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Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Atheist's Lullaby Redux




Wow, some days you just have to love the Internets.


Someone called "Dark of the Stars" just posted this lovely expansion to my "Atheist's Lullaby.

Labels: songs and doggerel

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 7:33 PM 2 comments links to this post

The old gray mare, she ain't what she used to be

Somerby:
...our modern elites are dumb to the core. Indeed, this may be the only fact a person can now expect to learn from reading the New York Times.

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 8:44 AM 1 comments links to this post

Saturday, June 27, 2009

"To be free, one must give up a little part of oneself" -- John Cameron Mitchell



Goodnight, hamsters.

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 10:23 AM 3 comments links to this post

Friday, June 26, 2009

You say that like it's a positive thing

Robert Reich:
Critics say the public option is really a Trojan horse for a government takeover of all of health insurance. But nothing could be further from the truth.

Labels: health care

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 11:36 AM 3 comments links to this post

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Invitation to the kabuki-jerk

E-mail from MoveOn.org:
Dear MoveOn member,

President Obama's public health insurance option—the key to lowering costs and helping cover everyone—is in danger. The threat? The so-called co-op plan.

If you have no idea what that means, don't worry. This stuff is confusing and changing quickly. So here are three great articles laying out the case FOR the public health insurance option, and AGAINST the co-op plan.

After you read one or all of them, can you call Sens. Kerry and Kennedy? Tell them that anything other than a strong public health insurance option is unacceptable—including the weak co-op proposal.
Oh, noes! Obama's nothing-edge "reform" is in trouble!

And Max Baucus is crying himself to sleep with crocodile tears!

What's that sound at the edge of hearing, you ask? That's me on the nano-violin.

Labels: health care

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 1:47 PM 3 comments links to this post

Monday, June 22, 2009

Q. Were A-list bloggers...

... the cool kids in school, and they're back to their old tricks?

Or were they geeks who are now taking it out on the rest of us?

Labels: Blogosphere

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 9:44 AM 4 comments links to this post

Interview with "Bloggers on the Bus" author Eric Boehlert

Eric,

Thank you very much for taking the time to answer some questions about your new book, Bloggers on the Bus.

As one of those "eclectic outcasts" you referred to in your book — those who had concerns about Barack Obama's candidacy and/or positive things to say about Hillary Clinton's — Chapters 8 and 9 on the "Blog War of 2008" were, of course, of special interest to me.

That thought-provoking material, and the vivid portraits of several different bloggers throughout the book, made for what I consider a must-read for progressive bloggers and their readers. Congratulations on a terrific follow-up to Lapdogs!

I've flagged the direct questions with asterisks, but there are incidental questions here and there and a bunch of context-setting commentary that prefaces the questions. Please feel free to opine about any and all. Without further ado...

1. In prior interviews, you've alluded to 35,000 words you had to delete to reduce page count.

* Can you tell us a little about what was deleted?
Mostly just additional portraits about some of the bloggers I featured, such as John Amato and Howie Klein and Digby, etc. The back stories in terms of the lives they lived before blogging were, to me, quite fascinating, but needed to be trimmed in the end.
* Any chance you'll be putting the excised content online?
Doubtful.

2. You note that Jim Gilliam of Brave New Films "concluded that the most effective way to alter the national conversation was through film. That’s how Americans communicate best."

Some of the top videos popularized via the blogs during the primaries imparted little (will.i.am's "Yes We Can") or no (Obama Girl's "I Got a Crush... on Obama" and "Vote Different," the reworking of Apple's "1984" ad) real political content, as they were "altering the national conversation." They were emotional appeals, like a soft-drink commercial.

This was quite far afield from John Amato's unblinking news captures, Digby's wonky essays, and Atrios's news-centered snark.

