Last week bombastic conservative radio commentator Rush
Limbaugh stuck his foot in his mouth—yet again—when he referred to a Georgetown
law school student, Sandra Fluke, as a "slut."
The comment was at once base and baseless. Limbaugh later apologized, sort of. It was one of those prideful “I didn’t
mean to offend you, but my intent is what really matters, and here’s why…” kind
of apologies. Not much contrition there. You only get away with that sort of thing if
the person to whom you’re apologizing isn’t someone you have to see again.
Previously, Ms. Fluke had testified before the House
Democratic Steering and Policy Committee that her cost of birth control, about
$3,000 during her time in law school, is prohibitively expensive for a cash-strapped student. Her testimony was part of Chairwoman
Nancy Pelosi’s theatrical attempt to demonstrate why it’s OK for the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (a.k.a., 'Obamacare') to force Catholic
institutions to cover birth control in their employee and student health
insurance plans. Limbaugh’s slut comment derives from an incorrect inference on the part of another commentator: if condoms cost about $1.00 each, and Ms.
Fluke is in school for 3 years, a total cost of $3,000 equates to 2.74 condoms
per day. However, Ms. Fluke was clearly referring
to the cost of birth control pills, not condoms, and we simply have no
knowledge—thank heavens—about how, um, active she is.
Rush blew it. He
should never in a million years have called her such a name, but since he did,
he should’ve simply said—directly to Sandra Fluke: “I’m sorry. What I said was awful. I hope you can forgive me.” The “yeah, but…” thing makes his epithet that
much more offensive.
Predictably, the left has blown a gasket, calling for boycotts
of the products of companies that advertise on Limbaugh’s show. The boycott is working—several major sponsors have
pulled out thus far, representing tens of millions of dollars in annual advertising revenue. It’s the kind of
thing that Limbaugh’s show, right now and in its present form, might not
survive, if listeners boycott also.
I say predictably not because I think lefties will
always react to stuff they dislike with boycotts (although you have to admit, it’s one of their favorite tools), but because Ms. Fluke isn’t really a person, in
this situation, but a prop. That’s how these
gross dances go: The Hatfields trot out some faux victim, the McCoys cry: "Baloney, you %@#$!", and
the Hatfields scream: "Scandale dans la maison de McCoy!".
I’ll bet you didn’t know that the Hatfields spoke French.
The problem is that this scandale
(call it ‘mysogeny’), like so many others, is actually symmetrical.
As Kristen Powers points out, there are plenty of lefty media types who
throw around all sorts of horrible, demeaning language but emerge unscathed. The left retorts, “But wait, Bill Maher is
just a comedian. Surely we can’t hold
him to the same standard as a news organization!” Maybe not, but has Rush Limbaugh, in the lefty mind, now suddenly been promoted from knuckle-dragging entertainer to serious newsman?
What would be helpful right now is not one of Nancy Pelosi’s dramatic
productions, not one of Rush Limbaugh’s demeaning rants, and certainly not the
left’s hypocritical, self-righteous indignation. What would help is a little analysis.
Fortunately, Cathy Cleaver Ruse has done just that for
us. The real issue is this: What
limitation are we going to impose on the federal government’s ability to coerce
the private sector into facilitating and funding acts which they find to be morally
reprehensible? Ms. Ruse points out
that, unlike medicine which alleviates the symptoms of chronic diseases such as
asthma, birth control medication facilitates private choice.
I don’t share the Catholic Church’s view that prohibiting
pregnancy is wrong. But this isn’t about
my opinion; it’s about what our government gets to force upon our
citizens. There are a whole lot of
things with which I disagree (like dressing up as zombie Mohammed), but which I
also defend in the name of liberty.
Sadly, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act fundamentally is about forcing a certain view of equality, not facilitating liberty. We should applaud Georgetown for even making a health insurance plan available, not berate them for declining one type of coverage. And whenever possible we should flee coercion.
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