NYTimes v. "Bigoted Christian Rednecks"

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fedlaw

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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A44082-2004Nov11.html

'Moral Values' Myth

By Charles Krauthammer

Friday, November 12, 2004; Page A25


In 1994, when the Gingrich revolution swept Republicans into power, ending 40 years of Democratic hegemony in the House, the mainstream press needed to account for this inversion of the Perfect Order of Things. A myth was born. Explained the USA Today headline: "ANGRY WHITE MEN: Their votes turn the tide for GOP."

Overnight, the revolution of the Angry White Male became conventional wisdom. In the 10 years before the 1994 election there were 56 mentions of angry white men in the media, according to LexisNexis. In the next seven months there were more than 1,400.

At the time, I looked into this story line -- and found not a scintilla of evidence to support the claim. Nonetheless, it was a necessary invention, a way for the liberal elite to delegitimize a conservative victory. And, even better, a way to assuage their moral vanity: You never lose because your ideas are sclerotic or your positions retrograde, but because your opponent appealed to the baser instincts of mankind.

Plus ca change ... Ten years and another stunning Democratic defeat later, and liberals are at it again. The Angry White Male has been transmuted into the Bigoted Christian Redneck.

In the post-election analyses, the liberal elite, led by the holy trinity of the New York Times -- Paul Krugman, Thomas Friedman and Maureen Dowd -- just about lost its mind denouncing the return of medieval primitivism. As usual, Dowd achieved the highest level of hysteria, cursing the Republicans for pandering to "isolationism, nativism, chauvinism, puritanism and religious fanaticism" in their unfailing drive to "summon our nasty devils."

Whence comes this fable? With President Bush increasing his share of the vote among Hispanics, Jews, women (especially married women), Catholics, seniors and even African Americans, on what does this victory-of-the-homophobic-evangelical voter rest?

Its origins lie in a single question in the Election Day exit poll. The urban myth grew around the fact that "moral values" ranked highest in the answer to Question J: "Which ONE issue mattered most in deciding how you voted for president?"

It is a thin reed upon which to base a General Theory of the '04 Election. In fact, it is no reed at all. The way the question was set up, moral values were sure to be ranked disproportionately high. Why? Because it was a multiple-choice question, and moral values cover a group of issues, while all the other choices were individual issues. Chop up the alternatives finely enough, and moral values are sure to get a bare plurality over the others.

Look at the choices:

• Education, 4 percent.

• Taxes, 5 percent.

• Health Care, 8 percent.

• Iraq, 15 percent.

• Terrorism, 19 percent.

• Economy and Jobs, 20 percent.

• Moral Values, 22 percent.

"Moral values" encompass abortion, gay marriage, Hollywood's influence, the general coarsening of the culture and, for some, the morality of preemptive war. The way to logically pit this class of issues against the others would be to pit it against other classes: "war issues" or "foreign policy issues" (Iraq plus terrorism) and "economic issues" (jobs, taxes, health care, etc).

If you pit group against group, the moral values class comes in dead last: war issues at 34 percent, economic issues variously described at 33 percent and moral values at 22 percent -- i.e., they are at least a third less salient than the others.

And we know that this is the real ranking. After all, the exit poll is just a single poll. We had dozens of polls in the run-up to the election that showed that the chief concerns were the war on terrorism, the war in Iraq and the economy.

Ah, yes. But the fallback is then to attribute Bush's victory to the gay marriage referendums that pushed Bush over the top, particularly in Ohio.

This is more nonsense. George Bush increased his vote in 2004 over 2000 by an average of 3.1 percent nationwide. In Ohio the increase was 1 percent -- less than a third of the national average. In the 11 states in which the gay marriage referendums were held, Bush increased his vote by less than he did in the 39 states that did not have the referendum. The great anti-gay surge was pure fiction.

This does not deter the myth of the Bigoted Christian Redneck from dominating the thinking of liberals and infecting the blue-state media. They need their moral superiority like oxygen, and they cannot have it cut off by mere facts. Once again they angrily claim the moral high ground, while standing in the ruins of yet another humiliating electoral defeat.

[email protected]




© 2004 The Washington Post Company
 
bbaerst said:
How's that?

Because many liberals are very stubborn when it comes to their own moral and intellectual superiority. They remain steadfast about how they're always in the right and Bush only won because he had the support of America's "dumb@$$ redneck hicks". A lot of them especially like to throw around "ignorant" and "racist".
 
They need their moral superiority like oxygen, and they cannot have it cut off by mere facts. Once again they angrily claim the moral high ground, while standing in the ruins of yet another humiliating electoral defeat.

The leftist extremists' vaunted "moral superiority" is moral and intellectual parasitism. Their claims of the moral high ground are plain, simple, unadulterated, old-fashioned lies.

I believe Bush won the presidential election of 2004 because that Kerry creature was repugnant to real Americans.
 
