Time to stop hurling Hitler insults.
John Timpane
Commentary Page editor for the Philadelphia Inquirer
11 Jan., 2004
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/special_packages/sunday_review/7685939.htmsnip
MoveOn.org, an antiwar (and therefore anti-George W. Bush) group, is sponsoring a contest titled "Bush in 30 Seconds." Send in your 30-second anti-Bush ad, and if you win, your ad will run in a TV campaign during State of the Union week!
More than 1,500 ads came in. On Monday, a bunch were posted on a Web page (www.bushin30seconds.org). The idiotic thing is that two of the posted ads compared Bush to Hitler.
Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie immediately tore his tunic in the forum, calling on MoveOn.org to apologize and remove the ads. "Poor taste," he said. "Despicable," he added. The Simon Wiesenthal Center also has asked for apologies, and MoveOn.org has made noises that sound like sorries.
Gillespie is even righter than he is Republican. It is in execrable taste to show Nazi flags waving and German tanks rolling behind a list of George W. Bush's supposed sins. Was everybody at MoveOn.org on muscle relaxants when these toxic ads came sliming across the transom?
Beyond being cretinous and poisonous, the ads were out of step with a recent cultural movement, one we might title Retire Hitler.
more...
In the print edition, the article frames the following (in bold type): "Invoking his name any time you want to tar an adversary devalues the horror of the Holocaust."
This piece is simply an effort to cheapen the efforts of MoveOn.org. It appears to be another example of The Inquirer respewing major Puke talking points. Allowing Nazi references in criticisms of ChimpCo, are they? Well then, clearly we can't take anything the rest on the site offers seriously.
I'll bet that Johnny has never visited MoveOn, much less gone through all the ads himself to discover that two were objectionable. If he had seen them, wouldn't he want to complement MoveOn for getting the truth out? Oh right, I guess we're to believe that all of the ads were part of the Dems bad habit of saying or doing anything to regain power.