Monday, March 18, 2019

And of course he apologized

It was a off-the-cuff very mildly humorous glimpse into one particular household's arrangement of family relations.

But the jackboots had to make it about dynamics between husbands and wives generally, and deem this particular playing-out of said dynamics unacceptable.

Mr. Kennedy-esque got roughed up the woke enforcers on his first day on the stump:

Yesterday was a day that Democratic presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke may want to forget. His first swing through Iowa as an official candidate was marred by a "joke" about his wife that drew heavy criticism and the revelation by Reuters of his membership in a hacker group as a teenager where he posted a story about kids getting run over by a car on the group's message board.
O'Rourke was on the defensive most of the day, apologizing profusely for saying his wife Amy raised their three kids “sometimes with my help.”
O’Rourke made the comment at multiple campaign stops during his first swing through Iowa, including earlier Friday, eliciting laughs each time, but he also drew criticism as being insensitive to the challenges faced by single parents raising children.
O’Rourke said the criticism of his “ham-handed” attempt to highlight his wife’s work in their marriage was “right on.”
Apologizing for a lousy attempt at humor is one thing. But the outrage mob was lying in wait for O'Rourke and he gave them an obvious opening with his self-deprecating crack. Presidential candidates in 2020 are going to have to walk on eggshells, weighing every word for its potential "insensitivity." In this case, activists complained that a woman couldn't make the same joke, so it was insensitive.
Indeed, O'Rourke humbly begged the world's pardon for his white privilege:
CNN:
"Not only will I not say that again, but I'll be more thoughtful going forward in the way that I talk about our marriage, and also the way in which I acknowledge the truth of the criticism that I have enjoyed white privilege," he said.
He pointed to his ability to walk away from two arrests as a young man without serious consequences as a example.
"So yes, I think the criticism is right on. My ham-handed attempt to try to highlight the fact that Amy has the lion's share of the burden in our family -- that she actually works but is the primary parent in our family, especially when I served in Congress, especially when I was on the campaign trail -- should have also been a moment for me to  acknowledge that it is far too often the case, not just in politics, but just in life in general. I hope as I have been in some instances part of the problem I can be part of the solution."
The less anyone stands up the jackboots - and certainly the more anyone apologizes for what the jackboots deem a transgression - the further down the rabbit hole of totalitarianism we descend.

It's the same principle one sees in the appeasement of rogue states with nuclear negotiations, or in the confronting of a city council by a gaggle of grade-school children demanding that the city "up its game" in addressing "climate change."

Robert O'Rourke should have said this:

"We have a particular dynamic in our household that works for us. We are a strongly bonded, happy bunch and I take no responsibility for how things go in any other household in this world."

But that would have required a bit too much spine for Kennedy-eque Robert.

3 comments:

  1. Or he could divorce and remarry a few times and stonewall all the rumors of extramarital relations. Just say, what a wonderful family God has chosen for our current first one.

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  2. That's the lamest attempt at deflection from the topic at hand I've seen in some time.

    ReplyDelete