While it would hardly be worthwhile to note every gaffe, faux pas, gaucherie, and all the other acts of tactlessness with French names that Bill O’Reilly engages in, it’s worth noting his most recent outburst, in which he told a Jewish caller to “go to Israel” when he complained about the pervasiveness of Christmas celebrations in American public life (specifically in public schools). What follows is a classic O’Reilly rant, which occured right after he lectured his caller on Chanukah’s “seven [sic] candles…and nights”:
O’REILLY: All right. Well, what I’m tellin’ you, is I think you’re takin’ it too seriously. You have a predominantly Christian nation. You have a federal holiday based on the philosopher Jesus. And you don’t wanna hear about it? Come on—if you are really offended, you gotta go to Israel then. I mean because we live in a country founded on Judeo—and that’s your guys’ — Christian, that’s my guys’ philosophy. But overwhelmingly, America is Christian. And the holiday is a federal holiday honoring the philosopher Jesus. So, you don’t wanna hear about it? Impossible.
And that is an affront to the majority. You know, the majority can be insulted, too. And that’s what this anti-Christmas thing is all about.
So, because a majority of Americans celebrate Christmas, minorities (such as Jews, for whom Chanukah begins at sundown tonight) have no right to object to the promotion of that holiday in a publicly-financed forum such as a public school. Regardless of the merits of the caller’s argument, O’Reilly has once again demonstrated that, like his audience, he is deeply committed to the belief that he shouldn’t have to acknowledge that he lives in a country where many citizens’ beliefs, preferences, and origins are not his own. Indeed, to be faced with such facts is an “insult”.
What’s most interesting about this outburst is that O’Reilly appears to have dropped his trope of referring to his audience (broadly speaking, conservatives, although many conservatives would claim O’Reilly doesn’t speak for them) as an aggrieved minority. It used to be a standard conservative tactic to speak in the language of minority rights—in other words, that recognition of conservative viewpoints was a necessary concession to democratic fairness. Now that conservatives have begun to rebrand themselves as a majority, in the wake of what they are describing as an electoral near-revolution, the recognition of minority viewpoints apparently is not so important anymore.





It’s sad in a way that outbursts like O’Reilly’s unfortunate comment about Chanukah really manage to pervert a large view of conservatism as being synonymous with the Church.
I don’t know that I could count the number of angry emails and letters to the editor that have flowed into the Herald complaining of my “Christian agenda” or accusing me of having politics whispered into my ear as I receive communion, but over the course of nearly two years of columnizing now, I can assure you that they are indeed numerous.
The irony, which always makes me quietly chuckle, is that it seems rather unlikely that I take my politics with my communion or that I am merely working to translate Matthew, Mark, Luke and John into my opinion columns, seeing as how I am a proud and practicing Jew.
Yes, it is possible.
I am a conservative - through and through. But it’s not because my religion tells me to be one.
I find it sad that people like O’Reilly make comments on occasion that obscure the otherwise legitimate beliefs of much of the population - like myself - that government is best kept in the Capitol and out of people’s lives, hard work should be rewarded, all forms of life should be protected, hawkish defense should be employed and time honored traditions should be, well, honored.
Rob makes some excellent points here. And O’Reilly - a guy I am fond of 80% of the time - seems to have really screwed up.
But please, just as I don’t judge all liberals on the strange precepts of Michael Moore and Barbara Streisand, please don’t lump all of us conservatives - an apparent majority these days - into the twisted words of one cable news commentator.