Mark Kelly Is Finding Out
Don't Miss This VERY Special Black Friday Offer
National Guardswoman Who Was Shot in DC Ambush Has Died
U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro Announces Charges for National Guard Shooter
Mike Johnson Warns Trump On Healthcare Plan
Identity Politics Saved This Activist Dad From Prison — But Not From Another...
How to Remain Grounded and Thankful Amid the Chaos
Sum of All Hatreds
Blue States Revolt: Democrats Sue Trump Over SNAP Rules Targeting Immigrants
Scott Bessent: New Fed Chair to be Named By Christmas
CBS Exploits a Murdering Mother Superior
Dick Cheney: Always Unintimidated
Fuel Hikes, Fear, and a Regime on the Brink
New York Bank Employee Sentenced to Probation for $25M Global Laundering Network
Federal Court Upholds North Carolina's Redistricting Map
Tipsheet

Harry Reid: No "Koch Head"

Harry Reid knows a lot of things that just aren't so. One is that all those supposed ObamaCare victims are liars. Another is that the Koch brothers are just really, really evil:

Advertisement

A few comments:

(1) It is disgraceful and unseemly when politicians use their official positions to attack law-abiding private citizens simply because these citizens disagree with them. It is an abuse of the power of their office. The President has done it; so does Harry Reid. It's nothing more than organized bullying on the public dime.

(2) Contrary to Reid's mish-mash of accusations, in fact, the Kochs have opposed even subsidies that benefit them. Can anyone think of Harry Reid doing anything remotely similar? As for his "un-American" slam against the Kochs, Harry Reid must have a pretty strange idea of what "pro American" looks like. More of Reid's specious charges have already been rebutted; of course, that fact never stops him.

(3) Look at the list of all time big donors. Of the top 20, 13 are either strongly or solidly Democrat. Five are on the fence. The first "leans" (not "strongly" or "solidly") Republican entity is at #17. The Koch brothers come in at #59. So if Harry Reid is truly worried about the subversive effects of money in politics, he'd better look at his own friends first.

Advertisement

(4) Of course, the fact is that Reid isn't worried about the subversive effects of money in politics -- he's worried about the fact that the Kochs' philosophy represents a fundamental threat to the cronyism that has defined his own way of life. The Kochs have made their money by making and selling products that other businesses, or the public, want or need. In contrast, Harry Reid has a long history of shady dealings greased by his career in politics. You decide which is the greater threat to a free people.

Harry Reid wants Americans to look at the Kochs and see the source of America's problems. Instead, we see him looking at the Kochs and engaging in a textbook example of projection.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement