Posted by
Verdie5 on Saturday, April 26, 2008 12:22:05 AM
Woo! First post. Ok. Must be dignified. Am new hotshot
conservative blogger.
Whatever! This is the pajama media, right? All about being
real? Like Obama’s real change? Wait…bad analogy. Ok. Anyhow…
As a longtime listener to the ‘evil’ known as talk radio, I
must admit I am sometimes frustrated by how hosts handle their callers. Sometimes
they cut off liberals that sound reasonable or at least willing to seriously consider
conservative viewpoints. If a liberal can stand to listen to a conservative
radio show, that should be taken as an indication of a glimmer of hope. If they
can speak calmly, they should be given airtime. Understanding the viewpoints of
people in this bracket is key to spreading conservative views.
On the other hand,
sometimes I think hosts tolerate (umm…how should I phrase this?) “dimmer” people
for too long. If a person is unable to articulate a clear point within the
first minute, they should be cut off. Why waste time trying to lead them to
their own point? Generally, I see Gallagher, Preger on the shorter end of the caller
tolerance spectrum and Rush and Medved on the more tolerate side. Hannity cuts
it both ways. They all, however, have their days. I’d like to see more time
given to those who sound like they could see the error in their liberal ways and
less given to those who are inarticulate or who seem so radical on either end
of the political spectrum as to lose sight of reality.
Of course, my theory that listening to talk radio can be a
glimmer of hope does contain a glaring weak point. Liberals, I know firsthand,
often like to pretend to pay head to other views to prove their
open-mindedness. Often, they will cite the fact that they flipped passed Rush
on their way to NPR as proof. But, hey, at least going to original source even
for a fraction of a second is better than merely rehashing Media Matters talk
points (Media Matters is a liberal non-profit that frequently attacks
conservative media outlets and proponents for “misinformation”, but seems to be
prone to decimating it themselves).
Some liberals take this pursuit of “open-mindness” even
farther by imbedding themselves within conservative organizations. For
instance, my intern class at a right-leaning think tank (our credentials were
verified by a code pink protest, thank you) has a few of these. I asked one why
she chose to intern here of all places, and she referred to the idea of
understanding the conservative psyche. Working here, she said has only
reinforced her views. Like she had pre-decided it would, I bet. The problem is,
that in the time I’ve spend with her, she seems to make more statements than ask
questions. Being open-minded is, as one should infer, a mindset, not merely a
change of location. Exposing yourself to other views merely to give yourself
additional opportunity to knock them is not being open-minded. It is looking
for an argument. That’s fine for what it is, but don’t kid yourself. The physical
process of hearing an argument doesn’t count as listening. Another liberal
intern wrote that she “works for the devil” on a social networking site. I don’t
know her rationale for choosing our think tank. The merit badge for bravery
behind enemy lines is all I can think of.
Another case that casts my “glimmer” theory into doubt is
one caller I heard today. One man repeatedly
accused Sean Hannity of being a racist because he doesn’t support Obama. Hannity
responded by pointing out he also fervently opposes Hillary and thoroughly explaining
rational against the messiah candidate and his mentor being a radical preacher
who said, “God D*mn America”
and his friendly relations with an unrepentant terrorist who bombed the
pentagon. The caller’s answer was to merely repeat his original assertion that Hannity
“couldn’t stomach the idea of a black president.” He couldn’t explain why he
though Hannity was racist; he seemed to think his statement was sufficient. Another
prime example of liberal open-mindedness. With callers like this, I’d ok the
host toying with them a little longer to prove a point, but the conversation
has ended. I can see why having callers like this might frustrate a host, but
they should still make every effort to distinguish between the liberal who’s
only physically listening and the one who’s actually listening and give the
latter his due say. While I love a conservative rant with the best of them, the
act of bringing in new conservatives is one of talk radio’s best functions and
should not be neglected for the comfort of a echo chamber or fun and humor that can occasionally be found in a fight with the truly unreasonable.