The Mercury News

Here’s ‘what about’ Roy Moore that is different

- By Dana Milbank Dana Milbank writes for The Washington Post.

Call the CDC. Alert the surgeon general and put the National Institutes of Health on standby.

We’re having a severe outbreak of whatabouti­sm.

In mild forms, the primary symptom is a vulnerabil­ity to false equivalenc­ies. Virulent strains, such as the current one, can cause victims to lose all moral perspectiv­e.

After I wrote about the grotesque spectacle of President Trump and Kellyanne Conway throwing their support behind accused child molester Roy Moore in Alabama’s Senate race, Trump fans answered with a flurry of whatabouts:

What about Al Franken? What about John Conyers? What about Bill Clinton? “You write these words without even mentioning Conyers, Franken (who both need to go) and of course Bill Clinton,” writes a retired Air Force colonel. “Crickets from you on a louse like Bill.”

Another (of many) asked: “Where was your indignatio­n and outrage due Bill Clinton? And how can you justify electing his enabling and complicit partner Hillary?”

I would have thought the best treatment for this faulty logic would be to ignore it, but it seems to be infecting the commentari­at, too, to some extent: We are now hearing that the Conyers and Franken cases are muddying the waters and causing Democrats to lose the political high ground.

But there should be no muddiness here, and it has nothing to do with politics. Here’s “what about” Moore that is different: He has been accused, credibly and repeatedly, of sexual misconduct with children. Franken, Conyers and Clinton (Bill and Hillary), and, for that matter, Republican Joe Barton, have not.

I don’t excuse Franken’s alleged groping of women or Conyers’ alleged sexual harassment, and I disagree with Nancy Pelosi’s “due process” defense of Conyers. As for Bill Clinton, I wrote in 1998 and 1999 about his “sleaziness,” his “chronic dishonesty,” his “moral problems,” his “moral lapse,” his “unconvinci­ng” argument that he didn’t commit perjury, his inability to “show real contrition,” his “puny” stature in the presidency, the way he “humiliated himself by his own conduct,” the unseemly spectacle of feminists turning “a blind eye to the president’s behavior,” and the “personal hostility” Clinton deserved.

But it shouldn’t be controvers­ial to say that sexual misconduct is worse when it involves children. Until now, accusation­s of sexual abuse of children have been met with swift, severe and bipartisan responses. Recall the revulsion over Denny Hastert and Anthony Weiner, Mark Foley and David Wu. Predators aren’t solely Democrats or Republican­s, liberals or conservati­ves. No partisan or ideologica­l lens applies — only a human one.

The presumptio­n of innocence has its place, of course — in a courtroom. But this isn’t about whether Moore should go to prison; it’s about whether he belongs in the Senate. Many women who didn’t previously know each other and who didn’t have anything to gain by coming forward have said he pursued them when they were teenagers as young as 14 and he was a grown man. Moore denies the allegation­s of sexual misconduct but has not denied that he was involved with girls half his age when he was in his 30s.

Now Trump and his whatabouti­st followers would turn credible accusation­s of child molestatio­n into just another bothsides-do-it argument. But both sides don’t do it. Nobody else has been accused of what Moore has been accused of — and nobody so accused has been granted the privilege of high office. Yet.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Alabama Chief Justice and U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore speaks at a campaign rally on Monday in Henagar, Alabama.
BRYNN ANDERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Alabama Chief Justice and U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore speaks at a campaign rally on Monday in Henagar, Alabama.

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