Saturday Night Beck
Here's a snippet
First, there is a good and strong tradition in alcohol and drug treatment that personal failings should not be extrapolated into the public sphere; that too often when this is done, conclusions are reached based on the wrong motives and, often, the wrong analysis. Glenn has made that mistake here and taken to our politics a cosmologizing of his own deficiencies. This is not a baseless criticism; they are his own deficiencies that he keeps publicly redounding to and analogizing to. It is wrong and he is wrong.
Second, for him to continue to say that he does not hear the Republican party admit its failings or problems is to ignore some of the loudest and brightest lights in the party. From Jim DeMint to Tom Coburn to Mike Pence to Paul Ryan, any number of Republicans have admitted the excesses of the party and done constructive and serious work to correct them and find and promote solutions. Even John McCain has said again and again that “the Republican party lost its way.” These leaders, and many others, have been offering real proposals, not ill-informed muttering diatribes that can’t distinguish between conservative and liberal, free enterprise and controlled markets, or night and day. Does Glenn truly believe there is no difference between a Tom Coburn, for example, and a Harry Reid or a Charles Schumer or a Barbara Boxer? Between a Paul Ryan or Michele Bachmann and a Nancy Pelosi or Barney Frank?
Bill Bennett does not get it. Bill Bennett's attitude is what's wrong with the GOP today. On his first point, I will concede that analogizing alcoholics and politicians isn't a perfect one, and a straw man at best. However, Beck's point was not a direct logical debate, but was to wake up the masses, and the analogy is more than suffice in driving his point.
On his second point, he names THREE names in the party, of whom the "team favorite" (Ryan) is a newbie. Beck obviously isn't saying every single one is a drunk republican. He's talking about the GOP overall as a whole based on its actions the last decade. And to further dig his grave, he brings up McCain. MCCAIN!!! The "maverick" who may have single-handedly brought down the party and shifted party ideology left of what it was before. The mere mention of McCain and using him to justify his point proves Bennett just does not get it.
His third point, well, is too stupid to rebut.