Disrespect for Tea Partiers is at its most extreme and unforgivable when conservative elites who know better at places like Hillsdale College and the Heritage Foundation lash their brands to Rush Limbaugh's star, and afford him a credibility they deep down don't believe he deserves in return. Blatant disrespect is Roger Ailes broadcasting Glenn Beck's show month after month after month, knowing it was filled with the most ludicrous conspiracy theories. Disrespect is Newsmax sending advertising emails to elderly subscribers on fixed incomes, stating, "When we stumbled upon this weird trick that can add $1,000 to monthly Social Security checks, we knew we had to share it with you."

When I tell Tea Partiers that these people don't have their best interests at heart, that they're perfectly willing to broadcast lies and to manipulate resentments if it makes them an extra buck, I am not trying to be condescending. Like Peggy Noonan, I make my living in the media, and while that doesn't mean that I have any more expertise than the average Tea Partier when it comes to being a doctor or lawyer or plumber or construction worker or small businessperson (or whatever their profession happens to be), I do have more expertise in mass media, rhetoric, the facts that surround political controversies in the news, and when pundits are telling people things that aren't true.

And I agree with Noonan.

Many of the people who enjoy the trust of Tea Partiers don't deserve it. It isn't just talk-radio hosts either. Donald Trump. Newt Gingrich. Herman Cain. They too are playing Tea Partiers for fools, and the only way things are going to improve is if Tea Partiers themselves wise up and stop vesting trust in whoever tells them what they want to hear. The Tea Party professes to harbor a high degree of skepticism toward media elites and politicians. It need only apply that skepticism regardless of ideology.

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* The conceit of the column is that she is channeling the advice that Senator Robert Taft would give if he were still alive, so think of it as her idea of what he would say if you like.