Via Memeorandum, Laura Varon Brown, at the Detroit Free Press, shares her story, in "Obama criticism shuts down conversation":
Parties were more fun when George W. Bush was president. You could debate, argue even, praise and condemn, throw darts and laurels and solve the world's problems over a bottle of wine.End of the presidential punchline as well.
No more. At least not in my circles. If you want to stop a conversation in its tracks, just question something President Barack Obama has said or done. It's not open to debate - and I don't think that's healthy, for the country or the president.
It's especially unsettling for a free speech girl like me. The First Amendment is important - but lately, it feels like my right of self-expression is being squashed.
One example: Obama's comment to Jay Leno on "The Tonight Show," comparing his bowling abilities to someone in the Special Olympics.
Can you imagine the uproar had Bush said that? He'd be banished from bowling alleys for eternity. His bowling average and IQ would have immediately been compared in Twitter messages demanding his resignation.
But instead, media and water cooler conversations the next day were about bowling scores and how tough the game can be. Anyone bringing up the insensitivity of the president's remark heard, "Come on, give the guy a chance. So he said one thing wrong. Anyone could have said something like that." End of discussion.
As today's Los Angeles Times reports, "Comedians are treading carefully as they test the limits of political satire with a black president":
On his HBO show, "Real Time With Bill Maher," the comedian routinely makes vicious fun of celebrities, politicians, presidents and even God. But he's learned that, for much of his audience, Barack Obama is off limits.You know, Maher dug down to the depths of depravity with his famous career-crashing line, "We have been the cowards, lobbing cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away. That's cowardly. Staying in the airplane when it hits the building, say what you want about it, it's not cowardly."
Not long after the historic presidential election, Maher joked that Republicans were feeling particularly superstitious: "They say the country is having bad luck because there's a black cat in the White House." The studio audience erupted in loud groans and boos - a reaction, Maher observed in a recent interview, that exceeded his often scathing attacks on organized religion.
"Obama is the new God," quipped Maher of the poorly received dig, which he pointed out pokes at conservatives more than the commander in chief.
And now he can't even joke that Obama's the new God?
Now that's cowardly! But what can you do when criticizing a black president gets you attacked as "racist"?
We're all Obamessianists now ...
I posted this elsewhere on this exact topic earlier today:
ReplyDeleteYou know, when you really stop and think about it, given what this statist totalitarian is currently doing to this country, from spending it into the financial toilet, to rubber-stamping a government takeover of just about everything, and not to mention his gearing up to stifle dissent, there really isn't anything that is even remotely funny about the man.
-Dave
Thanks Dave!
ReplyDeleteThanks Dave! You're smart! And MC Hammer's broke!
ReplyDeleteI've noticed while standing in line a the Post Office or supermarket that bringing up politics can REALLY raise hackles. That is why I like doing it.
ReplyDeleteWhat gets me is how many Obama worshipers still think Palin said she could see Russia from her front porch.
Just shows how ignorant many of them are.