Bill O'Reilly, how do you sleep?
Posted on Sunday, October 17, 2010 at 02:26 AM
RSS 
Recent Posts
- Will New York Senator Chuck Schumer ditch gay couples for an immigration deal?
- If nobody's happy, it's working – the abortion debate and Irish politics of stalemate
- Conservative news entertainment complex claim Barack Obama leader of Al Qaeda
- Why Irish grudges are passed on - a long tradition of never forgetting
- Boston man confronts Infowars conspiracy nuts over 'false flag' claim
Archives
I'm willing to bet Bill O'Reilly is chuckling contentedly in his mansion out on Long Island this morning.
Why shouldn't he laugh? He scored a home run on The View this week, where his incendiary comments provoked co-hosts Whoopi Goldberg and Joy Behar to walk off the set.
It was television gold. It was terrific for his ratings and even better publicity for his brand new book, the imaginatively titled: Patriots and Pinheads. In Bill O'Reilly's world you're either one or the other, unless you're a Democratic president and you're both, of course.
Bumper sticker rhetoric is often good for a cheap laugh. No one knows that better than you Bill. But between all the bestsellers and the big bucks, can I ask you spare a thought for the innocent people you carelessly maligned in the pursuit of healthy book sales, Bill?
Muslims, you said, killed us on 9/11. You said this on national television, not on your front porch. You didn't say Al Qaeda, you didn't say Wahhabi fundamentalist extremists financed by the Saudi's, you didn't even say Jihadists or terrorists - you just said Muslims killed us on 9/11.
That can only mean one of two things: all Muslims did it, or some Muslims did it. When you're making scattershot charges like this is there any point in splitting the difference?
The media let it pass. They do this more and more these days. They're so used to hearing Fox News defame the world's second largest religion they probably don't even notice it anymore.
But someone should say it: loudly and repeatedly. This kind of talk is deeply wrong. It's divisive and hateful and reactionary and damaging and it's beneath this great nation. We used to be better than this, in public at least, and you know it Bill.
In Pinheads and Patriots you lament the incivility that has replaced discussion in America. You write that Glen Beck and Rush Limbaugh "and many other conservative radio commentators believe pretty much the same thing: that the President is a force for pernicious change, a committed socialist in a two-thousand dollar suit. These guys pound President Obama into pudding just about every day, and millions of Americans are spooning up the dessert. But I'm not so sure this scorched-earth strategy aimed at the President is good for the country."
Come clean for once Bill. You damn well know this scorched earth strategy is not good for the country. You know the anti-gay, anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim Tea Party hordes inspired by Fox News won't vanish with the November elections. You know what this means for the political life of this nation. You know it better than all of your conspiracy-theory believing, extremist inspiring colleagues combined.
And how do you know it? Because you're not like them and you never have been.
You're the working class boy who went to the fancy prep school; you're the Harvard grad who prefers to rub shoulders with Irish cops and firemen; you're the Irish American who does the heavy lifting at Fox for the conservative establishment who never invite you to their patrician enclaves. You don't really belong to the people you're defending. You don't even like most of them, you often say.
That outsider perspective has carried you very far from your humble origins. It's allowed you to strike a chord with the millions of disenfranchised Americans who call you their champion. When you tell them that Muslims killed us on 9/11 they believe Muslims killed us on 9/11. They won't split the difference if you don't, Bill. People are either pinheads or patriots, after all.
Who's looking out for you, you often like to ask the American people. Then you give them that conspiratorial grin.
I want to put a version of that question to you Bill. Who's looking out for the 1.7 billion people you're defaming so carelessly? They're also our friends and neighbors here in the U.S. It was news to them to hear they'd attacked us on 9/11. Who's going to be fair and balanced about them? Who's looking out for them?
Why shouldn't he laugh? He scored a home run on The View this week, where his incendiary comments provoked co-hosts Whoopi Goldberg and Joy Behar to walk off the set.
It was television gold. It was terrific for his ratings and even better publicity for his brand new book, the imaginatively titled: Patriots and Pinheads. In Bill O'Reilly's world you're either one or the other, unless you're a Democratic president and you're both, of course.
Bumper sticker rhetoric is often good for a cheap laugh. No one knows that better than you Bill. But between all the bestsellers and the big bucks, can I ask you spare a thought for the innocent people you carelessly maligned in the pursuit of healthy book sales, Bill?
Muslims, you said, killed us on 9/11. You said this on national television, not on your front porch. You didn't say Al Qaeda, you didn't say Wahhabi fundamentalist extremists financed by the Saudi's, you didn't even say Jihadists or terrorists - you just said Muslims killed us on 9/11.
That can only mean one of two things: all Muslims did it, or some Muslims did it. When you're making scattershot charges like this is there any point in splitting the difference?
The media let it pass. They do this more and more these days. They're so used to hearing Fox News defame the world's second largest religion they probably don't even notice it anymore.
But someone should say it: loudly and repeatedly. This kind of talk is deeply wrong. It's divisive and hateful and reactionary and damaging and it's beneath this great nation. We used to be better than this, in public at least, and you know it Bill.