* Did any of the bloggers you spoke with observe that the mix of netroots content was, perhaps, moving toward infotainment?
That didn’t really come up, although it’s an interesting point. I think all bloggers fret about their traffic and how to keep it on the upswing and how to keep people coming back regularly. But I think the “Crush” video you mentioned was pushed more by the mainstream press online than bloggers themselves. “Vote Different” got more blogosphere play, but I thought its message was more serious, even though, as you mentioned, it was built around an emotional appeal.
* Should we expect that, typical of evolving media, the blogs are facing an inexorable transition from no-frills wonkiness to slickness (cf. Huffington Post), at least at the "A-list" level?
I wouldn’t assume that. I think the big sites are still quite serious, if not wonky, and that their readers want it that way.
* I couldn't help but find the "Vote Different" video, which you discuss at length — the one where a monstrous projection of Hillary Clinton's face is heroically smashed by a hammer — a harbinger of what was to come in the blogs and the activist community. Had you considered/intended this parallel?
I had not, but good catch because things def. got smashed up.

3. You wrote about a popular video that inaccurately called Sarah Palin a one-time member of the Alaskan Independence Party. A more-remarkably incorrect video caused a pronounced, brief, and conveniently timed stir: the faked Mickey Kantor video. Released days before the Indiana primary, it put words in the mouth of a Clinton advisor, making him appear to badmouth Indiana voters. When it was proven fraudulent, there was precious little inquiry on the blogs into questions like:

Who created the video, and how did it get so much attention? Were its creators well-connected with high-traffic bloggers?

What are the legal implications of distributing fraudulent materials in order to help to swing an election?

What ought the left blogosphere learn from the incident, to avoid being a conduit for disinformation?

* Isn't this the kind of meta-journalism story that bloggers and media pros ordinarily love to dwell on, both as a scandal/detective story and as a "teachable moment"? How did such a juicy story slip so quickly down the memory hole?
There were so many stories from the primary season that should’ve been a big deal and instead got flushed down the memory hole (as Bob Somerby puts it), and this was def. one of them.

4. You talked with a number of A-list bloggers about the Blog War, and they acknowledged some remarkable things. In your recent interview with eriposte (Parts 1, 2, and 3), you said this (emphasis added):

Eric Boehlert: One of the most interesting things bloggers have told me (often off the record) about the primary season was how clear it became that their readers really did dictate what the bloggers wrote. For years, bloggers and their readers had been in heated agreement about Bush, about Iraq, about the MSM. But in lots of cases they were not in agreement about who should be the Democratic nominee and bloggers mentioned to me how strange and uncomfortable that schism was, and how in the end many of them did just punt. Meaning, they got tired of fighting with their readers and simply didn’t write certain things because they knew it would create a pie fight within the site. They’re not especially proud of it, but they have conceded that they did alter what they wrote.

Please help clarify what this means. For each of these statements, was there at least one of the bloggers you interviewed for whom it was true?

* The blogger admits to turning a blind eye toward unfair content or behavior that benefited Obama
Yes
* The blogger admits to being an active participant in or promoter of unfair content or behavior that benefited Obama
No
* The blogger didn't have a preference but pretended to prefer Obama
No
* The blogger preferred Hillary but pretended not to have a preference
Yes
* The blogger preferred Hillary but pretended to prefer Obama
Don't know
For the sake of completeness, I could turn that list around and ask if any A-list bloggers were bullied into supporting Hillary, but I've seen no evidence for that. If I've got that wrong, please correct the record.

* Were there any other dimensions of the bloggers' "confessions" that are worth noting, to measure the distance between their conduct during the primaries and their true feelings about the candidates, process, culture, etc.?
Just that some, looking back, say they didn’t really feel like they could write honestly about the primary battle because their pro-Obama readers so strongly disagreed with them and that as a lib blogger it was a new and unpleasant experience to be fighting with their own readers.

5. Your book doesn't mention a single A-list blog where Obama supporters were swarmed upon and driven off by Obama-hating posters, commenters, and/or moderators. Where fictions comparable to the "darkened photo," "the Drudge photo," "as far as I know," and the racist implications of the term "fairy tale" were treated as definitively damning (to Obama).

Several bloggers you quote gave the implication that the Obama and Clinton bases were equally culpable in the blogosphere meltdown, or that the Hillary side "started it" or was worse.

