January 11, 2005
Bush’s Armstrong Blunder Bad For Minority Conservatives
By
Michelle Malkin
No. Never. Not one penny.
In the wake of
reports last week that the Bush Education Department
paid Republican pundit Armstrong Williams $241,000 to
flack for its "diversity"-friendly policies while
Williams posed as an independent commentator,
readers have begun sending e-mails asking whether I am
also on the GOP take. There seems to be an
orchestrated campaign now because I’ve received
several letters with the exact same wording:
"Have you, at any time,
taken money from the Bush administration in exchange for
promotion of the administration's policies?"
Hostile readers assert that if I ignore their
e-mails, they’ll assume that I am getting paid off by
the Bush administration. So, here I am, answering this
question instead of reporting on the Michael Chertoff
nomination (smart move) or Kid Rock’s invitation to the
inaugural celebration (dumb
move) or the CBS/Memogate scandal (they’re still in
dinosaur media denial).
Speaking of being in denial, some conservatives argue
that the Pay to Pander program is no big deal compared
to the
CBS scandal. The Clinton administration did it, too,
they point out. Other liberal journalists have failed to
disclose ethically suspicious payments, they steam.
Excuses, excuses. I thought we on the Right stood
against such expedient moral equivalence.
There are no shades of gray about this, friends: the
Bush Education Department subsidized a prominent
minority conservative "journalist" with federal
taxpayer dollars to sell
black parents on the Teddy Kennedy-inspired
No Child Left Behind boondoggle—a program that
represents the largest single expansion in federal
education spending since
Jimmy Carter created the Education Department.
This fiscally irresponsible,
ethically challenged, and possibly illegal
arrangement deserves only one thing from conservatives:
unqualified contempt.
Ever since I began penning conservative opinions and
investigative journalism nearly 15 years ago, liberals
have accused me of getting paid to think my own
thoughts. The attacks I face every day—in e-mail, on the
airwaves, and in person—are far more vicious in nature
than most conservative journalists receive because I
also happen to be a
woman and a
minority.
Rabid liberal elitists expect and demand that
"women of color" in
public and political life adopt their left-wing
political orthodoxy. When we don’t accept such tripe,
their racist and sexist diatribes against us are
unmatched.
"Progressive" cartoonists
Ted Rall and
Jeff Danziger mocked President Bush’s national
security advisor Condoleezza Rice, who is black, with
caricatures of her as a "House Nigga" (Rall)
and a thick-lipped, bare-footed
Prissy character from "Gone With the Wind" (Danziger).
A writer for the
militant open-borders publication,
La Voz de Aztlan, assailed conservative author
Linda Chavez and me as sellouts and
complained: "Both are married to Jews, both are
Republicans and both are being utilized to attack
Mexicans and Mexican-Americans."
"Being utilized" is a constant theme of
liberal critics who refuse to tolerate minority
conservative dissenters. You want to know how much
uglier it will get? Here’s a sample of the hate mail
that arrives in my e-mailbox every day—and these
predated the Williams/Department of Education fiasco:
As a result of the Williams/Department of Education
payoff, the rhetoric against the rest of us will get
even nastier.
In the name of
"minority outreach," the Republican education
bureaucrats who cooked up their pathetic scheme with
Williams have done more damage to our credibility than
all the unhinged liberal cartoonists and race-baiters
and grievance-mongers could ever hope to do.
Thanks for nothing.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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