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Andrew Sullivan's jihad (Embarrassed by Sullivan, Salon Editor Talbot Throws a HUGE Tantrum!)
Salon ^ | October 20, 2001 | David Talbot

Posted on 10/20/2001 2:44:13 PM PDT by Timesink

News


Andrew Sullivan's jihad
Since Sept. 11, the British journalist has declared himself the mullah of the media world, sitting in judgment of American writers' patriotism.

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By David Talbot

Oct. 20, 2001 | I like and respect journalist Andrew Sullivan, though I often disagree with his opinions. I find much of what he has to say about soggy thinking on the left to be a bracing tonic -- which is why Salon has published his views, along with those of David Horowitz, Norah Vincent, Camille Paglia and other conservative or independent critics of lockstep, left-wing thought. On the few occasions I've had the pleasure of his company, I've enjoyed his wit and charm. Since the horrors of Sept. 11, however, Sullivan's voice has become a shriek, hitting an ear-piercing decibel that, whether intended or not, drives out the possibility of rational discussion.

In recent weeks, Sullivan has taken it upon himself to evaluate whether his fellow writers and commentators are sufficiently patriotic. He broods darkly -- in the pages of his native British press, on his Web site and on the Op-Ed pages of the Wall Street Journal -- that America harbors nests of traitors, or in his words "decadent left enclaves on the coasts [that] may well mount a fifth column." And like all Manichaean guardians of national security, from the days of the Alien and Sedition Acts to those of Joseph McCarthy, Sullivan has turned his pumped-up and disproportionate rhetoric toward rooting out these disloyal Americans in his midst.

On his Web site, he does not just engage antiwar writer Katha Pollitt, whose tortured ruminations in the Nation on whether to fly a flag from her New York apartment window were admittedly neurotic and absurd. He seeks to obliterate her, gloating after a lopsided debate with her on public radio that "I took no prisoners." In the church of Sullivan, those who criticize or express ambivalence about the bombing of Afghanistan are not just wrong -- they are corrupt souls who must be excommunicated from the American congregation.

Turning his gaze of moral reproach on Salon, Sullivan has branded Gary Kamiya an appeaser for proposing that it's time for Washington to put pressure on the Israelis and the Palestinians to reach a peace settlement -- even though the tough and worldly men Sullivan so ardently admires in the Bush administration began taking this very line days later. And Friday, Sullivan lashed into me for conducting an interview "on [my] knees" with Susan Sontag, in which she characterized the bin Laden terror network as implacable and deadly foes while criticizing the bombing campaign's impact on civilians. Sullivan was as incensed by Sontag's remarks as he was by my introductory comments about the efforts of Sullivan's conservative colleagues to banish her from the world of acceptable intellectual discourse. "These pampered journalists," he fumed, "who have never seen a moment of real censorship in their lives, and who have marginalized conservative voices for their entire careers in their own organs and field of influence, take the occasion of the massacre of thousands of their fellow citizens to worry about themselves -- and preen self-righteously at the same time."

Since Sullivan has unleashed the hounds of patriotic fury, I'll respond with some nationalistic zeal of my own. It's repellent to be lectured about my commitment to America, which is deep and true, by an arrogant and self-important Brit. And it's equally galling to be scolded about my supposed intolerance of conservative dissent in Salon when I have made a consistent effort to include Sullivan's own voice and that of many of his fellow conservatives in our pages. Sullivan has often fallen to his own knees before President Bush in Salon. In fact there is no political journal in the country -- on the left or right -- that publishes as eclectic a mix of opinions as we do. The same week we published the interview with Sontag, Salon ran a cover essay by her son, David Rieff, blasting the Berkeley City Council's anti-bombing resolution and the "depraved rationalizations of the American left." When Sullivan seeks ideological variety, does he eagerly reach for the latest National Review or Weekly Standard? His own site is rigorously monochromatic -- one-note blasts from the increasingly narrow confines of his own head.

Earlier this year, Sullivan was exposed by the gay press for advertising for "bareback" sex (unprotected by condoms) in an AOL chat room and denounced as a hypocrite by his liberal gay critics for engaging in risky sexual practices after attacking President Clinton for his own incautious behavior. Salon was among Sullivan's most vocal defenders, running two pieces that condemned the invasion of his sexual privacy and the political motivations behind his "outing." It wasn't FreeRepublic.com that rallied around Sullivan; those conservative "enclaves" are too busy tossing kindling on the pyres to burn the sodomites. Their latest cause is blasting the Bush administration for apologizing on behalf of the Navy crewmen who painted "hijack this, fags" on missiles headed toward Afghanistan.

