Hey đđż I don't usually forward stuff but this is a good read from Jacobin. Sometimes I
feel like we get muzzled since we are accused of being politically correct. Interesting
thoughts !
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: Romy Ilano <romy.ilano(a)gmail.com>
Date: February 24, 2017 at 12:47:56 PM PST
To: Romy Ilano <romy(a)snowyla.com>
Subject: Milo and the Mainstream | Jacobin
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/02/milo-yiannopoulos-cpac-conservatives-altâŚ
Milo and the Mainstream
Milo Yiannopoulos was no âalt-rightâ deviation for CPAC â the conference has long been a
cesspool of reaction.
by Branko Marcetic
Milo Yiannopoulos in 2013. LeWeb Photos / Flickr
The next issue of Jacobin, âJourney to the Dark Side,â is out now. Subscribe for the
first time at a discount.
The Right is in a bit of a bind. After spending months attacking the âintolerant leftâ
for purportedly abridging right-wing troll Milo Yiannopoulosâs right to free speech, the
American Conservative Union has now disinvited him from its annual CPAC conference because
of a video dredged up that appears to show him defending sex between grown men and
thirteen-year-old boys.
âWe continue to believe that CPAC is a constructive forum for controversies and
disagreements among conservatives,â ACU President Matt Schlapp said. âHowever there is no
disagreement among our attendees on the evils of sexual abuse of children.â
A day later, asked about his position on the âalt-rightâ more broadly â the loose
coalition of white supremacists, misogynists, and others that has gained prominence since
Donald Trumpâs ascent â Schlapp clarified that âracism has no voice within the
conservative movement,â and that the alt-right doesnât âhave anything to do with the
conservative movement.â âWe wonât endorse it, and we wonât rationalize it,â he concluded.
Just today, ACU executive director Dan Schneider told attendees the alt-right was âtrying
to worm its way into our ranksâ and, jumping on a familiar right-wing talking point,
warned that it was a âhateful left-wing fascist group.â
But racism and the âalt-right,â of course, have a lot to do with the conservative
movement, and they are far from left wing. Over the years, Schlappâs own organization and
CPAC have often played host to conservative figures who are either part of the âalt-rightâ
or hold beliefs that overlap considerably with the racist movement.
Looking at some of the worst offenders in recent years not only gives the lie to
Schlappâs defense, but lays bare a conservative movement where the odious and the
mainstream are often indistinguishable.
1. Rush Limbaugh
Rush Limbaughâs well-honed shtick was the forerunner to Miloâs act. Limbaugh spent
decades spewing obnoxious, deliberately offensive material over the airways to irk
liberals and leftists and rile up an excited GOP base.
But while much of Limbaughâs material tends to the kind of provocative, anti-left
shock-jockery meant to get conservatives nodding in agreement, heâs also trafficked into
numerous ugly sentiments that in theory should be deplorable to âmainstreamâ conservatives
like Schlapp and Schneider, who disavow racism.
There was the time Limbaugh said the NFL âall too often looks like a game between the
Bloods and the Crips without any weapons.â Or the time he charged that âall composite
pictures of wanted criminals resemble Jesse Jackson.â Or when he told a caller to âtake
that bone out of your nose and call me back.â Or when he said the NAACP âshould have a
riot rehearsalâ and âpractice robberiesâ on liquor stores, said women are worse at
multiple choice tests because the Biblical Eve chose âmultiple orgasmsâ instead, and
professed that he didnât âgive a hoot that [Columbus] gave some Indians a disease that
they didnât have immunity against.â
He suggested that white college students who âsee a couple of black boys dressed in baggy
clothes with their hats on backwards swaggering toward themâ have a right to âfear that
theyâre going to be shot in the face for their ATM cards.â
For some on the Right, Limbaugh took it a step too far when he played a âparodyâ song in
2007 titled âBarack the Magic Negro,â featuring an Al Sharpton impersonator singing
âhumorousâ lyrics to the tune of âPuff the Magic Dragon.â Various Republicans fell over
themselves to condemn the song when an RNC chair candidate circulated it a year later,
with Newt Gingrich â Newt Gingrich! â saying âit should disqualify any Republican National
Committee candidate who would use it.â
For the ACU, however, using it apparently qualified Limbaugh to give the keynote address
at CPAC 2009, one met with a rapturous crowd reaction.
