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So Much More Than Lott
newsmax ^ | 12/31/2002 | Barry Farber

Posted on 01/01/2003 8:43:17 AM PST by TLBSHOW

So Much More Than Lott

So, already by Christmas the Republicans took their newly revealed "racist" Trent Lott and chopped him off like a hood ornament and left him folded up in the glove compartment like a paper napkin full of forgotten fruitcake.

Nice crisis resolution, huh? Neat image management, right?

Not so fast.

One problem. Trent Lott is NOT a racist.

Nobody believes Lott is a racist. His enemies don't believe that. His friends don't believe that. And nobody believes Trent Lott believes America would have been better off if Strom Thurmond had been elected president in 1948.

What everybody DOES believe is that Lott maladroitly gave his enemies the right to say, childhood-game fashion, "You SAID it and – ha ha – we can prove it!" Lott's true feelings – and actions – regarding racial issues fell off the bottom on the relevancy charts.

The Republican Party just turned and ran from what they feared would be dreadful political trouble down the road. That fear turned the quality of intra-party justice from King Solomon to King Kong.

Am I the only one troubled by this Republican unconditional surrender to an obviously phony charge?

Can anybody name the last Democrat tossed by his teammates into the crater of a live volcano no matter how racist, anti-Semitic, anti-American or clinically insane a comment he or she uttered?

Please don't misunderstand; I don't hold that Democratic loyalty to their rogues and fools as a role model. There simply wouldn't BE a Democratic Party if they jettisoned their own according to every political correctness breeze, real or artificial, the way the Republicans did. So let's stick to Republicans and Trent Lott.

In sticking to Trent Lott, let me quickly point out that I'm not talking about Trent Lott; rather, I'm talking about so much MORE than Trent Lott.

You hear Republicans ratifying their firing squad by saying, "I never thought much of him as a leader anyhow." Not even a nice try, folks. That doesn't in the slightest excuse the way you handled things.

"By the fifth or sixth apology he'd abandoned every principle that makes me a Republican in the first place," goes the refrain; and that's just as irrelevant as the justification preceding.

The key question, rather, is, What does the Trent Lott affair now say about the Republican Party? I suggest it says something that was better left as a vague suspicion or, better yet, never thought of at all.

It says: "These are my principles; and if you don't like them, fear not. I have others." It says, "These are our leaders, and we won't surrender them – unless you attack." Instead of a political army guided by courage and conviction, we now see the Republicans as a nudist in the middle of a barbed-wire fence.

Republican political fragrance finishes first. Trent Lott's innocence finishes last.

Delete, please, any notion that my feelings owe to some good-ol'-boy affinity with the Old South, and double-click on the fact that, at the age when Trent Lott was figuring out ways to keep his national fraternity lily-white, I and my hearty band of white Southern activists were (successfully!) rallying the student body of the University of North Carolina to overthrow the university administration's policy of making our first four black students sit in the Jim Crow section of Kenan Stadium instead of sitting with the rest of us students.

That's important to ME but, likewise, irrelevant to the issue at hand.

Dogs aren't the only ones who smell fear. We all do. The beautiful woman smells the fear of the nervous nerd asking for a date. The boss smells the fear of the insecure worker asking for a raise. And the voter smells the fear of a political party – even one controlling all three branches of government – that so quickly sacrifices a leader who did NOT mis-think, who did NOT mis-act, but who merely mis-SPOKE.

Trent Lott's birthday party remark about Sen. Thurmond was breathtakingly brain-dead.

(It was not unprecedented. President Gerald Ford said in debate to Jimmy Carter in 1976 that the Soviet Union did not exercise domination in Eastern Europe. And he no more believed that even as he was saying it than Lott believed America should have elected Strom Thurmond. Trent Lott's mysterious brain failure only cost him the party leadership in the Senate. Ford's probably cost him the presidency!)

If you should ask me, "Why, then, do they say things they don't believe?" you prove to me you've never competed in the public arena without a script.

Hear and heed, now, Republicans. All your friends and all your foes now know where your buttons are and exactly how high and how quickly you will jump when they're pushed.

Here's how the Republicans SHOULD have handled it.

Lott himself should have instantly announced that he would have preferred Republican Governor Tom Dewey win the election of 1948; next choice, Democratic President Harry Truman; and in no way and in no wise would he have favored Dixiecrat candidate Strom Thurmond. End of statement; but, admittedly, not end of story.

I would then have leaked that a "steaming" President Bush had abruptly canceled his meeting with the Prime Minister of Macedonia or Paraguay for a closed-door session alone with Trent Lott. Let lower-level aides then leak that the sound of White House breaking furniture reached but did not exceed the decibel level of a routine Clinton marriage quarrel in that meeting.

Let the nation know that the president in no uncertain dimension let Trent Lott know where the bear sat in the buckwheat and let the no-comments begin with Trent Lott exiting that meeting.

When the Democrats inevitably closed in for a blood-lunch, let some high-but-not-top-level Republican official tell them: "It's all over and done with as far as we're concerned. And, by the way, we have a great idea for the Democrats.

