In looking to see whether I'd posted an essay with that title on Dailykos, I found that I hadn't, but the search engine brought up this from 2010, which is also still relevant.
For example:
Cook clearly assigns more importance to what something looks like and ignores who's doing the looking. Also, the agents of legislation--i.e. the Congress--are again, conveniently, left out of the equation, while an inanimate object (the stimulus package) is assigned a life of its own. That's what conservatives, whether they're legislators or pundits, do; they deny their own agency and assign functions where there are none.It's not because I'm getting old and lazy that I'm now repeating stuff from five years ago. It's because, when we're living with conservative pundits and politicians, the issues are always the same.
I do, however, admit that I hate repeating myself and it's one of the things the internets make more palatable.