A few thing:
1) Just because someone is insulting someone, doesn't mean they are worried about that person. The Blackhawks, by and large, are not worried about the Wild in the NHL Finals, even though they are trash talking them.
2) Just because someone is worried about something, doesn't mean the other side is winning. I'm sure there was one Heat fan legitimately worried about their series against the Bucks when the Heat were on the verge of a sweep. There can be other explanations for why they are worried. Like, they might be ignorant of the situations (and thus are overrating the threat).
3) Why Trotskyities/Trotskyism? I see this term thrown around abrasively a lot more than I do Stalinist/Maoist/Leninist (but not, obviously communism), and I'm just curious if there is logic behind it ('They really aren't as bad as Stalinists...' for example) or if its just something that snowballed (a small case of mob mentality).
There is always logic behind my choice of words, thank you

(unless I simply misspeak.) Neoconservative and 'neocon' are tricky words because the left used them for so long to demonize any conservative not knowing or caring that it was a term of art. The neoconservatives were Trotskyite, big government, particularly on the world stage, internationalists seeking pure democracy with no pure 'rights' such as in our constitution, for individuals to withstand the whims of the majority at any given time. Power through manipulation of the masses. That isn't remotely conservative and never was. It found a niche in the GOP when the Democrats became identified with being the peace party, and Kristol's Dad (one of the originals) and his friends moved over to the GOP to manipulate evangelicals (using the argument that the current governmental unit that selected the name Israel today = the Israel the Bible says to support argument), and to manipulate national security conservatives who want DEFENSE but writ large, a world presence to make damned sure we have defense, as necessary.
National security conservatives are not the same thing as neoconservatives. National Security conservatives are literally driven through wanting to be too big to attack, a kind of defensive posture. They understand debt MATTERS to national security so while they want a lot more 'defense' than we think we need, they don't want it at the expense of a thriving economy. I see Jim DeMint as a national security conservative, and while I don't agree with his foreign policy views, I respect him as someone who stays true to his views. Compare DeMint to Lindsay Graham, now....or McCain.
Even Kristol jokes about his Dad being a Trotskyite, he just pretends he himself, with indistinguishable policies, isn't.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trotskyism
As to the other points, of course that is true, sometimes, but I don't believe either of those caveats fits here. Here they were ignoring Ron blatantly in media until he had this pretty low key announcement of his institute, and on the same day six or eight of the main MSM Trotskyite mouth pieces or leftist agenda protectors came out shrilly recycling old smears in a way that sure appears coordinated. It has happened before, and with something that anyone who knows anything about Ron knows isn't part of his character at all, and with the people in question, particularly Weigel and Kirchik or whatever his name is, absolutely know is false. (Humorously, Frum is one who wrote about this OFTEN as being 'Ron's' newsletters, yet he was tweeting this round of articles saying Lew had written them and therefore the Institute is racist. I tweeted back thanks that he confirmed Ron hadn't written them. They make up the facts to suit their current agenda.)
Here is a write up of when it was done 24 hours before the NH primary in 2008 (note that it had first made a big round of media in 1996 when Ron went back to Congress, yet they acted as if it was new. And did again in 2011.), Some of these just think Ron sucks too much oxegyn from the room JOHNSON supporters were pushing it in the primary this round, and they absolutely know better. The pattern I have seen of this nonsense being spun against Ron is that it comes out when they are scared. Ron is tied for first going into the Iowa caucuses, Ron surges to second place in the Reuters national poll with 22% before Super Tuesday. So I read it as fear, and the poll that more now are concerned that their constitutional rights be protected than that they get more security, DESPITE the poll being taken RIGHT after the Boston incident, tells me we are winning. Or, as Ron Paul puts it, "changing the direction of the wind."
http://formerbeltwaywonk.wordpress.com/2008/01/15/the-orange-line-anatomy-of-a-smear-campaign/