A House In The Hamptons
Article by Gil Gutknecht in "Townhall":
He is not as stout. He doesn’t wear glasses. He doesn’t work for the Yankees. Those differences aside, there is something about Intel Chairman Schiff that bears a startling resemblance to Seinfeld’s George Costanza. After pondering this matter, it finally dawned on me. They both have perfected the ability to prevaricate. And to do so quite convincingly. They both have the ability to keep a narrative alive, long after most rational people recognize that the air has completely escaped the balloon.
George was such a polished liar that Jerry sought his advice on how to defeat a lie detector test. Remember? After discussing the problem at Monk’s cafe, George closed the conversation by calmly telling his friend, “Jerry, it’s not a lie, if you believe it.” Of course, Jerry ultimately failed the polygraph concerning soap opera characters. Confirming just how rare this quality really is.
This is the same Mr. Schiff who, for two-and-a-half years, looked bug-eyed into virtually any camera he could find and promised that he had the evidence of Russian collusion. CNN and MSNBC had him in studio more than some of their anchors. Most media treated him like an accomplished strip tease artist. They could not get enough of his tantalizing act. But they never forced him to show any real skin. After all, he was then the Ranking Member of the House Intel Committee. He must’ve known what he was talking about. Right? No need for tough follow-up questions, then or now.
More recently, the media quickly granted him absolution for
lying straight faced to them. He claimed that he had not communicated
with the so-called whistleblower. It now looks like there was more than
simple communication with he and his staff. Two of his staffers may have
actually worked with the originator of the latest impeachment ruse. It
appears that they may have actually helped the snoop draft the complaint
and strong-armed the IG into changing the rules concerning first-hand
knowledge. Did Mr. Schiff ever admit to the lie? Of course not. He
simply said that he “should have been more clear”. His friends in the
media nodded in approval and agreed to turn the page.
Remember the Seinfeld episode where George wanted to impress his future in-laws? He invented a story that he had a house in the Hamptons. He laid it on thick, describing the wonderful weekend he had just enjoyed out at his place. When he sensed that the Ross’ weren’t buying his story, he doubled down. He invited them to take a drive with him out to visit his place. To his surprise, they accepted.
As they took the two hour drive through Long Island, he
told them more about the house, giving them a virtual tour. He had two
solariums. He told them about his horses, Snoopy and Prickly Pete. Mrs.
Ross even asked to stop at an antique shop so she could buy a house
warming gift. When they finally reached the end of the road, George was
forced to come clean.
And so as we approach the end of the Island, we learn what we already
knew: there is no house in the Hamptons, or anywhere else. There are no
horses or legitimate witnesses. Like the two year Mueller Report
concluded, there are no impeachable offenses. The whistleblower now
appears to be little more than a partisan shill. He won’t even testify.
No solariums, no impeachable offenses. Forget high crimes. There aren’t
even any misdemeanors. We are left with a rather innocuous telephone
call, a lot of half-baked conjecture and some shameless spying on this
President. It’s all been a lot of hype, selective leaks and bald-faced
lies.
Like George’s in-laws, we’ve been taken for a ride…again.
But, unlike the red-faced George Costanza, we should not expect an act of contrition. Mr. Schiff will just move on, promising as always, that this time he has the goods. Expect the stenographers in the media to nod approvingly, waiting for their chance to speculate on the next prevarication. They are too heavily invested in the impeachment narrative to be objective.
Life does indeed imitate art.
https://townhall.com/columnists/gilgutknecht/2019/10/20/a-house-in-the-hamptons-n2555048
He is not as stout. He doesn’t wear glasses. He doesn’t work for the Yankees. Those differences aside, there is something about Intel Chairman Schiff that bears a startling resemblance to Seinfeld’s George Costanza. After pondering this matter, it finally dawned on me. They both have perfected the ability to prevaricate. And to do so quite convincingly. They both have the ability to keep a narrative alive, long after most rational people recognize that the air has completely escaped the balloon.
George was such a polished liar that Jerry sought his advice on how to defeat a lie detector test. Remember? After discussing the problem at Monk’s cafe, George closed the conversation by calmly telling his friend, “Jerry, it’s not a lie, if you believe it.” Of course, Jerry ultimately failed the polygraph concerning soap opera characters. Confirming just how rare this quality really is.
This is the same Mr. Schiff who, for two-and-a-half years, looked bug-eyed into virtually any camera he could find and promised that he had the evidence of Russian collusion. CNN and MSNBC had him in studio more than some of their anchors. Most media treated him like an accomplished strip tease artist. They could not get enough of his tantalizing act. But they never forced him to show any real skin. After all, he was then the Ranking Member of the House Intel Committee. He must’ve known what he was talking about. Right? No need for tough follow-up questions, then or now.
Remember the Seinfeld episode where George wanted to impress his future in-laws? He invented a story that he had a house in the Hamptons. He laid it on thick, describing the wonderful weekend he had just enjoyed out at his place. When he sensed that the Ross’ weren’t buying his story, he doubled down. He invited them to take a drive with him out to visit his place. To his surprise, they accepted.
Like George’s in-laws, we’ve been taken for a ride…again.
But, unlike the red-faced George Costanza, we should not expect an act of contrition. Mr. Schiff will just move on, promising as always, that this time he has the goods. Expect the stenographers in the media to nod approvingly, waiting for their chance to speculate on the next prevarication. They are too heavily invested in the impeachment narrative to be objective.
Life does indeed imitate art.
https://townhall.com/columnists/gilgutknecht/2019/10/20/a-house-in-the-hamptons-n2555048
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