the politically correct, mostly Ivy League moderates and liberals pronouncing ex cathedra from Boston-Los Angeles-New York-San Francisco-Washington who dominate the mainstream media, the academy and foundations, and other establishment outposts of sophisticated opinion.

These folks lecture the rest of us about how to run the country; they are keepers of the conventional wisdom. And now, as the 2008 campaign enters the stretch run, we are about to see just how very much these folks know that is nonsense.

Take, for instance, the mantra of “change.” Having nominated Barack Obama and Joe Biden, respectively, for president and vice president — both prominent members of the most unpopular Congress in living memory — the Democratic wing of the political class chants incessantly about “change we can believe in.”

Which way for liberty: Reflections on Personal Democracy Forum 2008

Great thoughts from Mark Tapscott. -Patrick

It's not often that one gets the opportunity to be among and converse with several hundred of the smartest people in the world, but that is precisely what I was able to do last week as a participant at Personal Democracy Forum 2008 at Rose Hall in New York City's Lincoln Center complex.

It was my first PDF and, despite only being able to attend the second day, it was a memorable experience because I came away with a heightened sense that we are on the cusp of profound, even revolutionary changes in government and public policy thanks to the Internet. Being a conservative, I don't use that word "revolution" lightly.

I was in fact continually reminded throughout my time at PDF of Alexander Hamilton's prophetic observation at the outset of The Federalist Papers, America's most important contribution to serious  political thought:

"It has been frequently remarked that it seems to have been reserved to the people of this country, by their conduct and example, to decide the important question, whether societies of men are really capable or not of establishing good government from reflection and choice, or whether they are forever destined to depend for their political constitutions on accident and force."

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