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Michael Russnow

Michael Russnow

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Should Anthony Weiner Resign for Lying?: If So, Lots More Congressmen Should Go for Their Lies and Deeds

Posted: 06/ 9/11 05:26 AM ET

In reading all the stuff about Anthony Weiner and his foolish tweeting escapades, I can't help feeling the media has once again expanded the significance to gain ratings. Don't get me wrong. I don't condone what Congressman Weiner did and think it was dumb. But on what scale? Was it criminal? Hardly, unless he knew he was dealing with someone underage.

Regarding his lying: did he lie about congressional business, national security or was it to protect himself and his family from what is little more than gossip about his idiosyncrasies?

And the real question is why did he feel he had to lie? Was it perhaps because he knew the media jumps on such matters and blows them out of proportion unlike the treatment such news receives in more sophisticated countries, as in Europe. Which is to say nothing at all.

In any event, should he have 'fessed up and taken his media hit and the ensuing embarrassment like a man? Of course. Wouldn't the whole thing have dissipated pretty quickly, instead of the carnival-like atmosphere currently in abundance? Absolutely. But the fact is our national media spawns this sort of reaction, engendering enormous fear in the wrongdoer providing the need to cover up personal mistakes lest they be transmitted out of proportion -- mistakes that do no one any harm except for one's immediate family, the only people who should truly be concerned about what he's done.

On a somewhat larger periphery, the only other folks to cast judgment ought to be his constituents, who will have to determine whether in the aggregate his performance as a congressman regarding constituent services and legislation he promotes weighs more heavily than their disappointment about what he legally does in his private life.

This isn't an Eliot Spitzer situation, because, even though what he did while governor of New York was hardly horrifying -- as in taking bribes or some such -- prostitution is rightly or wrongly still a crime. And it isn't even akin to the cases of Senators Vitter or Ensign, who were ganged up on not so much because they had an affair or did something kinky, but because of the hypocrisy of said person, who'd been holier than thou on many occasions about "family values" and railed against those who are pro-choice or are for gay unions.

None of this relates to the Weiner case. A closer fit is Bill Clinton. And of course we didn't remove President Clinton from office, though some tried, and he had lied about his apparently much more graphic sexual activities on the national media and in a courtroom setting. We didn't remove him, because it was clear it had nothing to do with his constitutional duties. And we didn't remove him even though some of his dalliances were in his office and thus utilized government facilities.

And what about using government facilities, one of the criminal aspects confronting Weiner? Suddenly we can't use government stuff for personal use? Maybe in its purest form and certainly not for financial gain. But if such a "Got Ya" were applied to Weiner, then every call from a civil servant or official to a spouse or child, or every personal note used with a government pen would allow a political foe to cry foul. Not to mention, God forbid, surfing the Internet using a government computer to check for airline/hotel rates or stock quotes while on "company time."

It's time for our national media to grow up and not go after such things with a vengeance as is currently done by our broadcast and cable networks, newspapers and magazines. Did it really rate a lead story on Brian Williams' newscast on NBC or on Anderson Cooper's show on CNN? Scott Pelley made his debut at the helm of the CBS evening news and placed it third, putting the story in a somewhat better perspective.

And what kind of perspective should that be? Well, for starters we shouldn't be magnifying a stupid lapse of judgment over essentially nothing, while so-called moral men who may indeed be faithful to their wives are not damned for actions which hurt others severely. They seek legislation and court decisions to deny equality to their fellow men and women, whether it be discrimination about where they can live or work, the loving relationships they pursue and the manner in which they can control their own well-being on pro-choice matters or, worse, whether they can decide when to end their lives, rather than living in a vegetative state or in agony.

These "moral" men and women also hurt citizens in important areas such as education and the environment or lie about the administration's health care bill, and even promote conspiracy theories about where our president was born. Why not go after the congressmen who don't tell the truth about those things? To me these transgressions affect a lot more people than Congressman Weiner's sordid blunder and should be damned by all responsible people.

But until Chris Matthews on MSNBC, Diane Sawyer on ABC and the conservative pundits on Fox News care more about what's really important to its viewers, tabloid-type reporting of the Weiner sort of lying will continue. And when will it end? When America matures and in essence tells the media no longer to titillate us with nonsense by denying them ratings when they attempt to do so.

Again I'm not defending Anthony Weiner, just putting what he did in a proper context. While his actions are hardly laudable, in today's media climate they are actually understandable, even if he was foolish to think he could hide the otherwise innocuous evidence in an age of Twitter, YouTube and Facebook.

The main thing I draw from this incident is that the greater shame is in our puerile culture and how the media feeds the frenzy. On its own face their actions are ludicrous and the well-paid media honchos should be equally ashamed.

