June 15, 2007
Leftosphere Pwn3d by Politico
GOP campaigns - start getting your ads together.
Harry Reid has confirmed that he was indeed attacking Gen. Peter Pace in the Politico story.
Nice try at narrative control by the nutosphere, but they failed. As we've always maintained, if you lie down with nutroots, you're gonna say and do stupid things to please them.
And Harry Reid indeed has said and done a stupid thing here to please the Nutroots. His own Macacca moment? Probably not (the media won't give it any play like they did to the Macaccagate), but definitely embarrassing and well below the expected conduct of a member of the "austere" US Senate. Certainly not below the conduct of a modern Democrat, however.
Harry Reid wouldn't know the difference between a corporal and a lance corporal, but he knows Gen Pace is "incompetent." Bad news, Senator. The public trusts the military far more than they trust you pampered morons sitting on your fat as*es declaring the war lost in the comfort of your air-conditioned offices in the DemCongress.
If you want to see how they try to obfuscate, slither out of, and deny their involvement with this demagoguery after being forced to admit they were wrong, read down a few posts at TPM. The conceding post reads thus:
Okay, we've obtained a tape of the controversial Reid conference call with liberal bloggers.Sure. The "context" of calling Gen. Peter Pace incompetent is "overblown." Nice try, morons.Yes, he did in fact say that Pace is "incompetent." But the context shows that the controversy's way overblown. Take a look.
Did he say it, Greg? Yes. Did he say it to liberal bloggers? Yes. You and your horde spent your day trying to refute it and to deny it, and the truth hit you square on your noggin. See Insty for the "plausible deniability" exercise put on by the members of the conference call. In true Clintonista fashion, they all play the "I don't remember/recall/have knowledge/see it in my notes" card, but don't outright deny it because they likely knew what the truth was. They were there.
But remember, people. It was the "nuance" of the remark that matters. It was the "context." From liberal talker Taylor Marsh:
Calling a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff "incompetent" is anything but unremarkable.You're damn right, sister. Time for some nutroots to eat some well-deserved shinola sandwiches. This vitriolic Kos diarist can start gobbling crow any time now, when she passes Journalism 101. Any time, now. We'll gladly wait. Bob Geiger? Back to Journalism 101 for you, too.Trust me when I say we're going to be eating this for a very long time. Next our presidential candidates will be asked if they agree with Senator Reid's assessment of General Pace. Insert your favorite question about this nightmare here.
There is yet another aspect of this event. How did Politico.com get even the partial quote? That's yet another troubling aspect of this sorry situation.
Remember this incident the next time the Nutosphere tries to jump all over any right-blogger or right-politician for making a snafu - the "context" is what's most important. Which means (to them) that they may agree with what he said but regret that anyone outside of their little cabal heard it.
Addendum: DaveC in the comments points out that I clumsily worded a passage above when I said that Reid attacked "the Troops" as opposed to General Pace. He was, upon reflection, right about that, and I have amended said offending passage. I would also point out, however, that this is the second time this week that Reid has attacked military members - the other day, he preemptively declared an effort that hasn't even fully been implemented 'a failure.' I consider that an attack on the troops engaged in the surge effort, since he told them they failed before they even did anything. So I will make no apology to Reid on this basis. He's on a hot streak this week, so to speak.
By Good Lt. at June 15, 2007 07:36 AM | | l digg this