2. Tony Perkins
What do you do about a man who once spoke to a racist group that opposed âall efforts to
mix the races of mankind,â tried to use former KKK Grand Wizard David Dukeâs phone bank
for a Senate campaign, believes and peddles the idea that homosexuality and pedophilia are
related, and heads what the Southern Poverty Law Center calls an anti-LGBT hate group?
Why, invite him to speak at your political conference multiple times over the years of
course.
Perkins is in many ways par for the course for the conservative movement: his
organization, the Family Research Council, promotes gay conversion therapy, opposes
allowing gays and lesbians in the military, and supports anti-LGBT discrimination. Heâs
lambasted an anti-bullying campaign as âdisgustingâ and supported legislation in Uganda
that would imprison gay people for life or even execute them on the basis that it would
âuphold moral conduct.â
More recently, Perkins has somewhat broadened his horizons by dabbling in Islamophobia,
claiming that âonly 16 percent of Islam is a religion,â warning that Americans could âlose
our identity in the shadow of multiculturalism,â and crying crocodile tears over last
yearâs awful murder of gay nightclub-goers in Orlando by a Muslim man.
3. Frank Gaffney
Think of just about any kooky, racist, anti-Muslim conspiracy theory over the past few
years and you can probably trace it back to Frank Gaffney and his think tank, the Center
for Security Policy.
Obama a secret Muslim? Check. Clinton aide Huma Abedin working for the Muslim
Brotherhood? You betcha. American government and society being infiltrated by a fifth
column of Muslims and slowly coming under the sway of Sharia Law? Do you even have to ask?
Gaffneyâs imaginary network of secret Muslim agents extends to encompass Keith Ellison,
David Petraeus, Obama Supreme Court pick Elena Kagan, right-wing anti-tax campaigner
Grover Norquist, and many others.
Not surprisingly, Gaffney has links to the same âalt-rightâ that CPAC now purportedly
opposes. He hosted white supremacist Jarod Taylor on his radio show in 2015, and attended
two events organized by the Breitbart News focusing on the danger of radical Islam and
government cronyism. (Conservative luminaries like Newt Gingrich and former Bush attorney
general Michael Mukasey were also attendees.)
The ACU did stop inviting Gaffney to CPAC at the start of this decade â not because of
his conspiracy mongering, but because of his increasing attacks on fellow conservatives â
which culminated in his accusation that conservative movement was being infiltrated by,
who else, the Muslim Brotherhood, a charge partly based on the fact that Norquistâs wife
is Muslim.
But time heals all wounds. Gaffney returned as a speaker in 2012, and he and the center
were back in 2015 and had âan expanded presence in 2016.â âAlthough CPAC and the Center
have had some differences in the past, this is no longer the case,â Senior Vice President
for Policy and Programs Fred Fleitz wrote last year. Gaffneyâs views are considered so
pedestrian he was advising Ted Cruz during the Texas senatorâs 2016 campaign. Gaffneyâs
back again this year, hosting a âCPAC Conversationâ on âThe Vulnerability of the Electric
Grid.â
4. Phyllis Schlafly
Schlafly was a regular speaker at CPAC, and thereâs little doubt she would have been
invited to speak at this yearâs conference had she not died last year.
Perhaps best known as the legendary conservative activist who led a successful effort to
kill the Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s and 1980s, Schlafly was militantly
antifeminist, preaching a vision of the world where men had careers and women stayed at
home to enjoy a life of domestic bliss (a vision she herself never remotely ascribed to in
practice).