In Pinheads and Patriots you lament the incivility that has replaced discussion in America. You write that Glen Beck and Rush Limbaugh "and many other conservative radio commentators believe pretty much the same thing: that the President is a force for pernicious change, a committed socialist in a two-thousand dollar suit. These guys pound President Obama into pudding just about every day, and millions of Americans are spooning up the dessert. But I'm not so sure this scorched-earth strategy aimed at the President is good for the country."
Come clean for once Bill. You damn well know this scorched earth strategy is not good for the country. You know the anti-gay, anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim Tea Party hordes inspired by Fox News won't vanish with the November elections. You know what this means for the political life of this nation. You know it better than all of your conspiracy-theory believing, extremist inspiring colleagues combined.
And how do you know it? Because you're not like them and you never have been.
You're the working class boy who went to the fancy prep school; you're the Harvard grad who prefers to rub shoulders with Irish cops and firemen; you're the Irish American who does the heavy lifting at Fox for the conservative establishment who never invite you to their patrician enclaves. You don't really belong to the people you're defending. You don't even like most of them, you often say.
That outsider perspective has carried you very far from your humble origins. It's allowed you to strike a chord with the millions of disenfranchised Americans who call you their champion. When you tell them that Muslims killed us on 9/11 they believe Muslims killed us on 9/11. They won't split the difference if you don't, Bill. People are either pinheads or patriots, after all.
Who's looking out for you, you often like to ask the American people. Then you give them that conspiratorial grin.
I want to put a version of that question to you Bill. Who's looking out for the 1.7 billion people you're defaming so carelessly? They're also our friends and neighbors here in the U.S. It was news to them to hear they'd attacked us on 9/11. Who's going to be fair and balanced about them? Who's looking out for them?
74 Comments
15 - 74 | See all comments
Irishjule | Oct 21, 2010, 03:44 PM EDT
There are many good Muslims, but MUSLIMS attacked us on 9/11 and attacked our ships and embassies years before that. It was a Muslim who shot and killed so many people at Ft. Hood in Texas. It wasn't Irish, it wasn't Germans, it wasn't Poles, or Greeks, or French...it was MUSLIMS. O'Reilly and others who oppose the mosque have NEVER said that ALL Muslims are jihadists or terrorists, but those people are Muslims. By the way, Islam is not only a religion but a political movement as well.
Report abuse
maloney | Oct 21, 2010, 12:14 PM EDT
The disenfranchised in America is about to do a 180 degree turn. The ones who feel empowered now (you know who you are) will be put back under their rocks. You had your shot at your way & it failed, rejected by all but the radical fringe. Sanity will be returned with the Nov. vote.
Report abuse
killowen | Oct 20, 2010, 01:36 PM EDT
Well educated souls who leave to enrich other lands.
A beat that goes on giving. Thanks to the poodle folks
with their severed poodle piece of country.
The Clintons are pushing for that British poodle head
piece of old erin.
Ms. Clinton helping the crown like hubby did by bringing
Gerry Adams in from the cold. Knightings are due them.
Living in or coming from a poodle looking island with
its severed head in the control of long occupier
neighbour makes for severe dysfunctional behaviour.
A people whose usurped harp flys on the Sasanach
standards - proclaiming ireland as being in union with them. Next year, 2011, their queen is to arrive to cement
their claim.
Then the wild exhuberance of that tiger era which is but a pu$$ssy cat version whose nine lives are up.
Mysterious oligarch Abramovith, Chelsea's owner is going to sue the irish Gov for billions - another hit on their taxpaying unfortunates. Sad to say but it gets
worse with cutbacks that will last for years upon years.
Religion that gave them a sense that there was a tomorrow
leaves them feeling like lemmings - making for diminished
sexual interest.
Report abuse
DennisQ | Oct 20, 2010, 05:03 AM EDT
One important reason we need a new 9-11 Commission is to take a serious look at the way unfounded assumptions have become deeply entrenched. Not only is the evidence that Muslims did it a lot weaker than is commonly believed, it is also completely untrue that Muslims throughout the world celebrated the event.
Here's a challenge to all who believe Muslims endorse the 9-11 terrorist attack - document this assertion. There isn't any documentation for it, because it's not true. The people who agitated for war on Iraq made it up. And they've been discredited as complete liars.
Here's a challenge to all who believe Muslims endorse the 9-11 terrorist attack - document this assertion. There isn't any documentation for it, because it's not true. The people who agitated for war on Iraq made it up. And they've been discredited as complete liars.
Report abuse
reinkefj | Oct 19, 2010, 09:13 PM EDT
When moderate Muslims stand silent, then Bill has every right to call them on it. Same as when Irish Catholics don't condemn IRA violence, they need to be called on it.
If you want to criticize Bill, it should be about not critiquing the interventionist foreign policies that got us in this mess. We've been mucking about in global politics when George Washington warned about "entangling alliances". Time to get out of the "empire business" and bring the troops home. Let Japan, Germany, South Korea, and all the rest step up to their own security requirements.
That you can critique Bill on; not 9-11 religious affiliation.
imho
Report abuse
maloney | Oct 19, 2010, 09:07 PM EDT
Bill sleeps like a baby. Right makes might. Plus the extra added pleasure of driving libs crazy.
