"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Master And Commander

I've been thinking quite a lot about the nature of leadership, the human desire for social structure, and what in the end is Right and True about how we aught to treat one another. This is all very very interesting. That's how I look at almost everything that goes on in life, I know, but my thinking over the past three or four months has been very uptight.

Anyway, all this raises those eternal questions about the nature of humanity and what is the just sort of thing to do going forward. Personal vectors abound; will be revealed at a later date.

Getting back to the 50,000 ft level, it occurs to me in an unguarded moment that we are a world at war, and that the rapidly tightening circle of individuals in control of this nation are going to get an enormous number of people killed because they have no vision for a better tomorrow. The hard flip side of this reality is that our loyal opposition has no alternative course of action, and, in light of the gravity of the situation, is far too loyal.

Franz and Frank have both brought up the question, "have you thought about going over there?" The answer is yes. I never seriously considered enlisting, but the thought of getting closer to the struggle comes to mind often.

It's a tough thing, what to do next. I'm in this for the future, it would seem. With second helpings of truth, family, justice and a dash of personal glory. I believe we will either turn the tide in the next few years, We must be scientific, disciplined, engineers of progress. We must also be inspired, spiritual, embodiments of the future we wish to see.

We must be hungry chessmasters, entrepreneurial strategists of the highest order. That means having fun and living the life too.

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Whoredom

Never forget, my friends, that a common street synonym for professional (pro) is whore. Having just run through this little spate of political streetfighting and come out the other side more or less whole as a human being -- still even believing in the cause on a good day -- it's tough to see the democrats come out like whipped dogs afraid of Tom Delay's spritz bottle, and it's a kick it the teeth to realize that movement conservatives havn't a shred of intellectual honesty about them. Bunch of fuckers, really. I like to think at the end of the day that most of us could kick back and have a beer. Harder to hold onto that idea with the crap you see these days.

Instances: lavish and unqualified praise for the Swift Boat Liars; this "The American People Spoke Loud And Clear" business; the purging of people who think the truth and the president occasionally disagree; the tightening of the cabenet.

Oh, it's the ugly season, when dark meetings behind closed doors decide fates and futures. The circle will constrict, and it's only a matter of time before perverse eminations -- the smells that typically accompany the decomposition of a corrupted and hermetic power stucture -- begin wafting forth. The creepy crawlies have come out to play. Four more years. Four more years. Who will rise to lead the counterrevolution?

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Today I Learned To Fight

There's this great painting in the Brooklyn MfA office that Joe Felice made sort of by accident. We were spray-paint stenceling a lot of binders to send out volunteer manuals, and a stencel covered in wet red and gold paint fell onto a piece of paper, leaving an outline of our logo in fiery blurred color with other bits of paint spattered about at random. Joe picked it up, recognizing the value of a nice found piece. In small red letters, he finger painted the words, "Today I Learned To Fight" in the bottom right quadrant of the paper.

I've been thinking about that piece of paper a lot lately.

I believe we can fight and I believe we can win. I'll be continuing in this for the near future as my professional occupation, and no matter where my life takes me, I don't think there's any going back to apathy or ignorance.

We will need to play hardball for a few years to keep things from getting fucked up. This means, for instance, we might need to go to the remaining 45 Democratic senators (41 of whom can block judicial nominations) and tell them if they compromise our future for the sake of their political career, we will burn them down; which we can now credibly claim to do.

We will need to stage some very media-savvy protest actions. Here's a hint: ANSWER isn't the answer, but there are smart ways to use political theater to shape the national discourse.

We will need some people to run for office; lay in some ground floor talent. We will need some people to help raise money through benefit parties and the like. We will need research, rhetoric, and most of all the paitence and committment to develop a clear set of principles which we can use to grow our numbers.

But we can do all these things. And we will. And it will be enjoyable work for the most part. The reality is we are coming from way behind in this fight. But we are learning and building and we have room to grow; they do not. And so if we want to, we can win.

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Oh Man

It's all bad.

It looks like the youth broke for Kerry, but may not have turned out in greatly increased numbers. It would also appear that Rove's 4-million+ legion of evangelical voters was real, and well distributed. "Moral Values" was a top issue among voters, and that shit is nowhere on the pre-election polls. The answer is that fucktons of people who weren't being polled who really cared about moral values showed. 9 anti-gay constitutional amendments passed through the states; these bills were part of the GOP strategy, and it all interlocks.

