William F. Buckley Jr. Skeptical of Allen 's Explanations Too

By: PM
Published On: 9/25/2006 8:06:57 AM

http://www.nysun.com...buckleybig_1

So, George Ran With It
BY WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY JR. - Members of the voting public who have slogged their way through the difficulties of Virginia's Senator Allen in the past month have found it heavy going. What stopped this breathless spectator was the final exchange between Mr. Allen and his mother. But let's rehearse that relationship for just a minute GǪ

Only a few weeks ago, son George asked his mother about rumors that she had been born Jewish. She confirmed the truth of the rumors but bound him to silence in the matter. Legitimate question: Why?

Presumably she believed that if one had hidden such a datum throughout one's life, some sniffy GÇö and proud GÇö Jews would reasonably conclude that she was ashamed of her Jewish background. As to why she hid it in the first place, she told reporters that she and her husband (the famous football coach) hadn't wanted their children to grow up with the fear of persecution that she had lived with. Whether this was her actual motive, it was understandable that she swore George to secrecy when she first told him. To reveal her ethnicity in the last weeks of a political race might damage her son, who would be viewed as an accomplice in his mother's deception.

But as the whole world now knows, Mother Allen specifically released son George from his commitment to silence, and then enjoined him to make public the datum.

Here is where the story achieved sheer mawkishness. "On CNN," as the New York Times reports it, "Mr. Allen recounted his mother's saying: GÇÿI didn't want to tell you. Do you love me? You won't love me as much.'

"Mr. Allen said he responded, GÇÿI love you even more.'"

Well, this non-Virginian discloses that he loves the pair of them less.

Let us, if only for the practice, weigh the considerations of a popular senator running for re-election.

As a Republican, Senator Allen could reasonably assume that he would fare less well in the Jewish community than his Democratic opponent because of Jewish voters' traditional disposition in favor of the Democrat. In the last national election, Jewish voters went for Kerry 3-to-1 over Bush.

So? What might Mr. Allen do to appeal to reluctant Jews? Identify himself as a blood brother!

That thought may have figured in Mother's calculations when she confirmed what was otherwise merely a hypothetical claim.

Democratic contender, James Webb, hasn't challenged the freshly publicized bloodlines. He merely has said that the whole thing suggests racial bias on the part of Mr. Allen. By the whole thing, he has in mind what brought up the question of ethnic background in the first place. That was the use by Senator Allen of the word "macaca" in addressing a Webb campaign aide.

***

If anything is clear now in Virginia, it is that Mr. Allen wishes he had never heard the word "macaca." It is possibly in desperation at the reaction to her son's use of the word that Mrs. Allen thought of a possible means of augmenting ethnic attractiveness by recalling her Jewish roots. So, George ran with it, and at this point, gives the impression of running in every direction.



Comments



Allen Just Can't Get a Break.... (bb10 - 9/25/2006 9:21:11 AM)
....and that's just what he deserves. He'll never get out of the macaca.

Boy, are the chickens coming home to roost.

I wonder what Buckley thinks about the Salon.com piece?!?



You should cross-post this (Leaves on the Current - 9/25/2006 10:31:30 AM)
--at dailykos.

I gave it a plug at http://www.dailykos.... (search on Buckley to find it).

You might need to break up the block quote and summarize some of it--they have stricter rules about quoting extensively from other sources--but it would be worth it for the exposure.

Thanks for posting an important piece that shows how more responsible--and/or politically savvy--conservatives are jumping from Allen's ship.



good advice (PM - 9/27/2006 7:56:05 AM)
The Yahoo News feeder picked up the Buckley story, so lots more people will be reading it:

http://news.yahoo.co...



Another media critic of Allen's answer (PM - 9/26/2006 8:33:07 AM)
Then came the Jewish question, which he blew again–calling the notion that he was Jewish "casting aspersions." Really? Some of us in the Jewish faith might take offense at that, too. Then he tried to make a joke of it, saying that he had eaten a ham sandwich. Now that's clever.

http://www.usnews.co...

The writer is a contributing editor to U.S. News & World Report