James Wolcott, author of Attack Poodles:
Nils Bohr, I believe, once said of quantum physics that if you think you comprehend it, you don't understand it. I believe that if you think it's possible to be a decent person and support the current Republican party, you don't understand what you're supporting.
Now at this point a certain type of liberal will quote Joseph Welch's famous question to Joe McCarthy at the Army-McCarthy hearings of 1954, "Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?"
Liberals of a certain age love quoting that stirring heroic retort. When Anthony Lewis was a Times columnist, he used to quote it every other week it seemed, and I saw Richard Cohen pull a Joseph Welch a few columns ago.
But I won't. The question is no longer worth raising, even rhetorically. Because we know the answer.
They have no decency. Not a sliver, not a shred. Look at how Max Cleland has been treated, look at how George Soros has been smeared as some sort of Jewish intriguer who oozed his way out of Nazi Germany by Tony Blankley* and a drug kingpin by Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert, look at--oh, we know what the examples are.
. . . .
Do you really think that Rush and Newt and Dick Cheney and the rest of them regret that they didn't serve in Vietnam, that they didn't do their part for a war they supported and whose cause they still think was just? . . .
They have no conscience, they have no decency, so let's stop fake-pretending that they do.
Nils Bohr, I believe, once said of quantum physics that if you think you comprehend it, you don't understand it. I believe that if you think it's possible to be a decent person and support the current Republican party, you don't understand what you're supporting.
Woody Allen Said in "Radio Days"
Date: 2004-09-21 06:29 am (UTC)I think the problem lies in the passage of time.
For those of us close enough to remember the events of the "McCarthy Era" and the Viet Nam "Police Action" the past grows dimmer and dimmer.
The great majority of Americans have no interest in history.
Frankly, they don't even scream that "It Can't happen here!" because most of them don't even understand the concept.
Re: Woody Allen Said in "Radio Days"
Date: 2004-09-21 03:50 pm (UTC)I am younger than the McCarthy era by more than a bit, and too young to remember Vietnam.
But I have always, always known that it could happen here, and that it would happen because decent people would not believe they were seeing the beginnings.