"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Debate Watching

Watched the debates in a packed room in Ann Arbor last night. I had a couple pints of Old Style in me, so take this with a pretzel, but I feel it's pretty strong.

I was very surprised by the debates. This is not what I expected. As you can read below, I was pretty pessimistic about the format, and fearful that Kerry would eat it on style. I was wrong on both counts. The format kept things focused -- no interruptions -- and against all odds, Bush fell flat on his face in the style contest. Make no mistake; this debate will alter the dynamics of the race. It will demoralize Republicans and energize Democrats. It should also bring some independents and progressives into the Kerry camp.

Substance
Look at what the candidates repeated. Bush repeatedly talked about "what kind of message" his un-election would send. "Don't send mixed messages" he repeated. The only remotely positive statements that Bush pushed were, "it's hard work" (though this seems more like aqn ill advised excuse, considering that Bush has spent 27% of his time in office out of the office) and "we're gonna win," though he didn't explain how.

Kerry emphasized a "fresh start, with new credibility." He didn't repeat these key words as often as Bush hit his talking points, but those were clearly the words he wants to emphasize. He also had a devistating attack in the "we didn't use the best trained troops in the world to go after Osama; we outsourced that job to Afghan warlords, and bin Laden escaped." It only came up twice, but it's the kind of line that works like a serious political shank to the kidney. You only need to land it once and then stand back while your opponent bleeds out.

Beyond the Talking Points
The president at one point asserted "I know how the world works" but he displayed the confusion evident in his administration. The room I was in erupted when he verbally mixed up Saddam Hussein and Osama Bin Laden, but the far more telling moment was when talking about the war in Iraq he said, "we were attacked. We had to respond."

To his credit, Kerry called Bush out on this. I thought it was the most poignant moment in the debate, because this is exactly how many Americans look at the situation, and that Kerry was able to point out the flaw may resonate.

The other big things that jumped out at me were Kerry's insistence that the US should have no long-term designs on Iraq -- calling out the 14 "long-life" bases that are under construction -- and that bringing in the international community will mean ending the profiteering deals the Pentagon made with corporations like Halliburton and Bechtel.

Those are strong statements. He's certainly not saying "bring the troops home now" he is talking about the steps that need to happen for the winning of the peace in Iraq to become an international project, which is the only way it will ever succeed.

Conclusion
Kerry won this debate. Most surprisingly, he won on style as well as substance. He seemed calm, assured, assertive without being menacing or aggressive. Bush on the other hand took too many long pauses, seemed hunched, pinched, uncomfortable, even snippy at points. Kerry looked like somebody who knows what he's doing, whereas Bush looked like he'd rather be anywhere else. The effects will take a couple of days to set in, but I would expect the polls to reflect some kind of shift by mid next week.

Bush's reliance on talking points made him sound repetative. In an election which most people are giving half an ear to (e.g. vs Gore), this might work -- the repetition gets something across -- but in these serious times when bars and living rooms are packed with people paying close attention, the inability of Bush to project substence makes him sound childish, which can hurt him badly.

In fact, Bush really has very little to run on. The entire subtext of the Bush re-election effort is a negative message, that (as the team leader email said), John Kerry has a record of wavering in the face of real challenges. And we can't have that. No sir. I don't know what "record" that's based on, but Kerry took a lot of the wobble out of his image last night by clarifying his reasons for authorizing force and then calling Iraq the "wrong war at the wrong place at the wrong time," which essentially comes down to the fact that Bush promised one kind of action -- careful planning, international partnerships, war as a last resort -- and delivered almost the exact opposite.

People are interested in making a change. If Kerry's task, as the story goes, is somewhat akin to getting hired by the American public, he just gave a great first interview.

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Name The October Surprise; And Some Ranting

Name The October Surprise is an interesting contest being run by NYC Democrat Mark Green to collect ideas as to what the "October Surprise" will be.

