Governor Shapiro Finally Weighed in on Democrats Trying to Steal a Senate Seat
Huckabee Previews an Expansion of the Abraham Accords
Trump Admin Vows to Track Down Biden's Missing Children
Trump Has Made His Selection for Commerce Secretary
The New Leftists ANTI-Social Site, and Jake Tapper Wants Breakfast From Cheap Immigrant...
Don't Think Guns Are Treated Differently? Think Again
Washington Has No Excuse for Background Check Delay
It Looks Like A Familiar Face Will Be Selected As Trump's Secretary of...
Here's Who Leads the Pack for Democrats' Choice in 2028
Justin Trudeau Just Made a Stunning Admission About Canada's Immigration System
Dr. Oz Nominated to Have a Place in Trump's Administration
Tren de Aragua Has Expanded to Over a Dozen States
Scott Jennings Has a Message for Democrats Melting Down Over Trump's Immigration Agenda
NYT: Hey, Where Exactly Did Kamala's $1.5 Billion Campaign War Chest Go?
Fani Willis Disqualification Hearing Suddenly Canceled
OPINION

Rise of the Bitter Clingers

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Many of my more enlightened friends like to ask me: How could someone as intellectually gifted, delightfully urbane, profoundly moral and breathlessly handsome not want to spit at these stupid tea party candidates, with their stupid positions and their stupid stupidity? (That's slightly embellished; obviously, I'm not that handsome.)

Advertisement

Do I wish there were more articulate and intellectual free market candidates? Sure I do. But alas, Americans are in no mood for know-it-alls who think sailing is a sport.

Do I wish that science-challenged believers would resist the urge to raise their hands when asked whether they believe the world is 5,000 years old? God, yes. But an election offers limited choices. Take Delaware, where voters can pick a candidate who had a youthful flirtation with witchcraft or one who dabbled in collectivist economic theory.

Only one of those faiths has gained traction in Washington the past few years. And as far as I can tell, there is no pagan lobby.

Do I wish that Colorado senatorial candidate Ken Buck hadn't declared that being gay is a choice (as if there were something wrong with choosing to be gay)? Yes. Do I wish he hadn't followed up by comparing a gay genetic predisposition to alcoholism? I do. If you were brainy enough to watch "Meet the Press" instead of wasting time in church last Sunday, no doubt you cringed at that primitive lunacy.

After all, what's more consequential than a faux pas about nature and/or nurture? Who cares that Democrat Michael Bennet was busy moralizing about the cosmic benefits of dubious economic theory and science fiction environmentalism -- ideas that have already cost us trillions with nothing to show for it?

Advertisement

Just as long as we stay focused on what's important, right? We're so easily distracted.

Those who believe being gay is a choice are Neanderthals. The enlightened trust science. That's why the president appointed a science czar, people. A science czar who co-authored a textbook arguing for a mass sterilization of Americans to prevent an imagined population bomb. You know, "science."

God has no place in this faith. That's not to say that Yahweh has anything on our president, who once claimed future generations will see his election -- Goliath government -- as the point in history when we finally started "healing the sick" and "the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal."

Now, that's the kind of faith-inflected lingo we slack-jawed yokels can comprehend. Otherwise, the left's plans are just too darn complex for us to appreciate.

"Part of the reason that our politics seems so tough right now," Obama recently explained, "and facts and science and argument (do) not seem to be winning the day all the time is because we're hard-wired not to always think clearly when we're scared. And the country is scared." (Wait. If we're hard-wired to be confused and we're confused, isn't science winning the day? It's all so perplexing.)

Advertisement

Science can explain all, including how bitter, frightened, clingy voters aren't grateful enough.

Or -- and I realize this is probably crazy talk -- voters aren't scared; they have just been paying attention and are turning to candidates who, though far less than perfect and not always sophisticated, better reflect their sensibilities.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos