Boston Herald

Deception tried-and-true tactic for the far left

- BY GARY FRANKS Gary Franks is a former U.S. Representa­tive from Connecticu­t and visiting professor/adjunct at Hampton University, Georgetown and the University of Virginia.

Many liberals, progressiv­es, socialists, and far-left Democrats are disingenuo­us, but also serious-minded and focused.

When pushed to defend their failed policies, they are quite clever. They can make “up” seem like “down” and “down” seem like “up”. It’s almost as though they can put the masses into a hypnotic trance anytime they want in just three words — Uncle Tom for Black Americans and Trumpism for all Americans.

They bank on Americans being very trusting; they often rely on a cooperativ­e mainstream media. They understand that attention spans are short, not because people are dim-witted but because 24/7 politics is not what most people are about.

The problem with being too clever is that sometimes it backfires. Trust, once lost, is hard to regain.

Once you become suspicious of the narrative, you start to question everything. Irate political leaders then wonder why you refuse to accept the obvious. Lack of trust is the main reason more than half of the unvaccinat­ed continue to refuse the COVID vaccine, despite the fact that it is free and readily available.

Division and deception are the two true weapons used by the radical far left. I saw it firsthand during my terms in Congress.

President Bill Clinton convinced the American people that an increase in Medicare spending was a cut in Medicare spending. With the help of the far-left media it worked. I spent hours, days, months refuting the twisted logic in my 1996 re-election attempt – to no avail.

The Republican Party did not want to raise Medicare spending as high as President Clinton proposed, so it was spun as a “cut.” For example, Republican­s wanted to take it from $100 to $105 while the president wanted to take it from $100 to $110. Both, as you can see, are increases. The GOP was merely trying to slow the growth. On Election Day, we got crushed. I lost my bid for a fourth term. Clinton won the presidency handily, defeating Sen. Bob Dole.

That took a lot of work on the part of the far left. Eventually, they saw other ways to persuade voters to reject Republican ideas and leaders, often by using just two terms: Uncle Tom and Trumpism.

Call a Black Republican an Uncle Tom and the Black community goes into a hypnotic state. That person is dismissed regardless of the substance of his argument. Democrats need not offer ideas or produce solutions. They merely prevail because the other side is filled with Uncle Toms.

This derogatory term has a historical precedent. An Uncle Tom is defined as a Black person who works with white people to hurt Black people. Let us remember that the slave trade traffickin­g was aided by Black people who helped capture unassuming Black people. This fact and the legendary “House Negro” term often hit a raw nerve in the Black community. I have never heard a Black Democrat called an Uncle Tom. Even candidate Biden said that if a Black voter even had to think about whether to vote for him, they “ain’t Black.”

These labels, and others, are the far left and socialist Black leaders’ Trump card. That leads me to the second term that divides people and causes everyone to go into a hypnotic state. Trumpism.

Democrats want to label the vast majority of Trump supporters as misinforme­d and “deplorable” people. The problem is Trump received more votes (74 million) than any presidenti­al loser in U.S. history. That’s where the violent Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol comes into play. Some Democrats would like to divide the Republican Party or taint the entire Republican Party.

President Biden has his own problems. He repeatedly blames Donald Trump for U.S. failures in Afghanista­n, yet it was he who promised not to leave a single American behind — and yet he did so. This failure of leadership is a water-in-your-face wakeup call for unaffiliat­ed voters that has even eroded support from moderate Democrats.

President Biden’s job approval rating is 43%, the lowest of his presidency. For the first time, 53% now disapprove of his job performanc­e. Donald Trump pulled in an average 41% approval rating while in the White House.

I believe that President Biden, if he could, would blame his low numbers on, yes, you guessed it — Trump.

 ?? AP FIle ?? WHICH WAY IS UP? In Bill Clinton’s 1996 re-election bid, some on the left characteri­zed Republican­s’ smaller increase in Medicare funding as a ‘cut.’
AP FIle WHICH WAY IS UP? In Bill Clinton’s 1996 re-election bid, some on the left characteri­zed Republican­s’ smaller increase in Medicare funding as a ‘cut.’

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