(http://reason.com/)  

 
 
 

_Hollywood Babylon—For Ugly People_ 
(http://reason.com/archives/2010/07/23/hollywood-babylon-for-ugly-peo) 
A week of navel-gazing coverage of Andrew Breitbart, the Journolist, and  
race
_Michael C. Moynihan_ (http://reason.com/people/michael-c-moynihan)  | July 
23,  2010 


 
President John F. Kennedy called Washington, D.C., a city "of Northern 
charm  and Southern efficiency." This city—the one I reluctantly call home—is 
indeed  inefficient and charmless: The reason for the former should be 
obvious, though  the latter can be blamed on those oleaginous hordes of pompous 
and  self-important politicians, bloggers, and journalists that make D.C. “
Hollywood  for ugly people.” (Yes, I am one of these types, but, in my defense, 
I have a  perfectly reasonable understanding of my low-level of influence 
and importance,  and I don't harbor an earnest desire to change the world or 
score victories for  “my side.” I’ll let the reader decide how physically 
repulsive I am.) 
If you haven’t noticed the recent “news,” you blissfully missed another 
week  of Beltway navel-gazing, of self-referential media stories, 
holier-than-thou  sermonizing about journalistic ethics, and the usual 
bipartisan 
accusations of  race-baiting. We have all heard the deeply serious denounce our 
 
