No Regrets: Dole Staffer Defends Ad Attacking `Godless Americans'
Rob Boston printable version print page     Bookmark and Share
Fri Mar 06, 2009 at 10:32:45 AM EST
Let's pretend it's the middle of October, and John Doe and Jane Smith are both seeking the same U.S. Senate seat. Doe, who is down a few points in the polls, hears a rumor that Smith attended a fund-raiser sponsored by a Jewish group at the home of a couple who happen to be Jewish.

Doe's campaign runs a television ad, replete with scary music, that says: "Jewish Americans and Jane Smith. She hid from cameras. Took `Jewish' money. What did Jane Smith promise in return?"

John Doe and his staff members who devised this ad are enormous bigots, right? No one would hesitate to point that out. No right-thinking person would defend such an ad.

Plug in another religion if you like. "Jane Smith took `Buddhist' money, Jane Smith took `Hindu' money," etc. Doe and co. are still bigots.

It would seem to follow, then, that Doe and his staffers are still bigots when they accuse Smith of taking money from atheists, calling it "Godless money."

You may recognize this scenario. It played out in North Carolina last year when U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Dole attacked opponent Kay Hagan because Hagan attended a fund-raiser held at the home of two atheists. (The couple - businessman Woody Kaplan and author Wendy Kaminer - sponsored the event, not any "Godless" group.)

Recently, the man who engineered that ad, Marty Ryall, reflected on the campaign for Politics Magazine. Ryall talks about how the ad came to be aired and discusses some of the challenges Dole faced in her campaign.

Ryall recounts all of this in a matter-of-fact way. He writes, "We had polled the issue in mid-September and found that it tested very well among the key groups that we needed to win. We needed to raise intensity among Republican voters, as well as shift the focus of Independents and conservative Democrats from our negatives to Kay Hagan in an unfavorable way. We needed something that had some shock value and would also generate an earned media component - and that was the `Godless' issue."

It apparently never occurred to Ryall that he was engaging in rank bigotry, that the type of ad he green-lighted would never have been considered had it tarred any other group. He does no soul-searching and never once questions whether the decision to use the ad in any way damaged his integrity (perhaps because he doesn't have any to damage). Ryall's only regret is that the ad didn't work!

Now, I didn't just fall off the turnip truck yesterday. I've lived in the Washington area for 23 years and followed politics before moving here. I know what campaigns are about and am aware that politics is a blood sport. The sad truth is, if you want your candidate to win, you have to explain not just why he or she is so great but why his or her opponent is not to be trusted.

Yep, it's rough-and-tumble out there. But that doesn't mean there are absolutely no boundaries. Over the years, certain types of attacks have become unacceptable. Blatant appeals to racism have more or less dried up, and rank anti-Semitism is no longer tolerated.

Yet Ryall seems to think it's still OK to attack an entire class of Americans as somehow evil, dangerous or un-American because of what they believe (or don't believe) about God. Dole must feel the same way, since she signed off on this repulsive ad and defended it to the hilt.

This is appalling bigotry. We can all take solace in the fact that Ryall's cynical and wicked scheme backfired badly. Let's hope he learns from that.

I don't expect Ryall to suddenly get ethical - I suspect it's too late for that. But perhaps the fact that Dole lost by 9 points will help him understand that next time, religious bigotry is not the way to propel your candidate to victory.

As for Dole, all I can say is that this was an especially shameful way to end a political career.




Display:
And for saying that smears against atheists are a form of "religious bigotry."  

Religion in our constitutional history has always included the right to non-belief. When we say "religious freedom" that also means the freedom to be non-religious.

What Dole did in consort with Ryall is a disgrace and an attack on the spirit of the constitution and the culture of respect necessary to preserve and defend religious freedom for all Americans.

We should not soon forget this episode or the name Marty Ryall -- who may well become a liability for any candidate who hires him.

by Frederick Clarkson on Fri Mar 06, 2009 at 12:15:07 PM EST


Someone ought to take Marty Ryall out behind the woodshed and beat the hell out of him. The ad he wrote is disgusting, reflecting his total lack of decency and integrity. I wonder what his parents think of him. Bigots like him do not deserve to be called Americans. Ryall is so low that he no doubt has to chin himself to get over a door jam.

by Bonatti on Sat Mar 07, 2009 at 02:53:10 AM EST

I was just reading a poll from NBC news asking whether the phrase "in God we trust" should be removed from US currency. Of the nearly 12500000 voters, only 14% said yes. Like it or not, atheist bashing is still acceptable in this country, partly because most Americans, while perhaps not ready for a true reconstructionist-style government, nevertheless do support a soft theocracy. The only bright side in this poll might be to realize that even relatively small groups still consist of millions, and can make a lot of difference. Blacks for example, are less than 13% of the population. And look at the enormous progress they've made in the last 50 years.

by Dave on Mon Mar 09, 2009 at 12:29:17 AM EST

As long as constituents think this way, the politicians will not hesitate to take advantage of it.  And many people still think that way, especially here in the south.  I was brought up in a fundamentalist environment.  My family attended an AoG church. We regularly watched D. James Kennedy's "Coral Ridge Hour", and I was homeschooled for the first few years using the Bob Jones curriculum. I can actually remember my mother telling me that non-Christians live in America only because "we let them".  That is, at the pleasure of fundamentalist Christians.  It's a scary thought that a significant number of people think that way.  And after my mother found out I'm not a believer, she said I needed to move to another country.  She said this on more than one occasion, so it wasn't just a heat of the moment outburst.  That smarts, coming from your own mother.

by brother maynard on Fri Mar 13, 2009 at 01:11:09 PM EST


WWW Talk To Action


Cognitive Dissonance & Dominionism Denial
There is new research on why people are averse to hearing or learning about the views of ideological opponents. Based on evaluation of five......
By Frederick Clarkson (374 comments)
Will the Air Force Do Anything To Rein In Its Dynamic Duo of Gay-Bashing, Misogynistic Bloggers?
"I always get nervous when I see female pastors/chaplains. Here is why everyone should as well: "First, women are not called to be pastors,......
By Chris Rodda (195 comments)
The Legacy of Big Oil
The media is ablaze with the upcoming publication of David Grann's book, Killers of the Flower Moon. The shocking non fiction account of the......
By wilkyjr (110 comments)
Gimme That Old Time Dominionism Denial
Over the years, I have written a great deal here and in other venues about the explicitly theocratic movement called dominionism -- which has......
By Frederick Clarkson (101 comments)
History Advisor to Members of Congress Completely Twists Jefferson's Words to Support Muslim Ban
Pseudo-historian David Barton, best known for his misquoting of our country's founders to promote the notion that America was founded as a Christian nation,......
By Chris Rodda (113 comments)
"Christian Fighter Pilot" Calls First Lesbian Air Force Academy Commandant a Liar
In a new post on his "Christian Fighter Pilot" blog titled "BGen Kristin Goodwin and the USAFA Honor Code," Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan......
By Chris Rodda (144 comments)
Catholic Right Leader Unapologetic about Call for 'Death to Liberal Professors' -- UPDATED
Today, Donald Trump appointed C-FAM Executive Vice President Lisa Correnti to the US Delegation To UN Commission On Status Of Women. (C-FAM is a......
By Frederick Clarkson (126 comments)
Controlling Information
     Yesterday I listened to Russ Limbaugh.  Rush advised listeners it would be best that they not listen to CNN,MSNBC, ABC, CBS and......
By wilkyjr (118 comments)
Is Bannon Fifth-Columning the Pope?
In December 2016 I wrote about how White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, who likes to flash his Catholic credentials when it comes to......
By Frank Cocozzelli (250 comments)
Ross Douthat's Hackery on the Seemingly Incongruous Alliance of Bannon & Burke
Conservative Catholic writer Ross Douthat has dissembled again. This time, in a February 15, 2017 New York Times op-ed titled The Trump Era's Catholic......
By Frank Cocozzelli (64 comments)
`So-Called Patriots' Attack The Rule Of Law
Every so often, right-wing commentator Pat Buchanan lurches out of the far-right fever swamp where he has resided for the past 50 years to......
By Rob Boston (161 comments)
Bad Faith from Focus on the Family
Here is one from the archives, Feb 12, 2011, that serves as a reminder of how deeply disingenuous people can be. Appeals to seek......
By Frederick Clarkson (176 comments)
The Legacy of George Wallace
"One need not accept any of those views to agree that they had appealed to real concerns of real people, not to mindless, unreasoning......
By wilkyjr (70 comments)
Betsy DeVos's Mudsill View of Public Education
My Talk to Action colleague Rachel Tabachnick has been doing yeoman's work in explaining Betsy DeVos's long-term strategy for decimating universal public education. If......
By Frank Cocozzelli (80 comments)
Prince and DeVos Families at Intersection of Radical Free Market Privatizers and Religious Right
This post from 2011 surfaces important information about President-Elect Trump's nominee for Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos. -- FC Erik Prince, Brother of Betsy......
By Rachel Tabachnick (218 comments)

