I’m not much of a
sleeper, so to distract myself from middle-of-the-night fretting, I listen to
talk radio, thinking it’s so boring it will drive me back to sleep.
I usually listen to
sports talk—which is as enervating as it gets--but last night I tuned in to Savage Nation, an eponymous right-wing
program hosted by Michael Savage.
Born in the Bronx as
Michael Weiner, he is a little unusual because unlike his ilk he has a really
good education—a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley--and he has had considerable success in
fields other than milking money from Tea Party crazies. Back in the day he even
ran with Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Timothy Leary.
Knowing him as I do
from other late night encounters, I anticipated lots of railing about the IRS,
Benghazi, and Eric Holder. I wasn’t prepared for his tirade about the seven
female senators on the Armed Services Committee and how they are
attempting—with Obama’s open encouragement—to undermine our military by
pressing to take the investigation and prosecution of soldiers who engage in
sex crimes away from the normal, failed chain of command process.
He ranted about how these
“harpies”—with Obama again—were like members of the Cambodian Khmer Rouge whose
leader, the communist Pol Pot, to consolidate his power, during the 1970s and
80s, called for and oversaw the barbaric torture and extermination of at least
two million of his fellow countrymen.
This was so over the
top even for the likes of a Savage, Glenn Beck, or Rush Limbaugh that when I
awoke I thought I must have been having a nightmare. So I did a little checking.
It appears that Weiner/Savage
has been making these Khmer Rouge slanders for a number of years. It is one of
his mantas when savaging Obama. (Pun intended.) As an example, here is a long
except from WND, a raggy right-wing
Website:
Any doubt Americans may
have had that Barack Obama is a Marxist should be alleviated now after hearing
his rhetoric in a speech in Virginia over the weekend, top talk-radio host
Michael Savage told his listeners in July 2012.
Asserting that it is
governments and not individuals who create jobs, Obama told entrepreneurs
Friday: “If you’ve got a business – you didn’t build that. Somebody else made
that happen.”
“You didn’t get there
on your own,” the president said. “I’m always struck by people who think, well,
it must be because I was just so smart.”
After playing the audio
of Obama’s remarks, Savage offered a blunt assessment.“So there’s communism,”
he said. “That’s Karl Marx Obama. That’s Hugo Chavez Obama. That’s Joseph
Stalin Obama. This is a very dangerous man.”
Savage, noting he has
studied dictatorships, recalled that tyrannical regimes “begin with innocent
remarks like this.”“This man is the most
dangerous, most divisive, most evil – I’ll use the word evil – president in the
history of America.”
Savage acknowledged he
was “stepping up” his own rhetoric, because the situation requires it, and no
one else will.
“Things don’t start the
way they end,” he warned, drawing lessons from history. “They start with the
most innocent remarks like this.”
The elected Nazi
dictator, Adolf Hitler, whose rhetoric originated with 19th century French
anti-Semites, did not start with death camps but with relatively benign racial
purity laws, and no one stopped him, Savage pointed out.
“The rhetoric Obama is
expressing is not his own rhetoric,” Savage said. ‘This is what is deeply
embedded in the man’s brain stem. He has been inculcated with hatred for the
American way from the cradle.”
The Cambodian dictator
Pol Pot, Savage recalled, “was a mild mannered professor like Obama” who went
to Paris, studied Marxism “and came back a flaming communist.”
“It ended with a
mountain of skulls,” Savage said, with some 2 million people slaughtered in
Cambodia’s infamous “killing fields.”
Pol Pot, instituting
what he was taught at Paris universities, unleashed his Khmer Rouge on anyone
with an education – the productive people of society.
“What does this have to
do with that nice man in the White House with such a nice wife and nice
children?” Savage asked his “Savage Nation” audience.
“It starts with
rhetoric like this,” he said. “It unleashes the genie in the bottle. It
justifies any acts of betrayal, any acts of hatred, any acts of sabotage
against the successful.”
He called Obama “the
most hateful man who has ever plagued the White House.”
Thinking about Obama,
the seven female senators, and the Khmer Rouge, I thought to see just who those
seven senators are and what they had to say during the hearings with the Joint
Chiefs of Staff.
Two of the seven are Republicans—Kelly
Ayotte (NH) and Deb Fischer (NE)—and they were just as openly critical, even
outraged as their Democratic colleagues.
What’s more, three of
the male GOP senators—Roy Blunt (MO), Saxby Chambliss (GA), and John McCain
(AZ)—were just as upset about the resistance of the Joint Chiefs to take the
problem seriously that they spoke about about it just as forcefully as their
female counterparts.
Here is what Khmer
Rouge member McCain had to say—
He told an anecdote
about a woman he encountered whose daughter was thinking about volunteering for
the Army. She asked McCain, in the light of all the reports about sex crimes in
the armed forces, if he could offer his “unqualified support for her daughter’s
choice.
With a heavy heart,
this former air force hero and prisoner of war said, “I could not.”
A final word--Michael Savage
never served in the military. Like Dick Cheney, he secured a series of student
deferments.
Labels: Armed Services Committee, Barack Obama, Deb Fischer, John McCain, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Kelly Ayotte, Khmer Rouge, Michael Savage, Savage Nation, Sex Crimes
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