By
Ted Nugent has been crazy for a long time |
Ted
Nugent, the old rocker from the Seventies, is now just plain old. And off his
rocker.
A
political novelty act for the far right and a front man for the National Rifle
Association, Nugent regularly spews venomous, vulgar, race-laced, abusive hate
speech about liberals, Democrats, gun laws, and creeping communism.
In
January, for example, he tongue-lashed President Barack Obama. Nugent called
our commander in chief a “communist-raised, communist-educated,
communist-nurtured subhuman mongrel.”
Naturally,
Greg Abbott — the Republican candidate for governor of Texas — promptly
invited this scurrilous lout to come for a visit.
Abbott
is currently the state attorney general. As a dyed-in-the-wool tea party extremist, he
apparently thought it would juice up his far-out GOP flock to have the rabidly
nutty Nugent come campaign with him.
Ted
came. He embraced the gubernatorial wannabe as his “blood brother.” But the
brotherhood gambit backfired.
The
issue, however, isn’t Nugent’s sordid character, but Abbott’s.
Hugging
an infamous predator and hate-monger for political gain is both morally
repugnant and politically stupid. Yet, Abbott continues to cling to Nugent’s
embrace, tersely (and cluelessly) saying: “It’s time to move beyond this.”
A
campaign aide even tried to paint Nugent’s endorsement as a positive: “We
appreciate the support of everyone who supports protecting our constitution.”
Everyone,
including sexual predators and overt racists? How about mass murderers?
Shouldn’t
a candidate for governor — even in Texas — draw a sharper moral line?
OtherWords columnist Jim Hightower is a radio commentator,
writer, and public speaker. He’s also editor of the populist newsletter, The
Hightower Lowdown. OtherWords.org