Littwin: Paul Ryan’s serious baloney

 
[dropcap]I[/dropcap] admit that I have a weakness for the crazy. When Tom Tancredo goes over the line, which is like every day, I’m irresistibly drawn to it. So, when he joins with Ted Nugent, the Mongrel Man, in calling Barack Obama a radical America-hater, I’m there.

And when my inbox brings me video of Bob Beauprez, in his exile period as guest talk-show host, saying that the Obama administration has pushed the country to the edge of revolution — not metaphorical revolution, but actual, manning-the-barricades revolution — I’m forwarding the video to my friends and linking it here.

But that’s just so much noise, like Mitch McConnell coming onto the stage at the CPAC confab Thursday brandishing a rifle, to the roar of the crowd. And, it turned out, he was just a warmup act. Later the NRA’s Wayne LaPierre would bring the folks to a frenzy by saying, “In this uncertain world, surrounded by lies and corruption everywhere you look, there is no greater freedom than the right to survive and protect our families with all the rifles, shotguns, and handguns we want!”

It’s crazy and it’s noise and it doesn’t really mean much, other than a naked appeal to the fringe who think guns really do equal freedom in the way that, say, bombs equal friendship or tanks equal lemon meringue pie.

[pullquote]The moral Ryan took from the story — the story that wasn’t true — is even more disturbing than the fact that the events in the story never happened.[/pullquote]

But there was at least one speech at CPAC that wasn’t just noise, and was, therefore, potentially far more dangerous.

It was delivered by Paul Ryan, the Republicans’ serious man, Mitt Romney’s running mate and the politician who most desperately wants to protect the poor and the near-poor from the safety net that liberals have put in place over the last few generations to rob them of their dignity. Or something.

Ryan just put out a 204-page report claiming the war on poverty has been lost, in which he cites economists and social scientists, some of whom are claiming that Ryan either misrepresented or misunderstood their work.

It’s the same Ryan who argued against long-term unemployment benefits by likening them to a “hammock that lulls able-bodied people to lives of dependency and complacency, that drains them of their will and their incentive to make the most of their lives.” Or something.

In his CPAC speech, he turned his theme around slightly, saying that people want to work, if only, you know, liberals would let them.

And so he says, “People don’t just want a life of comfort. They want a life of dignity. They want a life of self-determination.”

That seems pretty inarguable, but Ryan then launches into the dreaded anecdote with which to prove his point.

“The left is making a big mistake here,” he said. “What they’re offering people is a full stomach and an empty soul. The American people want more than that. This reminds me of a story I heard from Eloise Anderson. She serves in the cabinet of my buddy, Governor Scott Walker. She once met a young boy from a very poor family, and every day at school, he would get a free lunch from a government program. He told Eloise he didn’t want a free lunch. He wanted his own lunch, one in a brown-paper bag just like the other kids. He wanted one, he said, because he knew a kid with a brown-paper bag had someone who cared for him. This is what the left does not understand.”

Two points:

One, it turned out the story never actually happened. People checked. The blog Wonkette thought it might have been borrowed from a book, The Invisible Thread, which is about the author, Laura Schroff, and her relationship with an 11-year-old homeless panhandler named Maurice Mazyck. Schroff wanted to make sure Maurice had lunch so as not to go hungry, and the boy asked if he could have it in a brown paper bag because that’s how boys with real families got their lunch.

Anderson told this story at a congressional hearing chaired by Ryan, saying she had met the boy, just as Ryan described. But when Glenn Kessler, the Washington Post Fact Checker, called her office, a spokesperson said she actually had seen Maurice Mazyck, now an adult, on TV being interviewed about paper bags and lunch — and, uh, misspoke. Of course, Mazyck wasn’t talking about school lunches and had never met Anderson. When Kessler checked with Ryan’s office, Ryan’s spokesperson said he had never checked to see if the story was true before making it a centerpiece of his speech. And so …

Two, the moral that Ryan took from the story — the one that wasn’t true — is even more disturbing than the fact that it never happened. Kids who get free school lunches, Ryan suggests, don’t have families who care for them. Kids who get free or reduced lunches must come from families who don’t take the time or effort to buy paper bags and bologna and bread. Kids who get free or reduced lunches have parents who are addicted to their hammocks. Kids who get free or reduced lunches are robbed of something essential so, presumably, they shouldn’t get free or reduced lunches because keeping their dignity, or something, is more important that getting the nutrition needed in order to learn at school.

And here’s the kicker, via Kessler, in an irony that is almost too good to be true, except that Kessler checked and it is. Schroff and Mazyck — the real people in the real story — are working with a group called No Kid Hungry, which advocates for, yes, hungry kids and works to get them hooked up with federal programs like food stamps and, you guessed it, free school lunches.

Can it get any crazier than that?

[ CPAC photo by Gage Skidmore ]

6 COMMENTS

  1. OK, here’s the news and it ain’t good:

    – February 28, 2014 Blog entry No Comments
    – March 04, 2014 Blog entry 2 Comments
    – March 04, 2014 Column No Comments
    – March 07, 2014 Column 1 Comment (so far)

    These columns/blog entries don’t write themselves! Mr. Littwin spends hour upon hour painstakingly and intensely researching each and every topic, ensuring each sentence, comma, semi-colon, full-colon is just so and this is all he has to show for it?

    How long would it take to write a short comment like“You’re the best, Mike” or “Mike, I missed you so!” or “Mike, you make the Colorado Independent what it is today!” or “Mike, you make me forget about Ernest Hemingway” or “Hey Mike, was that you I saw sleeping in a chair at the Tattered Cover?”.

    Looks like it’s time for another column on guns!

    http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org

  2. Mr. Littwin,

    Hey, your numbers are looking better already.

    I knew if I beat the bushes hard enough people would respond. Glad I could help and you’re welcome.

    And at least you weren’t snoring.

    Why doesn’t the Colorado Independent website display all Facebook comments and/or counts?

    http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org

  3. Don,

    I don’t know why the Independent doesn’t post all Facebook comments. Maybe just so you can feel good thinking that no one is reading me.

    Sadly, for you, it’s just not the case.

    Among the papers that have picked up the Ryan column, the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel has recorded 50-some comments and the Daily Camera has 50-some comments, and it looks like I’ve got 200-plus likes here (thanks, Anne, I never even noticed that, and apparently Don didn’t either) while the column on my Facebook page has 40-some comments.

    The column is running in five papers in the state, and I’m just starting to arrange for papers that used to run me when I was at the Rocky and/or the Post — like the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel — to take the column when it has a national focus.

    That isn’t to say I don’t appreciate your constant readership. I know that you, if no one else, will follow me wherever I go.

    Mike

  4. Mr. Littwin,

    Thanks for the update!

    And judging by the numbers you have been kind enough to provide, very little of your readership comes through the Colorado Independent.

    Or maybe it’d be more accurate to say that your column appears to be of very little interest to those who visit the Colorado Independent website. Hmm, I wonder if Mrs. Greene has noticed that.

    But the really good news is that now my comments can go national, or at least as far as Milwaukee. Thanks Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.

    And by the way, if you like your chair at the Tattered Cover you can keep it. Period.

Comments are closed.