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OPINION

The Political Myth of 'Nice'

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
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Democratic National Convention via AP

Michelle Obama kicked off the first night of the Democrat’s national convention with a familiar refrain referring to President Trump. It’s always some version of the same song - this time an unplugged and prerecorded version that resulted in a 30 percent decline in viewership from four years ago.  Donald Trump isn’t empathetic. Donald Trump doesn’t “feel your pain.”  Donald Trump just isn’t nice.

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For a few election cycles, this almost childlike refrain has always been at the heart of the Democrats’ message to voters.  “We’re nice and they’re mean.”  Does it work?  Time will tell, but any notion the opposition to Donald Trump is like a warm hug from your grandma is as laughable as their latest manufactured mailbox scandal.  

What is nice about the videos you’ve seen of the looting and burning of stores across the country? What is nice about a full-frontal assault on law enforcement? Is nice found in the desecration of federal monuments and buildings, statues and murals? Is nice blocking traffic, and in some cases literally dragging people out of their cars and beating them within an inch of their lives?  

“Nice” on the American left is no more sincere today than it was the days, weeks, and months after Donald Trump won the election of 2016.  Remember the signs in the yards of your Hillary voting neighbors? “Hate has no home here.” Those signs effectively communicated to everyone in their neighborhood and to passersby – if you voted for Trump you’re not welcome here.  That’s not very nice. 

Of course it wasn’t nice when Mrs. Clinton referred to the president's supporters as “deplorables” before the election.  It wasn’t nice when the “p*ssy hat” brigade led by the likes of Madonna marched on the mall after the election declaring she’d “thought an awful lot about blowing up the White House.”  It wasn’t nice when Brett Kavanaugh was accused of rape during his Supreme Court confirmation without a shred of evidence.  It wasn’t nice when high school student Nicholas Sandmann was publicly and falsely smeared as a racist on network and cable television news.    

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Just this past weekend, the hashtag #WrongTrump was trending on Twitter after the death of the president’s younger brother Robert was announced.  The comments weren’t nice either. “Why does God keep missing?” “I hope it was corona.”  “One down, one more to go.”  But probably the least nice event of the past four years was a Bernie Sanders supporter driving to a D.C. area baseball field to assassinate Republican members of Congress practicing for a charity game.  Congressman Steve Scalise was nearly killed.  Not nice.

The award for the most fictitious display of nice in the era of Trump might have to go to Ellen DeGeneres.  To be clear, I personally enjoy her comedy.  I had no reason to doubt she’s any different than the nice lady she’s always portrayed on her talk show all these years.  That is until an explosive expose was released describing rampant nastiness, name-calling, racism, sexism, etc. happening behind the scenes on America’s “nicest” talk show.

It’s been reported the executive team on the show has been removed. For a clue as to just how vicious those who run Ellen’s show can be, you need look no further than the Twitter account of her executive producer Ed Glavin who is one of the most virulent, hostile leftists you’ll find on Twitter. It’s pretty hard to believe that a guy who’s that nasty and partisan publicly doesn’t behave that way all day long at work and with the blessing of the host of the show. 

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Ellen is said to have issued a letter of apology to her show’s staff promising to learn from her mistakes and that it “breaks her heart” to learn of the hostile environment on her show.  It seems almost impossible to believe something so mean could be happening on a show hosted by a woman who is so nice…unless of course, she’s not really that nice either.

In 2016 she acknowledged the tragic suicide of a Rutgers student after he wrote he was taking his own life because he was harassed for being gay.  Ellen said it was after that she decided to end each show going forward by imploring her audience to treat each other with kindness.  

One year later, Matt Lauer – yes, the Matt Lauer who is also accused of doing some not nice things with subordinates at NBC – asked Ellen why she wouldn’t have President Trump on her show. “Because I’m not going to change his mind,” she told Lauer. “He’s against everything that I stand for. We need to look at someone else who looks different than us and believes in something that we don’t believe in and still accept them…”

Was the irony of that statement lost on both of them? Probably. But you can hardly blame them for missing it. It takes a lot of work and focus to pretend to be so nice.   

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