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Holocaust in Palm Beach?
By William Halvorsen
In spite
of what their enemies might think, there weren't too many revisionists
who were worked up about this year's presidential election. In general,
there didn't seem to be any big concern over the fact that Al Gore
had picked a Jewish running mate, and even in the immediate aftermath
of Election Night there weren't many revisionists who were concerned
about the electoral effect of the absentee votes of dual citizens
of the United States and Israel. The reason is that revisionists
are not as hung up on Jewish things as their critics like to insist.
What we did expect in Year 2000 was a contest between two silver-spooned
empty suits whose campaigns seemed to be based almost entirely on
whom was going to be giving away more money in various entitlements.
Of course, we knew that there were powerful emotional factors in
this election. Burdened for eight years with a shameless philanderer
and liar in the White House, 2000 was supposed to be the year when
the Republicans would crawl over broken glass in order to get to
the polls and vote the rascals out, hence the pundits predicted
the "Broken Glass Republicans" would come out in force.
Naturally, while the election had some features that were interesting
to your average skeptic, no one expected the Holocaust to make an
appearance in this election. It wasn't until a couple of days after
the indecisive results were in that we began to realize that the
Broken Glass Republicans had been turned into the Night of Broken
Glass. Witness the frothy musings of
Michael Moore, an over-rated
culture critic if ever there was one. Here he describes his liberal
conniptions while watching Joe Lieberman's wife, a "daughter of
Holocaust survivors" on TV:
"As I watched Hadassah's story, I paused to think of those in
her family who did not survive the camps to live to see this
momentous day. I thought, if only it had been possible, in the
final moments before their deaths, for someone to whisper to
them that this madness will indeed end, that the Jewish people
will not only survive but see the day when a child of theirs
is married to the man running for vice president of the United
States! Whatever small comfort that could have given them to
alleviate their pain and suffering before their lives were exterminated,
I wish... I wish... they just could have known that their death
was not in vain."
Truly, the idea of Holocaust victims consoling themselves
at the hour of their deaths with the notion that sixty years hence
a Jew would be the vice president of the United States has got to
be one of the most noxious and idiotic ideas ever presented. In
fact it is even a more repellent conceit than the claim, made by
"eyewitness" Filip Mueller, that "exterminations" were preceded
by a series of fiery political speeches concluding with four part
harmony of various national anthems and the Internationale
as the "gas crystals" were tipped in. Nevertheless, like Al Gore
says, "You ain't seen nothing yet "
Ruminating on the course of the post-election trauma, Moore works himself
up into a frenzy of pompous moralizing:
"Sixty-two years ago tonight, the Holocaust began in full force
on what was called Kristallnacht. The German government sent
goon squads throughout the country to trash and burn the homes,
stores and temples of its Jewish citizens. Seven years and 6
million slaughtered lives later, the Jewish people of Europe
were virtually extinct. A few survived. I will not allow those
who survived to come here to this "land of the free" be abused
again. They are our fellow citizens in our great democracy,
and their voice, if I have anything to say about it, will never
be snuffed out."
As Alexander Cockburn commented wearily: "Now we're at the point when
to deny Al Gore the victory in Florida is to deny the Holocaust."
How did it happen that the Holocaust was brought into an American presidential
election? How is it possible that the Holocaust was once more perverted
for crass purposes? Thereby hangs a tale.
The Butterfly Ballot
Of course by now, everyone knows the outlines of the story. A lot of
people in Palm Beach County, Florida, are old, and a lot of them
are Jewish. To accommodate the poor eyesight of these seniors, Jewish
and non-Jewish alike, the Palm Beach County Canvassing Commission
created a ballot that opened up like a book, and which contained
the names of the presidential candidates on both sides of the open,
"butterfly" page. Then the voters were supposed to work their way
down the center of the page, pick their candidate, follow the arrows,
and poke a hole in the ballot. Simple.
What happened is that the word got out that there were problems with
the ballots. The story goes that Pat Buchanan got too many votes
in Palm Beach County, those votes must have been meant for Al Gore
(but mysteriously, not for George W. Bush). The media followed up,
featuring a number of elderly Jews who raved on about how they might
have voted for Buchanan, who is persona non grata these days thanks
to a smear campaign mostly by Jewish groups that have labeled as
an "anti-Semite" and a "Hitler apologist." This standard slur on
Buchanan, in turn, was supposed to negate the three thousand votes
he apparently got, since, the logic runs, no Jew would ever vote
for him. Thus what would have been a minor election hassle anywhere
else, became, by virtue of the tight election, and the desire of
Democrats to turn the result, an occasion to roll out once more
the blazing virtue of the Mighty Holo of Holies.
There are, however, some things that the media hasn't been talking
about much. There hasn't been much discussion of the fact that not
only do a lot of Jews live in Palm Beach County, but also a lot
of wealthy non-Jewish independents, exactly the kinds of people
who might vote for Pat Buchanan, and who in fact gave Buchanan over
eight thousand votes in 1996. So the idea that any sizable number
of elderly Jews were traumatized because they stuck it for Buchanan
is a non-starter.