Michael Russnow's website is ramproductionsinternational.com

 

Follow Michael Russnow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/kerrloy

 
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8 minutes ago (11:24 PM)
Swap Weiner's name for any conservati­ve's name and this 14 paragraph "absolutio­n" doesn't get written
5 hours ago (6:14 PM)
Oh come on, if every politician had to resign for lying there would be no politician­s.

I read this somewhere "The desire to be a politician should forever bar you from becoming one"
How very true.
02:17 PM on 6/10/2011
No, Anthony Weiner should not resign for lying. He should resign for being a DUMBASS!!!­! I mean REALLY....­..
15 hours ago (8:41 AM)
EXACTLY! I was just telling my husband yesterday that I thought he should step down because he has exhibited such stupidity.

This was before I had heard the reports that he contacted as least one teenage girl. He claims the communicat­ions were neither explicit or indecent. Unless she was doing a term paper on government or something and had asked for his input, why in the world would he have a need to contact her or any underage child?

Step down Mr. Weiner. You have lost any credibilit­y you may have had in such a spectacula­r way that it can never be regained.

And if it turns out you are an online predator, or any type of predator, you need to be put away from society.
01:43 AM on 6/10/2011
Weiner should just say:" My speech was NOT MEANT to be factual"
10:10 PM on 6/09/2011
Very logical article! If he resigns then all the hypocritic­al Republican­s should too, AND Newt should withdraw from the presidenti­al race, HE IS THE WORST of them all...fami­ly values junk that the repubs hide behind. Anyway, I blame the media for being SOOOOOOO lame, so there is no other news going on ???COME ON, this was NOT a news story from the beginning!­!!
12:19 AM on 6/10/2011
How have we become a culture where shame is obsolete, old fashioned, amusing? What is wrong with you people?
09:01 PM on 6/09/2011
Weiner needs to go. While some may view his dirty deeds as somewhat minor in the scope of other politician­'s bad behaviors, it does expose some very serious flaws that this man harbors: 1) he very obviously has no problem lying to his constituen­ts, 2 )he has serious moral deficienci­es that should cause anyone to question his ability to fairly judge and deal with his constituen­ts and political peers.

So, perhaps the electorate feels his deeds are not so bad however, they should be critically concerned about this man's moral fiber and judgement that led up to this behavior. With all our talk about the calibre of politician­s we have allowed to lead this country into its current turmoil, are we really going to go right back to the same old business as usual apologetic­s for accepting these sub-par politician­s. Weiner should go, there are better than him that would love the opportunit­y to prove themselves­. Weiner has already proven himself and obviously, we can do better.
10:11 PM on 6/09/2011
MORAL FIBER???LO­OK AT NEWT AND HE WANTS TO BE PREZ???
01:44 AM on 6/10/2011
He want to wear a speedo too.
12:43 AM on 6/10/2011
It seems you drunk the kool-aid and convinced yourselves that people who go around telling people what they want to hear so they can get elected can retain a strong moral fiber. They are all liars to varying degrees the truth is something people don't understand or are not willing to accept. Clearly you are in denial. You think this is about moral fiber when it has always been about special interest having more power over our leaders than the entire ignorant and confused electorate­.

The best you can expect is someone whose special interest groups happen to be Unions and Working people instead of Oil companies and Big Banks. Even though democrats court all four they are biased towards the little guy when people are paying attention. Moral fiber from people who spend all day calculatin­g what they can politicall­y get away with. I think you need to look elsewhere for nobility and settle for good old pragmatism­.
10:51 PM on 6/10/2011
You and me and the pundits and the leaders of the respective parties don't get to make that call. Only the people in his district get to make that call.

As much as I think Southern and Western states have drooling idiots representi­ng them, ignorant at best, dishonest at worst, utterly beholden to socially conservati­ve groups and corporate interests, they are the people chosen by their voters, and it's the right of the voters to pick who represents them.

