POSTED: April 25, 12:40 PM ET | By Rick Perlstein
Once upon a time, in early 2004, I attended
one of hundreds of "Parties for the President" organized nationwide for
grassroots volunteers who wanted to help reelected George W. Bush, at a
modest middle class home in Portland, Oregon. At one point, a nice old
lady politely pressed into my hand a grubby little self-published
pamphlet she had come upon, purporting to prove that Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry had faked the heroics that had won him
three purple hearts in Vietnam. I added it to my mental store of the
night's absurdities that I expected to hear rattling across the
wingnutosphere the entire fall: "I still believe there are weapons of mass destruction"; "There is an agenda—to
get rid of God in this country"; "John Kerry attended a party in which
there was bad language!" What I didn't expect was to see Kerry's
war-hero cred earnestly debated night after night on CNN. Then came
August and "Swift Boat Veterans for Truth" — and that little old lady's
fever dream began dominating the media discussion of the campaign, and
the rest, as they say, is history.
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