"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Power Corrupts: The "Holy Fucking Shit This Is Our President?" Edition

The New York Times Magazine: Without a Doubt

I'll write more on this, but this NYT magazine article is required reading for anyone seeking to understand how we got here and why the Bush administration must be removed from power.

Read it. It's usually something of a comfort to inhabit the world of mainstream politics, where there are all kinds of stories and "reasonable explanations" for things. There are ways to rationalize horrible news of death and destruction -- a few marines here, a score of Iraqis there -- and other ways to gloss over sometimes more horrific statistics -- several million people living in proverty. There are ways to believe that all this business with our country lately is just little rough water, that nothing is seriously amiss or going wrong.

But as my mother quipped in a comment somewhere below: "I was tear-gassed by Nixon. Bush makes him look like a saint." Read the article.

This isn't "Bush Hatred" (which by the way is a made-up idea created by the spinmeisters in the west wing to supress reasonable dissent), it is the truth; and there's a fear that comes with that truth that all of this -- the faith-based president, the debased state of journalism, the world of 24-hour talking heads jacked up on the sickeningly stimulating death-juice of 9/11 -- it all might just be more that our country can handle. I do believe we run the risk of coming apart at the seams. I do, really, but I don't like to think about it because it's very frightening.

The article is very frightening. Here are some things we can do:

Voter X
MfA Get Out The Vote
ACT (massive grown-up GOTV)
Where's my polling place?

Please vote; and please tell everyone you know that you're doing it. Send an email to all your friends and let them know how you feel. Call everyone you know on November 2nd. Call them next week and tell them to vote early.

The most important motivator for new and unlikely voters is being asked to vote by a friend or peer. Do it. Lobby your friends and your family. There are no good reasons not to vote, and a million and one really important things on the line in this election.

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GOP Stragegy

Interesting:

And finally, it's hard to avoid the conclusion that BC04 is simply freaking out at Kerry's exposure, deliberate or inadvertant, of a vulnerability in their base-first strategy, which depends heavily on piggy-backing battleground state referenda on gay marriage.

This makes sense, and I find it interesting. It was clearly in effect in Michigan when I was there, but it's a spectacularly short-sighted strategy for the GOP. Younger conservatives (they're out there) aren't fired up about banning gay marriage. Most of them, in fact, are fine with it -- or with civil unions or some equivalent solution -- and don't want to be strongly associated with outright homophobia.

By tying their base-mobilization strategy to bigotry and religious fundimentalism, Rove's GOP is narrowing their base and turning off younger party activists.

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Freeway Free Speech Day Pictures Page 1

Awesome: culture-jamming is getting smarter and more mainstream. That's a good thing.

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Going Upriver

Went to see Going Upriver last night w/Nick. It's a great way to get psyched to vote for Kerry if you need or want that. We saw it in a shoddy art-house in the Richmond with like three other people in the audience, so I'm not sure that it's really getting out there. It might be big on DVD if Kerry wins: a kind of "get to know they guy before he becomes president" rental.

But the film. Kerry has an inspiring and humbling story, to be honest, but it's also one full of irony and a grim kind of forboding given what's going on today. The paralells between Iraq and Vietnam -- geopolitical, tactical, attitudinal -- are enormously disturbing. Nick and I have a mutual friend (possibly Nick's best friend) who is about to head back for his seventh stint in the middle east, so the feeling is personal.

Let me say this real quick: any hippy bullshitter who thinks Kerry's going to "escalate" in Iraq, or who thinks President Kerry would have done the same thing going to war had he been in charge the past four years is telling themselves an amazingly false story, probably in order to justify the dissident stance they've come to enjoy. Go see this movie, and then let's talk about it.

That being said, you can see the seeds of Kerry's douchbaggery quite clearly.

It's something of a mystery how he rose to the head of the VVAW, and my impression is that there wasn't a really strong leadership structure or organization there; it was a chaordic system and he just sort of emerged.

Part of this emergence was that he was clearly the only or at least most viable connector between the ultra-square Sentaors and the fairly radical vets who were protesting the war that had fucked them, that they felt was continuing to fuck the country. This was a tenuous position to be in. The heart of the film covers the VVAW's week of protesting in DC: camping on the Washington mall, going to Arlington Natl. Cemetary, meeting with people in Congress, etc, the peak of which (in terms of natl. impact) was Kerry's speech to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The documentary doesn't dwell on it, but it's clear there was tension between the two contradictory worlds Kerry was walking in. The difference between the now-grey-haired former-radicals who talked about the time, and the tone of the journalists (squares) who were there is revealing. The fact that most of the vets were bivouacking on the mall while Kerry attended at least one high-powered DC cocktail party, that he worked hard to keep the protests peaceful, that he was cast as "the responsible radical," and that this generated some resentment with some other vets leaves little doubt that a difficult balancing act was taking place.

