FRC Action Summit: Lou Dobbs
posted at 10:25 am on September 12, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
CNN anchor Lou Dobbs spoke today to the Value Voter Summit, after an introduction by FRC chief Tony Perkins, opening by telling the story of how he first told Perkins he had no business in public policy. Dobbs and Perkins engaged in a long dialogue on values and policy, and now admits that Perkins had it right all along. Values matter in determining public policy, which Dobbs understands.
Interestingly, Dobbs talked about the resistance in the “liberal media” — his words — to the idea of allowing people to discuss and debate values. He warned the summit audience that he had no intention of “leading a Hallelujah chorus”, but encouraged people to stand up for their right to engage in the political arena. He cast the media’s attitude as a form of bigotry against believers.
Dobbs challenged the audience to add a few values to their agenda. He made a pitch for more populist economic policy, saying that families get buffeted by financial issues as much as moral issues. He also wants the VVS to consider the decline of the rule of the majority, thanks to the lobbying industry and the isolation of Congress from their constituents behind a wall of money. Dobbs called Washington a town dominated by corporate interests and lobbying interests, and called for a push to re-establish accountability to the citizens of the nation.
He attacked the media as biased, in both the way it reports the news as well as the choices of stories they choose to publish. Dobbs says that the Sarah Palin nomination demonstrated this beyond any doubt. She was “savaged” by the media, including “intelligentsia” like Matt Damon and Whoopi Goldberg. Keith Olbermann is hanging by a “seriously medicated thread,” and told the audience that after Olbermann went after Dobbs’ children, he’d like to get him in a room alone for a … frank exchange of ideas.
Dobbs finished by asking the audience to give life to morality and to reach beyond the ideologues to think independently and avoid orthodoxies. Above all, engage.
Addendum: Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs followed Dobbs with a lively speech about football, God, and life.









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I thought this passage interesting:
[Dobbs] attacked the media as biased, in both the way it reports the news as well as the choices of stories they choose to publish. Dobbs says that the Sarah Palin nomination demonstrated this beyond any doubt. She was “savaged” by the media, including “intelligentsia” like Matt Damon and Whoopi Goldberg. Keith Olbermann is hanging by a “seriously medicated thread,” and told the audience that after Olbermann went after Dobbs’ children, he’d like to get him in a room alone for a … frank exchange of ideas.
I wonder if Dobbs is trying for “Worst Person In The World” tonight?
Mr. Joe on September 12, 2008 at 10:28 AM
Me thinks,Lou Dobbs stayed away from the koolaid!
canopfor on September 12, 2008 at 10:31 AM
My dream is for the Democrat party to basically become Lou Dobbs. Then my side could lose an election and I wouldn’t be afraid for the Republic.
D0WNT0WN on September 12, 2008 at 10:31 AM
Good for Dobbs. He needs to take on his own network. There is plenty of liberalism there.
jencab on September 12, 2008 at 10:32 AM
There is no question about that. The media looking down their long collective nose constantly derides anyone who speaks of faith in God, they cast it as some kind of political mis-step all on its own. That is bigotry, that is intolerance and its elitism at its worst. Of all the attacks on Palin the ones that disturbed me the most are the ones that attack her faith.
But what’s even more infuriating and obvious is when Democrats display token faith and use it to their advantage that is ignored by the media, they get a pass. Its only those who display genuine acts of faith that are attacked.
Maxx on September 12, 2008 at 10:45 AM
Olbermann went after Dobbs’ children, he’d like to get him in a room alone for a … frank exchange of ideas.
__________________________________________________________
Dobbs needs to let his wife take care of Olbermann, she the one with the gun.
try again later on September 12, 2008 at 10:49 AM
Didn’t Dobbs run that “Broken Government” series on CNN in 2006 prior to the election?
Hypocrite.
fossten on September 12, 2008 at 10:50 AM
Dobbs is a bit, er, weird at times, but it sounds like he made a lot of sense here.
flipflop on September 12, 2008 at 10:50 AM
Isnt Dobbs like a fringe Athiest?
Emeka on September 12, 2008 at 10:56 AM
Nice to hear CNN Lou unload! on the MSM for their ideological and political Biases…
I’m suprised that he didn’t work illegal immigration into the whole talk…
RocketmanBob on September 12, 2008 at 11:04 AM
Wow, Ed, you must LOVE your job. I don’t have a problem with lobbies, I think they serve a purpose, but I do agree they are too concentrated. My resolution for this is to have a legislative time frame. I don’t believe that Congress should be in D.C. long enough to establish homes there. They need to be home, living with the people they represent and driving their own cars. It would also mean that the influence peddlers wouldn’t have it so easy, everyone wouldn’t be so available to them.
