The death of outrage
The GOP's moral watchdogs are strangely silent, now that the lying, evasive
party boy turns out to be THEIR standard-bearer.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Gary Kamiya
Nov. 04, 2000 | The last 24 hours have proved once again that moralizing
right-wingers can dish it out, but they can't take it.
For the past eight years, an endless procession of conservative moralists --
politicians, journalists, commentators and general blowhards -- have
denounced President Clinton as the most disgraceful, lying, conniving,
lascivious, hippified, stoned, intern-groping, morally relativist president
ever to disgrace the Oval Office. Many of them were seething with righteous
indignation the moment the skirt-chasing, draft-dodging, non-inhaling good
ol' boy took the oath, but when the Monica Lewinsky affair broke their wrath
assumed towering, Jonathan Edwards-like proportions.
The impeachment leaders in the House and Senate led the way, intoning pious
denunciations of the president as a truth-evading, slippery, slimy scoundrel.
The most vociferous was Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ga., who did a superb imitation of a
Southern Baptist minister preaching with a nasty hangover, spewing out a
stream of invective against the cancerous, satanic lizard coiled up in the
West Wing. Fellow Republicans Alan Simpson, Trent Lott and Tom DeLay
thundered on and on about the president's disgraceful behavior. Rep. Henry
Hyde
invoked the great battles of the past as he implored his fellow
congressmen to do the right thing and impeach the lawbreaker.
The juiciest invective, however, came from outside the corridors of power.
Moralist without portfolio William Bennett, almost apoplectic with rage that
a sheep-like nation was letting the Great Satyr off the hook, sent forth a
vein-bulging screed titled "The Death of Outrage." Rush Limbaugh flogged his
Dittoheads daily with rapid-fire denunciations of the equivocating hound from
Arkansas. And, of course, much of the rest of the press -- especially the
pack-followers in the Beltway -- hastily doffed their reporters' fedoras to
don the black wigs of cut-rate moral judgment.
I often wished, watching this endless orgy of moral condemnation, that I
could live to see what these worthies would do if the equivocating, evasive,
cunning, legalistic good ol' party boy they were eviscerating suddenly turned
out to be a Republican. Call me cynical, call me a victim of decades of
morally relativistic brainwashing at permissive public schools, but I had a
sneaking feeling that the whole moral-outrage thing was a complete fraud, a
sham, merely a handy technique used by partisan hacks.
If it was their boy, I suspected, the "outrage" would magically disappear.
The thunderbolts of opprobrium would suddenly become a nudge-nudge,
boys-will-be-boys wink and nod. The miscreant's evasive, slimily legalistic
behavior would -- kazaam! -- be transformed into a high-minded concern for
the feelings of one's family. And the revelation itself would -- press avail!
-- be attacked as a political dirty trick.
I never thought I'd see it happen so soon, before the current POTUS had even
vacated the White House. But it just did. And guess what? The whole moral
outrage thing wasa complete sham.
Here's what we know. We know that Clinton is an equivocating, evasive,
cunning, legalistic good ol' boy who tried to cover up his misdeeds -- in
other words, a typical human being.
Now we know (if we didn't already) that George W. Bush is also an
equivocating, evasive, cunning, legalistic good ol' boy who tried to cover up
his misdeeds -- another typical human being.
But the people who were braying for Clinton's head then are silent now. It's
a world-class demonstration of hypocrisy.
Of course, being arrested for drunken driving 24 years ago isn't a mortal
sin. It shouldn't disqualify you to be president. It's a human failing, like
Bush's rumored youthful drug use (or Gore's admitted drug use), or like
Clinton's inability to keep his hands off Monica Lewinsky. Still, one would
have a little more compassion for Bush if he demonstrated that he had learned
something from his youthful indiscretions -- if, for instance, he showed some
compassion for the thousands of people locked up for minor substance-abuse
violations in Texas jails. (Violations it's hard to believe he himself didn't
engage in.) But all that he seems to have learned is that if you get away
with it, it's OK.
Nor is Bush's failure to reveal the arrest a mortal sin, although that
failure raises serious questions about his judgment. Not revealing that one
was arrested for a serious crime, when one is running for president, is both
foolish and arrogant -- qualities that in Bush's case seem linked to his
silver-spoon background. He's always gotten away with everything -- hell, he
became the GOP's candidate for president with fewer qualifications than any
candidate in modern history -- so why shouldn't he get away with hiding a
li'l ol' arrest?
Worse, but still not a disqualifiable offense, is Bush's tortured
family-values justification for not revealing his crime. Claiming he wanted
to be a role model to his daughters, Bush said that he made "the decision
that as a dad I didn't want my daughters doing the kinds of things that I
did." Just how telling your daughters that you were arrested, booked and
humiliated will entice them down a six-for-the-road lifestyle is not clear.
Nor is it obvious why allowing the press to inform your daughters of your
reckless past is a preferable parenting technique. But it doesn't matter: The
"I was protecting my girls" story has all the plausibility of those pious
declarations star athletes are always making that they had to turn down their
longtime team's offer of $36 million and sign with another for $45 million
"because of my family." How much more refreshing it would be if he simply
said that he concealed the drunken-driving arrest because when running for
president, it doesn't look good to have a rap sheet.