* Is this a legitimate position, or is it what we call an "equivalation," a false balance? That is, are they writing a history where Belgium invaded Germany (or where "there's enough blame to go around" to both countries)?
Well, I wanted to include, and quote, both sides of the 2008 blog debate. But I think your point is a factual one and that I’m hard pressed to recall a single phony story, akin to the Drudge photo, for instance, that surfaced online and which targeted Obama.
I just saw a comment in a discussion you're having on TPMCafe that wonders about this omission.

Check one, please:

a) You're a Hillary-obsessed dead-ender, in league with the evil PUMAs, hiding a mountain of damning evidence?
b) There were no A-list blogs where Clinton supporters made participation untenable for Obama supporters in any way close to resembling what occurred in Obama's favor?

* Seriously, is there any more to this than choice "b," above?
[see answer, below]
BTW, I'm not suggesting, with this line of inquiry, that no pro-Clinton blogger or commenter anywhere ever overstepped a line. We encountered a few such contributors on our C-list blog and canceled their accounts. And there were some pro-Clinton sites that we didn't find consistently credible or fair enough to spend much time at. That doesn't mitigate that the prevailing experience on the big blogs was unidirectional: Hillary Clinton was routinely smeared, and her supporters were driven off the blogs, and such an experience basically didn't happen to Obama supporters at any of the major blogs.

* Is that a fair characterization?
I can’t say definitively what experience all Clinton supporters had online, or if Obama supporters were run off specific sites. But what I did mention in the book was that the anti-Clinton tone online was much more vitriolic and personal. At times it didn’t seem that people even cared about her positions, they just couldn’t stand to see the sight of her and lashed out in very emotional ways. Again, I can’t say categorically that that never happened with regards to Obama, but in general, I did not see those kinds of attacks. I didn’t see bloggers and their readers express their deep, unabiding contempt for Obama as a person, the way I saw that stuff directed towards Hillary.

6. In the book, you take the position that the "no drama Obama" campaign wasn't behind any of the incendiary shenanigans.

But how are you sure of that, given the pattern of well-publicized and artfully timed, ginned-up controversies, often with direct involvement by Obama staff or surrogates?

In the RFK-quote smear, for example, the fire was fueled at the outset by an Obama spokesperson's condemnation of Hillary's innocuous statement. And at its climax, the Obama campaign distributed — to the entire news media — the transcript of Keith Olbermann's ten-megaton rant on the topic.

* Doesn't the "who, them?" assumption bear at least a little scrutiny, at least before announcing an "all-clear"?
I would say speaking in very general terms, the Obama campaign was not noted for its nasty tone or that behind the scenes we heard reports of aides or flaks bad mouthing Clinton. Did they do their best to spread bad news about her as well as dubious reports? I would say yes, as most campaigns do. But again, in terms of an overall vibe, I never got the sense that the Obama camp was unleashing the hounds. That seemed to happen independently online.

7. I think one might get the sense from your book that sexism was the overarching issue in the Blog War, based on the frequent reference to that topic in both the blogger quotes and the commentary.

As I see it, there were several significant, largely interlocking breakdowns of reasonable standards of discourse (and, especially, of progressive discourse) during the primaries, with sexism very much among them. I recently took at stab at summarizing these.

Given that each of these can be illustrated with incidents described in your book, I don't mean to suggest that your coverage of the Blog War was stuck on one note.

* But do you agree that it's tempting, and misleading, to file the whole affair under "sexism" or "race vs. gender"?
I tried not to cover the blog civil war under the headline of sexism. In fact that’s why I broke that out into a separate chapter because I thought there were (at least) two interesting dynamics at work: the breakdown in civility re: Obama/Clinton, and then the rise of sexist rhetoric within the lib blogosphere.
If nothing else, doing so seemingly justifies for some whitewashing all that happened by patting themselves on the back for deleting a post with "bitch" or "c**t" in it now and again.