loathsome celebrity-obsessed media culture, with all of its reporting on  
Britney, Mel, and Lindsey. Scoff, eye-roll, harrumph—queue the  dissident MSNBC 
anchoring _tearing up  a Paris Hilton news story on camera_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6VdNcCcweL0) , the Solzhenitsyn of the cable  
news age. 
Serious people don’t report on the unserious gossip from Hollywood, though  
how about the unserious gossip from Ugly Hollywood? Cut to the furrowed 
brow,  finger-wagging panel of experts discussing the firing of Washington  
Post reporter Dave Weigel, the leaked emails from obnoxious and unfunny  
liberal journalists, and the outraged discussion on just how a hyperpartisan  
troglodyte like Andrew Breitbart had snuck into our club. Sure,  we bowdlerize 
quotes and accuse non-racist people of secretly harboring  Orval Faubus 
tendencies, but we do it with élan and a journalism school  degree. 
So nonsense replaces nonsense, Britney to Breitbart, but it’s the only 
thing  this charming and efficient city is talking about. 
First, there was the _Journolist leaks,_ 
(http://dailycaller.com/buzz/journolist/)  in which members of a listserv  
inhabited by liberal journalists 
and academics expressed their desire to see  Rush Limbaugh die of a heart 
attack; to toss their enemies through plate glass  windows; to call random 
conservatives racists; and to rid the country of those  “_fucking NASCAR 
retards_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2010/07/in-defense-of-fucking-n
ascar-retards/60220/) .” In other words, a confirmation  of preexisting 
conservative stereotypes about members of the liberal  intelligentsia. But was 
the group of 400 writers—the Learned Elders of the  Left—attempting to 
coordinate news coverage?  
Former JournoList members scoff at charges of collusion, that they were  
members of an all-powerful clique recalibrating White House policy, burying  
coverage of Rev. Jeremiah Wright, and plotting to force Fox News off the air—
all  from a _Google Group_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Groups) . 
Critics counter that, whether opinion  journalists or straight news reporters, 
the group was _attempting_ 
(http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/07/the-line-on-palin.html)
  to “organize a media narrative,” to 
use  Atlantic blogger Andrew Sullivan’s phrase. 
The whole tedious debate misses one interesting point. While commenters 
have  noted blogger Spencer Ackerman’s sleazy suggestion that liberals start 
labeling  random Republicans “racist”—pick a conservative, like “Fred 
Barnes, Karl Rove,  who cares — and call them racists"—few noticed the 
obsession 
with accusing  opponents not of being misguided or wrong, but motivated by 
racial animus and  Nazi-like hatreds. But more on this in a minute. 
The other media-centric obsession was a selectively edited video released 
by  conservative activist Andrew Breitbart, suggesting that a black employee 
of the  Department of Agriculture discriminated against white farmers while 
working for  the Obama administration. A terrified White House forced the 
employee, Shirley  Sherrod, to resign, thus seeming to confirm the charge that 
the administration  had purged the USDA of a dangerous racist, the Angela 
Davis of the farm  lobby. 
When the unexpurgated _video_ (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E9NcCa_KjXk)  
was released, Sherrod was vindicated, offered an  apology from President 
Barack Obama, the NAACP, Bill O’Reilly, and dozens of  others quick to believe 
the racism charge, and offered her job back. In other  words, Sherrod was 
slimed and maligned because someone falsely accused her of  being a racist. 
But then again, Sherrod, who CNN’s David Gergen _compared_ 
(http://newsbusters.org/blogs/brent-baker/2010/07/22/shirley-sherrod-reminds-cnn-s-gergen-nelso
n-mandela)  to Nelson Mandela, doesn’t subscribe to the  ghastly views of 
Karl Rove and Fred Barnes. 
Most members of the media, both liberal and conservative, expressed outrage 
 over Sherrod’s sacking and the unfair media coverage that followed. Keith  
Olbermann denounced the “political guillotine” of Fox News and Breitbart, 
and  the conservative desire to “convict the benevolent as racist.” It was 
important,  Olbermann maintained, to remember that facts matter and that 
hyperbolic bloggers  who end up treating their quarry like Danton should be 
humiliated. And if you  thought these pleas for level-headedness, for the media 
to tone down the  rhetoric, were sincere, the MSNBC host employed another 
analogy from French  history, comparing Sherrod to _Captain Alfred Dreyfus_ 
(http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/anti-semitism/Dreyfus.html) , 
the French military officer  famously sentenced to life imprisonment on Devil’
s Island in an anti-Semitic  frame up. 
Even Sherrod, having just observed the consequences of sloppily charging  
people with racism, told CNN that Breitbart “knew what effect [the video] 
would  have on the conservative, racist people he's dealing with.” And as the 
scripted  media introspection and the rehearsed “conversations” about race 
were  inaugurated by those who already knew the answers, blogger and former 
Journolist  member Matt Yglesias was falsely accusing libertarian economist 
_Arnold Kling of racism_ 
(http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/2010/07/structural_decl.html) —the _second 
time_ 
(http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/2009/02/kling_vs_ny_tim.html)  Kling has 
had to endure the toxic charge.  But 
Kling, unlike Sherrod, is an enemy. 
If all this counted as a teachable moment, it is unclear who the students  
were. 
But the unfair charge of racism, fascism, and Nazism, correctly denounced  
when spouted by Glenn Beck, seems something of a regular feature on 
Journolist.  A blogger named Lindsay Beyerstein wrote of Obama’s opponents: 
“I’m 
not saying  these guys are capital F-fascists, but they don’t want limited 
government.”  Richard Yeselson, another liberal blogger, agreed: “This is core 
of the  Bush/Cheney base transmorgrified (sic) into an even more explicitly 
 racialized/anti-cosmopolitan constituency. Why? Um, because the president 
is a  black guy named Barack Hussein Obama.” Yeseleson argued that the Tea 
Partiers  wanted a “militarist/heterosexist/herrenvolk state,” using the 
German  word for “master race.” An essay by Victor Davis Hanson arguing 
against illegal  immigration is “very close in spirit to the classic 1970s 
racist 
tome The  Camp of the Saints, where White Guys struggle to make up their 
minds  whether to go out and murder brown people or just give up.” 
But false (or flimsy) accusations of racism abound—they are everywhere one  
looks—though they rarely provoke the level of outrage seen in the Sherrod  
affair. This week, in a fit of boredom, I found myself leafing through a 
deeply  silly book by William Kleinknecht, a crime reporter for a newspaper in 
New  Jersey, portentously called _The Man Who Sold the World: Ronald Reagan 
and the Betrayal of Main  Street America_ 
(http://www.google.com/url?q=http://www.amazon.com/Man-Who-Sold-World-Betrayal/dp/1568584105&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AF
QjCNG9jhtjcgLUluUtjRGspr6qTLhJVA) . If it wasn’t enough that Reagan 
betrayed,  attacked, humiliated, and sold Main Street to corporations the 
reader is 
 informed that after the 1980 election the United States was “turned over  
to...thinly-veiled racists.” Nowhere does Kleinknecht substantiate the 
charge,  but when the accused is Ronald Reagan, why bother? 
This whole “debate,” if we can charitably call it that, is a mess of straw 
 men, hypocrisy, stupidity, and reflexive defenses of one’s own tribe. It 
has  nothing to do with fairness, journalistic ethics, or the immorality of 
dragging  the reputations of innocents through the mud in an attempt at 
scoring political  points. 
Racism is the most powerful and toxic accusation in American discourse, one 
 that derails careers and destroys futures. Yet despite its toxicity it is 
also  the one that requires the least amount of evidence; the racism, we are 
 told, is institutionalized or subterranean, so trust that it’s being 
divined in  good faith. Well, that won’t do. Because there is no penalty for 
unfairly  calling someone a racist, as David Frum _points out_ 
(http://theweek.com/bullpen/column/205190/shirley-sherrod-and-the-shame-of-conservative-media)
 —if it sticks, a point for your side; if it  doesn’t, who cares? 
All of this will soon be forgotten, thankfully, and the charming and  
efficient pundits of Washington, D.C. will go back to observing the “racist” 
Tea 
 Party movement and that stupid conservatives aren't stupid _but_ 
(http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/07/malkin-award-1.html)
  “
_neo-fascists_ 
(http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/07/they.html) ." And 
we’ll be back to business as  usual. 
Michael C. Moynihan is a senior editor of Reason  magazine






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