Sep 142004
 

Last night, Jon Stewart and the Daily Show continued their campaign against CNN Crossfire and Chicago-Sun Times commentator Robert Novak in a segment called Douchebag of Liberty and bestowed the Congressional Medal of Douchebaggery on him. His outing of a CIA agent for partisan reasons, refusal to reveal his source for the outing, recent editorial on the Swift Boat Veteran ads and hypocritical call for CBS to reveal it’s sources for the recent Bush Texas National Guard memos have convinced me that it’s time to start paying tribute to the man, blogger-style. Who’s with me? Let’s all show our love for the Douchebag of Liberty.

Of course, someone has already registered douchebagofliberty.com, so make sure and link that to our favorite commentator’s name.

 Posted by on September 14, 2004 at 3:45 pm
Sep 052004
 

I just finished re-reading Animal Farm after finally reading Homage to Catalonia a few weeks back. A portion of the preface struck me as worth repeating.

The issue involved here is quite a simple one: Is every opinion, however unpopular — however foolish, even — entitled to a hearing? Put it in that form and nearly any English intellectual will feel that he ought to say ‘Yes’. But give it a concrete shape, and ask, ‘How about an attack on Stalin? Is that entitled to a hearing?’, and the answer more often than not will be ‘No’, In that case the current orthodoxy happens to be challenged, and so the principle of free speech lapses. Now, when one demands liberty of speech and of the press, one is not demanding absolute liberty. There always must be, or at any rate there always will be, some degree of censorship, so long as organised societies endure. But freedom, as Rosa Luxembourg [sic] said, is ‘freedom for the other fellow’. The same principle is contained in the famous words of Voltaire: ‘I detest what you say; I will defend to the death your right to say it.’ If the intellectual liberty which without a doubt has been one of the distinguishing marks of western civilisation means anything at all, it means that everyone shall have the right to say and to print what he believes to be the truth, provided only that it does not harm the rest of the community in some quite unmistakable way. Both capitalist democracy and the western versions of Socialism have till recently taken that principle for granted. Our Government, as I have already pointed out, still makes some show of respecting it. The ordinary people in the street-partly, perhaps, because they are not sufficiently interested in ideas to be intolerant about them-still vaguely hold that ‘I suppose everyone’s got a right to their own opinion.’ It is only, or at any rate it is chiefly, the literary and scientific intelligentsia, the very people who ought to be the guardians of liberty, who are beginning to despise it, in theory as well as in practice.

One of the peculiar phenomena of our time is the renegade Liberal. Over and above the familiar Marxist claim that ‘bourgeois liberty’ is an illusion, there is now a widespread tendency to argue that one can only defend democracy by totalitarian methods. If one loves democracy, the argument runs, one must crush its enemies by no matter what means. And who are its enemies? It always appears that they are not only those who attack it openly and consciously, but those who ‘objectively’ endanger it by spreading mistaken doctrines. In other words, defending democracy involves destroying all independence of thought. This argument was used, for instance, to justify the Russian purges. The most ardent Russophile hardly believed that all of the victims were guilty of all the things they were accused of: but by holding heretical opinions they ‘objectively’ harmed the régime, and therefore it was quite right not only to massacre them but to discredit them by false accusations. The same argument was used to justify the quite conscious lying that went on in the leftwing press about the Trotskyists and other Republican minorities in the Spanish civil war. And it was used again as a reason for yelping against habeas corpus when Mosley was released in 1943.

These people don’t see that if you encourage totalitarian methods, the time may come when they will be used against you instead of for you. Make a habit of imprisoning Fascists without trial, and perhaps the process won’t stop at Fascists. Soon after the suppressed Daily Worker had been reinstated, I was lecturing to a workingmen’s college in South London. The audience were working-class and lower-middle class intellectuals — the same sort of audience that one used to meet at Left Book Club branches. The lecture had touched on the freedom of the press, and at the end, to my astonishment, several questioners stood up and asked me: Did I not think that the lifting of the ban on the Daily Worker was a great mistake? When asked why, they said that it was a paper of doubtful loyalty and ought not to be tolerated in war time. I found myself defending the Daily Worker, which has gone out of its way to libel me more than once. But where had these people learned this essentially totalitarian outlook? Pretty certainly they had learned it from the Communists themselves! Tolerance and decency are deeply rooted in England, but they are not indestructible, and they have to be kept alive partly by conscious effort. The result of preaching totalitarian doctrines is to weaken the instinct by means of which free peoples know what is or is not dangerous. The case of Mosley illustrates this. In 1940 it was perfectly right to intern Mosley, whether or not he had committed any technical crime. We were fighting for our lives and could not allow a possible quisling to go free. To keep him shut up, without trial, in 1943 was an outrage. The general failure to see this was a bad symptom, though it is true that the agitation against Mosley’s release was partly factitious and partly a rationalisation of other discontents. But how much of the present slide towards Fascist ways of thought is traceable to the ‘anti-Fascism’ of the past ten years and the unscrupulousness it has entailed?

