The decision to publish Breitbart is particularly interesting in itself, but the content deserves a look, too. Breitbart certainly didn’t self-censor for the venue. When was the last time a column on the site vowed to “resist [the left’s] longstanding propaganda attack on the Tea Party as racist, homophobic, Nazi, nativist, and whatever fill-in-the-blank negative stereotype they can muster to marginalize millions of Americans”? Breitbart may not be a stranger to the site (he is named as a “primary developer&
Not surprisingly, Breitbart is taking undercover agent/prankster James O’Keefe‘s side in the whole NPR “Tea Partiers are racist” affair that cost the jobs of both top fundraiser Ron Schiller and CEO Vivian Schiller (no relation). What makes his take unique, however, is that Breitbart blames liberals for their demise, claiming that their insistence on labeling the Tea Party racist is what causes people like Ron Schiller to feel comfortable asserting those claims, inevitably causing them harm. And the focal point of these attacks, Breitbart insists, are the claims by Reps. Andre Carson, John Lewis, and a host of others that an “angry mob” of Tea Partiers shouted racial epithets at them in Washington last year. “Remember the protests on Capitol Hill last March against ObamaCare, and the media’s lie that members of the Congressional Black Congress had awful racial slurs hurled at them by Tea Party members that weekend?” Breitbart asks.
Most media junkies will say “yes;” most average news-watching Americans will have long forgotten, though perhaps vestiges of a belief in the Tea Party being, as Schiller put it, “scary racists” remain. As long as they do so, Breitbart will continue publicizing his video evidence of that incident not having occurred– or at least video evidence, as he did last year, of a crowd surrounding the Congressmen at the event.
Given the rapidfire speed of our 24-hour news cycles, going back a whole year to look at an instance in which a crowd may or may not have shouted a racial epithet seems like far too much work for the payoff. Breitbart counters that claim by noting that the footage left a near-indelible blemish on the Tea Party that needs to be removed. People like NPR’s Ron Schiller still believe the Tea Party is racist based on this story, he argues. Furthermore, those on the left that support them are willing to make them sacrificial lambs in order to preserve a semblance of objectivity. “They will do almost anything to preserve the dogma of political correctness and the aura of self-righteousness that surrounds the left,” Breitbart writes. “That’s why NPR threw its fundraiser, its chief executive, and itself under the bus. They sacrificed for the greater political cause.”
And yes, it bears repeating: this argument– that the racism accusations on the Tea Party are lies and only liberals are hurt by them– is on the cover of the Huffington Post. What’s even more impressive is the lack of visceral rejection in the comments section. Not that Breitbart’s views were exactly welcomed
So how is Breitbart himself taking the news that one of the biggest liberal political sites in America is comfortable reading him and discussing his work, contrary to an image routinely perpetuated in the pages of the Big sites that the American left is incorrigibly closed-minded and elitist? When Mediaite caught up with Breitbart, he admitted to being “pleasantly surprised” by the commenters and found the unexpected civility promising, even leaving the door open for further collaborations with the site. “I think if the mainstream media are willing to look at these videos and compare to [Rep. Andre] Carson’s outrageous and