The second thing that hasn't been discussed is the fact that there's
a reason why all of these people started thinking they had voted
for Buchanan. It's called mass suggestion.
Manufactured Mass Hysteria
The real story of what happened during the earlier part of Election
Day is still a little unclear. It seems that there were some elderly
Jewish congregants who told their rabbis at morning services that
there were some problems with the ballots. The word got around,
and the story probably grew in the process. Perhaps some voter who
was momentarily thrown off by the arrangement of the ballot, talked
about it, someone mentioned it to someone else, pretty soon someone
was the self-appointed maven of the supposed intricacies of the
Palm Beach ballot, advising others, "Make sure you poke the right
hole!" On that level, the story might have become an entrant into
the folklore of the offbeat, a little squib in the Saturday paper.
What actually happened however is that the Democratic election officials
in Florida got wind of the potential problem. Naturally, they wanted
to find out how severe the problem was. So they hired a telemarketing
firm in the late afternoon of Election Day to make phone calls to
lists of registered Democratic voters in Palm Beach. In each case,
the voter was told "there was a problem" with the ballot, could
the voter recall having any difficulties with it, is it possible
the voter may not have properly registered his or her choice, etc.
Over five thousand calls were made in the space of about an hour.
Now it's a fact that most people don't even know which shoe they put
on first in the morning. Ninety per cent of the things we do are
automatic. On any given weekday morning, probably millions of Americans
go back inside the house to make sure they turned off the stove,
or the coffee pot, before leaving for good. That is the background
for these calls. Now imagine that you get a phone call at work from
who-knows-where asking you if you know whether you left the porch
light on. Compound that with the fact that you are getting on in
years, and are starting to question your perception and your memory,
even if you try to conceal it from your spouse or kids. What you
have is a recipe for mass hysteria.
It seems that it was only after the phone calls that you began to get
these panicked seniors claiming that they "might" have voted incorrectly,
that they "might" have voted for Buchanan, or, as they put it, that
they "might have voted for Hitler." What could make better copy
than that? And what better way to give Al Gore and his enforcers
the gut conviction that they had somehow won this thing, enough
to turn the country on its back for several weeks in the process?
Conclusion
The butterfly ballot is no longer with us, of course. It has now been
succeeded by the "pregnant chad," a condition, contrary to what
you might think, brought about by the failure to achieve penetration
of the ballot. Now the issue of the absence of holes in the ballot
cards has become a matter of supreme importance, so much so that
we half expect to see Robert Jan van Pelt turning up at any moment
to insist that, while there may be no holes in the cards, "does
that mean they were never there?"
Still, for several days we were treated to the spectacle of impromptu
Holocaust remembrance, with pathetic elderly Jews (who still haven't
received any Swiss money, by the way) being wheeled out by lawyers
in pursuit of their own agendas. The Michael Moores of the world
dissolved into righteous spasms of grief over sixty year old tragedies,
while continuing to ignore civilian massacres that are six years,
six months, or even six days old. The race baiting of Jesse "Hymietown"
Jackson, invoking the Holocaust in between Sharptonesque chants
of "Gore got more" and "No Recount, No Peace!" provided a fitting
capstone to the grotesque display.
While this particular abuse of the Holocaust was due to the demographics
of the voters, it reminds us again of just why it is that revisionists
feel the Holocaust should be de-mystified. Not only that, but there
is a deeper way in which this invocation of the Holocaust was, in
our view, very appropriate.
Bear in mind that this particular hysterical reaction was created,
not on purpose, but almost by accident. Democratic officials heard
some rumors. Not very wisely, they hired an independent telemarketing
firm to canvas the voters. They in turn broadcast the rumors back
to the voters, who then started to second guess themselves. Next
thing you know, there were dozens of freaked-out people who were
convinced that they had seen, or done, what had been suggested to
them.
While it's true that none of these panicky voters claimed that poison
gas came out of the ballot holes, or that the curtains of the voting
booth were made from human skin, there seems to be an obvious similarity
between what happened in Palm Beach and the way a number of Holocaust
stories got started in World War Two. Back then, you had remote
Jewish agencies, looking for information. So they passed on the
rumors they heard, looking for verification. What they didn't realize
is that by passing along the stories, they were not only helping
to create them but they were giving the stories their own imprimatur.
So it was in Palm Beach. The Democrats wanted information. They passed
it on. The people on the receiving end, as in World War Two, internalized
the message and made it true. The possibility that one could have
voted wrongly, created the fact that one had voted wrongly, just
as surely as the possibility of making soap out of people created
the mythic bars of Jewish soap.
There's a sequel, here, too. Because of the rumors that have settled
as fact around the Holocaust, the Jewish people have acquired an
attitude, a bunker mentality of intransigence, that even to many
Jewish observers is not only destructive but self-destructive. Watching
Al Gore pursue a path destructive not only to himself but to the
United States, we can't help but wonder how much of his bunker mentality
is traceable to the "Holocaust" in Palm Beach County, where he first
became convinced of his entitlement of victory.
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