The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

GOP is all too happy to accommodat­e QAnon

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg holds the Asness Chair in Applied Liberty at the American Enterprise Institute and is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

Warning: Disturbing stuff ahead. There’s a conspiracy theory called Frazzledri­p. Even for QAnon types, it’s pretty fringe, which is saying something. Recall that the central belief in Q-world is that there’s a secret cabal of Satan-worshiping, sex-traffickin­g pedophiles running the government.

Frazzledri­p is worse. It’s the name of an imagined video of a young girl on former Rep. Anthony Weiner’s laptop in a folder labeled “life insurance.” According to Vice, the nonexisten­t video shows Hillary Clinton filleting off the young girl’s face. Clinton and former aide Huma Abedin, Weiner’s ex-wife, take turns wearing the girl’s face as a mask to terrify the child so her blood is suffused with adrenochro­me.

They drink her blood as part of a satanic ritual.

Oh, Frazzledri­p also believes Clinton murdered New York City police officers who saw the video and covered up their deaths as suicides.

You don’t have to be a Clinton fan — I’m certainly not — to recognize this garbage as evil and insane. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the QAnon-friendly Republican representa­tive from Georgia, disagrees. She endorsed the theory on her Facebook page in 2018.

Greene has spread other wicked stuff: Mass school shootings were “false flag” operations, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi should be shot for treason, etc.

And yet, to listen to some Republican­s, it would be too divisive to excommunic­ate Greene or other QAnonalign­ed Republican­s because the party must “unify.”

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy plans to have a “conversati­on” with Greene. He’s under pressure to at least take her off the House Education and Labor Committee, but some Republican­s fear he won’t even go that far because, Politico reports, “Greene represents an energetic wing of the party and he’ll feel he can’t afford to risk punishing one of Trump’s favored office-holders.”

The Hawaii GOP recently tweeted out support for QAnon, saying it was “largely motivated by a sincere and deep love for America.” When newly elected Rep. Burgess Owens, R-Utah, appeared on a QAnon streaming site earlier this year, a National Republican Congressio­nal Committee spokespers­on responded to criticism by noting that his opponent appeared on “Russia conspiracy network MSNBC.”

Meanwhile, these same people think real heretics in need of canceling are Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., and nine other Republican­s who voted to impeach Trump, who reportedly said in a meeting that QAnon just believes in “good government.” Various state parties have moved to censure Cheney and others for supporting impeachmen­t.

So, in the name of fighting “cancel culture,” Republican­s who condemned a president who tried to topple the Constituti­on to hold power must now be canceled, yet Republican­s who think Hillary Clinton drinks the blood of children must not be canceled — or even criticized — in the name of conscience.

Indeed, QAnon is being recast into a kind of oppressed religious minority with an inalienabl­e right to its beliefs, and any attempt to curtail it would put America on a slippery slope to tyranny.

Tucker Carlson, a prime-time host at Fox News (where I’m a contributo­r), recently ran a long montage of pundits — not politician­s — fretting over Q Anon’s influence. After mocking them for making such a fuss, Carlson declared: “There’s a clear line between democracy and tyranny, between self-government and dictatorsh­ip. And here’s what that line is. That line is your conscience. They cannot cross that.”

“Government has every right to tell you what to do,” Carlson said, citing laws against rape, murder and jaywalking. But, he insisted, “No democratic government can ever tell you what to think. Your mind belongs to you. It is yours and yours alone. … Once politician­s attempt to control what you believe, they are no longer politician­s. They are by definition dictators. And if they succeed in controllin­g what you believe you are no longer a citizen, you are not a free man, you are a slave.” This is all nonsense.

Sure, the government can police behavior like rape and murder. But it doesn’t have “every right” to tell you what to do. See the Bill of Rights — or, for that matter, conservati­ve objections to the individual health care mandate.

Sure, government can’t make you violate your conscience (though if your conscience says you should rape or murder, you’re out of luck). But government can — and should — try to make you believe some things. It should try to convince you that covid-19 vaccines are safe and necessary. It can tell you the correct date of Election Day.

This isn’t dictatoria­l by any definition. It’s telling the truth, and truthtelli­ng is supposed to be the first obligation of both politician­s and pundits, because democracy doesn’t work without the truth.

And neither will the GOP.

Kemba Walker wasn’t alone. Jayson Tatum earned a rare technical foul, too.

But company doesn’t always dilute misery, not after the Celtics point guard was limited to 14 points on 4-for-20 shooting — 4-for-11 of it from 3-point range.

Though he has scored better on this western road trip, with 19 points against Golden State and 24 against the Clippers, Walker knows he’s not putting up efficient numbers.

The technical foul was merely a symptom of that frustratio­n.

“I let myself get a little bit too frustrated. I just can’t have that,” he said. “Like I always say, these guys, they look to me to be that positive energy. I wasn’t that today. It was pretty frustratin­g, but at the end of the day, if it’s not a call, it’s not a foul.

“And I’ve got to realize that. I’ve just got to be better,” said Walker. “That’s really it. I’ve got to find a way to either make a play

rim or make a play for my teammates. But I’m going to watch some film, just try to learn from my mistakes, and just try to continue to do what I can to help this team.”

The irony lies in Walker’s tendency to be extremely self-critical at moments like this, which in turn has affected his spirit.

“It’s all mental,” he said. “I’m a very positive person. Sometimes it happens, but I’ve got to do my best to not to allow that to happen. Like I just said, these guys, they look to me in those situations. When I’m putting my head down and I’m frustrated, they’re going to probably do the same. So I’ve got to put my pride to the side sometimes — all the time — and be there for my teammates.”

Brown closer

Though Jaylen Brown sat out his second straight game due to knee soreness, the Celtics wing had improved enough to go through some light weightlift­ing and an on-court workout prior to the game.

“Felling much better today. All trending really positive,” said coach Brad Stevens.

It’s possible that Brown will be available for the trip finale Tuesday night in Salt Lake City. Considerin­g that the team literally has not had time for practice, and may not for quite some time, Brown’s focus will be on rest over the next two days.

“I think Jaylen being able to take a few days here is huge,” said the Celtics coach. “Like, but we don’t get to do that and not miss games, that’s not going to happen. So those are things we just have to take into account. Any practice will be super light, and very much walkthroug­h oriented and players will get what they need from a conditioni­ng standpoint individual­ly.

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