Speaking of the "decadent left enclaves on the coasts," who does Sullivan think fights for his right to enjoy the sexual pleasures of his choosing? His increasingly intolerant rhetoric is an affront to the very culture that protects him. If a right-wing theocracy ever came to power in America, guess who'd be the first person whose ass would be rounded up, self-described "power glutes" and all? And guess which Web journalists would be among the first to demand his freedom?

Sullivan's Taliban style of argument and his rigid habit of separating the world into the blessed and the damned turns American politics into a free-fire zone where any deviation from his view of the national program is immediately leveled. His absolutism has no way to account for someone with my views -- and there are many like me --without grossly caricaturing them. I strongly support the U.S. air and ground war against bin Laden and the Taliban. I believe unrelenting military force is the only way to destroy this ruthless enemy. I proudly display an American flag in my window. But I also believe that unless America works just as hard at making peace in the Middle East as we currently are at making war, our country will never be safe. And I believe that the American cause is served, not sabotaged, by those who disagree vehemently with my positions.

It is true that the urge to censor comes not just from the right, but also from the left. When U.C.-Berkeley's student government denounced a campus cartoonist for his allegedly culturally insensitive swipe at Islamic terrorists and clamored to put his editors in a reeducation program, these young centurions of correct speech were rightly blasted throughout the media world and quickly wilted under the fire. But journalists, including Sullivan, should be particularly vigilant against censorship when it's advocated by the government. It may strike Sullivan as "pampered" for American journalists to worry about this, but our ancestors fought and died for the right of free speech. During every crisis in our country's history, this freedom is the first to be challenged by self-proclaimed patriots as a threat to national security. If the press and the public don't fight for freedom of speech at times like these, it will quickly become a hollow right.

Andrew Sullivan is an insightful and intelligent man. He needs to pull back from his current jihad. There is too much testosterone pumping through his veins these days. He is right to be furious. The country has suffered a grievous blow -- one stunning in its premeditated wickedness -- and we are still being afflicted with threats to our security. The terrorist assault demands and is receiving a ferocious response. But it also demands that we all think deeply and carefully about how to make the country and the world safer, not just scream in outrage.

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About the writer
David Talbot is Salon's founder and editor in chief.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Front Page News
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Here is the short article from yesterday in which Sullivan lambasted Talbot for his sycophantic suck-up to Susan "I don't REALLY hate America!" Sontag.

This is one of the saddest rants I have ever read in any supposedly "respectable" publication. It is so blatantly obvious that Talbot is merely using his position as head of Salon to launch a purely personal attack, for no other reason than that someone publicly called him on the carpet for his pathetic example of giving aid and comfort to the enemy.

And notice how, all of a sudden, it IS just about sex? Now that Talbot has brought up Sullivan's bareback fun (which has nothing at all to do with the charges against Talbot), neither Talbot nor anybody else as Salon can EVER AGAIN try to make that false claim about the right only being obsessed with Clinton's sex life. Every time they do, we can throw this right back into their faces.

1 posted on 10/20/2001 2:44:14 PM PDT by Timesink
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To: Timesink
Sorry about all the dead links in the cut-and-pasted article. They all worked on the preview page!
2 posted on 10/20/2001 2:45:33 PM PDT by Timesink
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To: Timesink
On his Web site, he does not just engage antiwar writer Katha Pollitt, whose tortured ruminations in the Nation on whether to fly a flag from her New York apartment window were admittedly neurotic and absurd. He seeks to obliterate her, gloating after a lopsided debate with her on public radio that "I took no prisoners." In the church of Sullivan, those who criticize or express ambivalence about the bombing of Afghanistan are not just wrong -- they are corrupt souls who must be excommunicated from the American congregation.

"Well, Your Stammering is Eloquent" (Andrew Sullivan makes a fool of Katha Pollit on NPR)

Radio Smackdown! Andrew Sullivan wipes floor with Katha Pollitt

Sullivan asks Pollit what the US should do, she keeps avoiding the issue, and criticizing US policy, and blah blah blah, but she won't say what the US should do. He keeps asking her, and finally she answers him that she hasn't thought it through yet. And then he says, "if you haven't thought it through by now" (or something to that effect). It was so damn funny! Remember, this interview was over a MONTH after the WTC attacks, and Pollit is claiming she hasn't thought through what the US should do... she's empty, she has no real ideas.

Sullivan was tough, he was almost a bully. But he was right, sometimes you have to push people to get answers from them.

