"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Beantown Bound

I'm about to head to FORTRESS BOSTONIA (seriously, they're going a little overboard on "security") to do some conventionerring; drop me a line if you're going to be around then. I don't have official creds that I know of, but maybe I can get some young dems into a few rounds of Texas Hold'em and win my way in. I'll bring the party (meaning my HST oufit and iPod voice recorder) if I do.

In terms of interesting things to do in Boston if you're not a party-flack or othewise hopelessly square, I'm looking. Clearly I'll be at our show on tuesday night for sure.

OurConvention seems a decent resource as well.

My flight from Oakland (keepin' it real) to Boston is overnight tonight, and I've got to hit the 21st Century Dems young-folks press conference straight away. Hopefully being bleary(?) will aptly demonstrate my youthful credentials.

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Word Games

I want to play surreal word games to get some topics for conversation. Not because I have nothing to say, but because I have everything to say and not enough focus.

We were trying to fundraise this week at MfA. It was exhausting, but I think we learned a lot.

I have pictures and an essay brewing from vacation. Not quite ready for prime time. Soon.

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Let the games begin

Let the games begin, indeed:

The further into the fortnight you get, the fewer people you have living under coach-policed curfews, forced to abstain from the bacchanalia. And once they're done, watch out: thousands of young people with boundless energy and great legs are suddenly let loose.

Reminds me of the good old days in theater school, except that I didn't get around then. Too young and too serious, I suppose. Ah, to be in the persistant company of creative, limber people clad in movement clothes again. It's a good thing, to work and play with people who are in their physical prime. Deeply healthy if you ask me.

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Wanted: Good Republicans

A little quote from the Royal Tenenbaums:

Royal: Are you trying to steal my woman?
Henry Sherman: I beg your pardon.
Royal: You heard me, Coltrane.
Henry Sherman: "Coltrane"?
Royal: What?
Henry Sherman: Did you just call me Coltrane?
Royal: No.
Henry Sherman: You didn't?
Royal: No.

This is how the current brand of Republican leadership operates. They simply assert whatever is convinent. I got an email from Party Chairman Edward Gelesipe the other day alledging that Joseph Wilson was "a liar."

No evidence was cited, and from all I can see (at best, they may be able to say "Joseph Wilson was wrong") this is a charge completely without merit, but they make it anyway. Lies, lies, lies, the email was entitled. Repetition (ritual, for any anthropology fans out there) often creates its own kind of truth, and the Republican party's current reigning cabal of dark shamen certainly understand this.

While I was on vacation in the woods in Oregon, carving the night-thoughts like a red-hot vibrating knife through kashmere on two microdots of clean Tennesee Acid, it occurred to me that what we need more than anything else to get this nation back on its feet are some good Republicans. It occurred to me just how much was lost when Karl Rove's push-poll backstab found John McCain's kidney in the spring of 2000 down in South Carolina.

I'd wondered about President Gore before, but I'd never stopped to think about President McCain. He was on a roll -- the people's candidate riding the straight talk express and a million dollars raised online -- until Rove's people placed 10's of thousands of phone calls in South Carolina asking likely primary goers (hypothetically, of course) whether they would still support John McCain if they knew he had an illegitimate African American love child.

It doesn't take much to derail an outsider's bid for a presidential nomination; ask Howard Dean about it sometime. John McCain never recovered from that series of dirty tricks, and we're all paying for it now. Ironically, the dearest political cost will be paid by the Republicans themselves.

Think of it. The Republican Party as currently instantiated is locked into the worst kind of political death spiral. Sandbagged with un-truth, their only hope for continued vitality is to further the decline of American politics, to drive down participation, poison discourse, create greater divisions and disillusionment. Their palace of media is crumbling and there emperor has been naked for years, decided he liked clearing brush in the buff and now its too late to go back.

But there's no more money to squeeze out of the working classes without hydraulics. There's no way to get more heavy-handed with messaging without resorting exclusively to overt propaganda. There are precious few young lives left to throw at foreign devils. All that's left is God and stupidity and rallying people to hate the queers, the intellectuals, the tattoed and pierced and secular-community minded. With good winds that can make 2004 competative, but beyond that there's nowhere to go.

Bush and his gang have led the Republican party -- the party of Lincoln and Teddy Roosavelt (who at least understood empire and realized the danger implied by expansive corporate holdings) -- far far afield and deep into the muck. Their expidition in CEO-style governance is going nowhere. El Dorado will not be found, and provisions are running thin. Every day or two another face is gone; perhaps deserted, perhaps lost in the night, perhaps struck out on their own. Around quiet fires on the outskirts of camp there's talk of mutiny, while in the master's big tent corruption is evident. When a full accounting comes to pass, the people will not be pleased.

And they know this. The stink of impending hysteria seeps around the White House as secrets and silence lay deep the seeds of madness. The voodoo ragdoll bundle may or may not fully unravel in the next three months, but the stitching is thin and something unclean is leaking out around the edges. Everyone with skin in the game is hoping to ride it out; score one more time for an immunity fix and walk away a multi-millionare, hole up in one of those new gated communities to ride out armageddon.