ZeroX said:
I find it ironic that he lectures the right on moral superiority. :rolleyes:
I think you misread the article. Krauthammer isn't lecturing the right. He's criticizing the left.
ZeroX said:
Because many liberals are very stubborn when it comes to their own moral and intellectual superiority. They remain steadfast about how they're always in the right and Bush only won because he had the support of America's "dumb@$$ redneck hicks". A lot of them especially like to throw around "ignorant" and "racist".
That's Krauthammer's point. You agree with the article.
 
I believe Bush won the presidential election of 2004 because that Kerry creature was repugnant to real Americans.

That's pretty close. Let's say you went to vote on Nov 2 and the "main reason" you were voting for Bush was that you thought Kerry was a fraud. You thought his whole campaign was just a series of lies and you were sick of it. Then you got to take that exit poll that was given above. What do you choose? It wouldn't be terrorism or taxes, etc. But there isn't a choice for "Kerry is a liar and would be a terrible President." So you pick "moral values." And, just like the article says, the press then screams that it was a bunch of "right wing Christians" that defeated Kerry.

And I totally agree with the article that it is amazing that we had hundreds and hundreds of polls before the election asking people what was important to them but that one series of exit polls and "moral values" is about all that ever gets mentioned!

Gregg
 
I guess I'll have to be a bigoted "lapsed pagan" redneck... ;)
The wife must be the ignorant,bigoted christian redneck then...course,her PHD in Geophysics might make the "ignorant" charge hard to prove. :D
 
Bigoted Christian Redneck

The more the left tosses around that phrase (or one like it), the less I'll be to EVER vote for them. I MUST be bigoted, if I don't believe in changing something that has been that way for thousands of years. According to some, the mere fact that I am somewhat religious should be enough to keep me from voting. And redneck, well, I guess one out of three isn't too bad :p.

I hope the right remember the mudslinging going on right now about three and a half years down the road.
 
[devil's advocate]
Of course this theory is based in Carl Rove's stated -- and successful --strategy to increase the votes from evangelical protestants, so the left didn't pluck the idea it out of thin air.
[/devil's advocate]

It may indeed be true that evangelical protestants tipped the balance in Bush's favor. The problem is not in the theory, but it the bigoted reaction to this group.

OTOH, Rove increased the numbers of many other groups, so the focus on EP's might indeed be an exercise in parsing to get the result you want. You could just as well focus on the increased numbers of Hispanics or women (as Krauthammer notes)
 
El Tejon is absolutely right (again).

These dingbats are so mad and upset they have droped all pretense and are revealing their true selves. May they sputter long and loudly. So long as they keep it up we'll keep winning elections.

We always knew what they were. Now they're saying it too. :cuss: :D :D
 
Tulsamal nailed it. There was no category in the exit polls for those of us who thought Kerry stunk as a human being. So we get lumped in with whatever nefarious category of morally upright people the left chooses to single out. Krauthammer (God, what a name! :) ) called it right.

TC
TFL Survivor
 
All one had to do to be labeled a moralist voter was vote for the Republican. I think that's wrong. The GOP has many layers, and conservative does not necessarily mean injecting religion into government. Both major parties have serious problems with insincere pandering to voter segments that apparently have no idea what the party's core philosophy really is.

The election reminded me of PBS fund raising campaigns when populist forms of entertainment are showcased yet are never featured at any other time. When the campaign is over, it is strictly back to business with high-toned programming,and campaign material is put back in moth balls.
 
What I find amusing about this discussion is that politicians have no "morals". Every election, they stir up this great big debate about morals to get voters fired up, while in the back rooms it's bipartisan business as usual, doing what the money men tell them.
 
Of course this theory is based in Carl Rove's stated -- and successful --strategy to increase the votes from evangelical protestants, so the left didn't pluck the idea it out of thin air.

So the left are just mad that the group they tried to rally to support THEM turned out in smaller numbers then the 'bible right'.
 
David Scott said:
What I find amusing about this discussion is that politicians have no "morals". Every election, they stir up this great big debate about morals to get voters fired up, while in the back rooms it's bipartisan business as usual, doing what the money men tell them.

It's fun to be cynical, but some of the actual individuals involved probably deserve more credit than that.
 
Skunkabilly said:
Can I be one too??? :D

As far as the left is concerned, you are one already. Now you just need a t-shirt with something to that effect on the front...get a lot of turned heads I bet :D
 
This is not a pro-left article. The article's author is pointing out that "leftists" are making up excuses for Bush's win out of intellectual dishonesty. He's contending that Bush won because of the basic leftist failures of the Democratic party instead of accepting that their core philosophies are wrong. They’re blaming "someone" else for their bruising. In high school this would be a sophomore debate red herring and the NY Times, and those parroting them, are using this new myth of the “Bigoted Christian Redneck†to distract from the fact that their preferred candidate lost due to a majority of American's dissatisfaction with elitist snobbery and leftists policies.
 
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