Private derision and other thought crimes

Not often do I see my darker and more paranoid speculations confirmed in the MSM, but today is an exception.

First, I'll repeat my darker speculations from last Tuesday:

....(Others would argue that George Bush himself is sick of the very people he's deliberately manipulated to believe he's one of; I heard Howard Dean say precisely that!)

But politics is about compromise, and many Republicans have compromised with the "religious right." Hell, I've compromised my worthless principles every time I've voted for a Republican who supported the evil "Drug war," so what the hell is the big effing deal with the religious so-called right? I figure maybe if they don't want to kill me, why should I want to kill them? (Especially when millions and millions want to kill us!)

An AP story in today's Inquirer quotes a former Bush aide who complained about private derision in the White House:
WASHINGTON - A former aide to President Bush contends that evangelical Christians were embraced for political gain at the White House but derided privately as "nuts," "ridiculous" and "goofy."

The allegations - denied by the White House on Friday - are in a new book by David Kuo, a conservative Christian who was deputy director of Bush's Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives until 2003.

The book describes Kuo's frustration at what he felt was lackluster enthusiasm in the White House for the program, which seeks to steer more federal social-service contracts to religious organizations. Details from the book, Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political Seduction, were reported by MSNBC ahead of tomorrow's publication date.

Kuo singled out staffers in the office of Karl Rove, Bush's top political adviser, as particularly condescending toward evangelical Christians, viewing them as necessary to help win elections but ridiculing them behind the scenes.

Kuo also described how officials from the faith-based office were dispatched to hold large events in areas where there were key House and Senate races before the 2002 elections.

This is not to say that Kuo is right, or Howard Dean (whom I heard accuse Bush of scornfulness towards the RR). It may be another last minute, pre-election attempt to make sure as many religious conservatives stay home as possible.

As to the "nuts, ridiculous, and goofy" business, as a libertarian I'm quite used to it. It's politics.

What ought to matter are not private attitudes, but areas of common agreement.

I know I'm a compromiser, but I once tried to sum up (in admittedly blunt language) one way we might be able to get along:

"You have a constitutional right to be sickened by anything and everything which sickens you. Just don't get mad at me for not puking."
I think it's fair to say that being nauseated by something or someone is a personal and emotional experience. Because of the social graces, we generally keep these things to ourselves as private thoughts.

Of course, it's easy for me to argue that my private thoughts are irrelevant, and that I have every right to deride or praise anything I want in private. Other people, I would argue, have a similar right to their private derision. I think this goes to the essence of freedom of thought.

The reason it's easy for me to say this is because I'm not running for office and have no interest in doing so. Does that mean there's a double standard under which only private citizens are free to express private thoughts (and only as long as they realize that voicing such thoughts may bar them from ever holding public office)?

If their private thoughts are public business, I actually feel sorry for politicians.

Imagine living in a world where dishonesty is mandatory, 24 hours a day.

posted by Eric on 10.15.06 at 08:10 AM





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Comments

Imagine living in a world where dishonesty is mandatory, 24 hours a day.

You mean like Japan?

[hiding from Sean]

Mrs. du Toit   ·  October 15, 2006 09:17 AM

I'm not an expert on the extent to which private expressions of thought are tolerated in Japan, and of course I can't speak for Sean...

:)

However, I do think that in this country, people are losing the distinction between public and private -- to the detriment of privacy and maybe even freedom.

Eric Scheie   ·  October 15, 2006 10:25 AM

Ah, I've heard of this too. In garbled fashion.

The Bush-basher who told me this didn't know Kuo's name but did know it was someone whom we Righties should all recognise. The only Christian advisor from the pre-2003 period whom I recall is Olasky, so I floated that name; the Bush-basher agreed that it was, in fact, Olasky who'd written this book. The Bush-baster also claimed it was Bush himself who was doing the sneering.

Facts are important to Bush-haters, as you can see. They're reality based.

Now please allow me to make my own deductions.

This story isn't about to gain traction among the Religious Right. It's just another ego-stroker for Bush haters, one more factoid to bolster them in their conviction that Bush is Cynical and Evil.

David Ross   ·  October 16, 2006 12:09 AM

Here's one of my basic rules of life: I don't care whether people talk bad about me behind my back. Just be civil (or, better yet, nice) to me to my face.

And that's the way it should be in politics. I'd rather have my interests mocked and scorned privately -- and be triumphant in the public sphere -- than be given total respect in private, but be never pushed to victory in public.

Who gives a flying fig what the Bush Administration's private thoughts are. Do they do what I want them to do more often than the alternative would? If yes: who cares that they mock me (with derision!) in private. If no: who cares that they mock me (still with derision) in private.

Rhodium Heart   ·  October 16, 2006 02:28 AM

"You mean like Japan?

[hiding from Sean]"

Just you wait, sugar plum--you haven't seen the half of it. American friends who visit me here are always floored to see my usual relaxed, cocky Mid-Atlantic artfag demeanor shift into taut, beaming, insincere politeness when dealing with a certain kind of Japanese person in public. Apparently, it's very entertaining.

Anyway, regarding the situation at hand, it strikes me as entirely possible that the derision in question wasn't directed at Evangelical Christians en masse but at their self-appointed political activists. Washington power-playing brings out the shrill worst in true believers of just about every stripe, after all, and White House staffers could conceivably get sick of having to humor them without having any ill-will toward the ordinary people they're supposed to be representing.

Sean Kinsell   ·  October 17, 2006 09:35 AM


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