Conservatives outraged that Milo would seemingly offer a defense of pedophilia appeared
to be less concerned when Schlafly white-washed marital rape in 2007, arguing that âby
getting married, the woman has consented to sex.â A year later, she continued to defend
the comments. She also accused the Violence Against Women Act of being a feminist scheme
to win child custody more easily, mocked the idea that verbal abuse qualified as domestic
violence, charged the âgay ideologyâ with being about an assault âon our fundamental right
to free speech,â and asserted that sexual harassment wasnât âa problem for the virtuous
woman except in the rarest of cases.â
None of this stopped CPAC from inviting Schlafly to speak year after year.
5. Pamela Geller
Pamela Geller stands apart from most others on this list because she hasnât been allowed
to speak at CPAC for what she claims has been seven years.
Geller exaggerates: she was part of a panel in 2012 titled âIslamic Law in America: How
the Obama Justice Department is Selling Us Out,â and in 2011, her film The Ground Zero
Mosque: the Second Wave of the 9/11 Attacks â which cast a proposed Islamic cultural
center (with a public swimming pool and basketball court) two blocks away from the World
Trade Center site as a âtriumphal mosqueâ â was screened at CPAC. Before that, she was a
regular at the conference.
But Geller should have been persona non grata long before 2012. In various unhinged posts
on her blog, she claimed the State Department was âbeing run by Islamic supremacists,â
called Obama a âthird worlderâ who was âappeas[ing] his Islamic overlords,â and labeled
him âPresident Jihad,â one who was âagitating Muslims against Jews.â
According to her, Iranian-American author Reza Aslan is a âlittle wretched jihadistâ and
Grover Norquist a âstealth jihadist.â Besides vociferously opposing the so-called âGround
Zero Mosque,â she also attacked a Disneyland employee who sued the company because they
wouldnât let her wear a headscarf.
Geller used her appearances at CPAC to spread the kind of hateful views that are the
bread and butter of the âalt-right.â At CPAC 2009, she told the crowd that âHitler was
inspired by Muhammadâ and brought along far-right Dutch Islamophobe Geert Wilders to speak
to assembled conservatives. Wilders was greeted with a forty-second standing ovation,
complete with chants of âWe love Geert,â and received applause when he told the audience
that âIslam is a threat to the West.â
6. Steve Bannon
The most ludicrous aspect of Schlapp and Schneiderâs supposed disavowal of the
âalt-rightâ is that the ACU and CPAC have for years hosted some the most high-profile
figures associated with the movement: namely, Steve Bannon and the team behind Breitbart.
If Breitbart is the âplatform for the alt-right,â as Bannon candidly admitted, then CPAC
has served as the platform for that platform.
Various editorial staff, including current editor-in-chief Alex Marlow and
editor-at-large Joel Pollak, have spoken or taken part in panels at CPAC over the years.
The website itself boasted in 2013 that it had a âtremendous presenceâ at that yearâs
conference, hosting a variety of panels, speeches, discussions, and even a movie
screening. This year is no different, with Breitbart staff sprinkled throughout the
schedule.
Bannon, while less well known until a year or two ago, has been a fixture over the years,
either in person, speaking, or through screenings of various films heâs directed. In 2015,
he chaperoned Nigel Farage, the British right-wing populist, and former Duck Dynasty star
Phil Robertson, who was receiving a âFirst Amendmentâ award for homophobic comments he had
made. Today, Schlapp is hosting a âconversationâ with Bannon and Priebus, making his claim
doubly ridiculous.
Bannonâs toxic worldview involves an apocalyptic vision of a war between the
âJudeo-Christian Westâ and the âMuslim world,â a vision often reflected in Breitbart
headlines â and completely acceptable at CPAC.
