Courtwatch
By

Andrew Cohen /

CNET/ September 10, 2009, 5:07 PM

Joe Wilson's War

(AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
We moved one small step closer to parliamentary government Wednesday night when a real, live back-bencher, Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.), shouted "you lie" to Barack Obama's face during the president's speech on health care reform. (watch the outburst)

For his temerity, the obscure representative is obscure no more; his Twitter following more than doubled; his campaign coffers swelled; and all of Washington is talking about the moment as yet another nadir in our nation's political discourse.

The outcry about the outcry was as predictable as it is hypocritical. Our politicians say (or encourage their tribunes to say) the rudest things about one another in private, on the Internet, on the airwaves, or during speeches to their constituents. "You lie," is actually tame by these standards.

But we are shocked - Shocked! - when some of these same people forget their manners in the House Chamber? Why do we deign to tolerate the former and claim to abhor the latter?

We like to pretend that our system of government is more polite and more decorous than all the rest in the world but we are just fooling ourselves. Much in the same way that we live in denial about the long-lasting failures of our leaders to address long-term problems (health care, Social Security insolvency, global warming, energy independence, etc.) we live in denial about—and tolerate—an astonishing level of phoniness and mean-spiritedness in the political discourse over such matters. America is like the smiley, happy family that has all the bodies buried in the cellar.

To voters and the media, Washington still wants to try to maintain the fa?ade that, deep down inside, apart from political gamesmanship, there is widespread mutual respect by and between foot soldiers of both parties. That's why many politicians still make the effort to clap during presidential speeches in the House Chamber even when they don't really feel like clapping. We are thus supposed to continue to believe there are genuine aspirations of bipartisanship, or nonpartisanship, even as gerrymandering ensures that ideologues on both the right and left keep getting elected into office and even as the clear and convincing proof of an overall lack of statesmanship and foresight piles up.

We should know better. There is genuine and volatile anger, even hatred, between members of the two parties and the gulf between ideologies is as wide as it has been in a long, long time.

Congressional Democrats booed and hissed at George W. Bush when he spoke in the House Chamber in 2004 and 2005. Are we really surprised it occurred again Wednesday night, during a time in our nation's history when citizens brings guns to speeches about health care and toss around like horseshoes words like "Nazi" and "Socialism"?

Rep. Wilson was rude to interrupt the president's speech—rude but not hypocritical. At least he had courage to candidly and publicly (and succinctly) express his views about the president's statement on illegal immigrants and health care coverage. The time and the place were wrong. But how about using the kerfluffle (Rep. Wilson has since apologized to the White House and the White House has since accepted the apology) to push for a meaningful public debate on the topic between the president and an eloquent Republican opponent?

Wouldn't Americans benefit from seeing ideological opponents confront one another, face to face, fact to fact, accusation to accusation, instead of continuing to settle for getting their information (or wallowing in misinformation or disinformation) from inaccurate television commercials or from radio and television demagogues?

In Britain and in Canada, during parliamentary sessions, elected officials harangue each other all the time; forcing each other to respond directly to questions about controversial issues. Sure, it gets loud and rowdy. But no less loud and rowdy than the cable talk shows each night.

Last night, America might actually have benefited from a spontaneous exchange between Rep. Wilson and the president over the issue that generated the outburst. We need more candid debate over these topics and fewer vapid applause lines; more expressions of genuine positions and fewer meaningless sound-bytes.

These are monumental times and health care reform is a monumental issue. I wouldn't teach my son to interrupt a speech but I'll take the politician who is rude and candid over the one who is polite and sneaky any day of the week.

Joe Wilson Becomes the Latest Online Craze
Obama Accepts Wilson's Apology
Wilson Outburst a Boon to Challenger
Rep. Wilson's "You Lie" Outburst Swipes Spotlight
Lawmakers Condemn Outburst at Obama
Watch the Outburst
Best Political Brawls


(CBS)
Andrew Cohen is CBS News' Chief Legal Analyst and Legal Editor. CourtWatch is his new blog with analysis and commentary on breaking legal news and events. For columns on legal issues before the beginning of this blog, click here. You can also follow him on Twitter.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
113 Comments Add a Comment
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RobertSugg says:
For the year that I lived in the mobile home near the Hard Rock with Karen, I noticed in daily commutes past the well-kept mosque that there was a swing set on the grounds. Everybody swings their kids.
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RobertSugg says:
Interesting.