You can't kick somebody out of office for being a jerk, unless it's election time.
06:32 PM on 6/09/2011
Democrats are overreacti­ng. This is a micro scandal. Many, much larger scandals involving crimes, unprotecte­d sex, misuse of public funds, bribes... are all forgotten. Clinton survived a much larger scandal. Today, Clinton is a major campaign asset. Weiner could do the same thing. Despite his nerdy face, he has a remarkably sexy body. This aside, he is one of the best politician­s. He deserves to get off with a warning.
05:21 PM on 6/09/2011
The truth, from my humble conservati­ve perspectiv­e, is that ALL congressme­n/women who have betrayed the public trust should resign or be fired regardless of party. This guy may be considered the "pit bull" and darling of liberal progressiv­es, but he has the emotional maturity of a 10 year-old boy and does not possess the judgment I expect of my elected leaders. And if he is typical of someone with these predilecti­ons, these texts and pictures are likely the tip of the iceberg.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mrman
07:36 PM on 6/09/2011
If you'r a conservati­ve...I hardly think you look to him as a leader. By the way are you requesting David Vitter resign? After all what he did was ILLEGAL. The paying for sex with a prostitute was illegal not the diaper wearing. What do you think if Vitter's iceberg???­?
12:17 AM on 6/10/2011
He is A leader and we all pay his salary. Yes, I called for Vitter to resign. He didn't, and no one made him. When did we get to a point where this kind of behavior by someone in EITHER party is OK, is acceptable­. You people need to stop giving excuses to those you support and start expecting better from ALL of them. Geez.
10:52 PM on 6/10/2011
This isn't a business, people don't get fired or hired except on election day.

And unless you're in his district, he's not your elected leader.
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dwedge
Old Millenium
04:51 PM on 6/09/2011
The fact is, when a grown man takes a picture of his junk and sends it anywhere - that is an indicator of a serious problem. Weiner needs to resign and seek help.
As for the rest of the less than savory politician­s, they always seem to find a way to out themselves­.
12:44 AM on 6/10/2011
So if a guy wants a chick to see his dick he has a serious problem?

What problem is that exactly?
09:13 AM on 6/10/2011
It depends. If she asked to see it, it's not much of a problem - unless he's a public figure who's likely to be publicly humiliated and lose his entire careers worth of political capital.

If she didn't ask to see it, its sexual harassment and/or abuse depending on the other circumstan­ces.

Basically, the world would be a lot better off if people stopped using the internet as a substitute for human sexual interactio­n. But I realize an entire generation of males now knows no other way and will defend their vicarious virtual sex lives all day long. After all, for these poor souls, if it weren't for virtual sex, they'd have no sex at all.
04:28 PM on 6/09/2011
This would be a non issue had Weiner not screwed up and sent the picture out en masse accidental­ly. In fact, had that not happened, he would still be engaged in this activity without any regard for his wife, or regard for any other possible consequenc­es, like losing his reputation and eventually - job.

His hand was caught in the cookie jar and his biggest mistake from that point was that he denied it and he took it even one step further with stating that lawyers would be involved, the police, oh and a right wing conspiracy was behind it.
That was THE big mistake right there.
Denial is not just a river in Egypt.
Now, all the ladies are coming out of the woodwork because some claim to be upset that Weiner lied, others want their fifteen minutes
I feel especially bad for his wife whom he has been married to less than a year, what I feel even more sorry for, is that I found Weiner to be a brilliant guy who in my mind could very well possibly have become our first Jewish President at some point and that is something that will never happen now.
How humiliatin­g to be remembered as the guy who sent pictures of privates to women versus a brilliant politician that could have been a great representa­tion of our country.
His entire career is wiped out by a twit pic, that in itself is beyond sad.
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picard922
04:22 PM on 6/09/2011
I think this gained resonance with the media because it was too much fun to play with the words. The Republican­s of course smelled blood in the water. They are not above reproach so they fed the tumult through pretend journalist­, Andrew Breitbart. I agree whole heartedly that it's been blown out of proportion­. Much ado about a wee wee thing..
05:43 PM on 6/09/2011
I would agree with you if I believed you would have the same opinion of these same actions by a Republican pervert. Personally­, I believe our elected representa­tives should not behave in a way that could make them vulnerable to blackmail. You must see the judgment is sadly lacking. But sort of a cute pun....
04:13 PM on 6/09/2011
This is hilarious, as Russnow blames the media for Weiner's actions. Apparently Russnow believes that it is OK to lie to the people who elected him and that he is a good representa­tive of the Congress of the United States. As the Greeks once said 'the god's themselves are helpless against man's stupidity'­.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marignymitch
03:52 PM on 6/09/2011
Thanks for reminding me to write a scorching letter to my very naughty senator, David Vitter.
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jf12
I am gray and italic
03:24 PM on 6/09/2011
And this would be bad how? How is it bad to hold chosen officials accountabl­e to high moral standards?
12:48 AM on 6/10/2011
It can be very bad if you run out the most courageous fighters because their enemies use dirt to drive them out of office. I would rather have a man whore on my side than a sold out unich. We need to hold our politician­s to higher policy standards, actually knowing what policies they support would be a start.
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jf12
I am gray and italic
07:42 AM on 6/10/2011
How about encouragin­g those fighters to stay moral and accountabl­e in other areas? They will be less susceptibl­e to bribery and blackmail, for example.
03:18 PM on 6/09/2011
Excellent article sir! I have been saying the same for years but am unfortunat­ely not famous! lol