WASHINGTON — I like to think of Miss Sandra Fluke's contretemps with
the madly admired Mr. Rush Limbaugh as, well, a fluke. She objected to
his joke about her being "a slut" and "a prostitute," and
hesto presto
the part-time Georgetown University law student struck pay dirt. You
object to my characterization of her as "part-time"? How could she be a
full-time law student and still be appearing before Congress explicating
the plight of coeds with $3,000 contraceptive bills or others suffering
the heartbreak of being rejected publicly at the pharmacy for insurance
coverage of a birth control bill? Then there was all the other media
attention that came from Rush's little joke. Yes, I see it as a fluke,
defined by the Dictionary of American Slang as "a fortuitous accident."
Was not Miss Fluke felicitously named years ago before anyone ever
thought of talk radio?
Surely, Miss Fluke now will become an outspoken advocate for
contraception, fighting the good fight for free birth control five
decades after the development of the pill. Could anyone have imagined
the birth control pill's ability to engender controversy 52 years after
it became a staple of American life? Surely, Miss Fluke will branch out,
defending all kinds of gynecological innovations that trouble some,
say, Catholics or Southern Baptists or secular humanists who are
skeptical of Obamacare. Perhaps she will become a champion of the manly
condom. Of course, she will pronounce on abortion whatever her religious
convictions. She will become a latter-day Gloria Steinem. But my guess
is her season of splendors will be short-lived. I mean, who is going to
get exercised over birth control or other gynecological innovations in
the 21st century? Once the election is over and the Democrats have no
need to corral the mindless women who fall for this claptrap, Miss Fluke
will be back at law school immersed in the mysteries of contract law.
Her moment of fame really was a fluke.
Yet it did open my eyes and probably Rush's, too. Every few days for
more than two decades, he has been hazarding a reckless joke and seeing
how it plays.
I have, too. Now, however, an audacious
woman, Miss Kirsten Powers, has shown us the rancor and absence of
standards that diminish our public discourse. She says she is a liberal,
and I shall take her at her word, but she seems to me to be a very
old-fashioned liberal, one who does not flinch at the evidence.
Writing for The Daily Beast, Miss Powers has come up with a lot of
foulmouthed media personalities far fouler than Rush. I was not aware of
their existence, and I doubt Rush was. They lack wit and humor, and
they have no ideas, just irritable one-liners. In fact, after the
desperate pursuit of an idea, they settle for scurrility. Thus, the
physically disfigured Bill Maher calls Sarah Palin a dumb t--- and a
c---. He jokes about Rick Santorum's wife using a vibrator, but there's
nothing about the immensely more humorous spectacle of him using a
vibrator or even a dirty book. Miss Powers quotes some slug by the name
of Ed Schultz as saying Palin set off a "bimbo alert" and calling Laura
Ingraham, can you believe it, a "right-wing slut." Then there is Keith
Olbermann, who wished that right-wing columnist S.E. Cupp had been
aborted by her parents and who described Michelle Malkin as a "mashed-up
bag of meat with lipstick"; how very literary.
This is the quality of mind that holds forth on liberal cable
television. No one there objects to the gutter talk that is hurled at
conservative women. No sponsors threaten to pull their advertisements.
That probably should not surprise me. I have been arguing for months
that liberalism is dead. Here is proof that it is brain-dead.
Yet I cannot believe that this election is going to turn on the
question of whether the federal government is going to pay for birth
control procedures that have been around for 52 years. The Democrats are
aiming at the moron vote, and let them have it. The real question here
is religious liberty and the matter of choice. Should churches and
individuals have to pay for medical procedures they do not approve of?
The Democratic Party, the party of the straitjacket, says yes. The
Republican Party, the party of choice and of personal freedom, says no.
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