"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Knives Out: David Brooks Smears Dean

The Long Knives certainly are coming out against my man Dean. In today's NYT, conservative columnist David Brooks pens an artfully crafted attack at Deans base of support entitled "Bred For Power," an attempt to link Dean and Dubya on a number of points vis-a-vis their upper class backgrounds. It's quite a hack job, if I do say so myself.

First of all, like any good smear, this column contains some kernel of truth, giving the overall impression that the author is being, well, fair and balanced. Brooks is correct that Dean's family background is similar to the Bush's in WASPy stature. From this base premise, he ventures off into the attack zone.

Most egregiously, he compare's Bush's and Dean's "Prince Hal Phase's:"

Bush drank too much at country clubs. Dean got a medical deferment from Vietnam and spent his time skiing in Aspen. Both decided one night that it was time to get serious about life and give up drinking. Dean was 32; Bush was 40.

This almost offhand comparison makes it sound like Dean and Dubya have comparable young-adult biographies. Thankfully, this is easily refuted by the facts.

Howard Dean reported to a military doctor for a physical examination as required by draft law at the time of his graduation ('71) and was rejected from service, plain and simple. As a recent college grad in a disillusioned time, he went off to Aspen to ski for about a year before returning to New York to work on Wall St.

By contrast, George W Bush used family connections to get into the Texas Air Guard as a way around serving in Vietnam. He then went AWOL from his position for nearly a year after being transferred to Alabama, and has never attempted to explain that decision or account for how he spent the missing time.

Dubya was by all accounts a serious alcoholic, drunk at noon and picking fights. It's also tacitly understood that he abused cocaine for a spell. Talk to anyone on the inside during the 70s or 80s and you're bound to here some good stories. I have.

Dean by his own admission "partied pretty hard" in college, but you'd be hard-pressed to say he was at any point a drunk. Dubya dried out in a 12-step program, part of a total born-again conversion. Dean simply stopped. He says he, "didn't like who I was when I drank."

The rest of Brooks' piece is a hazy endorsement/indictment of the WASP establishment into which both Dubya and Dean were born. He links their leadership styles and boldness as being products of a privileged yet competitive upbringing, but makes few other definitive assessments. Personally, I get the sense that some part of Brooks actually admires the good doctor, or at least wishes they were on the same team.

However, there's a lot to be gleaned from the two hard biographical data points Brooks references. Dean did what was required of him with regards to service in Vietnam. Bush used family connections to get a do-nothing assignment, then ditched that responsibility too. Bush was only able to beat his drinking habit by being born again. Dean, by then a medical doctor, made a decision based on the facts.

These basic paradigmatic distinctions -- along with the fact that Dean possesses an engaging and curious intellect -- make all the difference in the world when it comes to comparing and contrasting these two men in their capacity to perform the duties of President.

One man has a long track record of taking responsibility seriously; the other has a record of dropped balls, some admitted but mostly not. One man has a fact-based outlook on life; the other takes a faith-based approach to policy. One man struck out to make his own life and his own career in a place where his family name meant little; the other partied until he was 40 then drifted into the family business, starting a pattern of cronyism that would follow him into public office.

Brooks's basic premise that both men come from privilege and were put through an educational system meant to groom them for leadership is essentially correct, but the meaningful similarities between Dean and Dubya stop there.

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We are on the move

It's a different feeling this time around, the annaversary of the national tragedy. Last time I was pretty distressed. This year, I feel like we're coming around. Which is not to say there still aren't plenty of sad notes, but the tone now is passion and progress, not mute pain and mourning.

Some people are still figuring out what a royal screwjob the post-trauma handling was. For instance, 24 months after the fact, we now know the air at ground zero was poisonous, which explains why my man Archie -- vetran NYC EMT -- at the corner bar mentioned that his lungs are fucked up the other night. Folks are starting to get a glimmer of an incling that the current national leadership might not be the best for guiding us forth from the mire we've wandered into, and I'm finding acres of purpose and a new career in helping that consciousness emerge.

So it's my hope we can figure out how to organize under a big banner of hope and community, avoid the flags of fear or anger or ego. It's going to be a challange over the next year, but I can think of no better reason for getting up early and staying up late. If we want a better tomorrow, it's going to come because we worked for it, not because someone offered it to us.

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My Thoughts On Kucinich

I got an anonymous request from my contact page asking for my thoughts on Dennis Kucinich. I do really read those messages, you know. Since many folk I know are fans of Congressperson Kucinich, I've devoted quite a bit of thought to this. I did a Dean vs. Kucinich head-to-head a while ago, but there's always room for more explication. So here's my take.

Dennis Kucinich seems to be a good man. He's got a record to be proud of as a representative from Ohio. He certainly has a vision for the world which is positive. I'm glad he's making a go of it to push that vision to the fore.

That being said I cannot support him as a candidate for president, for a number of reasons. First and formost because he cannot win. This is political reality. I am a Nader voter, and Nader -- though he could not win -- had an achievable goal: to reach 5% and guarantee future matching funds for the Green party. Moreover, while Kucinich's has a vision for an America of the future, the presidency does not come with a magic wand. Even if he were to do the impossible and reach the white house, much of what Kucinich proposes would be futile givin the checks and balances on the office.

Engaging as a participant in the political process means giving time and energy to support one candidate, and by definition to not give the same amount to time, energy and funds to another. As such, for me as an individual, Kucinich's campaign represents a black hole for political energy. That which goes into it will not emerge again, is wasted.

