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:: Archive: Editorial / August 2004 :: | ||||||||||||||||
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On a recent summer evening, with the scent of lavender in the air from a nearby neighbor’s farm, a dinner party was held at a West Linn country home for the wife of the Vice President of the United States. Oregon was at its summer-weather best, and the evening should have epitomized Western hospitality and political and intellectual enthusiasm. Instead neighbors across the long driveway held their own dinner party, if that’s the appropriate term. Which is questionable, because the sole reason for that get-together was to irritate and offend the wife of the Vice President of the United States, and the other neighbors who came to meet her. Banner signs posted along the driveway ranted anti-Bush slogans, including comments that Bush’s family values were not their family values. Offended by the ugly behavior, neighbors on all sides were caught in the middle of a nasty neighborhood fight. Feelings were hurt and permanent damage done to once-cordial neighborhood relations. Oh, and later there was also a smaller sign posted under the nasty banner along the driveway. It commented on the “values” of people who purposely attack their neighbors and disrespect the wife of our nation’s vice president. In-your-face politics, particularly negative politics, have reached a crescendo this year with the Democrats’ anti-Bush rantings. What can only be described as hatred of the president is epidemic—so much so that party strategists have begun urgent inside efforts to tone down the ugly tone of party faithful. It’s working only moderately at the national level, and not well at all here in Oregon, where the irrational politics of hatred have whipped the left into a frenzy. It’s
difficult to drive down Northwest streets without facing the butt-end
of a left-leaning automobile with an unpleasant hate-Bush slogan. The
drivers of the cars, who no doubt fancy themselves to be enlightened,
caring, tolerant liberals, nonetheless find obvious delight in spreading
messages of hate, disrespect and intolerance of their neighbors on But the left’s political tactics in this election have turned personal, taking on a quasi-religious fanaticism in tone. And as the tone becomes more personal, politics invades our personal spaces. Movie stars who once entertained us in hushed theaters now harangue us with their personal political opinions whenever they get a microphone. Who can relax and enjoy a movie when Alec Baldwin’s sneering face on the screen calls up reminders of his offensive rants? TV stars we used to laugh with in the privacy of our living
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now spout scripts with bitter partisan dialogue and left-wing policy speeches.
What happened to the flower children of the ’60s? That same generation is nearly unrecognizable in today’s adults. Whatever happened to peace, love and brotherhood? Even if it best serves their own campaign, we can all hope that Democrats’ recent pleas to their constituents to tone down the hate speech are heeded. For everyone’s sake, liberals need to chill out.
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