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Gore Imbalanced (The story of Al Gore's encounter with Ward Connerly is priceless.)
City Journal ^ | 3 August 2007 | Harry Stein

Posted on 08/03/2007 11:37:35 PM PDT by neverdem

The former vice president’s new book is itself an assault on reason.

The Assault on Reason, by Al Gore (Penguin Press, 320 pp., $25.95)

The most surprising thing about The Assault on Reason, Al Gore’s current bestseller, is that for a little while it actually makes some sense. The first few dozen pages, while hyperpartisan, mainly excoriate a dumbed-down, trivia-and-celebrity-obsessed culture, and in the age of Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan who could disagree?

But Al Gore is like one of those guys at a party with whom, once you get a few drinks in him, you never know what’s coming. He’s liable to strip to his underwear or start spewing expletives or waddle over with an outstretched hand and ingratiating smile and suddenly go for your ear like Mike Tyson. For just beneath that aging prep-boy facade, there’s an unmistakable anger and bitterness; where Bill Clinton has always seemed too comfortable in his skin, Gore has often seemed inclined to burst out of his, like some demented political version of the Incredible Hulk.

For me, the defining Al Gore story is the one that Ward Connerly, the longtime crusader against racial preferences, tells in his autobiography Creating Equal. Having been invited to the Clinton White House as part of a group of largely black conservatives to counter criticism that Clinton’s vaunted Initiative on Race was getting input from only one side, Connerly held forth on the great damage that he believed affirmative action and other well-intended policies had done to the ideal of a colorblind America. Clinton, he says, listened attentively, even sympathetically, and later threw his arm around him in brotherly solidarity. But Gore visibly seethed—and afterward, when Connerly offered his hand, he seized it in a vicelike grip and, smiling coldly, kept squeezing, until there was no doubt in Connerly’s mind that he was trying to hurt him.

The Assault on Reason is like that. Yes, it’s logically inconsistent and self-serving and unbelievably sanctimonious, but there’s a lot of that going around. What ultimately makes the book so disturbing is that something pretending to be a brief for reason and comity is so unbelievably small and mean-spirited. It is less an argument than an extended tantrum. Reading it is often like being locked in a room with a madman.

Even more than most partisan commentators today (and of course there are more than a few on the right), Gore is blind to how recklessly he abuses facts and applies double standards, not to mention to his own viciousness. He continually rails, for instance, against those who use “fear” and “simplistic nostrums disguised as solutions” to sway an inattentive and emotionally malleable public, causing it to “overreact to illusory threats and underreact to real threats”—this from the man behind the global-warming frenzy, who consistently downplays the menace of international terrorism.

He describes his conservative adversaries as nothing less than monsters, who hold their views not out of genuine conviction about what’s good for the country but because they are wholly indifferent to the general good. Moreover, he piously adds, the Right “often manifests a complete lack of empathy toward other Americans whom it identifies as its ideological enemies.” Yet a little further on, he’s applauding the special-interest groups on the left as “advocates of a broad and effuse public interest who rely mainly on the force of argument and the rule of reasoning,” regretting only that they lack “access to the same supplies of concentrated wealth” as those on the right. He bemoans “hatred as entertainment,” reserving special venom for the “Limbaugh-Hannity-Drudge Axis,” yet cites the likes of Paul Krugman and Joseph Wilson as decent and fair-minded commentators.

Most bizarre of all, he insists—indeed, this is his main point—that “the public sphere is simply no longer as open to the vigorous and free exchange of ideas from individuals as it was when America was founded” (this on page 26), and then manages not to discuss the Internet for another 230 pages. When he finally does, he blithely contradicts almost all of the alarmist claptrap that came earlier, proclaiming that “broadband interconnection is supporting decentralized processes that reinvigorate democracy.”

That The Assault on Reason has sold well is surely because Al Gore is now a name brand with whom a certain stripe of leftist is eager to identify. One is reminded of a recent marketing survey of Prius owners, which revealed that as many as 50 percent of those buying the Toyota hybrid do so because, unlike the Honda and Ford hybrids (which can be mistaken for regular Civics and Escapes), the Prius is immediately identifiable as a badge of virtue. Rest assured that this book, a similar emblem, will spend a lot more time on Hamptons coffee tables than at the beach.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: algore; assaultonreason; goracle; gore; goreacle; harrystein; stein; theassaultonreason; wardconnerly
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1 posted on 08/03/2007 11:37:38 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem
How can they voice such implications on the world’s leading savant on global worming?
2 posted on 08/03/2007 11:41:28 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (Victory will never be achieved while defining Conservatism downward, and forsaking it's heritage.)
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To: neverdem
Al Gore has become a joke and an embarrassment to sanity and rational thought. The left, as usual, simply lags behind the rest.
3 posted on 08/03/2007 11:43:23 PM PDT by Michael.SF. ("The military Mission has long since been accomplished" -- Harry Reid, April 23, 2007)
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To: neverdem

Who is the algore guy anyway?


4 posted on 08/03/2007 11:51:48 PM PDT by Frwy (Proud member of the vast right wing conspiracy.)
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To: neverdem
yet cites the likes of Paul Krugman and Joseph Wilson as decent and fair-minded commentators.

