From the department of “are you listening to yourself?” and “what
business are you in?” comes
this little gem of the
aforementioned sillyman and former U.S. attorney Chris
Christie. Again, I don’t have anything against the guy, except
that he happens to embody the kind of tin-eared inside-baseball
quick fix solutions Republican operatives think are worth
investing in. That is to say that machine politics in a state
where Republicans don’t win very much indicates a poorly-oiled
machine.
Chris Christie held a press conference from the state house in
which he gave his “I’m Shocked, Shocked” speech about how he’d
never committed any ethical flaps. Never mind the weird
coincidences involved. Anyway, my point here isn’t with the
ethics questions, but more the media strategy. Take a look:
Paul Mulshine, a conservative Star-Ledger columnist, was also
the target of Christie’s mini-meltdown. Christie said, with
great personal sadness, Mulshine’s column on federal monitors
“ruined my ability to enjoy my son’s baseball game with a smile
on my face.”
Other things Christie wasn’t able to enjoy because of Mulshine’s
column:
- The sound of children laughing
- Butterflies
- The sound of an ice cream truck
- Puppies
- His favorite Tom Clancy novel
- Cookies
- The newest installment of the film The Fast and the
Furious
I don’t understand the logic behind Christie’s statement. Does he
mean that Mulshine should not have written his column on the
basis that it affected him emotionally? Or should Christie have
possibly said that this was a fair point to make and he’ll do
Everything In His Power to make sure that ethics is Number 1?
I think it’s the latter. But Christie thinks that his kid’s
baseball game and his own smiles make a better soundbyte. Next
up: Christie Announces Bad Case Of Indigestion Over New
Unemployment Figures.