Finally, there's Bush's apparent lie about the incident, when Wayne Slater of
the Dallas Morning News asked him point-blank in 1998 about his arrest record
-- a lie, or misstatement, that he may have been about to correct when his
ever-vigilant spokeswoman Karen Hughes pulled him away from the reporter. It
remains to be seen what other steps, if any, Bush took to conceal the arrest.
None of these missteps are necessarily morally beyond the pale, but when
combined with the innumerable other examples of Bush Jr.'s fecklessness, they
paint a picture not just of a hopeless lightweight but a
responsibility-shirking one. (To me, the worst thing about the whole episode
was that it took this campaign-threatening bombshell to get Bush to hold a
real, live press conference where he would have to face real, live
questioners -- his first press conference, incredibly, in a month.) Moreover,
regardless of how serious you think his sins are, they are ones guaranteed to
send right-wing moralists into life-threatening convulsions: drugs (can
anyone seriously now interpret his non-denials as anything other than tacit
admissions?), avoiding Vietnam, being cagey with the truth.
Yet those moralists have suddenly become unaccountably mellow, as if they had
(no doubt inadvertently) smoked a beakerful of the herbal equivalent of the
true, the blushful Hippocrene. Whoa, dude, whatever, they mumble, barely
raising their heads from the paisley pillow upon which they recline while
listening to Blue Cheer. Drunk driving? Hey, man, we all blow it. Reefer?
Cocaine? Chill, dude -- what are you, some kinda square?
This isn't metaphor. A weird watershed of some kind was crossed on Thursday
night's "Hardball" when Alan Simpson, the fire-breathing former Wyoming
senator, defended Bush by saying that look, every family has been through
this, we all have kids who have been busted for drunken driving, everybody
knows a kid who got popped for pot or cocaine. And if there was a way that
Republicans could push reformed drug laws that would help only their rich,
white children beat the rap, I know they'd be big enough to put them through!
Then there was William Bennett. The apostle of windy rectitude was completely
untroubled by Bush's arrest, telling host Christopher Matthews that it would
only be an issue if he lied about it. (I don't know what Bennett is saying
now that it appears that Bush did lie, but I don't think he'll be rushing to
his computer to start writing "The Death of Outrage II." There are Republican
lies and Democratic lies, and in the exalted nostrils of St. William, only
the latter stink.) Somehow, it's hard to imagine Trent Lott or Rush Limbaugh
or any of the harrumphers of the right taking this live-and-let-live line if
it was Clinton or Al Gore who had been arrested for drunken driving. Then,
the very fate of the republic would be at stake.
The rest of the moralizers fell into party lockstep. Limbaugh began attacking
Gore and his supposed tricksters, working himself up into such a frenzy that
by the time he was done you were pretty sure that it was Al himself who had
poured a beer bong down poor George's craw that sodden day 24 years ago. Sen.
Arlen Specter, R-Pa., took the same line. For gentlemen who had revealed
themselves to be such tireless seekers after the truth in Monicagate, they
seemed oddly unconcerned with the fact that the story, whatever its origins,
was true.
One can forgive political operatives anything: They don't pretend to be
engaged in anything other than getting their candidate elected, by any means
necessary. But those who mount the bully pulpit and claim to be speaking in
the name of morality must be held to a higher standard. And by failing to
hold the Republican candidate to the same principles they held Clinton to,
they have abdicated all right to be regarded as arbiters of public behavior.
In fact, they have been revealed as nothing more than party hacks, practicing
the most vulgar kind of instrumental, ends-justify-the-means morality,
prepared to use the Bible or any other tool to defeat their opponent. It is
impossible to take them seriously. And the next time they come forward
raising a holy ruckus over some Democrat's misdeed, they should be laughed
off the national stage.
You do have to feel some sympathy for the moralistic wing of the GOP, though.
It's been hard from the beginning of the Bush campaign to look at them, then
look at their candidate, and keep a straight face. Now it's impossible not to
burst out giggling.
Here's their champion, the man they anointed to uphold their cherished
virtues: An intellectually lazy frat boy who avoided the Vietnam War by
pulling a dubious National Guard stint, a self-confessed partier and problem
drinker who didn't reveal an arrest for drunken driving and who has
conspicuously ducked all questions about what other substances he might have
used in his past, the heir to a political dynasty who was handed a series of
cushy rich-kid jobs.
Yessiree, that's certainly moral exemplar material! This is the guy they're
trying to sell to us as a paragon of virtue, the Western hero who will bring
honor and decency and courage and mom and apple pie and all that
star-spangled Ronald Reagan stuff back to the White House, once they fumigate
it.
Sorry, that dog won't hunt.
If American voters wind up putting this amiable dunce in the White House, I'm
actually hoping he falls off the wagon and returns to his party-boy ways,
because then at least we might have some decadent, Merry Monarch-like
Restoration Comedy fun -- leering courtiers, foppish wits, extreme d�collet�
and so on. But please, my dear braying moralists, don't pretend this low-rent
Charles II imposter represents some kind of Great Awakening. As Al Pacino
said in "The Godfather," "It insults my intelligence -- and makes me very
angry."

- - - - - - - - - - - -
About the writer
Gary Kamiya is Salon's executive editor.

Reply via email to