February 12, 2008
Conservative Talk Radio Attacked By Pro-McCain/Pro-Immigration Right
By
Michelle Malkin
The most anti-conservative rhetoric
against conservative talk radio these days is coming
from supposedly free-market conservatives. It's
disgusting.
Author Mark Helprin's grenade in
The Wall Street Journal
stands out. Yesterday, he launched an
attack on conservative radio hosts who oppose
presumptive GOP presidential nominee
John McCain. Helprin sneered that their "major
talent is that, like hairdressers, they can talk all day
long to one client after another as they snip."[McCain
and the Talk-Show Hosts, February 12, 2008]
It's one thing to hear such petty snark
coming from the left. Outraged that conservative talk
radio has succeeded in the marketplace while liberals
have bombed, and unnerved that new media outlets have
upended mainstream journalism's monopoly apple cart,
liberals have long crusaded against the medium. Bill
Clinton
blamed the Oklahoma City bombing on the
"many loud and angry voices" in conservative
talk radio that "spread hate." Democrats continue
to deride
"Republican noise machines" and are working in
Congress to marginalize, regulate and stifle influential
talkers—most recently by
threatening to reinstitute the Orwellian Fairness
Doctrine.
But now, we have establishment
Republicans parroting liberal ad hominem rhetoric:
Talk-radio hosts are talentless blabbermouths. Their
listeners are mind-numbed robots. Or, as supposed
free-market conservative and McCain supporter
Phil Gramm put it in his broadside against talk
radio in the Washington Post last week: "They
say they have principles, but some of it is their ego
and power, too. They're well-known, and they're used to
having power."[From
the Right, Both Acceptance and Distrust of McCain,
By Michael Leahy and Juliet Eilperin Washington Post,
February 7, 2008]
Funny. These trash-talking GOP
politicians and pundits had no problem when conservative
talk-radio hosts used their "ego and power" to
help kill Hillary Clinton's massive government
health care takeover in 1994. They had no problem when
conservative talk-radio hosts used their "ego and
power" to galvanize
support for the Republican revolution, two Bush
presidential campaigns and the war in Iraq.
In major metropolitan U.S. cities,
conservative talk radio offers rare relief from liberal
orthodoxy—and local talk show hosts have spearheaded
effective activism.
KSFO in San Francisco led the
Gray Davis recall brigade. KVI in Seattle was
instrumental in
launching the successful fight against Hillarycare
and in support of an
initiative abolishing government
racial preferences.
Were they nothing more than
empty-talking hairdressers then?
The Republican talk-radio bashers did
start having problems when many national hosts harnessed
popular
grassroots opposition to help kill last year's
Bush/McCain/Kennedy illegal alien amnesty bill. GOP
Rep. Lindsey Graham dismissed them as
"loud folks." In other words: They were making a
difference. Then-Sen. Trent Lott lamented that
right-wing talk-radio hosts were a "problem." In other
words: They were effective. McCain's defenders have made
common cause with the likes of
ethnocentric, open-borders groups like
La Raza in redefining all conservative talk-radio
opposition as unacceptable "hate" beyond the
bounds of reasonable discourse.
In other words: They must be shut up.
Bill Clinton approves.
Those who most stridently criticize talk
radio know the least about it. It is not one monolithic
bloc. Disagreements among top conservative hosts are
legendary. They have different interests, varying
styles, and divergent strengths and weaknesses. Do they
do what they do primarily for money, ego and power? It's
an embarrassingly
class-warfare-tinged cheap shot.
In any case, if you're a true
free-market conservative, it's
not supposed to be a crime to make a profit. There's
no shame in making a living by sharing information and
opinions—or in meeting unmet demands in the marketplace
of ideas.
I've done it for 16 years in the
newspaper, TV and blogging businesses. And I can tell
you this: Talk radio has been instrumental and
invaluable in the dissemination of conservative
principles. Ask
any author who hasn't been able to get a fair hearing in
the national press, but who has watched his
Amazon.com ratings soar after a mention by a talk-radio
host. Ask any local columnist grateful for a chance to
see his or her reporting receive wider attention.
Helprin accuses conservative talkers who
oppose McCain of rooting for a liberal presidency
because their "influence and coffers swell on
discontent" and they are "nostalgic" for the
Clinton years. Translation: They're all just greedy
self-promoters who care more about themselves than the
good of the country. Gramm leveled the same attack:
"They're people who put their dogma in front of the
interests of the country."
Cocooned conservative establishment
snobs denigrate talk-radio hosts for preaching to the
choir. But these same critics have no problem using the
medium to market their own work. Ask their publicists.
The message of the anti-conservative conservatives
dissing talk radio: Self-interest for me, but not for
thee.
No need to wait for a Clinton to take
the White House.
Clintonism is alive and well among conservative
talk-radio haters on both sides of the aisle.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."