Will someone tell Gore to donate all the millions his family has made from Occidental Petroleum? You know that evil black liquid that causes wars? And destroys the environment? I won't hold my breath. What a friggen' moron he is.
newsbuster.org; Posted by Mark Finkelstein on September 29, 2006 - 06:54.
Rejection is painful. Spurned suitors often-if-contradictorily condemn the very object of their affection, while reserving a good measure of bile for their successful rivals. Democrats have suffered lots of unrequited political desire in recent years, and the strain is really starting to show. We all know about Bush Derangement Syndrome. Yesterday I described a new strain, Gas Price Derangement Syndrome, and mentioned an even more insidious disease afflicting many on the left - Controlled Demolition Dementia.
Today comes more evidence of the left's painful struggle to deal with its diminished standing and repeated rejection at the polls. In the subscription-required Why Voters Like Values, Times columnist Judith Warner claims that "the Christian right's ability to stir voter passions is based not on values, but on psychology." Warner describes having bravely gone inside the belly of the conservative beast, recently attending a Values Voters Summit in DC, and declaring it "imbued with so much intolerance and hate." This is presumably in contrast with liberal love-ins at Daily Kos, Moveon, etc., where Bush & Co. are regularly depicted as liars, murderers, Hitlers, etc.
She later describes a schadenfreude-provoking scene of the day after Kerry's 2004 defeat, picking through the rubble with Harvard psychology professor emeritus, Jerome Kagan, who tried to console Warner and presumably himself. As she describes it:
"Our conversation drifted to the Republicans 'values' [note scare quotes] agenda, and Kagans belief that values sell because theyre an antidote to the endemic mental health problem of our time: depression.
"'Humans demand that there be a clear right and wrong,' he said. 'Youve got to believe that the track youve taken is the right track. You get depressed if youre not certain as to what it is youre supposed to be doing or whats right and wrong in the world.
"People need to divide the world into good and evil, us and them, Kagan continued. To do otherwise to entertain the possibility that life is not black and white, but variously shaded in gray is perhaps more honest, rational and decent. But its also, psychically, a recipe for disaster."
Got it? While liberalism is "more honest, rational and decent" than conservatism, it's sadly just not what the benighted public wants. They're looking for political Prozac, a Manichean worldview they can cling to, and that's what conservatism cunningly offers.
Warner accuses the right of engaging in "witch-hunting, puritanical intolerance and hatred." She explains this by asserting "people will engage in all kinds of mental acrobatics to stave off depression." Too true. Warner is surely familiar with another term from the world of psychology. It's called "projection."