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Paranoid?
The Conspiracy Against John Edwards
By John D. Turner
There’s a conspiracy afoot.
According to John Edwards, “they” are trying “to shut him up” by
focusing on trivia (like his rather expensive haircuts) instead of
focusing on the message he is trying so desperately to bring to the
American people. And what is the message “they” are trying so hard
to block? Why, ending the war and universalizing health care, of
course.
Here’s what Mr. Edwards had to say recently before an audience in
Creston, Iowa:
This stuff's not an
accident. Nobody in this room should think this is an accident. You
know, I'm out there speaking up for universal healthcare, ending
this war in Iraq, speaking up for the poor. They want to shut me up.
That's what this is about. "Let's distract from people who don't
have health care coverage. Let's distract from people who can't feed
their children.... Let's talk about this silly frivolous nothing
stuff so that America won't pay attention."
They will never silence me.
Never.
If we don't stand up to these people, if we don't fight them, if we
don't beat them, they're going to continue to control this country.
They're going to control the media. They're going to control what's
being said. They do not want to hear us talking about health care
for everybody.
My question for Mr. Edwards is simply, why? Why would anyone be
interested in “shutting him up”? Who cares? He isn’t even really a
contender. According to polling data on
Real Clear Politics, Edwards is a distant third behind Clinton
and Obama. In polls where Al Gore is listed, he trails Gore, who
isn’t even an announced candidate.
According to Ms.
Clinton’s website, her campaign issues include “Providing
Affordable and Accessible Health Care”, “Ending the War in Iraq”,
“Strengthening the Middle Class”, and “Supporting Parents and Caring
for Children”. No specific mention of “the poor” per se, although
they might fall under the latter category to a certain extent. And I
know I have heard her mention the poor a time or two.
Mr. Obama’s campaign
issues include “Fighting Poverty”, “Plan to End the Iraq War”,
and “Creating a Healthcare System that Works”. In fact, his site
lists 13 different issues, more than Ms. Clinton’s, including
“Protecting the Right to Vote”, which he seems to think is still a
problem in America today. “Fighting Poverty” is at the top of his
list, so even though Ms. Clinton didn’t mention it specifically, Mr.
Edwards can hardly claim he is the lone voice crying in the
wilderness.
So once again, since he isn’t saying anything any different than the
other candidates are, exactly why would “they” be out to shut him
up? Are “they” trying to silence Ms. Clinton and Mr. Obama as well?
And who are these mysterious “they’s” anyway? The news media? The
Republican’s? Ms. Clinton and Mr. Obama? Talk radio? Well, he’s kind
of vague on that. Whoever these unnamed forces are, they are,
according to Edwards, powerful enough to control the media and what
is being said. And they particularly don’t like it when Mr. Edwards
says it.
Shutting people in the media up sounds kind of like the “fairness
doctrine” to me. But wait! Isn’t that a Democrat initiative?
Silencing Rush Limbaugh is fine; he’s only a hate-monger after all.
But silencing Mr. Edwards? How evil!
I also took a look at Mr.
Edward’s website as well. Predictably, his main theme seems to
be his “two America’s” theory. According to Mr. Edwards, “In today’s
Two Americas, it is no coincidence that most families are working
harder for stagnating wages when there are nearly 60 lobbyists for
every member of Congress.” Assuming I accept his premise that wages
are stagnating, these two are related exactly how? And would 50
lobbyists for every member of Congress be better? 40? 30? Would
halving the number have a measurable effect on those “stagnating
wages”?
I know my “cost of living” raise was less this year, but then again,
that’s because the Federal Government only voted me a 2% increase
this year, which actually turned out to be about 1.7% (before taxes)
when all was said and done. Would cutting the number of lobbyists
garnered be a better raise? I think not. Perhaps I could use a
lobbyist in Congress!
Also typically, he seems to have a hard time coming right out and
saying what he means. His “speaking up for universal health care and
the poor” are buried under a heading entitled “Standing Up For
Regular Families”. Would that be as opposed to “irregular” families?
What’s a regular family anyway? A “just plain folks” millionaire
trial lawyer like himself, someone with multiple mansions, and a
carbon footprint the size of a small town?
Why not have a heading like Mr. Obama’s titled “Fighting Poverty”,
or “Universal Health Care”? Stick it right out there in the open,
unambiguously, where everyone can go right to it. State your case
boldly. But no, his call for ending the war in Iraq appears under a
heading entitled “Restoring America’s Leadership Role In the World”.
Yawn. Perhaps it’s the lawyer in him coming to the fore. And yet,
Ms. Clinton is a lawyer, as is Mr. Obama. Maybe Mr. Edwards simply
has a difficult time coming straight to the point. His website has
an unfocused and amateurish look and feel to it, unlike the hard
hitting, straight-to-the-point websites of Ms. Clinton and Mr. Obama.
I might disagree with them politically, but they do know how to get
a message across. Mr. Edwards message on the other hand, looks like
maybe it was put together by his hairdresser.
Mr. Edwards claims that the media is focusing on trivia, such as his
expensive haircuts, his many mansions, and otherwise extravagant
lifestyle, instead of his “message”. But in the case of Mr. Edwards,
the “trivia” is the news. His message is no different from the
message promulgated by candidates Clinton and Obama, both far ahead
of him in the polls, and much more likely than he to actually win
the nomination. The only thing differentiating him is the cost of
his haircuts, which is why the media focuses on that instead of
regurgitating the same message from another also-ran.
It’s too bad. From a Republican perspective, Mr. Edwards would be
the ideal candidate to run against; all hat and no cattle as it
were. Truly the embodiment of symbolism over substance.
It is interesting that this message of his, far from being
surreptitiously gathered by some Republican flunky and posted to the
Internet by someone trying to make him look bad, was actually posted
by a member of his campaign staff. In other words, they think this
will help his campaign!
Maybe he is looking to garner the tinfoil hat vote. This “they are
out to get me” tactic seems eerily reminiscent of Ross Perot’s
meltdown in 1992.
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