Last week I pointed out Senator Charles Schumer's blatant lie about Tea Partiers. Apparently, Senator Jon Kyl has also lied and then gone on to justify his lie in a manner most creative:
. . . Arizona senator Jon Kyl used his time on the Senate floor during a budget debate to claim that abortions make up "well over 90 percent of what Planned Parenthood does." When it was pointed out that, in fact, abortion funding constitutes about 3 percent of the organization's budget, Kyl shrugged it off. "It wasn't intended to be a factual statement," he said.
One question is why anyone would lie when they have he has decent arguments. The use of tax dollars to fund abortion is morally wrong whatever one thinks of the morality of abortion itself. It doesn't matter how many or how few tax dollars are used. That's one argument. A second is that funding outfits like Planned Parenthood is not among the essential functions of government, and that in a time of dire fiscal crisis, government must be pared back to its essential functions. That's a second argument. Properly exfoliated, they are powerful arguments. They won't convince leftists, but then no conservative argument will. But they will reinforce conservatives in their view and bring some fence-sitters over to our side.
Arguments appeal to our better nature, our rational, truth-seeking nature.
So what does Kyl do? He tells a lie thereby badly injuring his credibility. Even if Kyl doesn't care about the truth, he ought to care about his credibility, and he must know that to be caught in a lie is to harm it.
So why lie when you have good arguments?
Perhaps it is like this. "All's fair in love and war" and one of war's casualties is truth. Politics has nothing to do with truth; it has everything to do with defeating your enemies and gaining or maintaining power. Politics is about power, not truth. Politics is war conducted by other means. (I call this the 'Converse Clausewitz principle.')
So perhaps when Schumer and Kyl et al. lie, they make a calculation: the positive propaganda effect of the lie will offset the negative effect of being caught in a lie, and so lying is conducive to the end in view, namely, defeating the enemy. Also to be considered is that when politicians lie they are primarily addressing their constituencies many of the members of which do not care about truth either. Proof of this is the crap that people forward via e-mail: scurrilous and unsourced allegations about Obama, Pelois and whoever. When you point out to them that it is drivel, they are unfazed. For again, it is about winning by any means, and truth doesn't come into it.
Mendacity pays. Perhaps that is why politicians are so practiced in the arts of deception and prevarication. They get away with their mendacity and we let them. They don't care about truth because the people don't and they represent the people. Maybe we get what we deserve.
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