The McCain campaign has been whining about the supposedly vicious smears being directed at Sarah Palin by liberals -- and of course, has been roundly knocked down for it, since it's a classic strawman argument. (The Web ad they made whining about Obama's "lipstick on a pig" remark was so thoroughly eviscerated that it's been taken down from YouTube.) Indeed, it's clear that much of the reason McCain chose her was so that they could reignite the culture wars by making an inviting target of Palin, and then making her an object of soccer-mom sympathy.
But it's funny: Palin hasn't objected to vicious, personal and profoundly sexist political attacks ... when they've been directed against her political opponents.
Lou Dobbs pays us a nightly visit from up-is-down Planet Bizarro in his weekday show. But this week, his special Bizarro launching pad is the "Hold Their Feet to the Fire" anti-immigrant lobbying push -- you know, the one sponsored by a hate group.
DOBBS: Absolutely. And you're to be commended. The Federation for American Immigration Reform is to be commended. I know that you and I, our fellow radio talk show hosts, all of us who have been involved at the forefront of this issue for years now have taken a lot of heat. We have been called racists, xenophobes, all sorts of nastiness from groups that -- like the Southern Poverty Law Center, which has become a hate group of its own, referring to FAIR as a hate group simply because they want illegal immigration stopped and border security, port security put in place. How are you being received now?
Actually, if all FAIR wanted was "illegal immigration stopped and border security put in place," no one would object, particularly not the SPLC, which takes no position on either of those issues.
What the SPLC cares about is the xenophobic demonization of immigrants, particularly Latino immigrants, in no small part because that kind of scapegoating serves as a major recruitment tool for hate groups that inflict violence on minorities. Watchdogging that part of the scenery is pretty much the SPLC's deal -- and FAIR has indulged it so egregiously that they've earned the bona-fide hate group distinction.
How do you earn a "hate group" distinction? The SPLC's criteria is fairly simple: You have to be involved in the routine degradation and demonization of a target ethnic or other minority group: "All hate groups have beliefs or practices that attack or malign an entire class of people, typically for their immutable characteristics."
How do we know that FAIR does this? Well, there are all the examples cited in the America's Voice ad, for starters. But we need actually look no farther than the reply to Dobbs given by FAIR's spokesman, former San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock:
HEDGECOCK: Well nationally, we both run up against this. And I'll tell you, it's a measure of our effectiveness. It's a measure of the unhappiness of the average American. The pragmatic middle of the road, problem solving, can-do American who has had it with the impacts of illegal immigration in their community.
The deteriorating schools, the filling prisons, the social costs, all the horrible stories that you know we have all talked about, and so I -- you know I wear the badge of their -- of their lies about us as an honor because it is an honor to see how much we are troubling these people who are enemies of sovereignty, who are enemies of our country, who want to open borders to the most -- in a national security moment, an open border is an invitation to suicide.
That's right, Lou -- because, as you know, these immigrants are bringing filth and disease and crime, lots and lots of crime with them. And terrorists too. No matter how many studies tell us that the case is otherwise, we just know these things to be true because, well, we want them to be.
Now how could anyone think these good folks are a bunch of racists? Jeeez.
So it seems Sarah Palin – or at least one of her speechwriters – has been reading Westbrook Pegler. Here’s the Pegler quote she recited in her now Teh Awesomest Acceptance Speech Evah!
A writer observed: "We grow good people in our small towns, with honesty, sincerity, and dignity." I know just the kind of people that writer had in mind when he praised Harry Truman.
As TPM notes, another of that same writer’s observations:
[It was] "regrettable that Giuseppe Zangara hit the wrong man when he shot at Roosevelt in Miami."
[It is] "clearly the bounden duty of all intelligent Americans to proclaim and practice bigotry." (November 1963)
[His proposal for "smashing" the AF of L and the CIO was for the state to take them over.] "Yes, that would be fascism," he wrote. "But I, who detest fascism, see advantages in such fascism."
"I am a member of the rabble in good standing" [in a column that defended a lynching in California]
Oh, and Harry Truman, the president he supposedly was extolling? Pegler called him a “thin-lipped hater”.
That’s some fine political mentoring Palin has going on there, dontcha think?
For years, the Federation for American Immigration Reform has gotten
away with posing as a mainstream immigration-reform organization. The
mask has finally started to slip off the façade, thanks in no small part
to the Southern Poverty Law Center’s devastating report on FAIR last year in which it was finally designated what we’ve known it to be all along: a hate group.
One of the main events involved in FAIR’s charade has been its annual “Hold Their Feet to the Fire”
gathering of lobbyists, who then descend up on congressmen and
legislators and their staffers to push their decidedly xenophobic brand
of immigration “reform.” This year, CNN’s Lou Dobbs is even broadcasting from the event.
Well, turnabout is only, er, fair play. So this year, organizations
seeking progressive immigration reform are holding FAIR’s feet to the
fire – along with all the lobbyists and talk-show hosts participating.
