The upside-down mentality of the left
Published 1:36 pm Monday, December 16, 2024
The biggest stories in the national media this week both came from the mad streets of New York.
The manslaughter trial of Daniel Penny, the young man who accidentally killed a crazed homeless man on the subway, and the cold-blooded assassination of a healthcare CEO on the sidewalks of Manhattan, both deserved the saturation coverage and commentary they received.
But the way in which the stories were spun by the left-liberal news media shows what a sick, upside-down mentality exists in the U.S.
In the case of Penny, it’s safe to say Fox News and conservative media of all types treated him like the hero he was.
When Jordan Neely popped into his subway car and started threatening people and acting like a mad man, Penny did what you’d expect – and hope – any ex-Marine would do.
He tackled Neely, put him in a strong chokehold and held on to him until police and paramedics arrived. Sadly, the multi-troubled Neely died at the hospital.
Also sadly, instead of hailing Penny as a citizen hero, the city’s grandstanding prosecutor Alvin Bragg put him on trial for manslaughter and criminal negligent homicide, ruining Penny’s life for more than a year.
Because Neely was black and Penny was white, the ugly issue of race was always part of the story.
One of the top race-baiters in the liberal cable media, Joy Reid of MSNBC, griped that Penny’s acquittal was just the latest example of the systemic racial injustice in our legal system.
Others equally blinded by skin color said Penny was a racist because he never would have subdued a white guy – skipping the fact that several men and women Neely was threatening in the subway were blacks or Latinos.
Neely’s death never should have happened. He was a victim of bad parenting and his city’s broken mental health system and civic chaos.
Penny’s political trial, though an unnecessary political stunt, ended in the best way possible. Justice was served by the judge and jury and 95 percent of Americans would agree. Let’s hope Neely’s greedy formerly MIA father loses his civil suit against Penny.
We’ll have to wait to see what happens to Luigi Mangione, the rich, bright and proudly evil young man who’s been arrested for assassinating United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Details are still coming out about the motives and politics of the 26-year-old Ivy league grad who apparently has had health and mental issues of his own and doesn’t fit in any political box.
He disliked both major parties, supported RFK Jr. for president and criticized wokeness and cancel culture.
But he is against “corporate greed” and hates our “unfair” system of healthcare insurance because it costs too much and hurts people by rejecting too many claims.
Mangione’s cold-blooded hit made leftwing nutjobs like MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow and Sen. Elizabeth Warren do moral backflips – and make fools of themselves.
They tried to explain that while of course violence is wrong, what Mangione was pushed to do was understandable because our healthcare system is so systemically unfair.
Online thousands of anonymous knuckleheads submitted their own moral depravity, cheering for Mangione, buying “Free Luigi” shirts and calling him a hero for shedding light on the terrible crimes of insurance companies.
Tellingly, we haven’t heard a national call by the left for more gun control, which normally happens when celebrities or politicians are shot. But that knee-jerk cry usually doesn’t come when people you don’t like are shot.
Even hinting at the idea that it is the slightest bit understandable or excusable to murder a healthcare CEO to protest the failings or unfairness of our healthcare system is not just immoral, it’s insane.
By that twisted logic, to protest spiking grocery prices it’d be OK to assassinate the CEO of Ralph’s. To protest higher gasoline prices in California, it’d be OK to gun down the CEO of Exxon.
And to protest high inflation or the failure at the Southern border, it’d be OK to …
Michael Reagan, the son of President Ronald Reagan, is an author, speaker and president of the Reagan Legacy Foundation. Send comments to reagan@caglecartoons.com