My guess is that it was the formatting for the debates, which by barring direct discussion between the candidates essentially means Kerry cannot score any points on Bush. The election is fundimentally Kerry's to win, but unless he can make a move it's not going to happen. Bush can and will be on auto-pilot for the next month; going around to supportive rallies, running millions of dollars in ads, and relying on the GOP apparatus to turn out his supporters (and suppress Kerry's).

Bush's approval is soft -- 45% -- but he's leading (slightly) in the polls because Kerry hasn't been able to make the sale. Barring some radical shift in strategy or unforseen developments outside the race (unlikely as Bush has everything from Iraq to the congress in a holding pattern until Nov 2nd), the debates were the last big opportunity for Kerry to shake things up. With the rules that the GOP pushed through -- no direct questions, no rebuttal, pre-submitted questions, 30-second answers get a buzzer -- it's dueling soundbytes, not a chance any new information to emerge. Bad news for the JK campaign.

The race is probably going to come down to a grinding ground campaign between two candidates who don't really inspire anyone. Bush has some true believers and some true haters, but most people are not impressed by his term in office, for good reason. Candidate Kerry tends to be unspectacular on the trail (as does Bush, reall), and (like Bush) can be painfully awkward on television. They're both weak candidates, but while Bush is essentially at the top of his form, I really expected more from Kerry. We'll see what happens tonight and whether or not he can "close" this race as strongly as he has in his past challenges.

It's tough for me. On a purely emperical basis, Bush's presidency is literally one of the worst (if not the worst) in our history. By all rights, he should be rejected in something approaching landslide proportions. His supporters usuallly throw out a hearty "remember 9/11" anytime anyone mentions this, but that's really no fucking excuse.

The economic disruption caused by two buildings collapsing in lower manhattan and the bursting of a stock market bubble is hardly any reason for 1.2 million more Americans to live in poverty. It's hardly any reason for our international reputation to be at an all-time low. It's hardly any reason for 3 million more without health care or record levels of industrial pollution. It's hardly a reason for 10-year deficits of a scale that could undermine our (and the world's) economy. It's hardly a reason for a misguided occupation that's spiraling out of control.

These things happened because Bush made wrong choices, either through intentional avarice and pure incompetance. If he is re-elected, it will be an all-time low point for the Democratic party and the American system of government in general, because abysmally poor performance in office will have been rewarded with re-election.

So I'll say it again; this probably comes down to the ground game. There's not much time left. Get registered. Make sure your friends are registered. Vote early and spend some time this month making sure as many like-minded people as yourself are hustled to the polls. Asking can increase someone's likelyhood of voting more than anything else, especially if the ask comes from a friend. Do it.

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Two A's, Five S's

BAADASSSSS!

You need to see this movie. Serious as cancer.

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Wanting to Believe

I want to see this movie, Going Upriver, mainly because of this review:

What director GEORGE BUTLER has made is a fascinating documentary about a transformation in a man caught by the Kennedy dream of “ask what you can do for your country,” signed up to fight the communists in Vietnam, began to see the truth of that war and felt that his duty to his country and fellow soldiers was to try and help end the war. Basically – that’s what this documentary is about.

The other night as I was ranting to myself and listening to some old-school techno music (as I sometimes do to let off steam) one of the things I realized -- re-discovered, really -- was a desperate need to he hopeful rather than afraid for the future; to look forward to winning rather than dreading the prospect of loss. This need is real, and must be answered if we're to make progress.

Neither the radical establishment (yeah, there's a radical establishment) or the Democratic party have answers to this. I can't speak for conservatives or Republicans, but it strikes me they rule through fear and greed more than hope. Even Regan's sunny optimism was kind of a nostalgic "roll back time" fairy-tale coded to appeal to people's uncomfortability with the empowerment of minorities and women.

I'm reading Joe Trippi's book -- The Revolution Will Not Be Televised -- and it's alternately firing me up, which I need badly, and making me really fucking sad, which I don't know helps me out right now. It hurts to remember that we had the potential for a truly transformative political campaign, and we blew it. Those kinds of opportunities to take a great leap forward don't come very often.

