24 déc. 2011

Who are the actual “crazy” people in American politics?



My Salon colleague, Mark Benjamin, writes about last night’s Larry King Show — featuring a debate between Democratic Rep. Alan Grayson and GOP Rep. Michelle Bachmann — and does so by repeatedly branding Grayson as being every bit as “crazy” as Bachmann.  Beginning with the article’s headline (“Bachmann and Grayson: A diary of crazy”) to his sarcastic description of “these two towering intellects” to his claim that Grayson and Bachmann are “the Candy Stripers of Crazy of their parties,” Benjamin denigrates Grayson’s intellect and mental health by depicting him — with virtually no cited basis — as the Democratic mirror image of Bachmann’s rabid, out-of-touch extremism.  This view of Grayson has become a virtual Washington platitude, solidified by The New York Times‘ David Herszenhorn’s dismissal of Grayson as “the latest incarnation of what in the American political idiom is known as a wing nut.”

There are so many things wrong with this analysis.  To begin with, it’s a classic case of false journalistic objectivity:  the compulsion of journalists to posit equivalencies between the “two sides” regardless of whether they are actually equal (since I’m calling a GOP member of Congress “crazy,” I now have to find a Democrat to so label).  Benjamin cites numerous Bachmann statements that demonstrate her penchant for bizarre claims (and there are many he omitted), but points to only one Grayson statement:   his famous floor speech in which he claimed: “If you get sick in America, the Republican health care plan is this:  Die quickly.”  One could reasonably object to that statement as unduly inflammatory rhetoric, but Grayson was one of the only members of Congress willing to forcefully connect health care policy to the actual lives (and deaths) of American citizens.  There’s nothing crazy about dramatically emphasizing that causal connection; far crazier is to ignore it. 

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