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Home / Articles / Commentary / National - Jim Hightower /  Right-wing wardrobe silliness
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Wednesday, July 2,2008

Right-wing wardrobe silliness

First the flag lapel pin flap; now Rachael Ray’s “keffiyeh”

By Jim Hightower
Untitled Document Those goofy right-wing wardrobe police are at it again, getting goofier by the day. First came the flag-pin flap. The wardrobe cops insist that no politician should go out in public without sporting this mandatory piece of bejeweled patriotism. When U.S. Sen. Barack Obama had the integrity to say that his patriotism goes deeper than a flash of bling on his lapel, he was immediately pounced upon by rabid talk-show blatherers, bloggers, and other mad dogs of the kooky right. It’s un-American not to wear flag jewelry, they yapped. Recently, though, their yapping turned to yips when Karl Rove appeared on Fox TV — gasp! — with a naked lapel. So the yappers found another target for their fashion fanaticism: Rachael Ray. Yes, the perky Food Network celebrity was assailed by the right wing for promoting Muslim extremism and terrorism. It seems that Ray appeared in a Dunkin’ Donuts ad, ostensibly to hype the fast-food chain’s iced coffee. But the ever-vigilant rightists saw through the coffee, frantically pointing to the scarf that Ray was wearing. It has a black-and-white pattern and a long white fringe. Aha! shrieked the yappers — that’s a keffiyeh, the kind of headdress worn by Muslim suicide bombers. Don’t you see? yelped the right-wing chorus — Ray and Dunkin’ Donuts are not selling coffee; their ad is signaling symbolic support for the Islamic fiends who hate America! We must stop anyone from wearing the dreaded scarf, they yelled. Never mind that Ray’s scarf is a paisley design having nothing to do with terrorism. And never mind that the keffiyeh is worn every day in the Middle East by teachers, workers, and others having no connection whatsoever to terrorism — there’s no level of silliness too extreme for the right-wing monitors of wardrobe correctness.

Jim Hightower is a national radio commentator, columnist, and author.

 

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