So I want Kerry to step up. I want him to ask for people's votes, for their participation. I want him to present himself as something people should be hopeful for. I'm not holding my breath, but it would be nice. I want him to look at our petition and think about what it means. I'm glad he's standing strong on Iraq; it's a big issue. But as we hit the closing stretch in this election, I really want him to open it up Howard Dean style. I want his campaign to be about more than him. This election is so huge. It really is. The choice we make as a country here is fucking monumental, and it will set the tone for the next decade.

Are we going to start getting rid of the bullshit or are we going to let it drown us? Are we going to reform fucking everything or not?

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Neo-Con Bukakke

I've written a rather lengthy summary of what's gone on with Iraq over on Music for America. Hoping to lend some context to everything we've got going on now:

Neo-Con Bukakke (An Unfortunate Episode In History)

Fixed link. shortened title. This is how you hone a meme.

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Seriously Unamerican

In case you forgot we are in the midst of a frightening and dangrous drift away from our national core principles, here's a reminder. Found this in Tampabay.com Online Forums

I turned my back on the mewling Stevens during the Salman Rushdie episode. Although, to be sure, I'd have a bit more sympathy for him if his songs did not immediately cause me to retch uncontrollably. I seriously doubt he's a "terrorist threat"; that being said, I could care less whether the ****ing twit is barred from entering the country.

So does anyone else see how fucked up and fundimentally unamerican this is? I'm using "unamerican" seriously here.

Oh man.

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Dear Jon Stewart

Dear Jon Stewart: If you like the Daily Show, go sign this thing.

Pass it on.

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Vanity Fair: War and Destiny

Vanity Fair: War and Destiny

Does anyone else remember this shit? I don't have a flatbed sanner so I had to take a digital photo of the cover I've got (excuse the quality), but seriously can you believe this shit?

If you fucked up this badly in the private sector, you'd be so fucking fired you wouldn't belive it, or so the story goes. One of the dirty little secrets about late-stage corporate crony capitalism is that there's very very little in the way of entrepreneurialism or accountability within the executive regions of most companies.

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Krugman

I recently scored tickets to see Paul in mid october in Berkeley, which should be fun. His column runs Tuesdays and Fridays. Today is good, as usual. Read it if you haven't, and contemplate what it means that this is the voice of a the wonky little Princeton professor who the Times hired to be a bookish voice on economic issues.

You can look at it two ways. One: here's this wonky little bookworm and he's pissed off at what the Bush administration is doing. Where there's smoke there's fire. Two: why the fuck is the econ guy the leading voice of criticism against the Bush administration in all the world of syndicated columnism?

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For Political Reasons

One of the big reasons Iraq is al-FUBAR is that so many choices were made with political considerations outweighting operational imperatives. Kevin Drumm is no Flaming Leftie:

[The upcoming] election, and the political considerations that go along with it, have been driving our military strategy for the past two years. Before the war, we passed up a chance to take out terrorist mastermind Abu Musab Zarqawi -- for political reasons. We invaded with too few troops -- for political reasons. We lowballed the cost of the war -- for political reasons. We ignored the UN and then turned around and pleaded for their help -- for political reasons. Then we installed Iyad Allawi as president behind the UN's back -- for political reasons.

He's got links for all those things too. The most devistating part is the closer though:

Thursday's press conference was just scary. It's no longer clear if George Bush is merely a cynical, calculating politician — which would be bad enough — or if he actually believes all the happy talk about Iraq that his speechwriters produce for him. Increasingly, though, it seems like the latter: he genuinely doesn't have a clue about what's going on. What's more, his staff is keeping him in a sort of Nixonian bubble, afraid to tell him the truth and afraid to take any positive action for fear that it might affect the election.

As I said before (and I'll say again, it's my new "message"), working to unseat this administration is possibly the most noble effort anyone of you can undertake in the next five weeks. There are lots of ways to participate. Find one that lets you be who you are and use your skills and do it.

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