Beginning with the Winter Solder gathering -- which was a very very very powerful point in the film, as I can only imagine it was in real life, and which is still decried as a fraud by the right -- you can watch Kerry's radicalization, and you can watch him thinking how to connect the raw, true, revolutionary energy of his fellow veterans to the rest of America. His work was largely in tempering, shaping and focusing so the veterans could spark real change and self-reflection on Main Street USA rather than just be another radical spectacle. There's a little moment of the early, shadow-eyed radical Kerry where he's literally talking about "connecting these points of energy to change America."

I liked that; found it pretty interesting and relatable to my own life, though my own circumstances are much less dramatic and heightened.

But the irony! The irony! Nixon was worried about the "young demogogue." Kerry's speech to the Senators got something like 4 or 5 minutes of uninterrupted play on the nightly news. Huge impact. Senators talking of cutting off funds for the war, etc. Nixon is quoted as saying, "we've got to stop this Kerry before he becomes another Nader."

Just think about that for a minute. Oh yeah.

So they dug up John O'Neil to be the counter-Kerry in the proto-spin world of proxy press wars. This Talk-Show debate was in the film a little bit. It's also highly ironic that the same John O'Neil is the author of a recently published book attacking Kerry's biography, and a founder, organizer and spokesman for the Swift Boat Vets 527. This fight goes a long way back, it turns out.

Anyway, it's a decent film, if a bit uncritical. For instance, it didn't address some of the inconsistancies in the timeperiod addressed. E.g. the medal-throwing thing.

My sense is that this is a movie made by someone who believes in the Kerry of 1971, who wanted to help America remember that time, and that's why I like it. I want to believe in the Kerry of 1971 too. I find it preposterous that all the things he did then were a matter of political careerism. If you want to get into public office, you don't do it by leading protests and getting arrested -- yes, Kerry was arrested for protesting the war at least once -- and in fact he lost his first bid for public office, running for Congress in 1972. (source: wikipedia).

But it's all there to see, all the tensions of what getting seriously into politics means. All the compromises. 20 years in the political machine have rendered a man who was always a little square but once took enormous personal risks against the conventional wisdom to advance a cause into the candidate we now see. I want to believe that the idealist is still in there, but I don't expect Kerry to give me any proof of this until he's elected. See, I'm pretty convinced that Kerry's pretty fucking serious about winning, that explains why he doesn't run on this part of his biography: polls and focus groups have told him its a loosing "message."

Now, I find this mode of politcking highly dissatisfying. Not just because it produces a bland candidate who sounds like a broken record, but because it completely discounts the ability of a campaign to be a catalyst for change, to actually alter public opinion, to generate consensus, enlightenment, awakening.

This is at the heart of what I so hate about the current political system (and why I so loved what John Stewart did the other day on Crossfire): electoral politics has ceased to be any kind of national conversation in which people's beliefs are seen as open to change, or in which problems are actually investigated, discussed and solutions developed. Instead it's one mushy focus group target vs. another. I do believe that Blogging as a communicative form has the potential to change this, but only if bloggers (and their readers) are able to put more distance between what they discuss and the world of the big media spinwars.

I do believe we've reached a tipping point though. The 2008 presidential election is going to be very very different from the one in a couple weeks. I'm not certain that it will be better, but there will be change.

Anyway, enough ramblin' for now.

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Stollerizer

Matt Stoller is good with words:

"Bush can no longer claim to be a superb commander in chief. He can only claim to be an unapologetic one."

I think that's an excellent summary. The rest of the analysis in the article (about why the GOP freaked on Kerry's mention of Mary Cheney) is pretty good too, but those two sentences rang clear like a bell for me.

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A President Falls Before The Sword of TiVo

Bush fucked himself. The "ex-agg-er-a-tion" line is a gaffe on the level of Dukakis in the tank or Dean's post-Iowa scream. The rough cut, which took less than 12 hours to emerge from blogger one good move, is devistating:

Not Concerned

I actually wrote something a lot more coherant about this on BOP News.

It's far from a done deal, but the race is now officially a matter of putting our heads down and running some king-hell Democratic GOTV. Let's get to it.

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Dubya's Last Stand (Plus Some Gut-Check Honesty)

Dubya's Last Stand (Plus Some Gut-Check Honesty)

2233 words on the debate and what I think it's all about with some real good honest stuff at the end. Please go read it and leave me a comment of what you think.

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Election Day Registration Kills Vote-Supression

Voter registration is getting fucked up by Republicans all over the country. It's a goddamn vote-supression shitstorm out there. Florida, Ohio, Wisconsin, Nevada, Minnesota... dirty tricksters and underhanded election officials are tipping the scales all over the place.

One of those states isn't too much of a worry though. Minnesota. Why? Same. Day. Registration. That makes all these bullshit paper games a waste of time, and we need it nationwide next time around. Seriously.

This is someting I'm going to start hollering about soon after the election, but here's a sneak peak. Our use of technology in assisting the mechanisms of governance is bass-ackwards in this country. We have voting machines that don't work and fail to produce paper recipts, and an enormous paper-heavy bureaucracy that's easily fucked with for voter registration.