Cindy Munford on September 12, 2008 at 11:07 AM
Or the “North American Union”.
flipflop on September 12, 2008 at 11:08 AM
Isn’t that the truth. Classical Western liberalism (rather than Marxist postmodernist progressivism) is the way it used to be, and it how it should be. The left wing of the Dem party has become the antithesis of its former self. They are the people they used to warn us against.
petefrt on September 12, 2008 at 11:10 AM
Wow. I’m impressed.
madmonkphotog on September 12, 2008 at 11:19 AM
VVS? FRC? What? Oh, who cares.
indythinker on September 12, 2008 at 11:21 AM
Well, since you brought it up… I didn’t, I admired Dobbs for having the courage to mainstream that story. Yes, yes, I can tell by your tone that you think that was a bunch of nonsense. But explain the many state legislatures that put laws on the books to stop it. I guess they were all conspiracy theorist too, like me.
Maxx on September 12, 2008 at 11:22 AM
I don’t think so, since he generally ridicules the whole Democratic, anti-God thing. Never-the-less, so what if he is?
Forgive the rant, but contrary to popular belief most Atheists have the same values and self-proclaimed Christians. Also, contrary to an insult lobbed at me in another thread, that does not mean that those values are not rooted in anything. In fact, most Atheists that I know are far more consistent in values than the Christians I see preaching about brotherly love in church, minutes before they fight each other to be first out of the church parking lot.
Someone else here put it better than I can, but if you want to see a true test of values, see how someone holds their values when you remove the threat of God’s will and eternal damnation.
Seriously folks, Atheist does not equal Liberal. Statements like the one above are the reason that Republicans are painted as elitists? Funny, seem to recall Jesus saying “love thy neighbor” not “condemn everyone that thinks differently than you”.
Damiano on September 12, 2008 at 11:27 AM
Really, I haven’t seen a lot of hospitals built by Atheists. Nor have I notice a whole lot of charities helping the sick or clothing the poor. I wonder what the ratio is for charitable giving on a percentage basis between Christians and Atheists, I bet Christians give a lot more. Its your actions that count, not your self-proclaimed beliefs. And I won’t even mention the atrocities and total disregard for basic human rights that are common in self-proclaimed Atheists nations.
Maxx on September 12, 2008 at 11:39 AM
I heard Lou Dobbs state that Jack Cafferty is in the tank for Obama and is a lib.
When a guest said that CNN is more populist and Lou asked the person who other than him was.
kangjie on September 12, 2008 at 12:09 PM
Now that’s worth a Hallelujah chorus.
He cast the media’s attitude as a form of bigotry against believers.
Speakup on September 12, 2008 at 12:22 PM
Life was better when democrats resembled my grandfather, and Mr. Dobbs, and I might even vote dem once in a while.
DFCtomm on September 12, 2008 at 12:28 PM
This topic will be linked soon if it already hasn’t:
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1018422/
whoopi_goldberg_says_sarah_palin_is.html
“dangerous woman”. She spews the same BS that the hollyweirdoes pass off as undisputed truth. The bottom line: she’s hysterical in her jealousy and projecting herself on Palin. As an unhinged liberal, Whoopie is a dangerous woman indeed.
Christine on September 12, 2008 at 12:39 PM
The link didn’t get copied…sorry. I googled ‘Whoopie on Palin’.
Christine on September 12, 2008 at 12:41 PM
Damiano,
Please get a copy of Arthur Brook’s “Who Really Cares?”.
Then come back here to discuss things.
By the way, there is nothing wrong with getting first to the car with my family after Mass.
In fact, one of my fondest memories of Mass with my family is when my Dad would smile at us as the six of us waited for the priest to walk out of the church during recessional. It was so fun to get ready like an Olympic sprinter and as soon as the priest passed us we’d dart to the exit and race for the car. We would then head to breakfast or home or to an afterchurch event. Sometimes we’d race to be the first to shake the priest’s hand on the way out. It was pretty fun for me and my two brothers.
I’m gonna race my boy to the car some day. He’s too little to negotiate safely a parking lot on his own.
:)
Sapwolf on September 12, 2008 at 4:52 PM
Wasn’t there a poll/study/thing that came out a few months back contrasting the amount of charitable giving for self-identifying Republicans and Democrats? Those numbers should give you a rough idea.
Harpazo on September 12, 2008 at 6:10 PM
Only Atheists in countries with a Judeo-Christian cultural heritage. Atheists, bereft as they are of any transcendent moral authority, are cultural and moral parasites.
Harpazo on September 12, 2008 at 6:26 PM
Amen. Comments were much appreciated.
RD on September 13, 2008 at 12:06 AM