Posted on 05/15/2006 5:36:17 AM PDT by Quilla
One of the Lefts great agonies and frustrations of the past fifteen years has been its abortive quest to field a counterpart to Rush Limbaugh. Fully cognizant of the massive damage inflicted on it by talk radio, a number of contenders placed bids to mount a counterattack. To their bitter dismay, they all came to grief despite the great hype and hope that surrounded each successive attempt.
A decade and a half worth of feverish effort thus produced no headway, not even a single nationally viable liberal host. With nothing to show for, the time has surely come to ask the obvious question: Why?
Why have liberals failed to make any inroads in talk radio? And why has their failure been so complete?
It surely cannot be due to a lack of trying or will, since they have done everything they could to prop up their hopefuls, even to the point of raising donations in this consummately commercial medium. All to no avail.
But rather than to reevaluate their obviously failing approach, they stubbornly carry on in the same way with predicable results. Again and again they run headlong into the same wall, each crash more pathetic and embarrassing than the one before. So bad things have gotten that most recently they placed their bets on Al Sharpton, hoping that the kooky reverend would carry their water on national airways. A futile dream if there ever were one. Rather than pursuing vain hopes, liberals would do much better to take a pause and search for the root cause of their fiasco.
Any such effort would have to begin with a hard look at the format in which they are trying to succeed.
In the type of political talk show invented by Rush Limbaugh, the host openly takes an ideological stance (conservative or liberal) and then applies it to the issues of the day during his hours on the air. What this in effect amounts to is in-depth analysis of current affairs from a specific political point of view.
The key to success in this kind of enterprise is the hosts ability to articulate his positions in a logical and cogent manner. This is because most people will not listen for very long to an analysis-driven program if the analysis itself does not make rational sense.
And this is precisely where the crux of liberals problem lies. They are simply not able to explain and defend their views in rational fashion. This is not at all surprising, for how does one justify high taxes, gay marriage, abortion, multiculturalism and such? They are all based on false premises and they all produce disastrous outcomes. Anything more than a superficial examination must reveals them for the frauds and failures that they in truth are. This is why liberalism cannot withstand the analytical vigor of talk radio and why it has failed so abysmally in it.
Talk radio has thus exposed in a striking way a fatal flaw at the very heart of liberalism its indefensibility by rational argument. Without having yet grasped it, it is the mediums format that became liberals stumbling block.
However abysmal their current predicament may be, the future holds bleaker prospects still. Most liberals do not yet realize that they will never be able to succeed in talk radio. To make it there at least in the form in which it is currently practiced requires that hosts do something which liberals simply cant: logically and rationally expound their views. To make matters even more desperate there is nothing they can do about it short of abandoning their untenable ideology. In popular parlance, they are cooked completely and utterly cooked.
Things used to be infinitely more palatable (for liberals) when the television talk show was the main forum for the mass dissemination of political opinion. Its relatively short broadcast time rarely more than fifty minutes is usually intensely contested by several guests. As a result of severe time constraints, the discussants rarely speak for more than a couple of minutes at a time. This, of course, makes any serious analysis all but impossible. This problem is made all the more acute by the fact that the guests statements are routinely intended to rebuff points made by their opponents which themselves are often quite irrelevant to the topic under consideration.
This format is just fine with liberals who knowing instinctively that their positions cannot withstand thorough scrutiny are always happy to avoid in-depth discussion of anything. Conservatives, on the other hand, are badly disadvantaged in this kind of environment. Conservatism requires methodical exposition, quite unlike liberalism which can only survive in the realm of disjointed statements and unsupported assertions. The television talk show is thus liberalisms perfect vehicle. Often nothing more than a scattered clash of personalities, it is normally dominated by those with the biggest mouth. And since liberals have almost a complete grip on television, they make sure that the biggest mouths on their programs come from their own camp.
But things changed dramatically with the advent of Rush Limbaugh, when the program format he made commonplace became the first ever forum in the mass-media that allowed for the systematic analysis of issues. Nowhere indeed are things discussed more deeply and thoroughly than in talk radio where not infrequently the whole show revolves around two or three subjects. The level of analysis is further deepened by the input from callers who enrich the discussion with their unique input and perspective.
