The ‘winners and losers’ of a hostage crisis?

With the presidential campaign in full swing, we’re in a heightened political environment. Everything is perceived as having political implications. Political observers are viewing every event through political lenses. I get that.

But it’s hopefully not unreasonable to wonder if there are still any limits. At 6:38pm eastern, just minutes after Leeland “Lee” Eisenberg was taken into custody after holding hostages at a Clinton campaign office in New Hampshire, Slate published what it described as “the postgame analysis of who wins and who loses” as a result of the stand-off.

Slate declared Hillary Clinton, New Hampshire, Rudy Giuliani, and Bill Richardson the “winners” of yesterday’s hostage story (Richardson because he was the first to issue a public statement of support for Clinton, making him, as Slate put it, “a VP lock.”) Second Amendment advocates, the Secret Service, and Mike Huckabee were deemed the “losers” (Huckabee was apparently campaigning in New Hampshire, but reporters were too busy with a hostage crisis to care).

At the risk of sounding like a prude, a hostage situation is not like a debate or routine campaign event. A mentally disturbed man claimed to have a bomb and took hostages. Almost immediately after he surrendered, the human reaction is to be thankful that no one was hurt — not to publish “the postgame analysis of who wins and who loses.”

TNR’s Michael Crowley waited a full half-hour before publishing his own political assessment.

This was a big bummer for the Hillary campaign. Her planned message of the day–that Obama’s new health care ad is dishonest–was crushed. She had to cancel her speech to the DNC, where at least one rival shone. And she closed all of her Iowa campaign offices, which is a pretty painful move so close to caucus day.

Stretching the analysis a bit here (hey, it’s a Friday evening), I wonder if it also subtly reinforces the sense that Hillary somehow provokes crazy, extreme reactions among people in a way the likes of Obama and Edwards do not — which goes to the larger questions of electability and governing ability.

Seriously?

A disturbed man holds an office hostage with a fake bomb and this speaks to Hillary Clinton’s polarizing reputation? That’s not particularly persuasive — crazy people do crazy things for crazy reasons.

The AP, meanwhile, ran a very odd analysis piece.

When the hostages had been released and their alleged captor arrested, a regal-looking Hillary Rodham Clinton strolled out of her Washington home, the picture of calm in the face of crisis.

The image, broadcast just as the network news began, conveyed the message a thousand town hall meetings and campaign commercials strive for — namely, that the Democratic presidential contender can face disorder in a most orderly manner.

Look, thankfully, Clinton wasn’t actually in any danger yesterday, and she did all the right things by canceling events and traveling to New Hampshire to visit with staffers and their families.

But “the picture of calm in the face of crisis”? Isn’t this overdoing it a bit?

“It affected me not only because they were my staff members and volunteers, but as a mother, it was just a horrible sense of bewilderment, confusion, outrage, frustration, anger, everything at the same time,” Clinton said.

It was a thawing moment for a stoic figure who once snapped that she opted for professional life instead of staying home to bake cookies.

I’m at a loss.

we can all go back and watch Ahnold, the pre-governator in ‘RunningMan’, a surrealistically prescient depiction of our reality-TV, instant analysis, media-frenetic world.

Slate has just added a cherry on top.

I am going to go listen to Dylan’s ‘Idiot Wind’

  • I’ve been waiting for the right wing press or blogosphere to come out and say that America will be less safe under Hillary because she’s not even president and we’re already coming under attack from evil-doers. I’m sure it’s out there somewhere.

    The AP’s coronation of Hillary is another in their continuing efforts to be makers of myth. Whether it’s Rudy on 9/11, Bush’s bullhorn moment or now with Hillary, these guys in the media just can’t resist turning news into a made-for-TV movie of the week.

  • Do not dismiss out of hand those with mental illnesses. Many times they do crazy things…. but for real (not crazy) reasons.

    Wasn’t his stated purpose that he was seeking help for those with mental illness?

    Will Hillary hear his ill fated call for help? Does anyone hear his call for help? Will anyone help him and others….or will he be just one more person with mental illness shoved into our prison system?

    This actually highlights a big and growing problem in our society.

  • At 6:38pm eastern, just minutes after Leeland “Lee” Eisenberg was taken into custody after holding hostages at a Clinton campaign office in New Hampshire, Slate published what it described as “the postgame analysis of who wins and who loses” as a result of the stand-off.

    Of course, it typically takes more than “just minutes” to write, edit and upload four hundred plus words of analysis, which is why Slate’s article included this quote among their losers:

    Republicans. Especially if the human bomb turns out to be one.

    Which is to say, they didn’t write their analysis after everything turned out to be okay, but they were putting together their political analysis of a hostage situation while the damn thing was going on.

  • It’s like the coverage of the war – everything for voyeuristic effect, the reality of game shows.

  • It is hard to say this is any worse than the “winners and losers” discussions everytime the death or diagnosis with a terminal disease of a Congressperson or Senator has occurred in the last year. Those seem to occur with a standard apologetic first sentence – “It seems inappropriate and morbid, but it is nonetheless a reality in an election cycle. . .” — and are followed by less than a thimbleful of outrage. This is hardly limited to yesterday’s events.

  • The Slate analysis would be more appropriate as a “Low Concept” piece rather than part of its “Trailhead” series. Although I don’t read Slate’s Trailhead, so maybe that’s full of wiseass cynicism, too.

    Anyway, I’m sure Mark Halperin is sorry he got scooped.

  • When will these fools realize that the rorschach that looks like a naked lady eating a giant strudel really is just a random inkblot and not the naked lady that’s inside their head?

  • “Whether it’s Rudy on 9/11, Bush’s bullhorn moment or now with Hillary, these guys in the media just can’t resist turning news into a made-for-TV movie of the week.”

    Well said, peterado.

  • “When will these fools realize that the rorschach that looks like a naked lady eating a giant strudel really is just a random inkblot and not the naked lady that’s inside their head?”

    Dr. Biobrain, how come you know me so well?

  • If only it had happened in one of the Republican candidate’s office… I’m sure all the staff and volunteers *there* would have been armed to the teeth and would have shot the man dead in no time flat. Or else would have recognized the flares for what they were (not a bomb) and would have overpowered him, instead of enduring a 5 hr stand-off, with the police on the roofs (waste of municipal money, too) and everyone in the vicinity evacuated.

    But, of course, as Evergreen (@3) says, the man went there to ask questions about mental health care. And disturbed as he might have been, he wasn’t crazy enough to ask such questions of republicans.

  • When the media assigns this to Hillary, that she was “the picture of calm in the face of crisis,” this overstatement struck me like a stretch to assign her some ‘gravitas’ that they must think she needs. The reality of the situation is, she couldn’t have done anything about it if she wanted to. Law enforcement did its job well, and its over.

    The perp will be getting the mental health treatment he wanted, only it will be behind bars. And that’s a good thing.

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