If you want to gauge how the presidential campaign is going, all
you need to do is strap sphygmomanometers to the arms of a few
New York Times editorial writers, Washington Post
reporters, and MSNBC hosts. The higher their average blood
pressure, the lower Obama has sunk in the polls.
Yes, they’re at it again. Or I should say, “still.” The Obama
media — the Gatekeeper Media who try to control what people know
based on what fits their narrative — are proving almost daily that
they’re not in the news business. They are in the business of
political activism, aimed solely at getting their guy another four
years in the White House.
Obama’s admission of the obvious fact he’d previously denied —
his support for same-sex marriage — is now being ballyhooed as
proof of his great political courage. Really? As Brit Hume pointed
out yesterday on “Fox News Sunday,” Obama’s position on gay
marriage didn’t evolve: it revolved. In 1996, Obama said he was for
it. In the 2008 campaign, he said he opposed it but also opposed
the California referendum banning it. In office, his Department of
Justice has refused to defend the constitutionality of the Defense
of Marriage Act, which defined marriage — as Obama did in 2008 —
as a union of a man and a woman. Now he says he supports gay
marriage.
Instantly, that became the biggest media story of the week,
second only to the story about Mitt Romney bullying a presumed
homosexual who attended the same exclusive prep school Romney did
in the 1960s. The two stories are entirely instructive, as is the
media’s timing.
In fact, Obama had no choice in announcing his position. Good
Ol’ Joe Biden, who has never had an unexpressed thought, said on
“Meet the Press” eight days ago that he was “comfortable” with gay
marriage. Cornered, and under intense pressure by the homosexual
lobby to motivate the (insignificant) homosexual voting block that
was already with him, Obama endorsed same-sex marriage five days
later. To the media, that’s proof of his political heroism.
Jay Leno got it right. Obama said his position on same-sex
marriage had “evolved.” What a coincidence, said Leno, that he had
completed his evolution just in time for a multi-million dollar
fundraiser in Hollywood. That, to the media, is heroism. We eagerly
await the announcements from endangered Senate Democrats such as
Missouri’s Claire McCaskill supporting their president’s position.
That would be akin to the heroism of Japanese samurai who committed
ritual seppuku.
The media would have us believe that it was another coincidence
that in the five-day gap between the Biden and Obama statements,
the Washington Post published a story about Romney cutting
the hair of a possibly homosexual fellow high school student while
others held him down. The incident occurred in 1965 and, we are to
believe, is proof of Romney’s homophobia and a demonstration of his
mean-spirited character.
Romney apologized. “I don’t remember that incident,” he said.
“And I’ll tell you I certainly don’t believe that I … thought the
fellow was homosexual. That was the furthest thing from our minds
back in the 1960s, so that was not the case.”
Romney’s nervously delivered apology could have been a moment of
political courage eclipsing Obama’s. He could have said that he
supports both the Defense of Marriage Act and, more importantly, a
constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a
woman. He could have said that his position was much like Obama’s
2008 position, and that he was sticking to it. But he didn’t. His
lack of confidence will goad the media to attack his weakness when,
in truth, he isn’t weak (at least on that issue).
Two weeks ago, there was a one-day story about what White House
Press Secretary Jay Carney said was Obama’s “compression” of people
in his first campaign autobiography, “Dreams from My Father.” The
New York girlfriend Obama wrote about in that book didn’t exist. As
Obama wrote in the introduction, “For the sake of compression, some
of the characters that appear are composites of people I’ve known,
and some events appear out of precise chronology.” In short, the
book is a work of fiction that intentionally conceals Obama’s
actions, choice of friends, and beliefs.
The Romney high school incident happened 47 years ago. Like
everything a presidential candidate has done, whenever he did it,
it’s fair game for reporters. But where are the stories of Obama’s
high school and college years? Where are the media investigating
Obama’s statements in his books?
The people who voted for Obama in 2008 knew virtually nothing
about him, and know little more now. Where are his college
transcripts, his friends and girlfriends, and whatever he wrote for
the Harvard Law Review? No one has seen the transcripts or the
writing, no one has sought out and interviewed his high school and
college friends and girlfriends. We know almost nothing about
Obama’s early years except what Obama himself has written. Even his
later years — sitting in Jeremiah Wright’s church, listening to
the anti-American racist nutcase — remain uninvestigated and
unreported. What did Obama think, listening to Wright for two
decades? Why didn’t he leave that church for another if he strongly
disagreed with Wright?
In the minds of the Gatekeeper Media, we aren’t entitled to know
about Obama’s character, what he said or believed, or what he did
before he began his 2008 campaign. The Gatekeepers — ABC, NBC,
CBS, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and
many other newspapers — don’t want to investigate for fear of what
they might find. They’re intent on re-electing Obama and will, as
they have in the past, simply decline to report on those
stories.
When Newt Gingrich railed against the Gatekeeper Media in two
primary debates, he struck a deep chord with Americans. According
to a Rasmussen Poll released on June 15, 2010, “Sixty-six percent
(66%) of U.S. voters describe themselves as at least somewhat angry
at the media, including 33% who are Very Angry.” Romney needs to
reach deep down and find the courage to take on the Gatekeeper
Media. They’re going to do everything in their power to defeat him,
so there’s no reason to play their game.
Romney should begin at the long-promised event in which Gingrich
will enthusiastically endorse him. Gingrich will say nothing new,
but Romney should take the opportunity to praise Gingrich’s courage
in taking on the media. Romney should say that the media’s bias is
a matter of culture, not conspiracy.
He should quote the statement about five years ago by
Washington Post editor Marie Arana who said, “The elephant
in the newsroom is our narrowness…. If you work here, you must be
one of us. You must be liberal, progressive, a Democrat. I’ve been
in communal gatherings at the Post, watching election
returns, and have been flabbergasted to see my colleagues cheer
unabashedly for the Democratic candidates.” And he should challenge
them to report the stories they now bury, especially about Obama’s
past.
It’s an opportunity for Romney to make the media a campaign
issue. If he did, he could significantly boost his chances, and
those of other Republicans, in November. It would take a courage
that no Republican other than Gingrich has had. The anger at the
press measured by that old Rasmussen poll hasn’t diminished; it’s
grown and will continue to grow in the coming months as the
Gatekeeper Media splash every real or imagined Romney misstep
across the airwaves and front pages, ignoring whatever could hurt
their candidate.
Make no mistake, Gov. Romney: Obama is their guy and you are
their enemy. They will act accordingly. Will you?