And then, of course, there are those who disagree and openly challenge the hosts positions. To retain his audiences trust he must be able to deal with their objections in an honest and fair manner. Woe be to the host who keeps dismissing those who oppose him without properly addressing the points they raise. Sooner or later he will be abandoned by all except the most narrow-minded in his audience. No one understands this better than Rush Limbaugh who accords those who contradict him the time and courtesy which go far beyond the bounds of common politeness.
Unable to face the unsavory truth, liberals charge that Mr. Limbaugh owes his success to his showmanship and that their failure to compete is due to their inability to field an equally talented performer. But this surely is not the case. Success in talk radio is not contingent on the hosts ability to be funny. There have been a number of other conservatives who succeeded in this medium without possessing Mr. Limbaughs flair for entertaining. Sean Hannity, Michael Reagan and Oliver North immediately come to mind. Funny or not, not a single liberal talk show host has come even close to matching their level of success.
The most acute observer of the American scene, it is his intelligence, penetration, and grasp of issues that primarily account for Rush Limbaughs success. His sparkling humor is merely the icing on the sumptuous cake of analysis he serves up on a daily basis. To liberals, however, it does not taste as delicious and understandably so. To them his wit feels more like a stinging petard in their rear regions as they lie prostrate in the ruins of their ideology brought down by the power of his analytical firestorm.
Buckley's Firing Line was on NPR. If my memory serves me.
He was way above the heads of most Americans. And not entertaining unless you could appreciate his dry wit.
But Rush is unique. I doubt a Sean Hannity could have pulled it off.
BTW. Rush claims Buckley as his mentor during his intellectually formative years.
Well, I ain't William Saffire, and I have a feeling he probably won't see this--LOL!
Yes it's easy to make fun of liberals and their pretentions, as Rush skillfully does, because they're so irrational. The point of the article.
It is natural to claim objectivity if you can get away with it. Conservatives would do so if they dominated journalism.I disagree. Conservatives like Rush don't claim objectivity. What they do claim and insist upon, I might add, is rationality.
That's the essence of the article. A conservative argument is more rational than a liberal argument. Hence Rush's success in a format that demonstrates rationality and exposes irrationality.
I absolutely agree that a conservative argument is more rational, more modest and less arrogant and emotional than an anticonservative argument. But the point I was making is that it is natural for anyone who has never been subjected to contrary arguments to assume that their own beliefs are objective. Liberals have been in the position of being able to discount conservative ideas because their circular arguments are buttressed by a mutual admiration society of journalists assuring liberals that anticonservative news is "objective" and whatever happens to reinforce conservative beliefs "isn't news."Conservatives who heard that propaganda have had to sharpen their arguments and drop any which they cannot back up with logic. Conservatives would like to think and declare that they are objective, it's a natural subject human perspective. But they have known for half a century or more that the possibility of arguing from that premise is not available to them.
Maybe its me but I don't see this as a message; just an attitude. Anyone who doesn't see the USA as being the fault in the World is a fool. The only way to rectify the problems of the World is through liberal ascension. No plan, no ideas, just 'trust us'.
Sorry, but that is not a message to me, only a hype. That's been my point. The DimocRats have not been 'on message' for years because they really have no message to give.
Yes, like the bumper stickers you folks posted. They "think" in bumper stickers and speak in bumper stickers.
But bumper stickers serve another purpose also. I'm not an expert on cults, but I've read a bit about them and it seems cults all have little mantras they are taught to repeat when challenged.
This is "lalalalala I can't hear you lalalala..." to block out thoughts and questions dangerous to the "teachings", and at the same time it reinforces the "teachings". IOW a form of mind control by dulling and robotizing the mind and focusing it only on the "teachings".
I don't think it's a coincidence that the death cult requires 5 interruptions in every day wherever its followers may be in order to repeat their mantras and keep the cultists in line. Maybe that's why the liberals seem to feel so much empathy for what should be an enemy.
Oh, so true!
I think their main problem is that the more they brodcast their agenda the more it sounds like Coast to Coast with Art Bell.
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