A March 2, 2007, opinion piece by Los Angeles Times liberal
Rosa Brooks addresses the recent
CPAC convention. The
title is,
"The lunatic right returns." Subtle, eh? It gets worse.
1. Brooks refers to the
Swift
Boat Veterans for Truth as a "goon squad," although the group is
comprised of more than 280 men who bravely served their country in
the Vietnam War. (link)
(link)
Witness this: Brooks refers to a group of honorable Vietnam
veterans as a "goon squad," but then she goes on to harp that it is a
"myth" that the "antiwar left spits on returning troops." Do you see the
irony? Brooks also brazenly claims that the Swifties were "discredited."
Unfortunately, she fails to provide a single example supporting this
assertion. The truth is that during the 2004 campaign, defenders of John
Kerry flat-out failed to discredit several key claims made by the Swift Boat
Veterans and found in the book Unfit for Command. A partial list
can be found
here (from a web site I operate).
2. It is no "myth" that the antiwar left has literally spat on
our veterans. There were several
contemporaneous news accounts in the late 1960's and 1970's that told of
troops being literally spat upon. For example, there is this
December 27, 1971, report on the CBS Evening News and this
October 23, 1967 front-page article in the New York Times by
Pulitzer Prize winner James Reston ("[Anti-war demonstrators] spat on
some of the soldiers in the front line at the Pentagon and goaded them
with the most vicious personal slander. Many of the signs carried by a
small number of militants . . . are too obscene to print.").
Northwestern law professor
Jim Lindgren, who blogs at
The Volokh Conspiracy,
easily located several contemporaneous news accounts of soldiers
being spat upon, many of which he has listed
here and
here. The 1989 book by Bob Greene,
Homecoming, reportedly contains 63 accounts of spitting (source).
Is everyone lying, Rosa?
In addition, spitting on soldiers has been reported as recently as three
months ago. On December 7, 2006, the Syracuse Post-Standard
reported that a 35-year-old woman was charged with spitting in a Fort
Drum soldier's face "without provocation at Hancock International
Airport." (Rosa, you can read the article
here. The incident was also reported on WFBL in Syracuse (link).)
The bottom line: Brooks' claim of a "myth" is flat-out erroneous.
3. In the closing graphs of her baseless attacks, she refers to
Michelle Malkin as a "right-wing attack blogger" "whose work has been
repeatedly criticized for its cavalier attitude toward facts." Again,
Brooks provides no support for her claim.
But if Brooks is concerned about a "cavalier attitude toward facts,"
she may want to look in the mirror. As NewsBusters'
Mark Finkelstein has
reported on several instances, Brooks has built quite an unflattering
reputation for playing loose with facts, logic, and common sense. Just a
month-and-a-half ago, Finkelstein wrote how Brooks misled her
readers with regards to the electricity and oil production scenarios in
Iraq (here).
Brooks throws labels like "goon squad," "lunatics," and
"radicalization" at Republicans like a crying infant in a
highchair throwing her
cereal. Yet a cursory look at Brooks' columns in the last six months
reveals a
lunacy all in itself. For example,
- In a column last September, Brooks referred to President Bush as
"Torturer In Chief." And speaking of facts, in the article Brooks
couldn't even get the year right that the United States signed the
Geneva Convention. (The Times had to issue a correction. Gee, who
has the facts problem now?) (link)
(October
2006 was a banner month for Rosa:)
- In October, Brooks depicted the President Bush as a "drunk
driver." (link)
- Also in October, she likened the President to Kim Jong Il,
Iranian mullahs, and a Nazi. (link)
- Also in October, Brooks equated Congressional tax cuts to "child
endangerment." (link)
And it was only a little over a year ago that Brooks actually defended the
totally tasteless remarks by Jimmy Carter and Rev. Joseph Lowery at the
funeral for Coretta Scott King. (link)
In the column, she wrote, "It's time to take a stand against
civility, decency and appropriateness."
Well, at least Brooks knows how to apply herself.