"We all have shortcomings. Let THEM take care of THEIR Jesse Jackson's 'Hymie-town,' Al Sharpton's 'diamond merchants' (Jewish businessmen) intruding into Harlem, the gracious racist Sen. Byrd's white-nigger-black-nigger soliloquy, Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney's 'Bush knew in advance about the Israeli-planned-9/11 attack' and Sen. Patty Murray's 'Bin Laden is more popular than we are because he builds and we bomb.'

"We, for our part, will make clear who we think should and should not have won the election of 1948."

The "big fear" of Republicans was stated often and bluntly while Lott was busy apologizing. "In the next election, unless Lott is drawn, quartered and fed to the donkeys, every Republican candidate in 2004 will face TV commercials beginning with Trent Lott's endorsement of Strom Thurmond followed by footage of Dixiecrat Thurmond in 1948 blatantly appealing for segregation."

As a usual-but-not-always Republican voter, I say bring it on. Such an absurd backward reach in 2004 would never rekindle what would then have become a minor upscuddle way back in 2002. I insist that either the Democrats in 2004 would never have used it OR it would have blown up like a grenade in their faces.

I never made it all the way up to be a scientist. But in grammar school I loved watching a fire die when the oxygen was cut off. I would have loved to see this fire die the same way.

Republicans, particularly conservatives, have an occupational hazard. Lots of people do. Those who work at computers hours on end get carpal tunnel syndrome. Football players retire with bashed-up knees.

Conservatives, for their part, get drawn like seafaring victims of the mythical Lorelei onto the treacherous rocks by the power of liberal seduction. "I am a conservative," the syndrome goes. "Therefore, when I commit a liberal or an anti-conservative act, the liberals will love me."

There are, indeed, many voters who welcome the Republican annihilation of Trent Lott. BUT THOSE ARE VOTERS WHO WOULD NEVER HAVE VOTED FOR TRENT LOTT OR ANY OTHER REPUBLICAN ANYHOW!

Those voters the Republicans intended to woo by sacrificing Trent Lott are precisely the voters who say to the Democratic Party, "No matter what you do that I dislike, I shall always be FOR you." And to the Republican Party they say, "And no matter what you do that I LIKE, I shall always be AGAINST you."

So, GOP, you called no attention to your brotherly proclivities. You called attention only to your cowardice.

In Gore Vidal's hit play "The Best Man," the protagonist, aching head in both aching hands, says, "I don't mind being a bastard. But why am I such an INEPT bastard?"

Vidal is far from my political lodestar, but he came across with a good line.

It's not that Republicans are cowards.

It's that they're such INEPT cowards.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: annspoodle; bltlosershow; buchananbuttboy; deadhorsealert; getlifetlb; getoverit; gop; lott; pleasekissitann; tlblikefries; tlbrattyrat; tlbwantfries; weeper
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To: M. Thatcher
Amen. My guess is Trent Lott was more afraid of hillary and daschle than he was of the President. When he decided that he didn't think it was important to pass Homeland Security and Terrorism Insurance in the lame-duck congress, his message to the President was clear: "Mr. President, Tom doesn't want us to pass this legislation right now - sorry about that." The President said, "Pass them - NOW." Senator Lott always had his tail between his legs - he was not a leader - he was a jellyfish - and I'm glad he has been replaced.
21 posted on 01/01/2003 9:23:11 AM PST by Wait4Truth
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To: cynicom
Re-read...What is name of first American president to pick the Senate majority leader.

YOU re-read. If you understood my response you'd know I follow your point. But obviously I am going too fast for the pro-Lott contingent.

To spell it out for your ilk: George W. Bush is the answer you're expecting. (Without doing the research I'll assume for the sake of argument you are correct).

My point: I prefer the Senate Majority Leader handpicked by George W. Bush to the IDIOT Senate Majority Leader handpicked by the hapless Bob Dole, TO WIT, Trent Lott, Dole's equally hapless understudy.

Which is what I meant by MY response -- "You obviously prefer the twit handpicked by Bob Dole." So sorry my point was too subtle for you.

22 posted on 01/01/2003 9:25:06 AM PST by M. Thatcher
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To: sinkspur
Wrong. There are many voters warily eyeing the GOP for its next capitulation to the race pimps.

Nope. There are four. You among them.

23 posted on 01/01/2003 9:26:26 AM PST by M. Thatcher
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To: TLBSHOW
"Can anyone name the last democrat tosssed by his teammates....?"

Yeah. James Traficant.

They didn't have to toss Gary Condit because the voters did it for them.

Congressman Tony Coelho quietly "retired" from Congress rather than face charges of fraud and corruption and certain conviction.

In 1972 Goerge McGovern dumped his Vice-Presidential running mate Senator Tom Eagleton of Missouri when it came to light he had been treated in the past for bipolar disorder.


A few years before that, there was Senator Tom Dodd, father of the current sleazebag Chris, who was censured and essentially cashiered by his own party for massive corruption.

Then there was the drunken Ways and Means Chair, Wilbur Mills, who was dumped after his frolics in the mall Fountain with stripper Fannie Foxe.

