The Rush Limbaugh polling company
Even though polls have shown a nation overwhelmingly in support of Michael Schiavo's decision to remove the feeding tube, former Bush speechwriter David Frum argued that many Americans actually "do not care very much about Terri Schiavo." Talk radio kingpin Rush Limbaugh heartily agreed, offering up some polling of his own, carried out in earnest among plain ol' regular folk over Easter weekend.
"I was all over the place this weekend," Limbaugh announced on his Monday broadcast, "and I've seen all these polls out there that supposedly say 75% of the American people, 'Pull the tube, let the woman die, it's a private matter.' I couldn't find any -- one person. I found one person who has that view and they weren't really even that committed to it. The most common view I found, and I was not hanging around with political people. This was a social weekend for me, and I was hanging around with people playing golf, doing other things, and the thing I heard just over and over and over again was, 'I can't believe we're killing this woman.' That's what I heard. I didn't hear any 75% of the -- I'm not denying that there are people out there with that point of view, but you would think that you'd run into a lot more of it. Maybe it is that people don't have the guts to say those views in public but they'll say them to a pollster or what have you."
If Limbaugh is suspicious of pollsters, he sure doesn't trust those inconsistent liberals, either. On his show last Thursday, he shared some expertise on the psychology of marine mammals in order to expose the utter hypocrisy of the save-the-whales crowd: LIMBAUGH: "I'm sure before the day is over some whales somewhere or some dolphins somewhere will beach themselves wanting to die, that's why they beach themselves, and the liberals will just march out everywhere, the environmentalists, and try to send these dolphins, even though they're telling us they don't want to live, that's why they beach themselves, they'll be down there, they'll be throwing them back in the water. They'll keep them alive, put them in various places -- ice chips to make sure they don't get dehydrated and so forth, because of course that could lead to terrible problems for the dolphins and the whales. Somewhere this will happen today or this week, and of course we will mount all of our worldly efforts to save these beached beasts, stop their euphoria and so forth and try to feed them so that they can stay alive. We'll get ice chips and do whatever we can to keep these beached whales hydrated."
In promoting ice chips for Schiavo, Limbaugh must've shared notes with MSNBC's Joe Scarborough, who also pondered liberals' pure anti-Bush rage on his show that same day.
SCARBOROUGH: "Why is it that the same activists who fight to save the whales, the spotted owls, and a snail darter, for God's sake, sit quietly by while the U.S. government helps kill Terri Schiavo? Why do we see the visceral reaction by leftist organizations to the attempts to save Terri Schiavo's life? Do these liberals really hate George Bush so much? And that's all you ever hear about, George Bush. You never hear about Terri Schiavo. But do they hate George Bush so much that they are cheering for Terri's death only because the president of the United States and his brother are fighting for Terri's life?"
According to Operation Rescue's Randall Terry, brother Jeb in fact doesn't quite measure up to brother George. "If Gov. Bush wants to be the man that his brother is, he needs to step up to the plate like President Bush did when the United Nations told him not to go into Iraq," Terry said during protests outside the hospital housing Schiavo in Pinellas Park, Fla. "Be a man," he said. "Put politics aside."
A Republican Party in big trouble? What's been most striking, though, is the right-wingers who've planted themselves firmly on the other side of the battle line. Syndicated radio host Neal Boortz, traditionally unwavering in his role as a conservative Republican yes-man, broke ranks from the get-go. The political fallout from the Schiavo story remains to be seen: The calculus in favor of religious conservatives, some are arguing, is that mainstream Republicans put off by it now will have forgotten the drama by the next round of elections in 2006. But in Boortz's view the outlook for the GOP is not pretty.
"In spite of the delusions of grandeur of the abortocentrist crowd and religious extremists, George Bush was not elected to facilitate a government takeover of the ovaries of every fertile American woman, nor was he elected to establish a theocracy," Boortz wrote on his blog late last week.
"This story will not die after Terri Schiavo passes away," he continued on Monday. "Republicans will be feeling the repercussions for some time to come. Randall Terry will be sad to discover that the majority of Americans don't want a Christian Theocracy. They want to live in a society where people are free to practice their religion as they see fit, but where they are not free to use the police power of government to impose their religious beliefs on other people. Most Americans now realize that Terri Schiavo has already been kidnapped. Jeb Bush would have been too late. She's been kidnapped by religious extremists and the anti-abortion movement.
"Have you stopped for a moment to consider the long-term consequences of the Republican Party's fawning over these religious extremists? Watch President Bush's judicial nominees. Watch the Democrats use the Schiavo matter to illustrate what might happen to other Americans if Bush's nominees are confirmed. And watch the congressional elections next year. If it's close, and if the Republicans lose their majority, look back to the crowd gathered since last week in Pinellas Park for an explanation." |