They’re running an ad campaign
pointing out FAIR’s long history of indulging and promoting a frankly
xenophobic and frequently outright racist campaign against immigrants.
The ad, paid for by America’s Voice and
the Service Employees International Union, among others, asks, "When Did
Extreme Become Mainstream?" And it notes FAIR has been "designated as a
HATE GROUP by the Southern Poverty Law Center."
The ad includes three racially explosive quotes; one from John
Tanton, founder of FAIR, saying, "As whites see their power and control
over their lives declining, will they simply go quietly into the night?
Or will there be an explosion?" FAIR president Dan Stein is quoted
saying, "Should we subsidizing people with low IQs to have as many
children as possible?" Another quote in the ad, attributed to former
Colorado governor Richard Lamm, a former FAIR advisory board chairman,
says: "New cultures [in the U.S. are] diluting what we are and who we
are."
Does anyone want to wager on whether Dobbs will mention the SPLC’s
hate-group designation? Or whether, if he does, he’ll dismiss them again
as an “open borders advocacy group” – even though the SPLC in fact has
never taken any position on either border security or immigration policy
generally?
UPDATE: FAIR responds:
WASHINGTON, Sept 09, 2008
/PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ — Having been unable to convince the
American public that a mass illegal alien amnesty was justified or
served any public interest, advocates for amnesty have launched an
orchestrated and well-financed campaign to smear the Federation for
American Immigration Reform (FAIR) and others involved in defeating last
year’s immigration bill. Using full-page ads in today’s editions of The
Politico and Roll Call, this coalition of special interest groups uses
inflammatory language and stock photos of individuals who have no
association with FAIR to incite hatred against anyone who has the
audacity to oppose their views on immigration policy. The tone and
content of these ads demonstrates that their strategy to silence
proponents of immigration reform has resulted in the ugliest and most
negative public relations campaign in the history of American politics.
Instead of seeking to promote rational, intelligent, meaningful
dialogue on immigration reform, one of the most important issues facing
our nation today, the ad utterly distorts FAIR’s 30-year record of
advocacy on immigration reform and merely parrots previous distortions.
La Raza has claimed that one in seven Americans (which equals 45 million
people) are members of hate or extremist groups. In fact, considering
how many Americans oppose amnesty and support the enforcement of our
immigration laws, this coalition might want to consider whether they
wouldn’t simply save themselves time and money and simply call the
American public in whole a hate group.
The ad’s sponsors have also forgotten to disclose their own political
and economic interests in the immigration debate. Each of the
organizations responsible for placing the ads invested heavily in failed
lobbying efforts to pass the 2007 Senate amnesty bill. In the first
half of 2007, America’s Voice alone spent $420,000; the National Council
of La Raza spent $340,000. During the whole of 2007, SEIU spent over
half a million dollars lobbying Congress on immigration and other
issues.
In contrast to today’s ads that employ vitriolic language and images,
any earnest attempt to investigate FAIR will reveal 30 years of
consistent advocacy for changes to our legal and illegal immigration
policies that make the interests of the American people paramount, not
an afterthought. FAIR supports overall reductions in immigration levels
in order to avert massive U.S. population growth. We seek to protect
American workers against the erosion of the jobs and wages due to
policies that flood our labor markets. We oppose immigration policies
that strain vital public services, such as education and health care.
FAIR favors securing unguarded borders that are an open invitation not
only to illegal workers, but to criminals and terrorists. FAIR has
testified before Congress on these issues about 100 times over the years
and has been a source of information, analysis and commentary to every
major newspaper and media outlet in the United States.
FAIR’s record is equally consistent with regard to how this nation
should treat immigrants. Unlike our critics who seek to blur important
distinctions, FAIR distinguishes clearly between immigration policy –
which can and should be debated like any other public policy – and
immigrants who deserve to be treated with respect and dignity. We
believe that immigrants to our country should be admitted based on their
individual merits, without regard to race, religion, ethnicity, or
country of origin, and should be welcomed and integrated into the
mainstream of American society. Finally, FAIR is one of only 155
charities nationwide – and the only immigration-related nonprofit – to
be accredited by the Better Business Bureau’s Wise Giving Alliance.
Does this ugly ad campaign reflect the tone of change we are to
expect from the new wave of political operatives we can expect to
descend on Washington at the end of this year? After all, isn’t a change
from the nasty, divisive rhetoric of Washington what the American
public is demanding? If it is, the state of public discourse in the U.S.
truly is at a new low. FAIR stands by its record and we call upon all
Americans to reject the blatant attempt on the part of a small coalition
of radical organizations to halt meaningful debate about one of the
most important public policy issues of our time.
Notice what’s missing: Any mention of the actual facts in the
article. The only thing that’s "ugly" is the very real quotes from FAIR
leaders and officials. Moreover, its listing as a hate group by the SPLC
— which is not, by any stretch of the imagination, a "radical
organization" — goes utterly unmentioned.
Memo to FAIR: It isn’t a "smear" by definition if everything that’s said is true.