On Tactics
Unions suffered a major defeat in Wisconsin this week, as the Republican legislature figured out a parliamentary maneuver which allowed them to pass a Union-busting bill even without the Democrats present to form a quorum in the upper house. In an unrelated story, two of the highest-ranking officials from National Public Radio stepped down from their jobs in the wake of yet another "gotcha" video from the guy who took down ACORN. Democrats, in both cases, are loudly decrying the political tactics used. But they really shouldn't be, because the tactics themselves are neutral (even though their use was -- as is almost always the case -- extremely partisan).
To be fair, Democrats and Republicans alike are prone to doing this sort of thing. Both using political tactics such as these, and decrying them as being somehow "unfair." There's no monopoly by either party on this type of political hypocrisy. Yes, hypocrisy is the right word to use. Unless you'd prefer "political moral relativism of the worst kind," which is slightly more accurate but a little wordy. Either way, the equation reads: "This sort of thing is just fine when our side uses it, but downright evil when the other side does the same thing."

