The Maher that showed up to this debate– about health care reform, and, later, the failure to repeal Don’t Ask Don’t Tell– was more concerned with pointing out his outrage against President Obama and the Democrats than making any repetitive points about conservatives, with which he clearly does not agree. He refused to understand why Democrats did not campaign on health care reform, to which Holmes and Breitbart retorted extensively that Obamacare is wildly unpopular despite, as Holmes put it, the fact that “they talked about it endlessly.” Between the two of them the phrase “shoved down our
Maher continued to blame the Democrats for not being able to adequately prove that their system was better, and here there was a rare moment of visceral disagreement– from Breitbart, who refused to leave the Republicans behind. “[Republicans] are now suffering because of the Tea Party… They’re not even close to what the Tea Party wants out there,” he argued– or, at least, not any closer than the Democrats are. Breitbart also challenged Maher on his supposed libertarianism: “You’re officially not a libertarian anymore, right?… you admit that you have a more European socialist tendency?”
MacFarlane, meanwhile, bided his time until the Don’t Ask Don’t Tell debate, where he accused Congress of being “20 years behind everyone else” and noted the inherent contradiction in fighting in Iraq alongside openly gay armies without objecting, but maintaining the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy. As an olive branch to social conservatives, he suggested an invasion of Iran– “but it has to be all gay guys.”
The chemistry seems to
Last night’s discussion via HBO below: