I watched the New Hampshire returns last night feeling shellshocked by The New Republic’s disclosure that afternoon of racist screeds printed under presidential candidate Ron Paul’s name in the 1980s and 1990s. I was at a gathering of DC journalists and, two beers in, was ventilating about my disappointment to progressive analyst and journalista Ali Savino. She looked at me as though I had just announced my startling discovery that there was a war in Iraq or genocide in Dafur. This has been around for months, she replied quizzically, as though I must never read the news.
“Well, I had read some vague allegations of racism in blogs,” I stumbled, “but I was happy to ignore vague allegations. The New Republic produced documentary evidence!”
It seems that many left-of-center types had read such allegations and believed that they were probably true, while my fellow-travellers had generally brushed them off as baseless. The simple and obvious explanation for this discrepancy is that people tend to believe what they want to believe, but I think there may be more to it.
Free-market types are particularly skeptical of charges of racism, no matter at whom they are levelled, because almost all of us have been the target of such accusations at least once or twice in our lives, usually by college or grad school classmates. Ann Althouse’s bizarre meltdown at a Liberty Fund event, during which she tearfully demanded that everyone at her table prove that they were not racists, was all too familiar and illustriative.
I don’t think that most people with left-of-center political views casually slander those with whom they have reasonable, legitimate disagreements. Most don’t. But the small minority who do have unfortunately undermined the credibility, at least among non-progressives, of all such charges.
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