* How would you define the "very important track [that] had been jumped during the heated campaign season," as disaffected Kos blogger Lee Stranahan calls it in your book? That is, what were the significant problems that manifested themselves?
The biggest was simply the vacation the blogosphere, or portions of it, took from being a reality-based community. The fact that the previously high factual standards that bloggers and readers had set for themselves could so quickly be jettisoned was surprising and disturbing for a lot of people.
A follow-up question on that:

* Did you see much of this happening from Obama skeptics / Hillary supporters in a way that was at all comparable to what was happening in the other direction? I ask because we often see — including in some of the quotes in your book — claims that the non-Obama camp acted the same or worse.
I did see some of that (although not as much) happening from Obama skeptics/Hillary supporters online. The "whitey tape" instantly comes to mind, for instance.
[See note at end]

8. In the context of the countless and often furious calls for Hillary Clinton to fold her tent, which began the night of the Iowa Caucus or soon after, you quote Digby describing the typical glass-ceiling dynamics by which a well-qualified woman is advised to step aside: "... this is really for the good of the company. It's best for everybody.' The appeal is made along the lines of 'The family needs you to do this.'"

More generally, this is the language of corruption, isn't it? The "we wash our own laundry here" that Serpico was ominously advised?

Unfortunately, the Serpico reference isn't quite as far-fetched as one would hope for. From your book: "The truth is a dangerous thing," said [Mayhill] Fowler two months after the hullabaloo and still shaking her head in amazement. "Boy, I sure learned that."

Fowler, as you noted, was a maxed-out Obama supporter who grudgingly shared with her Huffington Post editor a tape that proved damaging to Obama. In the aftermath, she and her daughter received death threats.

I've been warned more than once to stop blogging critically about Obama "or else," and I've grown accustomed to friendlier kinds of persuasion, like being painted as a racist and a hate-speaker.

So, blogging against the grain ain't beanbag, is it?

I don't know if you fancy yourself a Frank Serpico, who answered back "The reality is that we do not wash our own laundry - it just gets dirtier." I'm going to guess not.

But your book plainly does air some laundry that most of the left blogosphere doesn't want anyone to see. And I have to congratulate you on doing something that was pretty brave -- bucking the wishes of your own tribe, the progressive scribes.

* Did you struggle with whether to include the content about the Blog War?
Not really. I didn’t see how I could write serious book about blogs/2008 campaign and not address it. Plus, as a writer you go to where the tension/conflict is because that, by definition is more interesting.

* Did you worry that it was "going to cost you" in some way?
Sure. It would have been easier to write a book about how wonderful and glorious the blogosphere is. And frankly, for the most part I think it is. (I started the book as a fan and ended the project as a fan.) But to ignore the blemish would have been rather dishonest.
* And do you think it has?
Yes. For instance, I don’t think the book has ever been mentioned on the front page of DailyKos, which seems odd for a book about the rise of the liberal blogosphere.

9. At watchdog site, Media Matters for America, where you're a Senior Fellow (and which, BTW, is a resource for many items in one of the posts linked in #6, above), you wrote arguably the definitive debunking of the "as far as I know" smear — a canard that convinced many Democrats that Hillary Clinton was slyly suggesting that Obama wasn't, as it were, properly Christian.

Yet, I can't find anything on Media Matters that debunked the RFK smear, in which a Democratic senator / presidential candidate was falsely accused on news program after news program and in news article after news article of just about the vilest thing one could imagine: that she was looking forward to the assassination of her rival, the potential first black president.

* Did Media Matters publish something about it, and I just missed it in my search?
I didn’t see anything.
* If not, why wasn't this occurrence considered news-critique worthy? Is it for reasons comparable to what silenced Digby on that very topic and others?
I don’t know why that specific incident wasn’t covered. But Media Matters likely called out more people for producing awful, inaccurate anti-Clinton journalism during the 2008 race than anybody, so it certainly wasn’t for fear of offending anyone.
10. I'll preface my next set of questions with two quotes (emphasis added), the first from Atrios (Duncan Black) this past week, the latter from your interview with eriposte.

Atrios: "There was that primary business, of course, though the less said about [that] the better."

Eric Boehlert: "I'm still not sure why the debate from the spring of 2008 generated into what it did, and I'm not sure many bloggers today really want to look back and search for answers to that question."