The mass media isn't liberal biased, but it is biased against fundimentalist christian subculture, if only because most of those folk think TV is Satan's medium (700 club excepted). So those of us -- I'm looking at you, liberal blogosphere -- who take their cues from Big Media never saw it coming. Never detected it. Neither did Zogby. There's a lot of us, fifty million or more, who didn't. But there it is.

This is America, and it belongs to the conservative movement for a while longer yet. I'm sad, ashamed and afraid, but life is also a lot bigger than politics. I'll be fine, and more likely than not so will you. The people who will get the squeeze soon are poorer, less educated and more marginalized than you or I. The question is whether or not I'll be happy living in a country like this.

It's an open question.

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Ralph Nader Talking To Dolls

Once proud, now disgraced:
Nader talks to dolls

Maybe it was always part of some incredible bit of strategy to sap funding and legal aid from GOP sources and give the "crazy people" (like those who told me with a straight face that Al Gore would have gone into Iraq the same as Bush) something to do for a few months. Maybe this is Ralphs final twist, a genius masterstroke.

If only I could believe that. The more likely interperetation is that he's in some way literally lost his mind. Poor bastard. The GOP giving him money is like frat guys giving some hobo a 40 and then making him dance around campus.

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Stand Strong

Click Here and see if you don't get just a little bit excited. Just a little weensy bit.

More fortification. Click around.

For a little kick in the ass from the opposite direction, check the 2002 state of the union. In hindsight, it's terribly chilling. Try jumping in at minute 16 or so -- "axis of evil" quote is at 16:40 -- but really, just listen to how lengthy the sections of applause are for what amounts to pretty poor oratory. For instance, the first round of clapping in this section comes when G-dubs talks of missile defense systems.

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Reason #371 Wolf Blitzer Should Retire

People sometimes wonder why I dislike so much the newsmedia. Here's a very very specific example. Check this little clip from CNN. Blizter, while leading in to a talking head from Bush/Cheney04, plays a bit of the latest Bin Laden tape where he references Bush's reading "My Pet Goat" on 9/11. Blitzer's comment, "it sounds like Bin Laden's been watching Michael Moore's movies."

Here's my question: where or when in the process of dry-humping the half-conscious body of "journalism" did it occur to Blitzer that F9/11 was the most likely source for Bin Laden to get this information? And even if somehow in the white-flash of orgasm you did reach this conclusion, what possible relevance could the source of Bin Laden's knowledge of Bush's Tuesday-morning reading have in this situation? Really. I honestly want to know what the fuck he was thinking.

I realize it was news to many Americans who saw that film that the Prez remained paralyzed for a good seven minutes after learning that the towers had been hit, but just because the mainstream newsmedia elected not to air that footage in the name of national unity, that doesn't exactly make it a secret. They have the internet over at Al-Qaeda too. I'm sure they're familiar with Google, you pompous jackass. 9/11 was their coup de grace, their moment of triumph. One can assume they probably have the whole thing researched out the wazoo in terms of how it happened and what went down after.

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The Fully Functioning Left?

Kos has a story up, mostly sourced from a piece in the LA times, about how the America Votes coalition is helping to create an intigrated, fully-functioning left.

This might catch me some flack, but I have to call bullshit.

America Votes is a well-intentioned organization, but I do not think it has performed well or is a model that should be extended without significant overhaul. I'm not saying this out of any sort of spite or malace; in real terms I have had very little interaction with people in charge of AV. I'm saying this because I know that there are limited resources for left-wing politics in 2005, and I don't want these resources to be mis-applied.

This election it cost $50,000 for an organization to get a "seat at the table" with America Votes. This means being in on weekly conference calls and monthly meetings in DC, which serve some purpose in terms of allowing groups with parallel interests to keep in touch with one another. However, the idea that this was worth 50 grand to any of the fine organizations involved is ludicrous.

My experience is on the young end of the spectrum, so perhaps it's skiewed, but my organization, Music for America, got almost zero value from these meetings. Our meaningful -- and in many cases quite productive! -- coordination with other groups happened for the most part at the field level, and those contacts that manifested nationally happened the way any other contact in our generation emerges: someone picked up the phone and called someone else, or sent an email. You don't need a $50k seat at a table to do that.

The one thing of real value AV provided was a semi-working voterfile. Now, we aren't using this, and many of the other groups have their own systems at the field level -- and in reality this probably says more about the failure of the DNC to coordinate hard data than anything else -- but for groups that do direct voter-contact and turnout this probably provided some value. I know at least two groups whose state-level campaigns are using the AV voterfile tool, to which MfA was able to conribute some 20,000 contacts. That was nice, but again, we didn't need to spend $50k to give other people our data.

