Sarah Palin and the "blood libel": "(Paul)Sarah Palin is coming in for criticism for using the term 'blood libel' to describe accusations that she and other outspoken conservatives somehow have blood on their hands in connection with the Tucson shootings. Palin's remarks on the shootings are also being compared unfavorably to President Obama's speech at the University of Arizona. Obama's speech was healing and uplifting, while Palin's, some say, was divisive and defensive.
I find both criticisms of Palin unfair.
As to using the phrase 'blood libel,' it is true that the term originally referred to a very specific libel, namely that Jews kidnapped and killed Christian babies so they could use their blood as a food ingredient during Passover. Later, it became a more general accusation that Jews kill non-Jews in furtherance of Jewish religious observances.
However, the phrase 'blood libel' has come to be used much more generally to encompass the false assertion, made with malice, that someone is responsible for the spilling of someone else's blood. Jim Geraghty has collected examples of such usage.
Palin may be the first prominent politician to have charged others with a 'blood libel' in the broad, modern sense of the term. This shows her, once again, to be 'edgy.' But being edgy doesn't necessarily mean acting improperly. Once a certain usage gains acceptance in mainstream political discourse (I don't recall anyone objecting to the new usage of 'blood libel' until now), I see no obligation on the part of politicians to steer clear of that usage.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Sarah Palin and the "blood libel"
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