I'm left wondering how a Vietnam POW would have reacted to 9/11, whether his secretary of defense would have told people to go looking for targets in unrelated countries, whether he would have resurrected ruination-syle deficits and fed them stereroids; whether he would have isolated America from the rest of the world, divided us sharply against one another, mocked and squandered the ideals of unity and social progress. While I'm sure I'd have plenty to complain about from President McCain, I just can't see him doing any of these things.

The realization rings true like a bell; if America is to prosper again, good Republicans will need to emerge, Republicans in the Eisenhower mold. Bush and his gang have sullied our nation, but we've got a good chance to make a course correction coming up in a few months. For those who believe in the Republican party, there's a hard rain coming. My hope is that the strong and wise emerge with an eye for truth and justice, and that when they do we're ready to meet them halfway with open arms.

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Popular Misconceptions About Liberal Grassroots

I'm a lefty netzy grassroots fanatic, but every time I see this kind of stuff I wince a little:

For all the right wing was ahead of the left in terms of infrastructure over the last 30 years with think tanks and legislative efforts and such, the left is light years ahead with these grassroots efforts - getting people in touch with their neighbors for validation and courage to let them know they're part of a bigger fight.

There's something everyone should know. The GOP does grassroots far better and has been doing it for far longer than the Dems. There are some good grassroots people in various left-leaning do-gooder organizations, but we're just getting the handle on a game that Republicans have been playing like champions for years.

Pick a metric: small dollar donations, in-home gatherings, local party participation, political adjuncts to existing social organizations (e.g. church groups and gun clubs); in all these counts the Right has been way out ahead of the Left for decades. We're getting closer, which is why it feels so exciting, but this hasn't been our strong suit. It is exciting. But I'd think it's important to understand that there are just as many GOP Team Leaders and Parties for the President as there are MoveOn house partiers.

Which isn't to say it's no good having a MoveOn party. It's good! Do it! Do everything! Just beware the high you get off Democracy -- and it's a high, no fucking doubt about that -- can lead to fits of hubris.

Also, it's worth noting that we on the Left do have a distinct grassroots advantage in one respect. Our real advantage (which meshes so well with the netroots angle and why we've been able to make up so much ground so quickly) is that the left is more paradigmatically suited to decentralized, non-hierarchical, network-style organization and action. Our ability to take action and pursue an agenda outside the context of a lockstep campaign allows our activists and organizers to bring more of their skills and resources to bear, while at the same time giving us more power over what in the end is done.

The projects I work on, MfA and CivicSpace being the two big ones, are dedicated to furthering this new-school kind of organizing and activity. It's all very exciting, dreams of John Dewy dancing in our heads, and I'm blessed to be able to do the work. That being said, we've got a long way to go yet.

The problem on the Left -- aside from that we lost our ethical backbone somewhere in the 70s -- is that we tend to fight amongst ourselves a lot. The trends on that are encouraging though. We're getting better, partly because of the consensus that Bush must go, and partly because lots of new people are getting involved who aren't in it to fight with other Lefties, and partly because we're learning to trust one another and communicate better.

Links are being forged this year that will be important for decades to come. There's a sea-change at work, and we won't really know what it's all about until after the fact, but it seems to be generally positive. It's a bright future if we can keep up the good work and live good lives at the same time. Not easy; but doable, that.

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Travel Report

The past week was a busy one; sorry for the lack of content. Semi-final count on the OCF GOTV drive: 881 voters registered, 6,500+ pledges to vote, and a lot of fun had.

I've got more cooking; insights into musty corners of the new American mind and all sorts of funny pictures and goofs from my trip up to Oregon. But I'm back in SF now and I need to unpack, shower, and re-construct my room.

Much love for you all.

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MSNBC - The Junior Varsity

MSNBC - The Junior Varsity

MfA featured heavily in the latest NewsWeek.

Also, for a larf: the new Partisan Jab is up.

I've got about 600 emails to get through. Talk to y'all later.

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OCF

As of this morning our crew has registered about 600 voters, and collected more than 5,000 pledges to vote. It's been a learning experience, but also a lot of fun. Good crew.

Vacation is good. I'm feeling renewed. I still need about three days worth of sleep (don't get a lot of that out here), but my mental and spiritual batteries are getting charged up good.

See y'all soon.

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NY Post Screws Up

Daily Kos || Ha ha

I'm just checking email and printing things before going off register and organize hippies to make an electoral difference here in Oregon, so in the background I pop up the ol' Kos, and this is at the top of the page. I don't realize right away that it's a goof, and oh man.

Otherwise everything is cool. I'm out for a while.

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Vacation: Now - July 13th or so

Vacation, bitch! It's a celebration! Started it off with several bangs last night, nudge nudge, wink wink, saynomore, saynomore.

While out of pocket, I'll be helping to run the fair's first-ever voter-registration drive. Hells yeah.

Posting may be sporadic for a week. Love to all y'all. I've got my camera. Pictures when I get back.

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