TDS Outbreak at Miss
America Pageant
ÒMiss Texas Tears into Trump in a Blistering
15-Second Takedown on Live TV,Ó screamed the headline on YahooÕs lead article, which originally appeared in the liberal Huffington Post this past Monday
morning. Here are the articleÕs
first two paragraphs:
Miss
Texas Margana Wood may not have triumphed at the Miss
America pageant, but she won over millions of new fans by calling out both
white supremacists and President Donald Trump on Sunday night.
During
the Q&A portion of the event, Wood was asked about TrumpÕs response to white supremacist violence in Charlottesville, Virginia last month, when he
said there were Òvery fine people on both sides.Ó
The links one will notice are all to thoroughly
one-sided, indeed, extraordinarily propagandistic, articles in the Huffington Post that turn the Charlottesville Operation into the morality play
that I discussed in my previous article.
I said that the mainstream mediaÕs coverage could be summed up by the headline, ÒViolent White Supremacist Rally in Charlottesville Turns
Deadly.Ó In fact, it might be better summed up by the question to which the
aspirant to the Miss America crown was given 20 seconds to respond:
Last month a demonstration of Neo-Nazis, white
supremacists, and the KKK in Charlottesville, Virginia, turned violent and a
counter-protestor was killed. The
president said there were very fine people on both sides. Were there?
ÒYouÕre asking me thatÉhere?Ó is what I would be
thinking. ÒAre you out of your
mind?Ó
But the person asking the question was one of
the judges, Jess Cagle, the Hollywood-celebrity-obsessed
editor
of Time, Inc.Õs People magazine. He might not be the most appropriate evaluator of feminine allure, but
itÕs pretty clear from his loaded question that he knows what he likes when it comes
to current political opinion, and Miss Texas, who wanted his vote, could hardly
have responded in any way but in the direction in which the question led
her. Furthermore, an honest and
knowledgeable answer, which would have to begin with a correction of the
falsehoods in his question, would have required a lot more than 20
seconds. LetÕs take a shot at it to
show what I mean.
First, the stated purpose of the demonstration
was to protest the proposed removal of the statue of the great Confederate general,
Robert E. Lee, from its place of honor in Charlottesville. Considering that unstated fact, there is
a very good chance that at least some of the demonstrators were Òvery fine
people,Ó Southern gentlemen of the old school, in fact, of whose number I like
to count myself. Perhaps the lovely
blonde Margana could have made that point in the
allotted time, but anyone depending upon the mainstream press for her
information wouldnÕt even know it, and if she did such an answer would surely
have ruined any chance she had to win.
Second, not even the thoroughly dishonest
mainstream press has reported that the KKK was among the demonstrators. That heavily FBI-infiltrated group,
which really amounts to nothing as a political organization in this second
decade of the 21st century, had already had its meager little rally in Charlottesville a
month before.
Third, the expression Òwhite supremacistÓ is a
pejorative term used by opponents of people who call themselves Òwhite
nationalists,Ó as the leader of the rally, Jason Kessler, and more prominent
associate, Richard Spencer, and their intellectual mentor, Jared Taylor, like
to do. I made in quite clear in my previous article that I do not regard
these likely mountebanks as fine people, but I would not dismiss the
possibility that some of their well-meaning but misguided followers might have
been swayed by their argument. As
both Taylor and Spencer have put it, they are calling for the same sort of
group consciousness and pride among the very disparate group of Caucasians generally
that sustains the state of Israel. This
latter is a sentiment that they and the molders of public opinion in the
country seem to admire, and we donÕt hear the Jess Cagles
of the world bandying around the expression, ÒJewish supremacists,Ó when it
would seem to be a good deal more fitting for Zionists than calling
self-proclaimed white nationalists Òwhite supremacists.Ó
Fourth, Cagle leads off with Òneo-NazisÓ as
though it was their rally more than anyone elseÕs, which is simply a joke. Anyone calling himself a Nazi of any
stripe in the United States today and flaunting a flag with a swastika on it
might as well have a sign pinned to his backside that says, ÒKICK ME.Ó Yes, there were such people
polluting the rally, but who can really believe that they were anything but
Deep State plants, designed to make defending Robert E. Lee look absolutely as
bad as possible?
