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The Case of the Group Chat...

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Democrats have been desperate to find a moral equivalence argument to save Jay Jones' flagging campaign, and they hope they have found one in some leaked chatroom texts from a group of Young Republicans.

The chat included some clearly ironic comments in which the Young Republican leaders from several states made incendiary comments in horrific taste, and there is no doubt that if you read the comments as serious, they come across as horrific. We can argue all day about the propriety of making Hitler jokes, but I am not interested in litigating whether the comments were or were not in bounds. It is a pointless argument to have, and utterly beside the point.

What matters in the political context is simple: does the joking (or even serious) discussion of Hitler's virtues or vices by Young Republicans in a private (or even public) group chat make it OK for Democrats to ask voters to back a candidate for Attorney General in Virginia? 

Does the "everybody does it" argument wipe away the stain of Jay Jones' clearly serious argument that killing Republicans is justified if it will lead to enacting policies one likes?

Look up the reaction to the "scandal" on X. You will find countless examples of Republicans denouncing the texts and demanding the resignations of these guys, who, by the way, nobody knows and nobody is asking to make the top law enforcement official anywhere. 

"I don't think they should work in the Republican Party. I don't think they should be involved in the Republican Party. I think they should be excommunicated... In Virginia [there is this Democrat Jay Jones who] said things are worse in this.... Democrats have defended an individual who said family members should die."

I guarantee you that I, and no other Republican, will ever vote to put these people into office, so making a comparison between one case and the other is absurd on its face. 

Democrats are howling in outrage about this group chat, but at the same time, they are rallying around Jay Jones and asking Virginia voters to put him in office so he can fantasize about killing people he dislikes behind a mahogany desk. Rep. Vindman, who insists Donald Trump is unfit for office, is calling on his fellow Virginians to back Jones. 

Republicans are expected to either defend or condemn any comment made by any Republican, no matter how obscure, and are held accountable for the fleeting thoughts of some rando in the boonies. Democrats escape responsibility for endorsing the most vile people in the world. 

Democrats in Virginia are running on a platform of "rage," and smirk when called on to denounce fantasies of murder and the emotional torture of a mother. 

Their fake outrage about this Telegram chat is a wonder to behold, and what is even more wondrous are the efforts of Pravda to create a moral equivalence between the group chat--clearly filled with irony--of some obscure young Republicans with open musings of a candidate for Attorney General.

For the purposes of discussion, I am willing to concede that the contents of the group chat are out of bounds and all the participants should be excluded from getting our votes. 

Democrats won't do the same with Jay Jones' murderous musings. 

That sums it up.  

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