To: Celeste Wesson, Senior Producer, NPR
Marketplace
Re: Help Wanted
Dear Ms. Wesson:
My deepest sympathies regarding the recent news that your
longtime token “conservative” commentator, David Frum, has decided
to resign his position with your program.
Mr. Frum’s
confession today that he has come to “recognize that my views
are not very representative of the conservative mainstream”
certainly must mark a sad day for you and all his friends at
National Public Radio. Mr. Frum remarked in his farewell
notice that he has suggested “potential replacements from
closer to the present GOP consensus,” and I’m not sure whether my
name was on that list. I have long considered Mr. Frum a friend,
despite the frequent complaints from my conservative comrades
who routinely denounce him as a “treacherous Canadian
jackal,” etc.
Despite our friendship, however, perhaps my name would not have
been foremost in Mr. Frum’s mind among those whose thinking
represents the “GOP consensus,” given my frequent and at times
vituperative denunciations of Republican Party leaders as
untrustworthy and unprincipled (e.g., the GOP’s support of
Dede
Scozzafava). And it is true, as you may have heard, that I have
vowed to “wreak vengeance on the worthless RINO-hugging GOP
Establishment sons of bitches” who
changed the date of the Florida primary and thereby ruined
Christmas.
Furthermore, while I can confirm that I have called the National
Republican Congressional Committee staff a “crew
of bumbling dingbats,” I deny the accusation that I called for
NRCC Chairman Pete Sessions to be “horsewhipped and stomped to
death by the House Republican Caucus, his head carried through the
streets atop a pike, and his mutilated headless corpse fed to
dogs.” That was clearly a
hypothetical, preceded as it was by the contingent clause,
“If there were still any old-fashioned justice in the world
…”
All of this is to say — and I’m sure Mr. Frum would vouch for
it — that I am a responsible and eminently reasonable voice for
America’s conservative grassroots today. As my good friend
David notes in his farewell to
NPR, his duties on Marketplace involved doing
“point-counterpoint” with former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, an
opportunity I would greatly enjoy. And I hope that Mr. Reich will
understand that when I called him a “demented Bolshevik dwarf,”
this was merely a colorful figure of speech.
Looking forward to working with you in the near future. Let’s do
lunch.
Most sincerely,
Robert Stacy McCain