Fifth, there is the Òturned violentÓ and
Òcounter-protestorÓ part of the questionÉor statement. One would never gather from it that the
turn to violence occurred when the Democratic governor of Virginia, Terry
McAuliffe, with no apparent reason for doing so, declared the rally an unlawful
assembly 30 minutes before it was to begin and then the police forcibly flushed
the demonstrators out of the park where they had been given permission to
gather and into the arms of the violent Antifa and
Black Lives Matter Òcounter-protestors.Ó
After they did that, the police, ignoring their responsibility to
maintain order, simply retired from the scene and allowed the two opposing
groups to go at one another.
Propagandist Desperation
Certainly you realize, dear reader,
that the stated opinion of a contestant at the Miss America event is not
worthy of being treated as national news.
But, as it turned out, Yahoo and
the Huffington Post were not alone. AOL also headlined the story and gave it the same
spin as Yahoo and USA Today did the same. In fact, ÒDisagreeing
with President Trump was a common theme during the Miss America 2018
competition, Sunday,Ó is how the latter led off its story, noting that the
eventual winner, Cara Mund of North Dakota, went for
the bait on TrumpÕs withdrawal from the Paris climate change accord, but Miss
Missouri, Jennifer
Davis, gave a pass on an invitation to find Trump guilty of colluding with the
Russians to deprive Hillary Clinton of the presidency.
What in the world is going on here? What we are witnessing is desperation by
the molders of public opinion at their increasing loss of control of the
national narrative. They still hold
a considerable amount of sway over people who subscribe to newspapers, watch
the network nightly news shows, or, say, listen to National Public Radio. That is to say, they are still able to
propagandize that part of the public that likes to think of itself as
educated. In Virginia, such people
are heavily concentrated in the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, DC,
and in the University of Virginia home of Charlottesville. Those are the only parts of the state
that went for Marco Rubio over Trump in the Republican primary last year and the
regions that made the difference for Hillary in her narrow victory over Trump
in the state in the general election.
You can almost see the wheels turning at propaganda
central: ÒHow can we reach the lowbrows?Ó
ÒWalter ScottÕs Personality ParadeÓ in the Sunday newspaper insert Parade magazine used to be a favorite
way as I have chronicled with my Parade of Lies series, but, as noted, only a very few
people get newspapers anymore, and Parade
has shrunk to virtually nothing. ThatÕs
where the Miss America pageant comes in, as well as ubiquitous free sources of
news on the Internet. (An Internet search of ÒMiss Texas TrumpÓ showed that a
great many other news organs also treated this ginned up exchange with Miss
Texas as news, including Fox.)
Fortunately, thereÕs a good sign that the
propagandists are succeeding mainly in making themselves look bad and exposing
themselves for what they are. At
the time of my writing this, 11,820 people had weighed in on Yahoo with comments. Almost all of them attacked Miss Texas and
the article. One of the most
perceptive was from someone using the screen name ÒHawkiÓ:
Obviously, she doesn't represent the state of Texas. We like the
president and support him. Trump Derangement Syndrome [TDS] needs to be
certified as a legitimate disease by the American Psychiatric Association.
HereÕs another one that was fairly typical: from
ÒPartyLikeIts1776Ó:
Fake
News: Young impressionable girl, brainwashed by Liberal mainstream media fake
news, parrots LIES that have slandered our great President enough, and loud
enough, and continuously enough, people will believe it. Good for Democrats,
sad for truth seeking Americans... This should open the eyes of many Americans
to the Democrats propaganda policy, if you tell a LIE long enough, and loud
enough, and continuously enough, people will believe it. Good for Democrats,
sad for truth seeking Americans.
TheyÕre
not having very much success with their target audience, it would appear, and itÕs
just wishful thinking that Miss Texas Òwon over millions of new fansÓ with her
desired response to Jess CagleÕs loaded question.
David Martin
September 14, 2017
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