Regardless, the fact is that ignorant and misleading defenses of the indefensible Lott by the likes of this Faber kid are an insult to the intelligence of the populace.

The Conservative forces of the Republican Party did the right thing. They stood up and said, "We can't read minds, but we know what we hear, and we are no longer going to tolerate this kind of crap from our own people."

Did it make political sense? The speech by Bush, in which he disavowed Lott's bigotry, was the most powerful opportunity for Republicans to speak to African-Americans in a long time. And it was a home run.

Besides, there is the matter of integrity--do the right thing because it is the right thing to do-- regardless of whether or not your foes demand it.

Lott's comments were not "winging it" or off-the-cuff. They were written notes and had been used before. He believed them, he meant them, and he thereby proved himself unworthy to lead the GOP in the Senate.
24 posted on 01/01/2003 9:27:11 AM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: M. Thatcher
Subtle???? Maybe that was too subtle but your rudeness is very apparent. You did not answer the question because you knew not the answer.
25 posted on 01/01/2003 9:29:24 AM PST by cynicom
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To: sinkspur
(He painted it white, by the way, another example of a GOP politician shaking-in-his-boots.)

did he really?
26 posted on 01/01/2003 9:30:32 AM PST by TLBSHOW
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To: TLBSHOW
One has to love the Bush apologists, they so much resemble the Clinton apologists. Kneepads on, ready to apologize at anytime for any thing. I have to wonder why they come here on a conservative forum.
27 posted on 01/01/2003 9:31:38 AM PST by cynicom
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To: cynicom
One has to love the Bush apologists, they so much resemble the Clinton apologists. Kneepads on, ready to apologize at anytime for any thing. I have to wonder why they come here on a conservative forum.


Was Trent in your mind a conservative?
28 posted on 01/01/2003 9:35:36 AM PST by deport
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To: deport
deport...

I always disliked Trent Lott,still do. Does that answer your question????

This was never about Trent Lott, or racism, there is much more at play here. Bush is the first president in the history of this country to handpick the senate majority leader. First time in over 200 years.

29 posted on 01/01/2003 9:38:47 AM PST by cynicom
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To: cynicom
Well not exactly. The question was "is Trent a consevative in your mind" ..... Not whether you liked Trent or not.
30 posted on 01/01/2003 9:42:56 AM PST by deport
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To: cynicom
Subtle???? Maybe that was too subtle but your rudeness is very apparent. You did not answer the question because you knew not the answer.

I assumed the answer was Bush. And this is the only way to understand my point.

31 posted on 01/01/2003 9:44:37 AM PST by M. Thatcher
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To: cynicom
Frist would not be Majority Leader if the Senate Republicans had not voted for him in the conference call. I would say Frist was hand-picked by the Senate Republicans, not the President. The senators knew the President favored Frist, but they are still the ones that voted him in.
32 posted on 01/01/2003 9:45:42 AM PST by Wait4Truth
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To: TLBSHOW
every Republican candidate in 2004 will face TV commercials beginning with Trent Lott's endorsement of Strom Thurmond followed by footage of Dixiecrat Thurmond in 1948 blatantly appealing for segregation."

I'm sure they are already made, and waiting to go.

33 posted on 01/01/2003 9:46:30 AM PST by StriperSniper
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To: deport
Lott...

Lott is a conservative republican, I am a conservative American, so we think differently. He is constrained by the party, I am not. I think of the country first and always, party members think of their own hide and the party first, the country comes last.

Professional politicians have been the curse of this country, both parties, the country suffers for it as we slide into socialism, fostered by both parties.

34 posted on 01/01/2003 9:47:17 AM PST by cynicom
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To: TLBSHOW
By distancing themselves from Lott (who either consciously or subconsciously seemed to long for the days of segregation) the Republicans in fact have innoculated themselves from the continued accusations from race hounds.

In fact, the Lott fiasco was sort of a blessing in disguise, showing that the GOP does have the fortitude on the race issue while the Democrats, on the other hand, continue their hypocricy.

No, my TLBSHOW friend, the rest of the country, and party, can go on to more important matters while the Save-Lott crowd will dwell in the past, continuing to harp on a dead issue.

It's simply not worth it. Please, give it up.
35 posted on 01/01/2003 9:48:53 AM PST by Edit35
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To: Wait4Truth
Wait...

Who voted Lott in time after time???

36 posted on 01/01/2003 9:48:57 AM PST by cynicom
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To: cynicom
Lott is a conservative


Thanks.
37 posted on 01/01/2003 9:49:57 AM PST by deport
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To: dyno35
dyno...

Surely then, the republicans will not want our votes in 04. Perhaps you should try to see beyond this "save Lott" veil that blinds so many republicans.

38 posted on 01/01/2003 9:52:48 AM PST by cynicom
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To: cynicom
The same Senate Republicans. Guess they changed their minds after Lott went on his insipid apology tour and after he kissed little tommy's butt once too often.
39 posted on 01/01/2003 9:53:19 AM PST by Wait4Truth
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To: Wait4Truth
Wait...

There was a vote for new leader, can you tell me the names of those in consideration?????

40 posted on 01/01/2003 9:55:31 AM PST by cynicom
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