 Posted by on September 5, 2004 at 7:12 pm
Sep 022004
 

Zell Miller speaking about John Kerry on March 1, 2001

Zell Miller speaking about John Kerry last night.

The GOP has a term they’ve been using an awful lot in the media that could characterize the difference between those two speeches, but I can’t seem to recall it. Can anyone help me out?

DailyKos linked AP photos from last night. Cheney’s makes him look meaner than he actually was. Miller’s doesn’t quite capture some of the glares he was giving. I’ll have to see if I can find a better one. There wasn’t a whole lot of “compassionate conservatism” going on last night.

EDIT: Transcript of Wolf Blitzer and Jeff Greenfield confronting Zell Miller with the inaccuracies of his speech right after he gave it.

 Posted by on September 2, 2004 at 3:54 pm
Aug 252004
 

I’m so pissed off at the way the media is churning the swift boat issue over and over this past week or so. Josh Marshall has a lot of good stuff about it as usual along with the guys at Pandagon. Jon Stewart had the ultimate comment last night, though. I need to find a way to easily transfer stuff from my Time Warner-owned DVR so that I can post clips and not have to rely on Lisa Rein all of the time.

Anyway, Stewart commented on a appearance by Bush-Cheney campaign manager Ken Mehlmen on Meet the Press this past weekend. Mehlmen was refuting an article in the NY Times showing ties to those responsible for the swift boat ads and Bush. I don’t have the exact quote, but he compared the article to the old Kevin Bacon game about six degrees of separation. Stewart ran with it, trying to see how many steps it would take him to get from Bush to the ads. The first attempt went: Bush to Karl Rove, his top advisor, to Bob Perry, the main financer of the ads. Stewart was very pleased with himself and tried to do better. Starting with Bush, he went to Ken Cordier, who was a member of his campaign’s steering committee for veterans until the link was pointed out and he resigned. Stewart happily exclaimed that he had done it in one degree. He followed that with something to the effect of:

Hey, I’m really good at connecting the dots. You want to know something? I tried to play that game linking Saddam to Al Qaeda. It’s much harder.

Yep. Love that Jon Stewart.

They followed that up with a segment with Rob Corddry who speculated that the swift boat issue wasn’t going away anytime soon due to the appearance of a new group: Drunken Stateside Sons of Privilege for Plausible Deniability.

John Kerry will be their guest tonight.

 Posted by on August 25, 2004 at 12:23 am
Aug 182004
 

Well, I did manage one non-political post this week.

Kuff points out that Becky Klein, the challenger to my beloved congressman, Lloyd Doggett, will probably not unseat him this November, but that if Bush wins again, she’s a front runner for head of the FCC. I’m sure we can expect her to continue the Howard Stern witchhunt and trust that she will do her best to protect us from Janet Jackson’s right nipple. It also appears that she has the current administrations love for secrecy.

Boy, I’m growing more and more fond of her by the minute.

 Posted by on August 18, 2004 at 6:31 pm
Aug 132004
 

I’ve been quoted out of context in the past. In general, mainstream media has a real problem taking quotes out of context and using them. This is a tactic currently being employed by both sides of this year’s presidential race as well.

It’s no secret that I’m not a fan of Bush, so I was, of course, amused at the quote from his remarks at the UNITY conference last week. Now, of course, Kerry’s remarks the day before at the same conference are being taken out of context and attacked by The Evil Cyborg, err..Dick Cheney.

Let’s have a look at the two in and out of context:

Here’s Cheney talking about Kerry’s remarks out of context:

Senator Kerry has also said that if he were in charge he would fight a “more sensitive” war on terror. (Laughter.) America has been in too many wars for any of our wishes, but not a one of them was won by being sensitive. President Lincoln and General Grant did not wage sensitive warfare — nor did President Roosevelt, nor Generals Eisenhower and MacArthur. A “sensitive war” will not destroy the evil men who killed 3,000 Americans and who seek the chemical, nuclear and biological weapons to kill hundreds of thousands more. The men who beheaded Daniel Pearl and Paul Johnson will not be impressed by our sensitivity. As our opponents see it, the problem isn’t the thugs and murderers that we face, but our attitude. Well, the American people know better. They know that we are in a fight to preserve our freedom and our way of life, and that we are on the side of rights and justice in this battle. Those who threaten us and kill innocents around the world do not need to be treated more sensitively. They need to be destroyed.

Here’s what Kerry actually said:

I will fight this war on terror with the lessons I learned in war. I defended this country as a young man, and I will defend it as president of the United States.

