The Top Seven Techniques Liberals Use to Lie About Conservatives
John Hawkins
Tuesday, March 31, 2009Liberals spend much of their time
trying to hide what they believe from the public while conservatives are
perpetually frustrated by the fact that the American people don't seem
to understand what we really believe. Both problems spring from a single
source: liberals lie incessantly. That's not to say that there aren't
conservative liars or truthful liberals; there are, but for liberals,
lying is the rule, not the exception.
There are two reasons why liberals lie much more than conservatives.
First off, this is a center-right country and liberal beliefs are much
more unpopular than conservative ones. If liberals told the truth about
what they believe and want to do, the Democratic Party would practically
be wiped out in much of the country.
Additionally,
conservatives tend to think liberals are merely stupid or emotional,
while liberals tend to view conservatives as evil -- and liberals
use that belief to justify lying about conservatives. After all, if you
lie about someone who's evil to keep them from doing bad things,
couldn't that be considered virtuous? You may disagree with that, but
liberal politicians, bloggers, and journalists live by that rule. Any
lie told about a conservative, even one that liberals know isn't true,
will be uncritically repeated ad nauseum by the Left until the point it
becomes politically disadvantageous to do so.
So, in order to help fight the lies of the Left, here's a guide to
the most prevalent techniques that liberals use to mislead people about
conservatives. If you're listening to liberals talk about conservatives,
you're virtually guaranteed to hear at least one of these techniques
used.
1) Question The Motivations: When liberals are losing an argument,
they love to shift the discussion not to the facts at hand, but to the
motivation of the person on the other side. That's because it's almost
impossible to prove what someone's motive may be for a particular
action.
Thus, liberals can claim that
Charles Pickering, a man who went toe-to-toe with the Mississippi Ku
Klux Klan in the sixties, is actually a racist or that George Bush
invaded Iraq to try to steal its oil.
From the liberal perspective, the more shameless the lies, the better
because the target of the scandalous accusation and his defenders will
often waste inordinate amounts of time and energy fighting ridiculous,
unfounded allegations that a certain percentage of uninformed Americans
will simply assume are true without evidence.
2) The Anonymous Smear: Want to launch an attack at a conservative,
but don't have a credible source handy? No problem. Just take a vicious
critic or an unreliable source and make them "anonymous."
CBS did it with
Bill Burkett, who provided them with the fake "Bush was AWOL"
documents during the 2004 campaign. Had they revealed who he was, the
story would have been treated as not credible from day one.
If even that proves too troublesome, some members of the media (I
strongly suspect
Seymour Hersh is guilty of this) just make things up and attribute
them to non-existent sources. Since their sources are anonymous, unless
they make the mistake of including verifiable details like
the New Republic's Scott Beauchamp, it's almost impossible to prove
they're lying.
3) The Teary Eyed Spokesman: One of the Left's favorite tactics of
late is to pick pathetic figures we're supposed to feel sorry for as
spokesmen. That way, if you try to respond to the lies of someone like
Cindy Sheehan, you're accused of picking on the mother of a dead
soldier. If you try to respond to the lies of Max Cleland, you're
accused of picking on a crippled vet. At this point, I'm surprised they
haven't found a gaunt, stuttering orphan to serve as Obama's Press
Secretary. Worst-case scenario, he couldn't do much worse than Robert
Gibbs.
4) Rewriting History: The American public has a short memory and
liberals count on that to get away with many of their most egregious
lies. For example, that's the factor liberals count on when they try to
pretend that George Bush lied about WMDs to get us into Iraq. Lies of
that sort usually seem to work until someone points out that Democrats,
including our current Secretary of State, were
saying things like this before the war,
"In the four years since the inspectors left, intelligence reports
show that Saddam Hussein has worked to rebuild his chemical and
biological weapons stock, his missile delivery capability, and his
nuclear program. He has also given aid, comfort, and sanctuary to
terrorists, including Al Qaeda members, though there is apparently
no evidence of his involvement in the terrible events of September
11, 2001. It is clear, however, that if left unchecked, Saddam
Hussein will continue to increase his capacity to wage biological
and chemical warfare, and will keep trying to develop nuclear
weapons. Should he succeed in that endeavor, he could alter the
political and security landscape of the Middle East, which as we
know all too well affects American security." -- Hillary Clinton,
October 10, 2002
5) Everybody Knows: When liberals want to avoid a losing argument,
they sometimes just refuse to have the argument at all and assure
everyone that the matter has already been decided. Why, there's no need
for Al Gore to even debate global warming with people who could easily
blow
holes the size of the Grand Canyon in his arguments because he
insists that there's a non-existent "scientific consensus."
The Swift Boat Veterans for Truth? As long as the Kerry campaign
ignored them, most of the mainstream media did, too, but then the line
of attack was immediately that the Swifties had already been "discredited."
Who discredited them? How did it happen? What made them less credible
than Kerry, particularly since they
made him change his story more than once? Whenever you hear liberals
in some form or fashion insisting that the argument with conservatives
on a particular issue is already over, it's a good indication that they
believe they'll really get their clocks cleaned in a straight up debate.
6)
The Ransom Note Method: One of the Left's favorite tricks is
to take something a conservative says completely out-of-context and to
attack that comment, even if it's obvious that they're twisting the
meaning of what was said. This is how the Left can accuse John McCain of
wanting to fight for 100 years in Iraq or say Rush Limbaugh wants Barack
Obama to fail even if it hurts the country.
This one is especially insidious because some conservatives foolishly
blame other conservatives for having their words taken out of context.
However, the reality is that if someone is determined to distort what
you say, he can always find something to twist around. The people who
deserve blame in that situation are not the people whose words were
misrepresented; it's the liars who have chosen to misrepresent what they
said.
7) The Straw Man: If you can't find a sin conservatives have
committed to attack, then invent one. This is one of the most used
arrows in the quiver of liberals who claim the Right wants to create a
theocracy, kick senior citizens off of Social Security, or reward the
rich at the expense of the middle class.
The Left uses this tactic against specific politicians as well.
Remember during the 2004 campaign when the Left kept promising to
fight a draft that Bush didn't propose and didn't support? How about
all the attacks on Saxby Chambliss because he supposedly questioned the
patriotism of crippled war vet Max Cleland? Except, of course, Saxby
Chambliss
never questioned Cleland's patriotism.
Unlike liberals, conservatives believe most Americans share our
values and so, if you want to know what we think, all you have to do is
ask us and we will tell you.
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