7. Ann Coulter
Where to start with Ann Coulter? In many ways, Coulter should be annoyed that Milo stole
her gimmick. For the better part of two decades, Coulter has been the Rightâs go-to
provocateur, saying deliberately awful things to get a rise out of liberals and leftists,
all barely masked in a semi-sarcastic, âjust kiddingâ style that gives her the barest
semblance of plausible deniability.
The list of hateful, noxious remarks sheâs uttered over the years could fill a book â in
fact, theyâve filled several â but here is a brief greatest hits. She:
Said âthere ought to be a poll tax to take the literacy test before votingâ because âway
too many people vote.â
Stated that âfew failures have been more spectacularâ than court-ordered desegregation,
with âilliterate students knifing one another between acts of sodomy in the stairwell.â
Mocked the United Statesâs immigration policies, arguing America âwelcomesâ terrorists
and lamenting that America is âso good and so pure we would never engage in discriminatory
racial or âreligiousâ profiling.â
Urged the government to âinvade [terroristsâ] countries, kill their leaders and convert
them to Christianity,â and implied that the United States should kill civilians as in the
carpet-bombing of World War II.
Claimed that âall terrorists are Muslims.â
Said her âonly regret with Timothy McVeigh is he did not go to the New York Times
building,â later clarifying that she meant only when everyone but the reporters and
editors had left the building.
Said âit would be a much better country if women did not vote.â
Complained that women shouldnât be in the military because theyâre not âable to carry
even a medium-sized backpack.â
Complained that âthe White House allows that old Arab Helen Thomas to sit within yards of
the president.â
Said to applause, at CPAC 2006: âOur motto should be post-9-11, âraghead talks tough,
raghead faces consequences.ââ
Accused 9/11 widows who called for an independent commission on the governmentâs failure
to stop the attack of being âself-obsessed womenâ who were âenjoying their husbandsâ
deaths.â
Said that she and other Christians âjust want Jews to be perfectedâ â in other words,
converted.
Said Muslims should be banned from flying on airplanes and should take âflying carpetsâ
or âa camelâ instead.
Itâs not as if Coulter has been some sort of fringe figure at CPAC. Sheâs been a major
draw. The conferenceâs organizer told the Washington Examiner in 2015 that Coulter was
consistently the most popular speaker among attendees, Coulter herself claimed she had
been voted âbest speakerâ in previous years, and her books were bestsellers at the event.
It wasnât until 2015 that the ACU stopped sending Coulter invites to their yearly confab
(not counting a brief hiatus after her âragheadâ comments at CPAC 2006).
CPACâs Line
So to recap, the things that will apparently get you disinvited from CPAC (after a number
of years, anyway):
Appearing to defend pedophilia
Attacking other conservatives
Promoting a particularly conspiratorial form of Islamophobia
Things that wonât get you disinvited from CPAC:
Racism
Sexism
Islamophobia
Homophobia
Association with well-known racists and racist groups
Defending marital rape
Defending verbal abuse by a spouse
Advocating for war crimes
Calling for the murder of journalists
Whatâs more, while this list above may name some of the worst offenders, it doesnât even
begin to account for the likes of Islamophobic congressman Steve King, Black Lives
Matterâhating sheriff David Clarke, anti-gay former senator Rick Santorum, disgraced
former Reagan staffer Oliver North, and the many other reactionaries who are every year
invited to speak to âmainstreamâ conservatives who applaud and cheer for them.
Aside from Geller, none of the figures named here are considered particularly far outside
of the mainstream in todayâs conservative movement. And while the ACU has tried to clean
house, the Milo disinvitation being the most recent and well-publicized instance, itâs
clear CPAC has been and remains a platform for a variety of odious figures who are
fortunate enough never to have been caught on tape appearing to defend pedophilia.
The ACU presumably disinvited Milo because defending child molestation is considered so
beyond the pale it would be obscene and/or damaging to give him a platform. What does it
say that they donât feel the same way about everything else on this list?
Our next issue, âJourney to the Dark Side,â is out now. Subscribe today.
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