Respect for Others? or Political Correctness?
The term "political correctness" as used by Conservatives and Republicans has often puzzled me: what exactly do they mean by it? After reading Chip Berlin's piece here-- http://www.talk2action.org/story/2016/7/21/04356/9417 I thought about what he explained......
MTOLincoln (253 comments)
Fear
What I'm feeling now is fear.  I swear that it seems my nightmares are coming true with this new "president".  I'm also frustrated because so many people are not connecting all the dots! I've......
ArchaeoBob (107 comments)
"America - love it or LEAVE!"
I've been hearing that and similar sentiments fairly frequently in the last few days - far FAR more often than ever before.  Hearing about "consequences for burning the flag (actions) from Trump is chilling!......
ArchaeoBob (211 comments)
"Faked!" Meme
Keep your eyes and ears open for a possible move to try to discredit the people openly opposing Trump and the bigots, especially people who have experienced terrorism from the "Right"  (Christian Terrorism is......
ArchaeoBob (165 comments)
More aggressive proselytizing
My wife told me today of an experience she had this last week, where she was proselytized by a McDonald's employee while in the store. ......
ArchaeoBob (163 comments)
See if you recognize names on this list
This comes from the local newspaper, which was conservative before and took a hard right turn after it was sold. Hint: Sarah Palin's name is on it!  (It's also connected to Trump.) ......
ArchaeoBob (169 comments)
Unions: A Labor Day Discussion
This is a revision of an article which I posted on my personal board and also on Dailykos. I had an interesting discussion on a discussion board concerning Unions. I tried to piece it......
Xulon (156 comments)
Extremely obnoxious protesters at WitchsFest NYC: connected to NAR?
In July of this year, some extremely loud, obnoxious Christian-identified protesters showed up at WitchsFest, an annual Pagan street fair here in NYC.  Here's an account of the protest by Pagan writer Heather Greene......
Diane Vera (130 comments)
Capitalism and the Attack on the Imago Dei
I joined this site today, having been linked here by Crooksandliars' Blog Roundup. I thought I'd put up something I put up previously on my Wordpress blog and also at the DailyKos. As will......
Xulon (330 comments)
History of attitudes towards poverty and the churches.
Jesus is said to have stated that "The Poor will always be with you" and some Christians have used that to refuse to try to help the poor, because "they will always be with......
ArchaeoBob (148 comments)
Alternate economy medical treatment
Dogemperor wrote several times about the alternate economy structure that dominionists have built.  Well, it's actually made the news.  Pretty good article, although it doesn't get into how bad people could be (have been)......
ArchaeoBob (90 comments)
Evidence violence is more common than believed
Think I've been making things up about experiencing Christian Terrorism or exaggerating, or that it was an isolated incident?  I suggest you read this article (linked below in body), which is about our great......
ArchaeoBob (214 comments)

More Diaries...




All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective companies. Comments, posts, stories, and all other content are owned by the authors. Everything else © 2005 Talk to Action, LLC.