In recent weeks, we’ve seen high-profile Republicans struggle with the meaning of some basic words. Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.) doesn’t know what “compromise” means; Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) doesn’t know what “hypocrisy” means; Indiana’s Richard Mourdock doesn’t know what “bipartisan” means; and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) doesn’t seem to know what “divisive” means.
Yesterday, however, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) suggested he doesn’t know what “threaten” means.
NBC News asked Boehner about his intention to hold the nation hostage again next year when it comes time to raise the debt ceiling. “Whoa, I’m not threatening default.”
I don’t mean to sound picky, but when you effectively argue, “Give me what I want or I’ll push the country to default,” that’s what “threatening default” means. The Speaker is playing a strange semantics game in which he’s declared he’ll refuse to raise the debt limit, deliberately trash the full faith and credit of the United States, and push the nation into default, on purpose, unless Democrats cave to his demands.
Now he’s also saying, “I’m not threatening default.” It seems Boehner (a) doesn’t understand his own strategy; (b) doesn’t want to tell the truth; or (c) doesn’t understand what “threaten” means.








