Calling BS on Harry Reid's story about his injuries
It is an emperor has no clothes
moment. The partisan mainstream media has failed to show the slightest
curiosity about an improbably story peddled by one of the central figures of
the last six years of politics. John Hinderaker of Powerline
has been asking the questions about Harry Reid’s injuries and retirement from
the Senate that a reasonably curious media should have been asking, but hasn’t
because Reid is a Democrat.
I noted the injuries that Reid
suffered on New Year’s Day, in Las Vegas: multiple broken bones around his
right eye, damage to the right eye, severe facial bruising, broken ribs, and a
concussion. Was all of this really the result of losing his balance because an
elastic exercise band broke? That seems unlikely, to say the least.
Anyone who saw Reid would say that
he looked like he had been beaten up by a guy with a hard left, maybe using
brass knuckles:
Face it, Reid has a very questionable
past, having enriched himself with deals on land that became very profitable
following federal government decisions. Reid cultivated an image as a
mob-fighter, once acting out on videotape he knew was rolling a show of outrage
over an offered bribe. But as Kevin Williamson notes at NRO:
Reid’s political incubator:
mobbed-up unions fighting mobbed-up gambling interests, both sides quick to
resort to violence but too blisteringly incompetent to manage very much of it
effectively.
Hinderaker:
When a guy shows up at a Las Vegas
emergency room on New Year’s Day with severe facial injuries and broken ribs,
and gives as an explanation the functional equivalent of “I walked into a
doorknob,” it isn’t hard to guess that he ran afoul of mobsters. Yet the
national press has studiously averted its eyes from Reid’s condition, and has
refused to investigate the cause of his injuries. To my knowledge, every
Washington reporter has at least pretended to believe Reid’s story, and none,
as far as I can tell, has inquired further.
The people back home in Nevada
aren’t really buying Reid’s story, and Hinderaker notes the amount of Google
traffic aournd questioning Reid’s story. Rumors can’t be given much
credibility, of course, but they do tell us what people are thinking. And the
people in Nevada do know Reid better than the rest of us:
A friend of mine was in Las Vegas a
week or two ago. He talked to a number of people there about Reid’s accident,
and didn’t find anyone who believed the elastic exercise band story. The common
assumption was that the incident resulted, in some fashion, from Reid’s
relationship with organized crime. The principal rumor my friend heard was that
Reid had promised to obtain some benefit for a group of mobsters. He met with
them on New Year’s Day, and broke the bad news that he hadn’t been able to
deliver what he promised. When the mobsters complained, Reid (according to the
rumor) made a comment that they considered disrespectful, and one of them beat
him up.
Harry Reid is a known liar. Using
the protection of the Senate floor where he could not be sued for liel, he lied
about Mitt Romney not paying income taxes. His list of scurrilous charges about
the Koc brothrs is long and well known.
The story here is as much about the
propaganda press, which accepts unlikely stories as it is about the man Harry
Reid, who in my book is one of the worst politicians of our era.
A Democrat by birth, Thomas became more conservative in adulthood as reality taught him that dreams of perfecting human society always run smack into human nature.
In 2003 he founded American Thinker.
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