The
New Blacklist
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: On
to Tehran – or Is It Damascus?
My days as
a political analyst at MSNBC have come to an end.
After 10 enjoyable
years, I am departing, after an incessant clamor from the left that
to permit me continued access to the microphones of MSNBC would
be an outrage against decency, and dangerous.
The calls for
my firing began almost immediately with the Oct. 18 publication
of Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?
A group called
Color of Change, whose mission statement says that it "exists to
strengthen Black America's political voice," claimed that my book
espouses a "white supremacist ideology." Color of Change took particular
umbrage at the title of Chapter 4, "The End of White America."
Media Matters
parroted the party line: He has blasphemed!
A Human Rights
Campaign that bills itself as America's leading voice for lesbians,
bisexuals, gays and transgendered people said that Buchanan's "extremist
ideas are incredibly harmful to millions of LBGT people around the
world."
Their rage
was triggered by a remark to NPR's Diane Rehm – that I believe homosexual
acts to be "unnatural and immoral."
On Nov. 2,
Abe Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League, who has sought to have
me censored for 22 years, piled on.
"Buchanan has
shown himself, time and again, to be a racist and an anti-Semite,"
said Foxman. Buchanan "bemoans the destruction of white Christian
America" and says America's shrinking Jewish population is due to
the "collective decision of Jews themselves."
Well, yes,
I do bemoan what Newsweek's 2009 cover called "The Decline
and Fall of Christian America" and editor Jon Meacham described
as "The End of Christian America." After all, I am a Christian.
And what else
explains the shrinkage of the U.S. Jewish population by 6 percent
in the 1990s and its projected decline by another 50 percent by
2050, if not the "collective decision of Jews themselves"?
Let error be
tolerated, said Thomas Jefferson, "so long as reason is left free
to combat it." What Foxman and ADL are about in demanding that my
voice be silenced is, in the Jeffersonian sense, intrinsically un-American.
Consider what
it is these people are saying.
They are saying
that a respected publisher, St. Martin's, colluded with me to produce
a racist, homophobic, anti-Semitic book, and CNN, Fox News, C-SPAN,
Fox Business News and the 150 radio shows on which I appeared failed
to detect its evil and helped to promote a moral atrocity.
If my book
is racist and anti-Semitic, how did Sean Hannity, Erin Burnett,
Judge Andrew Napolitano, Megyn Kelly, Lou Dobbs and Ralph Nader
miss that? How did Charles Payne, African-American host on Fox radio,
who has interviewed me three times, fail to detect its racism?
How did Michael
Medved miss its anti-Semitism?
In a 2009 cover
story in the Atlantic, "The End of White America?" from which
my chapter title was taken, professor Hua Hsu revels in the passing
of America's white majority. At Portland State, President Clinton
got a huge ovation when he told students that white Americans will
be a minority in 2050.
Is this writer
alone forbidden to broach the subject?
That homosexual
acts are unnatural and immoral has been doctrine in the Catholic
Church for 2,000 years.
Is it now hate
speech to restate traditional Catholic beliefs?
Documented
in the 488 pages and 1,500 footnotes of Suicide of a Superpower
is my thesis that America is Balkanizing, breaking down along the
lines of religion, race, ethnicity, culture and ideology, and that
Western peoples are facing demographic death by century's end.
Are such subjects
taboo? Are they unfit for national debate?
So it would
seem. MSNBC President Phil Griffin told reporters, "I don't think
the ideas that (Buchanan) put forth (in his book) are appropriate
for the national dialogue, much less on MSNBC."
In the 10 years
I have been at MSNBC, the network has taken heat for what I have
written, and faithfully honored our contract.
Yet my four-months'
absence from MSNBC and now my departure represent an undeniable
victory for the blacklisters.
The modus operandi
of these thought police at Color of Change and ADL is to brand as
racists and anti-Semites any writer who dares to venture outside
the narrow corral in which they seek to confine debate.
All the while
prattling about their love of dissent and devotion to the First
Amendment, they seek systematically to silence and censor dissent.
Without
a hearing, they smear and stigmatize as racist, homophobic or anti-Semitic
any who contradict what George Orwell once called their "smelly
little orthodoxies." They then demand that the heretic recant, grovel,
apologize, and pledge to go forth and sin no more.
Defy them,
and they will go after the network where you work, the newspapers
that carry your column, the conventions that invite you to speak.
If all else fails, they go after the advertisers.
I know these
blacklisters. They operate behind closed doors, with phone calls,
mailed threats and off-the-record meetings. They work in the dark
because, as Al Smith said, nothing un-American can live in the sunlight.
February
17, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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