LOL!

“broadband interconnection is supporting decentralized processes that reinvigorate democracy.”

In other words, FR rules!

5 posted on 08/03/2007 11:53:11 PM PDT by OCC (Rehab is for quitters!)
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To: neverdem

BUMP


6 posted on 08/03/2007 11:56:31 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: neverdem
...where Bill Clinton has always seemed too comfortable in his skin, Gore has often seemed inclined to burst out of his, like some demented political version of the Incredible Hulk.

To this reviewer, Al Gore is Michael Moore squeezed into a suit.

7 posted on 08/04/2007 12:06:37 AM PDT by AZLiberty (President Fred -- I like the sound of it.)
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To: neverdem
I love the line about "it's like being locked in a room with a madman," but THIS line gets Gore down perfectly:

"For just beneath that aging prep-boy facade, there’s an unmistakable anger and bitterness; where Bill Clinton has always seemed too comfortable in his skin, Gore has often seemed inclined to burst out of his, like some demented political version of the Incredible Hulk."

Al Gore is one of the bitterest little men I've ever seen. He is offended by the idea that someone dares disbelieve him.

8 posted on 08/04/2007 12:08:47 AM PDT by Darkwolf377 (PRO-FRED (Use all caps--it bugs the Fred-haters ;))
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To: Darkwolf377

I think he’s flat-out whacked. Nutso. Kooked.


9 posted on 08/04/2007 12:18:18 AM PDT by Finny (Only Saps Buy Global Warming)
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To: neverdem
Reading it is often like being locked in a room with a madman

Heh heh.

10 posted on 08/04/2007 12:19:24 AM PDT by T. Buzzard Trueblood ("Surely we can talk about this!" Theo Van Gogh)
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To: neverdem

Harry Stein is a very good writer.


11 posted on 08/04/2007 12:25:48 AM PDT by liberallarry
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To: Finny

“He BETRAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYED our country! He PLAYED ON OUR FEARS!!!!”


12 posted on 08/04/2007 12:29:56 AM PDT by Darkwolf377 (PRO-FRED (Use all caps--it bugs the Fred-haters ;))
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To: Darkwolf377
There’s definitely something about him that just doesn’t seem ‘right’, and it’s much different in comparison to before he lost the lost presidential election. He’s always sounded to me that he was ‘speaking down’ to people, but that is now mixed with anger.
13 posted on 08/04/2007 12:30:49 AM PDT by pieceofthepuzzle
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To: neverdem
[Al Gore is now a name brand with whom a certain stripe of leftist is eager to identify.]

This helps to explain AlGore’s conversion from legislative policy wonk to eco-zealot; this new name brand is PROFITABLE. As long as he continues to be the “environmental prophet” and preach fire and brimstone (as a consequence of anthropogenic global warming) the donations will continue to pour in to the Ministry of AlGore from the flock of faithful liberals.

14 posted on 08/04/2007 12:31:09 AM PDT by spinestein (The answer is 42.)
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To: Darkwolf377
His eyes even bulge when he does it.

Clearly "off the rails." Gone politically postal. "Nuttier than a squirrel turd," as one FReeper says.

15 posted on 08/04/2007 12:37:13 AM PDT by Finny (Only Saps Buy Global Warming)
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To: pieceofthepuzzle

[He’s always sounded to me that he was ‘speaking down’ to people, but that is now mixed with anger.]

The reason for this is the same as in my post #14. AlGore is the “fire and brimstone” preacher excoriating the multitudes of sinners to repent (and keep sending those checks to the Ministry of AlGore!*).

*and buying the latest books and bumper stickers from the stores


16 posted on 08/04/2007 12:38:19 AM PDT by spinestein (The answer is 42.)
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To: neverdem

Gore could never hope to better a great man like Ward Connerly intellectually so he tried to do so physically, in a setting where no one would expect such physicality.

This idea that emotion-driven, irrational liberalism is based on logic and intellect, while conservatism is based on raw emotion, is one of the more brazen lies the left has been propagating lately.


17 posted on 08/04/2007 12:50:52 AM PDT by puroresu
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To: spinestein
The reason for this is the same as in my post #14. AlGore is the “fire and brimstone” preacher excoriating the multitudes of sinners to repent (and keep sending those checks to the Ministry of AlGore!*).

Didn't Gore drop out of a divinity school for preachers?

18 posted on 08/04/2007 12:54:24 AM PDT by neverdem (Call talk radio. We need a Constitutional Amendment for Congressional term limits. Let's Roll!)
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To: Frwy
Who is the algore guy anyway?

He the blatant LIAR that claimed two billion people participated in Live Earth when the TV and internet ratings companies worldwide could only account for about 40 Million, or two percent, of his claimed audience.

19 posted on 08/04/2007 1:25:12 AM PDT by Wil H (So just what IS the Globe's optimum temperature?)
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To: neverdem

I’m telling you, Manbearpig is real, and he’s coming right here.


20 posted on 08/04/2007 1:38:48 AM PDT by dsc (There is no safety for honest men except by believing all possible evil of evil men. Edmund Burke)
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