According to Wikipedia, in 2003, Wilson voted for a provision in the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act that provided $250,000 annually in taxpayer money to reimburse hospitals for treatment of illegal aliens. He changed his position to oppose the use of public funds to treat illegal aliens in 2009, not too long before his "you lie" outburst against the president during his speech on the same subject before Congress this week.

You could call him "Flip Wilson" except that it would disrespect the name of a famous and well-liked comedian who is no longer with us.

Wilson is a member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, a group growing in numbers of people who favor secession and who view slavery as a benign institution. When he was in the South Carolina Senate, Wilson was one of seven in a 36-7 vote who voted to continue flying the Confederate flag over the state capitol.

When Essie Mae Washington-Williams announced in 2003 that she was the daughter of Williams' former boss, Strom Thurmond, and his black maid, he scolded her, even after finally accepting the truth of the story, for spreading a "smear" against Thurmond and for "diminishing" his legacy.

This information brought to you by looking it up.
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RobertSugg says:
Joe Wilson is a lawyer emboldened by the same echo chamber that now rules broadcasting and cable. When Fairness was dropped by FCC in 1987, and its personal attack rule was dropped by FCC in 2000, attacks, hate speech, lies, amplified extremism (on both sides), and disinformation lost their checks and became quite legal in the arena of ideas of public importance. Average citizens are no longer fully informed about issues that affect them, because all-powerful corporate interests skew their presentations and do not permit full counterpoint, except that it be shut down by derision.
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stilwatr says:
What about Katie Couric reviewing President Obama's Nationally Televised speech about Health Care, referred to the President as "MR." Obama. Is there no respect left even in the major news organizations? I think she should apologize to the PRESIDENT.
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hockeymom441 says:
Even if he were right...

How can some republicans defend HOW she shared his opinion... McCain and everyone else agreed it was inappropriate, rude and unproductive.

His outburst served his OWN agenda... he's not serving the people.

He's wrong. If you can read (which I guess is taking a lot for granted...) non-citizens are not ellible for the public option insurance plan, period. No, Obama is not a Muslim (which is just another example of your racism... who cares if he were); he WAS born in America; and no, the toothfairy is NOT real.

We can spend a lifetime debating lies and propaganda, but in the meantime, America grows weaker... and eventually we will pay the price for all this pointless bickering.
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aburr replies:
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Uhh hockey mom did you take a puck to the head? Read the bill you lazy fool.
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Lawyers-Guns-n-Money says:
by ToughBreak September 11, 2009 8:13 AM EDT
I really hope the majority of voters are really not as simple-minded as the people who are swallowing the horse apples being dished up by Mr. Wilson and his colleages.
=====================================================

LOL!!! Good luck with that.
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TominNY says:
Joe Wilson = Just anudda ignorant Republican pinhead!
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vjamerson says:
How dare you make excuses for this blatant act of rudeness!!!! Gee! I think that you and Rep. Joe Wilson are two peas in a pot. The representative was totally out of line and South Carolina should be ashamed that they have a representative that can not control his emotions. There is a time and place for everything! That was certainly not the time. Totally unbelievable that you would try to justify this man's actions!!!!
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vaughanja says:
Is it any wonder that we can not obtain health care reform in this country when the President gives a speech on needed reform and the ?NEWS? agencies in this country spend more time reporting on an outburst during the speech than the facts about the recommended changes to health care!
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r9119111 says:
The Republicans have a new ploy. They simply assalt anything reasonable. They put on a big show and the doners throw money at them. The bigger the nut job, the more money they throw at them because, in America, playing Hollywood attracts attention.

We can expect more of this from the Republicans. We need to stop rewarding bad behavior and such childishness. This behavior in Congress isn't acceptable, it is disruptive. Poor behavior gets you what you want. If this is allowed to expand, we will never have meaningful discussion among adults in America again. This appears to be the newest right wing agenda. ---Spoiled brat Hollywooders---
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