David Frum on health care

Mar 24, 2010 00:54

I wanted to bring this blog post to the attention of any of my friends who hasn't yet seen it. David Frum is a former speechwriter and staffer for Bush who maintains a very Republican blog. Here's what he has to say about the health care bill: http://www.frumforum.com/waterloo. The sort of fear-mongering that he's blaming for this 'waterloo' is ( Read more... )

Leave a comment

Comments 9

pondalorum March 24 2010, 12:43:34 UTC
Hey, thanks! I saw that in the PG and wanted to send a link to my dad, but I couldn't find it on-line and finally gave up. But now I have the link, so thanks from BOTH me and Pop :-)

Reply


genuinekfc March 24 2010, 17:14:45 UTC
I sent this link to my parents, who have been seeing similar comments made on the news discussion shows. Both sides routinely need the reminder that pundits do not have the same responsibilities as elected officials.

(In geekier news, it reminded me of an XKCD comic about the Ender's Game spin-off...)

Reply

grouchyoldcoot March 25 2010, 06:05:54 UTC
The part I don't understand is why the successful Republican pundits (Glen Beck for example) are such total whack jobs. I mean, I find the *obviously* unbelievable after, like, 2 minutes of viewing. How do they get to be leaders of an entire political group?

Reply

genuinekfc March 25 2010, 19:32:53 UTC
As Frum points out, the far-right motivates the party and brings out the voters. The elected officials forgot what the quieter moderates want.

I suspect that the regular viewers don't see the far-right as whackjobs. Example A: A distant relative collected books denying global warming. We couldn't convince him that scientists aren't writing as many books claiming it is happening, because it's been published in peer-reviewed scientific journals.

Example B: A co-worker told me that he's seen a scary change in a friend who started watching Glen Beck. The guy used to have reasonably well-thought opinions; now his statements are more dogmatic and he distrusts mainstream media*. The guy seems indoctrinated.

*(Nevermind that Fox News has mainstream numbers. They sell themselves as the alternate news source.)

Reply

bhudson March 26 2010, 01:07:31 UTC
To be fair, the GOP is trying to harness their anger for electoral purposes, but the teabaggers don't seem to like the GOP very much. Although, just like poor abused voting socialists have no part to vote for but the democrats, tea baggers will probably vote GOP anyway.

Reply


(The comment has been removed)

grouchyoldcoot March 24 2010, 18:57:47 UTC
Maybe, but that doesn't make him wrong. The whole 'Democrats want to kill your grandmother' thing is really counterproductive.

Reply


thriceajoy March 25 2010, 01:05:56 UTC
Don't know if you've seen this already, but here it is anyway: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pilG7PCV448

Reply

grouchyoldcoot March 25 2010, 06:02:26 UTC
Err, I'm having trouble viewing it. Apparently my sound isn't completely fixed after all :-/ They are a scary bunch, though, aren't they? It's like buffalo with voting rights.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up