GOP Civil War: Crazed Right Wing Conservative ‘Intellectuals’ Launch ‘Against Trump’ Movement
In Amazing Act Of Hypocrisy, Over Two Dozen Well-Known Right Wing Writers Join Conservative Publication To Expose and Defeat Trump
For decades, since its inception in 1955, The National Review has been home to some of the respectable right’s “intellectual” anti-gay bigotry and racism. In recent years, it’s been repeatedly shamed into purging some of those standard-bearers, like John Derbyshire and Robert Weissberg, but many (NOM co-founder Maggie Gallagher and Jay Nordlinger, who defends calling Mexicans “wetbacks,” for instance) still remain.
So its almost hysterical that late Thursday night The National Review rounded up nearly two dozen right wing “intellectuals” and, together with its own editors, launched a new coalition called Conservatives Against Trump.
Conservatives against @realDonaldTrump is out HERE: https://t.co/beXjdcM5L9 pic.twitter.com/wuRiTAF0Pb
— National Review (@NRO) January 22, 2016
Who are these conservatives battling to save the soul of the Republican Party and retrieve the mantle of conservatism?
For years, the people on this cover fed the climate of fear-mongering extremism that created Donald Trump. They built this.
— Charles Johnson (@Green_Footballs) January 22, 2016
The list includes crazed apocalyptic prognosticator and U.S. Constitution perverter Glenn Beck. Far right wing media “watchdog” empire magnate L. Brent Bozell III. Founder of right wing and Tea Party extremist website Red State, Ben Domenech. Former Red State editor-in-chief who says gay activists are like ISIS, except for the killing part, Erick Erickson. Neocon warmonger, the almost-always wrong William Kristol. Tea Party firebrand and gun extremist Dana Loesch. Slavery whitewasher Michael Medved.
These, and several others, are the “intellectuals” who are teaming up with The National Review to save conservatism and wrest the GOP nomination from Donald Trump.
The irony of a publication with a lengthy history and current-day affinity for racism, or the promotion of racism denial and a variety of other ugly stances, is stunning. It’s right-wing hypocrisy and siloism to the extreme.Â
It’s almost as if The National Review and these right wing “conservative intellectuals” joined forces to say to Trump, “Hey, racism, misogyny, xenophobia – that’s our beat. How dare you try to take it from us?”
Of course, taking down Trump is a noble cause, one which we support entirely, but this group claiming to do it to save conservatism is hypocrisy and blindness to the nth degree.
Trump had this response:
National Review is a failing publication that has lost it’s way. It’s circulation is way down w its influence being at an all time low. Sad!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 22, 2016
More responses via Twitter:
.@chenx064 @NRO Where were you at the start of this freak show? Say, January of 2009? https://t.co/0Ty8g9fnFv
— Shoq (@Shoq) January 22, 2016
NRO editorial meeting: “Need to save US conservatism as a serious intellectual movement. Really make a splash. Let’s publish Glenn Beck!”
— Dan Murphy (@bungdan) January 22, 2016
NR “Against Trump†issue opens with Glenn Beck slamming Trump for TARP, fiscal stimulus, and auto bailout – 3 issues where Trump was right.
— David Frum (@davidfrum) January 22, 2016
Is @NRO talking about Trump or the entire Republican field here? pic.twitter.com/3cdNYawbmI
— Micheál Keane (@aexia) January 22, 2016
… Almost all of them – Beck, Meese, Sowell, Erickson, Bozell, Medved, etc – make their living off of the conservative marketplace.
— David S. Bernstein (@dbernstein) January 22, 2016
Yes, Mazel Tov to J-Pod, the one brave Republican who stood up to Trump’s birtherism 4 years later. https://t.co/Q9kyE2yOuc
— Gary Legum (@GaryLegum) January 22, 2016
I love that the National Review’s anti-Trump cover looks like it was designed by someone who decorates the rooms of a Trump hotel/casino
— Dana Houle (@DanaHoule) January 22, 2016
There are some good things in NR’s anti-Trump issue but a lot of it seems like country club snobbery. “He’s not one of us.”
— Jeet Heer (@HeerJeet) January 22, 2016
Medved is a movie critic. Meese tried to starve kids to death. Podhoretz shouldn’t be left alone with the babysitter.
— Richard M. Nixon (@dick_nixon) January 22, 2016
Watching Trump & NRO retweet things from the past reminds me of friends who fought out their divorce on Facebook
— Dana Houle (@DanaHoule) January 22, 2016
The @NRO conservatives only just now realizing Trump is a problem? These are intellectuals? FUCK the National Review.
— Talib Kweli Greene (@TalibKweli) January 22, 2016
.@NRO you’re fifty years too late
— Squarely Rooted (@squarelyrooted) January 22, 2016
Conservative intellectuals didn’t care what Trump said until they realized he could cost them the election.
— Dana Houle (@DanaHoule) January 21, 2016
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Image via National Review/Twitter
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