The sequence that sticks in Curmie’s mind the most, though,
comes a little earlier in the song: “Girls will be boys and boys will be girls
/ It's a mixed up, muddled up, shook up world / Except for Lola.” That word “except” has continued to intrigue
for well over a half century. Lola,
whatever terms of sexual identity might be used to describe her, becomes the
narrator’s bulwark against the confusions of the world. There’s a lot to unpack there.
Curmie has always liked the song, and he’s pretty sure he
owned it on 45 back in the day, but it has seldom crossed his mind for decades
except when it comes around on Spotify or the local classic rock radio
station. But it has risen to the top of
his consciousness of late when encountering two Facebook posts.
The first was this one,
by Aaron Terr, the Director of Public Advocacy at FIRE (the Federation for
Individual Rights and Expression. His
excoriation of Attorney General Pam Bondi’s boast that “We will absolutely
target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech” is impressive:
The Attorney General is just flat wrong here…. She’s not the first politician to say that hate speech isn’t free speech, but this is the nation’s chief law enforcement officer. She really should know better, and this is the type of thing that’s going to chill public debate. It’s going to make people afraid to say things that the current administration might consider hateful, lest they actually be prosecuted for it.
Curmie notes that a representative of FIRE (accurately) calls
Bondi a politician rather than a lawyer and makes the obvious point that the Attorney
General, of all people, ought to know the freaking laws she’s supposedly upholding. Bondi is either profoundly ignorant or too
big of a political hack to care that she’s advocating the evisceration of
Constitutional protections. Or both, of
course.
But it’s what Terr says next that intrigues Curmie:
What’s also incredible about this video is that usually the argument that hate speech isn’t protected speech is something that you would hear from the left side of the political aisle. But now we hear a top Republican official saying it. And I think that just goes to show that censorship rationales, once they’re on the table, they’re a loaded gun just waiting to be used by any political party that takes power.
Terr is right about this, too. Curmie has made the point repeatedly (most
explicitly here and to a lesser extent here)
that neither of the two principal political parties in this country are much
interested in upholding First Amendment protections. But whereas the right was more likely to
engage in political censorship (books in libraries or in school curricula, for
example), it was generally the left that sought to deny constitutional
protections to hate speech.
Now, we’re living in a mixed up, muddled up, shook up world,
with the GOP, and especially the MAGA wing thereof, bellowing from the
proverbial rooftops about how hate speech should be prosecuted. Bondi is worse than most—hardly surprising,
that—but even she isn’t the most insane right-winger out there. Remember this guy,
an actual Congresscritter Curmie mentioned a few days ago?
Right now, the same people who cheerfully described moderate
Democrats as “communists” for arguing that someone who works a 40-hour week
ought to be able to afford to pay for essentials, or that programs that help the
general population (FEMA, Medicaid, the CDC, the FAA, etc.) ought not to be
sacrificed so those poor destitute billionaires can get a tax cut that balloons
the national debt—these people are getting righteously indignant that
anyone would dare call a racist, sexist, jackass like Charlie Kirk, well, a
racist, sexist, jackass. And they
want people fired or even arrested for speaking their truth. Most of what they’re objecting to isn’t even
hate speech by any reasonable definition, but we’ll antiphrastically let that
pass for now.
The other Facebook post Curmie wants to mention was this one,
which Curmie reposted on his page a couple days ago. It reads, “Reminder: Fox News host Brian
Kilmeade said homeless people should be put to death by lethal injection and
they didn’t even take away his morning donut.
The obvious context was that the propinquity of Kilmeade’s comment and
the firing of Jimmy Kimmel by ABC for his on-air comments about the aftermath
of the assassination of Charlie Kirk.
Was Robinson a leftie ideologue? We still don’t know, and for these purposes
it doesn’t matter. There was, at the
time Kimmel was on the air, some evidence emerging that perhaps Robinson was a
Groyper, and the fact that his grandmother says his politics were shifting to
the left could simply be deflection (“we’re a Trump-loving family, so the assassin
in our midst obviously wasn’t like us”).
Were Curmie of a cynical disposition (perish the thought!), he might even
suggest the possibility that Robinson was pretty much a Nancy Reagan Republican:
dismissing the concerns of others until, in his case, he entered into a
same-sex relationship, and Kirk’s homophobia was placed in a different
perspective.
The point is that for these purposes, none of this matters. (Nor does it matter that Curmie has never found Kimmel even moderately amusing.) Did the MAGA world make a concerted effort to place the blame on someone other than themselves? Of course, they did! It doesn’t matter if they were “right” about Robinson’s motivations; they just didn’t want him to be one of theirs. (To be fair, the left was spinning just as hard in the other direction, but that doesn’t change the fact that Kimmel was absolutely accurate.)
It’s also worth mentioning that Kimmel, like a host of leading
Democrats, expressed shock and horror at the news of Kirk’s death, calling it a
“senseless murder” and condemning those who seemed to be celebrating it. Contrast that with the deafening silence (well,
there was that one bit of sneering from Mike Lee) of every Republican you can
name about the murders of Melissa Hortman and her husband by a right-wing nut
job.
Note: the key words here are “nut job,” not “right-wing.” What MAGA in general is attempting to do is
to define the entire group—liberals—as guilty in Kirk’s murder because Robinson
might have been a leftist with respect to one particular aspect of his politics. This is the scam JD Vance is trying to pull
off, with outright lies about the relative frequency of political violence perpetrated by the left and the
right. C’mon, JD, only the stupidest
MAGA believes that “While our side of the aisle certainly has its crazies, it
is a statistical fact that most of the lunatics in American politics today are
proud members of the Far Left.” Even the
report of the hard-right Cato Institute calls that claim bullshit. Well, that’s
not exactly a direct quote, but you see the point, Gentle Reader.
But Curmie reverts to his inner Confucian. Even if there is some correlation between
affiliation X and action Y, we can’t assume that one implies the other. Curmie quotes himself from a post in 2013 about
that gunman in Aurora, Co, at the opening of the new Batman movie. Just substitute “Robinson” for “Holmes” in
the following:
The fact is, Gentle Reader, this guy Holmes doesn’t represent me even if we’d vote for the same person or worship at the same church. If he turns out to be an atheist, that doesn’t mean that atheists are the problem, any more (or less) than Baptists are the problem if that’s what he is. His politics can be from the left, right, or center, and he doesn’t represent any of the good people some of whose views he shares. Even if he had help, he’s a lone wolf. Our society lives on, saddened but intrepid.
OK, one more point, since Curmie knows there are people out there ready to rant about how corporations have a right to hire and fire whomever they choose. Yes, that’s true, even when Nexstar and Sinclair, the two distributors who refused to air Kimmel’s show in the future, are notoriously and rather proudly right-wing. It’s the intervention of FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr that’s the real problem. Carr, appointed in the first Trump administration, has apparently now gone full sycophant, as anyone who wants to stay employed in that administration is likely to do. Oh, and an administration so openly venal is going to be a lot more amenable to proposed mergers and such-like if you, ABC, suck up appropriately. Not all bribes are monetary; some just censor alternative voices. As the singer in “Lola” says, “I got down on my knees…”
Anyway, Bobby Schroeder, a valued longtime reader of Curmie’s page
(and a conservative, by the way), responded to Curmie’s post of the meme about
Kilmeade, with this: “ABC comedy is more conservative than Fox News? What in the hell is happening in this world?”
And that prompted Curmie to respond with the line about the “mixed up, muddled up, shook up world.” And here we are, Gentle Reader.
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