3 posted on 10/20/2001 2:52:49 PM PDT by xm177e2
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To: Timesink
Looks like Andrew finally got to them. :o)

Good going Andrew, you know you're ahead of the pack when they spend all their time trying to stab you in the back.

As to the comment about FreeRepublic, Andrew Sullivan knows he has a lot of friends here.

4 posted on 10/20/2001 2:53:45 PM PDT by McGavin999
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To: Timesink
It wasn't FreeRepublic.com that rallied around Sullivan; those conservative "enclaves" are too busy tossing kindling on the pyres to burn the sodomites.

I remember defending Sullivan on FR, and I remember a lot of other people standing up for him here, too.

5 posted on 10/20/2001 2:55:13 PM PDT by xm177e2
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To: Timesink
Real deal is that Sullivan has got this twit's number. Said twit (Talbot) gave himself away when he referred to Sontag's writings as *texts*. The word texts is pretentious/ deconsctruto/ liberal university/ New York Review of Books speak
6 posted on 10/20/2001 2:56:10 PM PDT by JJ59
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: Timesink
Like most left-wingers Talbot can dish it out but can't take it. When you are beaten you resort to ad hominem attacks, and you play especially rough when the foe is a turncoat gay.
8 posted on 10/20/2001 2:58:03 PM PDT by gaspar
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To: Timesink
Sullivan's Taliban style of argument

Apparently, leftists no longer call people who disagree with them "Nazis," having found a new bogeyman.

9 posted on 10/20/2001 2:59:38 PM PDT by mountaineer
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To: McGavin999
Bump for Andrew Sullivan.

He is unrivalled in his ability to attack the coastal elites on their own home turf. Imagine: a gay man with the audacity to display patriotism, admiration for religion, and plain common sense! He understandably horrifies the likes of David "Free Love" Talbot.

Andrew is a true conservative and a Patriot.

10 posted on 10/20/2001 3:01:41 PM PDT by cicero's_son
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To: Timesink
"It wasn't FreeRepublic.com that rallied around Sullivan; those conservative "enclaves" are too busy tossing kindling on the pyres to burn the sodomites. Their latest cause is blasting the Bush administration for apologizing on behalf of the Navy crewmen who painted "hijack this, fags" on missiles headed toward Afghanistan."

ROFL.................as long as you spell the name right, Talbot..:)

11 posted on 10/20/2001 3:04:32 PM PDT by RightOnline
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To: Timesink
I honestly didn't know that SALON still existed (seriously). Reading this loathsome piece of flatulent vulture dung from Talbot just reminded me of why I stopped reading it several months ago!
12 posted on 10/20/2001 3:07:55 PM PDT by RANGERAIRBORNE
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To: xm177e2
I remember defending Sullivan on FR, and I remember
a lot of other people standing up for him here, too.

You have to remember Freepers are mostly social conservatives.
For many of these people, sexuality blinds them to any
other attributes a person has.  That's what absolutes
do for you.

13 posted on 10/20/2001 3:09:51 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: Timesink
Aren't Talbot and Steve Brill entwined in a death embrace as they go under for the last time?
Someone of Sullivan's intellect needs Salon a LOT less than they need him.
14 posted on 10/20/2001 3:11:51 PM PDT by MamaLucci
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To: gcruse
Couldn't a person be "liberal" and still view homosexuality as the deviance it is?
15 posted on 10/20/2001 3:12:19 PM PDT by sailor4321
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To: xm177e2
I remember defending Sullivan on FR, and I remember a lot of other people standing up for him here, too.

That's exactly what I recall, too....

16 posted on 10/20/2001 3:14:10 PM PDT by backhoe
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To: RightOnline
Talbot can't even get this right. The picture included a bomb with "high jack (sic) this fags" written on the side.

Here's my updated version...


17 posted on 10/20/2001 3:15:07 PM PDT by bootyist-monk
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To: backhoe
I also remember some people NOT sticking up for him... FR does have its share of people with anti-gay attitudes, as well.
18 posted on 10/20/2001 3:18:57 PM PDT by xm177e2
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To: Timesink
Salon.com

Still, the greatest stock short sale in history. That's about all it was good for. Now please, just go away.
19 posted on 10/20/2001 3:20:17 PM PDT by Nuke'm Glowing
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To: gcruse
You have to remember Freepers are mostly social conservatives.

If this is the case, why did we defend Sullivan in such numbers?

20 posted on 10/20/2001 3:21:20 PM PDT by Timesink
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