There's no reason not to have same-day (election day) registration. It can be done. It works. It boosts participation. A little about same-day registration.

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Talkin' Terrorism

Inspired by Pandagon: No Plan, No Problem, and a comment.

I lived through 9/11 in New York, and I recall doing quite a lot of very serious thinking in the days and weeks and months after about what the hell we should do. The vision that kept returning was of Jefferson's post Amercan revolution revelation that unless the sharecropping rentier farmer class that had been a large part of the revolutionary army were tied to the new order somehow, a series of unproductive repeat uphevals were in the mail for sure.

There are so many people out there who are not in any way partners in our massive and unparalelled prosperity. That's a significant root cause of the problems we face.

If you follow this line of reasoning, some people might accuse me of wanting to kowtow to murderers. You obviously can't have a policy of negotiation with individual terrorists as in a hostage situation, but there's a lot of value in looking at the ends a group of people are attempting to achieve by means of a campaign of terror, and try to figure out if there's a way to solve with without killing. We make truces with people who go to war. Sometimes it's even a good idea.

The resistence to this kind of reflection in America -- a resistence characterized by accusations of some isiduous desire to "blame America first" -- is really just a desire for us to be easy on ourselves and not challenge our assumptions about how the world works.

So, I don't want to sound un-American, but if you look at the set of reasons the likes of Bin Laden gives for making war on the US, they're pretty understandible. They don't "hate our freedom." That is and always has been an outrageous lie. This war isn't about Playboy; it's about geopolitical power.

What they hate is having US troops in Saudi Arabia (and now Iraq), US companies buying their oil at discount prices, and US power backing repressive and corrupt regimes throughout the region. The realities of petropolitics mean we can't just grant concessions on most of these things, but the demands are not really crazy or anything. It's really, "get your boys out of my hood, quit jackin' my shit, and quit backing up local thugs."

Until we can find a way to meaningfully address these concerns without sacraficing our national interests, we're stuck with more-than-nuisance terrorism. The Neo-Con fantasy in full regalia sort of represented one way out: proving the terrorists wrong in the moral sphere by conjuring a prosperous, US-friendly democracy in their midst. Problem is you can't "create" a democracy any more than you can "give" anyone freedom. It doesn't work like that. It was a great wet dream, but come the fuck on.

The alternative as I see it is waging a serious campaign of law enforcement, counter-proliferation and diplomacy while systematically weaning ourselves of the Saudi Smack over the next 10 to 20 years to the point where we can actually give the people what they want: the chance to take their freedom from the regimes which supress them and charge us whatever they want for that sweet black gold.

That won't be easy, and it will take a lot of political will, and I'm not saying Kerry will do it. But it's probably going to have to be done.

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Like Science? History? Business? Vote Kerry.

I know I live in a country with a decidedly anti-intellectual bent. Our greatest demogague, O'Reilly, likes to use the term "pinhead." For real. But still, come the fuck on, America. Science rules! Listen to what the nerds have to say!

The New Scientist:

"At its birth two centuries ago, this republic was governed by men who had a deeper understanding of science than most of their successors. The Founding Fathers were children of the Enlightenment, of the Age of Reason.

Today we are governed by people who do not believe in evolution. They have few qualms about distorting scientific knowledge when it does not conform to their political agenda. They speak as if they are entitled not only to their own opinions but also to their own facts."

So said Kurt Gottfried, chairman of the Union of Concerned Scientists, in the opening passage of a damning report released in July on the politicisation of science in 21st-century America. Put bluntly, Gottfried’s charge, and that of the UCS, is that President Bush does not understand science.

He has little interest in the subject, and his administration has grossly manipulated the process by which objective science informs policy. As a result, the US has made the wrong decisions over issues such as climate change, energy, reproductive health and the environment.

So let's run it down. Scientists? Bush must go. Historians? Ditto. Business Professors?

The data make clear that your policy of slashing taxes – primarily for those at the upper reaches of the income distribution – has not worked. The fiscal reversal that has taken place under your leadership is so extreme that it would have been unimaginable just a few years ago. The federal budget surplus of over $200 billion that we enjoyed in the year 2000 has disappeared, and we are now facing a massive annual deficit of over $400 billion. In fact, if transfers from the Social Security trust fund are excluded, the federal deficit is even worse – well in excess of a half a trillion dollars this year alone. Although some members of your administration have suggested that the mountain of new debt accumulated on your watch is mainly the consequence of 9-11 and the war on terror, budget experts know that this is simply false. Your economic policies have played a significant role in driving this fiscal collapse.

That's a scathing indictment. And Nobel Winners agree. I could go on like this. I wanna do the ethical/moral case against Bush too, but all this brain-weight gives me ideas for another ciritique.

In any event, it should be clear that this arrogant manchild of a president cannot listen to criticism or reason, which is clearly a pointed difference between him and his opponenet, and from my perspective this anti-factual bullheadedness is one of the most compelling reasons to work for regime change here at home.

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