Finally, to be honest, there are a lot of things I don't like about Dennis Kucinich. I don't like his history of using racial fear to win elections in Cleveland. I don't like his bitterness. People have been pushing the "Mean Dean" meme for a while, but looking at the debates, Dennis is the one who comes of as the most sour and angry. Not at the president either, but at the other candidates, at America in general. His candidacy reminds me of all the negatives of Nader's campaign, and few of the positives.

Furthermore, the "movement" that his campaign engenders is to my eyes frankly un-progressive. It is backed by the activist establishment, what Heidegger called "left-wing fascism," a collection of mostly well-intentioned people who take a seriest of mostly dissident positions. Kucinich also has the most obvious retro 60s throwback appeal, something that lands close to home for me but which ultimately I must reject. There is no going back. Manufacturing jobs are not coming back to America. Globalization cannot be undone. If we are to have a positive and prosperous future for ourselves and the world, it is going to be something new, something that embraces the chancing economic and politcal realities we now live in.

In the end, my basic pro-Dean impulse -- that he's a fact-based candidate -- is what drives me away from Kucinich. His positions seem to be dreams and only dreams; and while we need ideals and big thinking and bold visions for the future, pure dreaming is not the stuff of progressive policy. If politics is where the rubber meets the road, where real things happen in real people's real lives, Kucinich is attempting to drive a car with no tires.

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Emergence

Going through the Burn was a politically affirming experience for me. It refreshed my feeling that better things are possible, and reminded me how many Good People there are who just need a little nudge, a little taste of starry connection in order to catch fire themselves. There's an amazing amount of good work being done now by an amazing amount of people. I might be joining the fray full time soon (crossing fingers double-time), and won't that be something if it happens.

In the mean time, the web continues to provide a place for decent people to express quality things. Here's a brilliantly written, very well researched, often hillarious dissection of the right-wing's attempt to smear Cruz Bustamante for his college-days involvement with a Latino student group. Bustamante is the top Democratic candidate running in the California recall. Hopefully the recall itself, which is a sham and a hack, will fail. Even if it does, this man is going to be the next governor; and it's about time.

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What is Compassion?

We've all heard that George W. Bush is a compassionate conservative. I remember hearing that phrase a lot on AM radio back in 2000 when my summer job had me driving Bill's old Oldsmobile Cutlass around a lot. AM was all I got and inevitably I grew tired of golden oldies and tried out talk radio for a lark. But I never really understood what "compassionate conservative" means.

Well, thanks to Boy George's own website, and a tip from the impeccable Daily Kos I now know. To Bush, compassion means talking to black people.

I'm not kidding. Check the link out. Better than 90% of them are Bush making nice to brown people. Nothing else. That's what's listed under "compassion." It just fits in so well with the neo-colonial worldview wrt. Iraq. George W. Bush: Taking Up The White Man's Burden. Fitting that Kipling's poem was in response to the US occupation of the Phillippines, which has been suggested as perhaps an informative historical example of what our desire to improve other nations hath wrought in the past.

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Shot of Dean

And real quickly, here's some hot and salty Howard Dean grits: he's up in New Hampshire and his campaign-man Trippi has a great interview over on Larry Lessig's blog. If you're one of my friends who scratches his/her head and squints when I try to explain why this is a revolution, read it. If not, read it anyway. It nicely summarizes a lot of the reasons why I think the 2004 election could be a very real tipping point for the US and for the world.

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McFunny

So I do read the Dean campaign blog at least once a day. I'm a fan, we all know that. But I really got a kick out of the photo for this post. If'n you click the link you'll get to see Dean's Iowa campaign vehicle -- a donated RV from an Iowan supporter with the license place "McFun" -- right behing the John Edwards tour bus. Now, Dean did real good with fundraising last quarter, beating all other candidates for that quarter, but clearly Edwards -- scion of the working class -- is clearly sitting on a big pile of cash.

Or you can see the man play the guitar. Still waiting for an mp3 though.

This goes along with my Howard Dean is the Humility candidate. He's not really a joe sixpack, nor does he attempt to portrey himself as such, but his candidacy does exhibit a lack of pretention I find appealing. Why just look at these photos from the Iowa state fair. Hard to imagine John Kerry in that photo spread.

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Important Things

Important things are happening in the world. How do we learn about them? Most people I know watch television, which I pick up by proxy but don't really pursue myself. I prefer the subjective but un-spinnable feed of human experience. Here's the latest in that vis-a-vis our current misadventures in occupied Iraq:

TurningTables is a blog kept by some G.I. overseas. Maybe it's a pentagon plant. Maybe it's not and this guy is cruising for a court-marshal. In any case, it's fascinating reading, regardless of its veracity.

On the other end, Salam Pax continues to bring the real stuff. His friend G. recently caught a beating from some US forces; not a good sign. He also publishes more polished prose in the Guardian.

All of which reminds me to get back to work on my interview with my Air Force friend.

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Kudo For Me 2!

Seems something I wrote has gotten some high-profile linkage. I'm just tickled. Have to pump out some more premium motivational content for the old DeanSpace, which grows ever more popular as the word seeps out.

Feels good to be a part of something that might be significant.

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My Moment Of Zen

Here it is: Republicans for Dean. 14 months before the election too.

Yesterday was purgative. Huge bike ride up into the bourgeois and oligarcic hills of Piedmont, high above the city of Oakland. I found a vista between two incomplete mansion-sized houses which afforded almost 270 degrees of amazing bay views. Sweated my ass off too, worked through a lot of shit. I'm a better animal for it.

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