I believe I can fight a more effective, more thoughtful, more strategic, more proactive, more sensitive war on terror that reaches out to other nations and brings them to our side and lives up to American values in history.

I lay out a strategy to strengthen our military, to build and lead strong alliances and reform our intelligence system. I set out a path to win the peace in Iraq and to get the terrorists, wherever they may be, before they get us.

You don’t really get the same effect from Cheney’s two word quote, do you? Now let’s look at Bush.

Here’s the quote taken out of context. I’ve left in the leadup question so that you can see what he was answering.

MARK TRAHANT, SEATTLE POST INTELLIGENCER: Good morning. My name is Mark Trahant. I’m the editorial page editor of the Seattle Post Intelligencer and a member of the Native American Journalists Association.

Most schoolkids learn about government in the context of city, county, state and federal. And of course, tribal governments are not part of that at all.

Mr. President, you’ve been a governor and a president, so you have a unique experience looking at it from two directions.

What do you think tribal sovereignty means in the 21st century? And how do we resolve conflicts between tribes in the federal and state governments?

BUSH: Tribal sovereignty means that; it’s sovereign. I mean, you’re a — you’ve been given sovereignty, and you’re viewed as a sovereign entity. And therefore, the relationship between the federal government and tribes is one between sovereign entities.

Bush’s first paragraph response sounds even worse on tape because he halts and stumbles through it. If we add his next comment, it doesn’t look nearly as bad, although he still doesn’t really answer Mr. Trahant’s question.

Now, the federal government has got a responsibility on matters like education and security to help, and health care. And it’s a solemn duty. And from this perspective, we must continue to uphold that duty.

I think that one of the most promising areas of all is to help with economic development. And that means helping people understand what it means to start a business. That’s why the Small Business Administration has increased loans. It means, obviously, encouraging capital flows.

But none of that will happen unless the education systems flourish and are strong. And that’s why I told you we’ve spent $1.1 billion in the reconstruction of Native American schools.

Bush completely ignores Trahant’s question after stumbling through his ramble on sovereignty and heads to the comfort of some talking points.

This is the great thing about the Web. You can go read these speeches in their entirety yourself and not have to rely on the spin machines of the two parties and a mass media that reports that spin. I only hope I’m not the only one doing it.

By the way, while reading through the transcripts, let’s nitpick. Bush claims:

You know, when I came into office, we had a problem with our economy; it was in a recession.

Bzzzt. Wrong. Bush took office on January 20th, 2001. By many of the accounts that I can find, the recession began in March of that year and some say (note the Fox News joke) that it wasn’t even really a recession. I’m just pointing out that, through no fault or merit of his own, the economy was, in fact, not in a recession when Bush entered office. And if he’s trying to take credit for pulling us out of a recession that may or may not have existed at all and setting us on the road to more prosperous times, he’s not going to like today’s stock market news.

EDIT: Jon Stewart pointed out on the Daily Show tonight that Cheney might want to take a particular paragraph of Bush’s own speech at the UNITY conference out of context.

Now, in terms of the balance between running down intelligence and bringing people to justice obviously is — we need to be very sensitive on that.

Hmmm…well, I’m sure you’ll read the rest of his speech so that you won’t jump to conclusions.

 Posted by on August 13, 2004 at 12:19 am
Aug 112004
 

I saw this a couple of weeks ago and thought about posting it. Now that it’s been updated, I will. Glen E. Friedman, who I generally respect except for some of his more militant vegan views, is using Russell Simmons’s old place right next to the site of the World Trade Center (featured on MTV Cribs just a month or so before 9/11) to stage a protest against everyone’s favorite administration. Right on.

 Posted by on August 11, 2004 at 11:16 pm
Aug 112004
 

Orwell and Bradbury, here we come. I’m not sure if this is one of the intended consequences of terrorism, but it definitely could be considered a fringe benefit by someone wishing the breakdown of a (once) free society. The misapplication of security policies by troglodytes is resulting in the kind of climate that Orwell and Bradbury wrote about in their respective masterpieces, 1984 and Fahrenheit 451. Am I being a little alarmist? Yes, but I don’t like the direction this is heading. I sincerely hope that every high school in America has both of these books on their reading lists this year.

 Posted by on August 11, 2004 at 10:42 pm
Aug 112004
 

We’ll see if this gets much play from the television media. If the Bush campaign is going to allow stuff like the swift boat ads, then we might as well pull up some old college rugby shots. What an asshole.

It may be somewhat petty and people do change, but if people are willing to disregard a lot of the good things that Clinton did because of the Lewinsky affair, I don’t see why we can’t disregard Bush because he punches people in the face during a rugby game.

EDIT: I left out the original LA Times article that dredged this up in the first place.

 Posted by on August 11, 2004 at 6:33 pm