Those are the words that will get you points among the beautiful people and taste-makers you aspire to impress.
They are the OK people who decide what is and isn’t OK to say.
They also perform triage on other people.
For just as there are words that are not OK, so there are plenty of people who are not OK.
In the context of American politics, one of the least OK people is Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).
She is wildly popular in her own state.
But so what? Georgia voters, by and large, are not OK people.
They don’t, according to the OK people making the rules, really count.
As I write, we are being treated to a reality-TV-show-like exhibition of OK scrutiny in action.
The Democrats, taking note of MTG’s popularity among voters, decided to nobble her.
Not by finding a candidate who could beat her in an election.
They understand that that would be difficult to do.
So they took to the courts and decided to accuse her of insurrectionary behavior, a tort that would, under the 14th Amendment, disqualify her from running for office again in 2022.
So far, the courtroom drama has been farcical.
As it happens, Greene’s behavior was completely innocuous.
But with that wild hyperbole under their belt, it was easy to say that Marjorie Greene was herself an insurrectionist.
The courtroom proceedings against Greene were full of comedy gold.
To date, my favorite moment came when a desperate prosecutor asked Greene whether she said, “We aren’t a people who are going to go quietly into the night.”
Why, yes, I did, quoth Greene, as you well know since you just showed a video clip with me saying just that. So what?
Well, proceeded Perry Mason, have you ever seen the movie “Independence Day”?
Yes. Again, so what?
Don’t you recall that the chap who plays the plucky president in the film says just that, right before launching his assault on the aliens?
Er, no.
“We aren’t a people who are going to go quietly into the night.”
Who knows what inspired her?
Maybe she just made it up on the spot.
But it gets better.
For the prosecutor went on to deliver a truly magnificent display of linguistic sumptuary presumption.
Our hapless prosecutor has extended the stricture to language.
Did you not, he asked Greene, use the term “1776”?
Well, yes, she replied. And, in fact, it’s right there on the state seal over the judge’s head.
Forget about that, snapped the increasingly desperate prosecutor, you were using it as code!
Apparently, 1776 is only an OK word if you are not someone like Marjorie Taylor Greene.
But what about Nancy Pelosi? Greene later tweeted.
When Botox Nancy announced that the House was drawing up articles of impeachment against Donald Trump, she began by saying, “Let us begin where our Founders began in 1776.”
It is, of course, supremely farcical, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t also minatory. Stalin’s show trials contained a large element of farce, too, but they tended to end grimly.
It isn’t clear, as of this writing, how Greene’s inquisition will turn out.
But Greene is appearing before an Obama-appointed judge, so who knows?
I suspect Greene will prevail and will go to crush whomever the Dems put up against her in November.
There’s another delicious prospect to savor.
The Republicans are set to take the House, and probably the Senate, in November.
And then?
Indeed, there is.
Stephen Potter would have a field day analyzing the gamesmanship coming up.