Thursday, November 4, 2010

It's Easy Being Greene

Democratic candidate Alvin Greene has lost his bid to go down in history as the first African American elected to the Senate by a major party in South Carolina.


Unemployed and living with his father, Greene spent 81 million dollars less than Meg Whitman on his Primary campaign, not including his filing fee (which he paid for with a personal check). He didn't have a campaign website, he didn't have campaign yard signs, and he didn't actually, uh, campaign. Nonetheless he received 60 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary, capturing all but 4 counties in South Carolina. This led enlightened Democrat Senator Robert Ford to suggest that Greene garnered so many votes because he was able to identify with his constituency through name recognition-

"No white folks have an 'e' on the end of Green. The blacks after they left the plantation couldn't spell, and they threw an 'e' on the end."

Green with an "e" notwithstanding, Alvin faced an uphill battle against Tea Party darling Jim DeMint, and ran a tireless campaign, which consisted pretty much of having his manifesto posted at The Guardian, and defending himself against felony obscenity charges.

Greene's Quixotian fight came to an end Tuesday, when he lost to DeMint by more than a 2-1 ratio. But things could have been much worse for our courageous pol.

For all the struggles Greene endured, in this era of 24 hour news cycles and constant media attention paid to the most insignificant minutiae, there was one place in the world where Greene found safe harbor, a refuge from scrutiny.

I'm speaking of course about our unbiased, non-partisan, objective, help you sort out the truth in Politics friends at Politifact.

Despite the novelty, history, and nefarious charges surrounding his failed run towards the Senate, Politifact never seemed to have the time to rate a single one of his statements.

Perhaps Greene simply didn't say anything outlandish, or misleading during the campaign for Politifact to check?
"The department of defence can't say where $1 trillion went. The army can't locate 56 planes and 32 tanks – how do you lose a plane? Rumour has it, the Pentagon started off as the Hexagon, but one day one of the sides went missing."

"Half the members of the US senate work for BP. The other half work for Halliburton."

"Jim DeMint started the recession."

"I am the best candidate for the United States Senate in South Carolina...And I am also the best person to be TIME magazine's Man of the Year. "

Of course, we can't expect Politifact to check every fringe candidate in every race, especially the ones who have no chance of winning.

Unless of course that candidate is sponsored by the Tea Party.

That brings us to Christine "I'm not a witch you" O'Donnell who rang up four Truth-O-Meter ratings on her own and yet another one about her for a total of five Politifact reviews.

O'Donnell's disingenuous rhetoric that needed to be verified included "We haven't yet taken out a negative ad." (which earned "Pants On Fire") and an ad in which the narrator claimed her opponent "thought that a 911 call should be taxed." This one was knocked down to "Barely True" because Coons proposed the 911 tax on cell phones, and it was already a tax on landline phones, and also because it was a tariff, not a tax. Glad we sorted out that truth in American politics.

When Politifact didn't have any O'Donnell statements to rate, they resorted to making them up.

It's also interesting to note that while ignoring any comments made by Greene, Politifact also chose to ignore the widespread accusations, including those made by Congressman James Clyburn (D-SC), that claimed Greene was a Right Wing plant. That is the type of thing where Politifact would have been helpful, you know, to sort out. But instead those baseless accusations were left unchallenged by our objective defenders of truth.

And if there were any evidence that suggested the Democratic Party was using chicanery to silence Greene, I'm sure Politifact would have been all over it.

But it doesn't matter now. Greene was just a fringe, protest candidate that no one was going to vote for anyway. Maybe that's why Politifact ignored him during the entire campaign.

Or not. Greene ended up with 356,969 votes, which is more than O'Donnell (123,025) and Coons (173,900), combined. So much for that excuse.

The truth is that Politifact ignored Greene because he was embarrassing to Democrats. His Primary opponent, Vic Rawl, was so bad he was beaten by a man that didn't even campaign. When Greene did secure the nomination, Tolerant Liberals excused it as stupid black voters selecting a candidate based on race, and accused the Tea Party and Republicans of fraud. Then Democrats went out of their way to suppress and marginalize Greene. Just by rating Greene, Politifact would have brought unwanted attention to Democrats unsavory behavior.

The story of Alvin Greene is an example of just one aspect of Politifacts bias. It doesn't always manifest itself in how they rate an item, or what they choose to rate. Their bias is evident in the things they choose to ignore.

2 comments:

  1. I wanted to see PolitiFact rate Greene's statement about stimulating the economy through the production of Alvin Greene action figures.

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  2. That was a beauty-

    "Another thing we can do for jobs is make toys of me, especially for the holidays. Little dolls. Me. Like maybe little action dolls. Me in an army uniform, air force uniform, and me in my suit. They can make toys of me and my vehicle, especially for the holidays and Christmas for the kids. That's something that would create jobs. So you see I think out of the box like that. It's not something a typical person would bring up. That's something that could happen, that makes sense. It's not a joke."

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/06/alvin-greene-south-carolina-senate#

    As absurd as Greene's comments may be, contrast them with Nancy Pelosi's plan, which is to create jobs by having more people lose their jobs-

    Unemployment Benefits "creates jobs faster than almost any other initiative you can name."

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdAj8zui6ss

    Note-This is also a statement Politifact chose to ignore. Pelosi made the comments on July 1st. Finally on July 27th, Politifact ended up rating little known Senator Jeanne Shaheen for making a similar (though not as outlandish or straightforward) comment, thus sparing their darling Pelosi from scrutiny. In Shaheen's article Politifact only vaguely referred to Pelosi as a "Democratic lawmaker". Not surprisingly, it was rated Half-True.


    http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2010/jul/27/jeanne-shaheen/lawmaker-claims-unemployment-benefits-boost-econom/

    ReplyDelete