On issues of real organizational/operational coordination, message, press, and shared access to power, I didn't see a lot going on. What I saw was a lot of stuff that reminded me in a negative way of corporate America. The particular anecdote that kept coming to mind was from one time in late 2000 when I was trying to do a bit of consulting work for Gerber (the baby-food giant). In an unguarded moment just after a meeting, the senior VP of marketing and apparent heir to the CEO spot said, "you know, all the people in this building [the entire executive staff] could disappear into thin air and the company would go on fine for years."

That's the sense I got from AV: well-meaning, but ultimately innefectual (and expensive) executive management.

Again, its perfectly plausable that some of the other groups like the Sierra Club or Emily's List got enormous value that I am ignorant of from the meetings. However, from where I sit, there wasn't much going on. If it wasn't all so well-meaning, I would say it was bullshit. I think the resources and talent, the time and energy, could have been much better applied. Moreover, I feel that (again for us) the AV organization even got in the way.

Specific example: there was a group called the "Young Voter Alliance" which was a cluster of some other youth orgs. This group of groups included our pals at The League of Pissed Off Voters, who we work with quite a lot. On occasion, the YVA rep say things to AV that were directly contrary to the statements made by people who were actually working for indyvoter kids, and as these things tend to work out, the kids actually doing the work were right. For us, the America Votes environment was not really one of trust.

Also, I know that other orgs experienced internal fissures, power struggles, confusion, etc, and to the best of my knowledge AV did nothing to address or mitigate this. In fact, my guess is that the environment created by exclusive meetings between "the people who matter" in Washington DC probably exacerbated this kind of problem more than anything else. If you're an org with an internal power struggle, who do you send? Who gets to be on the call? What do you say?

Power games seemed to happen a lot in that kind of world. It becomes less about getting anything done and more about being right and justifying your existence/paycheck/position of authority. If we're seriously in the business of getting shit done, we've got to drop the pretense and keep our focus on reality, on what matters. I know my Executive Director was going to write a fairly critical evaluation of AV as part of their feedback process. I helped her find some nice things to say after another more seasoned pol asked her, "what are you hoping to accomplish with this?"

The clear implication was that this was an organization which was run by some people who we want to have on our side, and pissing them off by telling them they weren't doing anything that was helping our work wasn't in our own best interest. So, like I said, we found a few nice things to say.

In retrospect, that was the wrong thing to do. It wasn't honest. In theory, groups like AV should be important workhorses providing leadership, expertise and actively pushing for coordination between its member organizations and the wider left-wing network. In practice, something significantly less than that happened; and unless we confront this reality, we're going to hit a lower point of potential than otherwise might be possible.

Knowing what I know now, it's hard not to see the LA Times push as a PR offensive by the AV people designed to stake some claim to the smaller pile of resources (money) that will be available in the next calendar year. I think that for us, giving money to America Votes again would be a mistake. What should be funded instead are organizations which actively work to correct the now glaring flaws in our electoral process, and to construct powerful/flexibe data-sharing platform(s) that are truly of "enterprise level."

Operational coordination works much more effectively at the field level, and message coordination requires leadership in addition to focus groups. Most importantly, national coordinating groups need to provide some minimum of political focus in order to become catalysts for action. Perhaps more so than any other group, America Votes seemed to purely be an anti-bush coalition; as such, in a week it's reason to exist will have passed, and without significant overhaul, so should the organization.

I think we're on our way, but it's still a long road to a fully functioning left. Meaninful coordination at the field level, positive agenda-setting, joint press operations, a forum for best practices and a source for political experience and leadership: these are all going to be pressing needs in 2005, and I'm sorry to say that from my experience America Votes gets at best a C+ on these counts.

I know this is just politics, but C+ isn't going to cut it. This ain't no time for grade inflation, people. We got to keep it real.

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Bush Campaign Web Site Rejects Non-US Visitors

Netcraft is an authoritative source.

Netcraft monitors web site response times from seven locations, including four within the United States and three in other countries. Since Monday morning, requests to GeorgeWBush.com from stations in London, Amsterdam and Sydney, Australia have failed, while the four U.S. monitoring stations show no performance problems. Web users in Canada report they are able to visit the site.

Weird.

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The New Yorker Endorses Kerry

Best endorsement yet; very strong. Plus, they haven't endorsed anyone in like 80 years.

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