For Maher, Tonight was not a good night

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Bill Maher seems bright enough to know what glass is. So why does he throw stones in houses made with this material? Photo: Paul Drinkwater/NBC

SAN DIEGO — January 14, 2011 — Although it has become fashionable for liberals to challenge right-wing "hate speech" with patronizing pleas to “tone down the rhetoric” and a microscopic ability to examine their own verbal ammunition, the discussion reached an all-time low this week following Arizona’s fateful shootings.

Quick to add his personal spin on recent history, Bill Maher received quite the surprise while appearing on The Tonight Show, Tuesday, January 11th.  This time, television’s hip crowd did not seem to appreciate Maher’s clever willingness to associate conservatives with violence.

Bill Mahr on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. (Photo: Paul Drinkwater/NBC)

Bill Maher on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. (Photo: Paul Drinkwater/NBC)

Said Maher,  “The right-wing loves, the go-to rhetoric for them is, "Wouldn't it be fun to kill the people we disagree with?”

When members of the audience started booing, Maher asked them if they ever read. Such arrogance is par for the course with this smug celebrity and his personal track record of designating those who disagree with him as nothing but a pack of morons.

One cannot help but think of another recent shooting: The Pentagon incident. Bill Maher, in the middle of a standup routine commenting on how the perpetrator was gunned down said, “Why? Why? Why couldn’t this have been Glenn Beck?”

Call me a romantic, but Maher seemed to be having “fun” with the idea of Beck’s death. Yes, I do understand: The brilliant, artistic wit was in the middle of a comedy monologue. He did not intend for his well written oratory to be taken as a literal call to violence. But then, we conservatives are not the ones who need to be convinced that lone gunmen, (rather than the words they may be exposed to) are responsible for their own actions. If Maher really wants to go through this door, he’d be well advised to look both ways first, to the left as well as the right.

Bob Siegel is a radio talk show host and columnist. Information about his radio show can be found at www.bobsiegel.net.

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Bob Siegel

A graduate of Denver Seminary and San Jose State University, Bob Siegel is a radio talk show host and popular guest speaker at churches and college campuses across the country, using a variety of media including, seminars, formal debates, outdoor open forums, and one man drama presentations.

In addition to his own weekly radio show (KCBQ 1170, San Diego) Bob has been a guest on many other programs, including The 700 Club, Washington Times Radio's Inside the Story, The Rick Amato Show, KUSI Television's Good Morning San Diego, and the world popular Jonathan Park radio drama series, for which Bob guest starred in two episodes and wrote one episode, The Clue From Ninevah.

Bob is a regular contributor for San Diego Newsroom and San Diego Rostra. Bob does a good deal of playwriting as well (14 plays & 5 collaborations), including the award winning, Eternal Reach.  Bob has also published two books;  A Call To Radical Discipleship, and I'd Like to Believe In Jesus, But...

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