To: Thomas A Watson who wrote (282046 ) 7/31/2002 3:17:37 AM From: JEB Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670 The Anti-Semitic Vote Commentary from Ted Gausmann In the days following Al Gore's selection of Joe Lieberman as his running made, I personally observed at least three TV and print media pundits casually backhanding conservatives with comments like: "Well, Gore wasn't going to get the anti-Semitic vote, anyway," wrongly implying that the only safe haven for racists and religious bigots is right of political center. This is dangerous fiction and should not stand unchallenged. Extremists, often uninvited and unwelcome in the major parties, are a fact of life in American politics. With a Louis Farrakhan on the left for every David Duke on the right, embarrassing poster children for bigotry can be found at both ends of the political spectrum. So why do conservatives get more of the blame for bigotry and racism? Maybe it's because, as several studies have shown, a majority of journalists describe themselves as liberal, and it's easier for them to see the specks in conservatives' eyes than the planks in their own. Imagine the reaction in the news media if Pat Buchanan, not Jesse Jackson, called New York "Hymietown." Or if two witnesses swore that it was Rick Lazio, not Hillary Clinton, who called a campaign worker a "f***ing Jew bastard." Or if James Dobson of Focus on the Family, not Lee Alcorn of the NAACP, said people "need to be suspicious of any kind of partnerships between the Jews at that kind of level because we know that their interest primarily has to do with, you know, money and these kinds of things." It will take time to change attitudes and reputations. The next time you hear a conservative called a Nazi, or a mean-spirited comparison of a conservative to Adolph Hitler, send a friendly note to the editors at the offending media outlet reminding them that "Nazi" is short for "National Socialist German Workers Party," (emphasis mine) and that the Nazi record, including support for gun control, abortion, euthanasia, socialized medicine, and central economic planning, has closer ties to modern liberalism than modern conservatism. Anti-Semitism can have its roots in religious bigotry, racism, or both. Political ideology need not have anything to do with a person's fear or hatred of Jewish people, and if it does, the anti-Semite may be from the political right or left. usconservatives.about.com