Daily Kos

Anti-Shame League holds its annual bash

Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 06:27:56 AM PDT

In the spring of 1980 in Boston there was a murder trial of a notorious pair of thugs, ghetto low-lifes who had raped, murdered and robbed a young nurse in her own home. At the trial, the prosecutor asked one of the murderers about a certain boombox, proved to be the nurse's, that was in the man's possession when he was arrested. The exchange went something like this:

Prosecutor: You took that boombox from her apartment.
Murderer: Yeah.
Prosecutor: But when you were arrested, you said that it was your boombox.
Murderer: It is mine.

Now that is what the absence of shame looks like.

For a more recent example of brazen shamelessness, we have the annual dinner of the White House Correspondents Association.

At the dinner in 2004, George W.Bush pointedly ridiculed the sailors, soldiers, airmen and marines who had been killed in the Iraq war. The audience howled with laughter. He then went on to mock the children who had been left fatherless or motherless, and especially the Iraqi children who had been orphaned, killed, or blinded, burned, castrated or maimed in the war. The audience laughed and laughed, tears streaming down their faces. He concluded by insulting the people of the United States of America in whose name he had done all this rapine and murder; the audience rose to its feet in enthusiastic applause.

That spectacle pretty much showed that the attendees of the White House Correspondents Dinner were about as shameless as the murderer in Boston. Nevertheless, one man made a final brave attempt to look for any humanity that might have been lurking, hiding, in the bosom of the people who would debase themselves by taking part in this disgusting spectacle.

At the dinner two years ago, Stephen Colbert, in his role as invited entertainer for the evening, pointed out that Bush and his cohort were unelected, ignorant, authoritarian warmongers and criminals; that indeed they were a threat to the continuation of our country as a constitutional republic. He also pointed out that the members of the audience whose job it was to inform the public had betrayed the people's trust and in fact become a part of the junta's propaganda machine. His talk was not well received, at least by those in attendance.

Colbert made it clear that the annual dinner of the White House Correspondents's Association was no place for decent people. Speaking for myself, I have more respect for people who attend Ku Klux Klan rallies and neo-Nazi gatherings, for at least those people have some measure of honesty about what they stand for.

At the dinner last year, in a pointed rebuke of Colbert and the rest of us who care about this country, David Gregory, the correspondent for defense contractor GE/NBC, did a comedy routine with the traitor Karl Rove. The audience approved. And that was about as big a "fuck you" as can be imagined to any patriotic Americans hopeful that Colbert had shamed some decency into these hacks and whores and millionaire poseurs.

So last night they had their dinner again. Craig Fergusson was the entertainer, and presumably he said something mildly amusing and humane; that's what he does. Maybe I'm a softie, but I won't condemn him for going before these lickspittle pukes. He's an optimistic fellow who came back from alcohol addiction, so he knows of personal redemption and maybe he thought he could succeed where Colbert had failed. But I certainly won't watch his performance at the dinner, with cameras panning to Bush, his wife, and the disgusting biped bovines in tuxedos and evening gowns sitting around fancy tables in the audience. I would rather drink a bucket of pus.

Over on Doxos a little while back, Lee Malatesta—an Orthodox Christian who knows Latin and Ancient Greek & who likes to write about deep theology, especially where Hellenistic philosophy meets Christianity—had a nice post about the idea of shame as a social regulator from Plato until recently, when it seems to have disappeared.

Go give it a read. It's a lot more interesting than the White House Correspondent's Association Dinner.

(Cross-posted at wetmachine.)

Tags: whca dinner, stephen colbert, defense contractors, media, Traditional Media (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 7 comments

  •  I saw part of it. (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    j sundman, gdwtch52

    Mo Rocco? was doing some jokes about Obama.  That was it, 20 seconds total and I was out of there.


    The religious fanatics didn't buy the republican party because it was virtuous, they bought it because it was for sale

    by nupstateny on Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 06:34:25 AM PDT

  •  it was fun during the Clinton years (0+ / 0-)

    So I don't begrudge the association for having their annual dinner.

    I know, it's probably not what you want to hear. oD

    by obligatorydiscord on Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 06:50:05 AM PDT

    •  "fun" (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Abra Crabcakeya, gdwtch52

      I'm sure the current shows are "fun" too, by some definition of "fun". I don't begrudge them an annual dinner either. But when they make the president and his wife the guest of honor, they explicitly put themselves in the role of courtiers. They abdicate any claim on the title "journalist". They're not criminals; they're just immoral. But I never said that they shouldn't be allowed to have a dinner. Let them do whatever they want.

      Wetmachine for your daily dose of technoparanoia.

      by j sundman on Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 06:57:04 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  "Let them do whatever they want" (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Abra Crabcakeya

        As if we had a choice.  That's funny.  Lickspittles...yes, they are!

        If we want peace, why do we give weapons and call it "aid"?

        by gdwtch52 on Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 07:00:47 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

      •  it's not an honor based on merit (2+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        VClib, Abra Crabcakeya

        It's just given to the guy occupying the office.  Same was true with Clinton, even during all the scandals.

        Some traditions are just worth keeping, no matter how bad it gets.  The head of state of the host nation gets to open the Olympics.  Dictators get to speak at the United Nations.  The White House correspondents get to honor the sitting President.  There's nothing immoral about it.  It's just tradition.

        I know, it's probably not what you want to hear. oD

        by obligatorydiscord on Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 07:05:26 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  Some traditions are just worth keeping, (1+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          bookkillrr

          As I think I've made pretty clear, I don't think this is a tradition worth keeping, at least insofar as we value the notion of a free press in a democracy as a check on usurpation of power.  But like I said, I have no respect for the people who would attend this thing after 2004, and especially after Colbert.  Really, I think they're horrible, disgusting people. I'm not just saying that.

          The only reason I bother to rant about them here is because they have so much power to influence what becomes of my country.

          Wetmachine for your daily dose of technoparanoia.

          by j sundman on Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 07:11:54 AM PDT

          [ Parent ]

  •  This is wrong. (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    j sundman

    I look at this dinner as a "Kick-Back" for journalists.  We know this is wrong.  They know it's wrong.  This is worse than that guy on the Sunday's news show who golfs with George Bush.
    I doubt he will actually say what he want's to say, knowing he will be hitting golf balls with him down the road.
    I bought the DVD of Stephen Colbert hosting the White House Prostitutes/Reporters/Non-Reporters dinner.  That is worth seeing again, and again.
    My favorite part is where Colbert let's the "Reporters"  know they are doing a great job by not reporting.  There was this eery silence.  Yup, he nailed it.  So, this "Kick-Back" dinner should end.  It's not funny any more.

    Help, my country has been hijacked by a retarded cowboy.

    by bookkillrr on Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 07:12:51 AM PDT

Permalink | 7 comments