Report abuse
2BorNot2B | Oct 19, 2010, 05:00 PM EDT
To seanO'mal-born --- Spewing vile(sic)? The actual word is BILE..look it up! --- As for tu-rd... what? Are you in 3rd grade.. or looking at a mirror??? --In your case either of the two options is plausible given your meager and quaint opinion of 'the Crusades.' -- If my version is 'comic book' I'd be interested to hear what your 'reeeeally serious version' actually is and who it was written BY and FOR.. Written by Dan Brown for presidents resentful of the white race, who bow low to muslim Sheiks of araby, and readers who believed his sloganeering and went to the ballot box with eyes wide-shut to elected him? Mmmm, yeah...that should be a credible version! --- Your opinion happens to be just a tad long on 'wishful fiction' and short on specifics. Please elaborate and support with evidence, or STFU, can you?
Report abuse
2BorNot2B | Oct 19, 2010, 03:57 PM EDT
To manhattan --- Re: your question as to why the leftard Kool-Aid drinkers hate Bill O' there's a story doing the rounds that could be applied to those of any nationality suffering from terminal ENVY --- A lobster fisherman off the Mass. coast unloads from his boat a couple of large bins full of newly caught lobsters, one bin is open, the other securely shut with bars and locks. --- A curious bystander asks why the one is closed and the other not. -- The fisherman tells him the unlocked bin need not be shut because it contains 'Irish lobsters'... he has no need securing them because as soon as one of them tries to go for the top... the other ones take care of pulling him down.
Report abuse
patrick1945 | Oct 19, 2010, 03:08 PM EDT
They were Muslims. It's not up to O'Reilly to explain any differences, it's up to the Muslims themselves to explain the differences between 9/11 Muslims and others of the Islam faith. So far Muslims have done a poor case of making this point.
Report abuse
manhattan | Oct 19, 2010, 12:15 PM EDT
2bornot2b, I wonder why these cool aid drinkers hate Bill O'Reilly so much.? I bet they never listen to him and to knock him for graduating from Harvard and being rich, could it be that bad old irish way of knocking any one with irish blood that has become sucessful? I love reading your responses. Keep up the good work.
Report abuse
kell7757 | Oct 19, 2010, 10:26 AM EDT
"You're the working class boy who went to the fancy prep school; you're the Harvard grad who prefers to rub shoulders with Irish cops and firemen; you're the Irish American who does the heavy lifting at Fox for the conservative establishment who never invite you to their patrician enclaves. You don't really belong to the people you're defending."
I wouldn't even know where to begin. Your thought process is so clannish, and non-individuated. It's so dependent of membership within a particular group, and opposed to the whole idea of thinking for oneself. I have to wonder if was it clannish Irish Americans who did this to you, or the Catholic Church. Only feeble minded brainwashed people join a group and then line up their views with their group and sing along in unison. This is the beauty of being an individual. You can express your opinion freely and not worry whether or not it lines up with any particular group. I'm Irish American, but I express my honest opinions freely, and if other Irish Americans reject me for it, I don't have a problem with that. I'd rather be rejected for who I am than accepted for being a fraud. This article reflects the worst kind of clannish non-thinking.
Report abuse
kell7757 | Oct 19, 2010, 10:09 AM EDT
This article is like a lesson in stupid. Is this how your mind really works? Are you still in high school?
Report abuse
TaranOconner | Oct 19, 2010, 02:11 AM EDT
ALL Muslims believe in the Koran. The Koran commands Muslims to KILL INFIDELS. The definition of Infidel is ANYONE that is NOT Muslim. Get the Picture Yet!! DUH! When the Radical Muslims take over---ALL Muslims will be, at that point, FORCED to be RADICAL OR BE KILLED! READ the Koran! Understand your Enemy--
Report abuse
DennisQ | Oct 19, 2010, 12:01 AM EDT
I'm starting to entertain the idea that Osama bin Laden never existed. He's a mythical character like Finn Mac Cumhaill. Osama and his magic dog Brann roam the world over, appearing to some, but staying mostly hidden. Occasionally he appears in a video, but not the ones put out by the CIA, which don't even look like him.
Perhaps the Osama legend is the reason Druidry on the rise all over the world, not just in Ireland. The mighty fear him and launch devastating wars on countries where he has never even set foot. Eventually the Osama legend will merge with those of Bigfoot, Paul Bunyan, Gilgamesh, and Odysseus. They will re-enact the Cattle Raid of Cooley and the destruction of the Sennacherib. But if he sees his shadow on February 23rd, his birthday . . . there will be six more weeks of winter.
Perhaps the Osama legend is the reason Druidry on the rise all over the world, not just in Ireland. The mighty fear him and launch devastating wars on countries where he has never even set foot. Eventually the Osama legend will merge with those of Bigfoot, Paul Bunyan, Gilgamesh, and Odysseus. They will re-enact the Cattle Raid of Cooley and the destruction of the Sennacherib. But if he sees his shadow on February 23rd, his birthday . . . there will be six more weeks of winter.
Report abuse
74 Comments

Report abuse