No matter the cause to which we ascribe the 2008-primary blogosphere rift, isn't the bloggers' near-universal "see no critique, hear no critique, speak no critique" posture quite remarkable — especially from idealistic media critics who pride themselves as reality-based muckrakers?

Previously "get over it," "STFU," and the "move along folks, nothing to see here" attitude were reliably derided in the left-blogosphere. But not when it came to this happening on their own turf. In my experience, attempts to review and reflect on what happened are met with the most bilious responses imaginable. There is no implication too vicious or absurd to levy at someone who raises this topic. In the best case, one gets "I just can't talk about this."

Given that you had candid interviews with several high-profile bloggers, perhaps you can shed some light on this.

* What don't they want people to know/remember/understand about what happened — and why?
I think it’s pretty simple: the blogosphere acted in a way that lots of people who have been part of it for a long time were surprised and upset about. It didn’t really live up to its previous standards and it’s somewhat natural for people not to want to dwell on those stumbles.
* Are they, in your estimation, trying to avoid coming to terms with what happened, themselves -- and why?
No, that's not the sense I get. Instead, more just not wanting to live through the unpleasantness within the larger community.
* Are there important lessons that could and should be learned by looking back?
Sure. My feeling is that people think the 2008 turbulence online represented a once-in-a-lifetime situation and that the ugly fracture that occurred won’t happen again. But if nothing is learned from 2008 I’m pretty sure it will happen again (I have no idea what the circumstances and players will be) and participants will act surprised all over again.
* Do, or did you, have any hope that airing this "dirty laundry," might lead to some positive developments in the blogosphere and progressive community in general? Please expand on this.
Again, since I was writing about the blogs and 2008 I felt like I had to delve into the primary tension. (Although the topic only accounts for two chapters in the book.) Whether my focusing on it would lead to positive developments or not, I wasn’t sure.

11. In a couple of your interviews, you've described left-of-center blogging in the post-election world as having about 25% of the bloggers criticizing Obama from the left.

* Do you expect this percentage to increase?
Hmm, I think what I said, or what I meant to say, was that lib blogs would probably spend 25% of their time critiquing Obama from the left, 25% cheering him from the left, and 50% defending him from right-wing nut jobs.
[Vastleft note: Just for the record, since I appear to have mis-paraphrased him, I presume that Mr. Boehlert is correct in his description of his prior statements re: percentages, which I believe came up in one or two audio interviews available online.]

* If yes, will increased criticism of Obama by mainstream bloggers eventually lead to more reflection about the Blog War, or will that topic forever be treated as off-limits in polite company?
No, I think it’s been flushed down the memory hole.

* * *

Again, thank you very much for agreeing to this interview and for providing a rare and valuable record of a remarkable, and I think significant, occurrence in the blogosphere.

And, while the focus of this interview is on the part that Glenn Greenwald calls "perhaps the most interesting," the whole of Bloggers on the Bus is a very captivating look at the motivations, minds, and lifestyles of several different left-leaning bloggers, and I recommend it highly to all of our readers.

* * *

Responding to a follow-up on question #7, Eric cites the "whitey tape" controversy.

I received his answer shortly before "press-time." I've just sent him these thoughts on that topic, and will update with any responses he may have to them...

The "whitey tape" episode, seems to me, illustrates the contrasting ways the progressive blogs handled questionable attacks on the two prospective first families.

Security consultant Larry Johnson, a Daily Kos exile, posted at his No Quarter blog about a purported recording of Michelle Obama railing about "whitey."

Whereas, post-Edwards's exit, anti-Hillary memes of the most dubious rationality, taste, and provenance got major traction at the big blogs (in the comments sections, at the very least), the consensus view on the "whitey tape" was that:

- It should be ignored or condemned as a fabrication until and unless it was proven real

- It almost certainly didn't exist

- Larry Johnson was walking the credibility plank by writing about an allegedly provocative tape he acknowledged never having heard himself

At Correntewire, where most of the commentary ran contrary to the pro-Obama / anti-Hillary blogosphere norm, the tape story was subject to a healthy skepticism.

Also, there was a curious sidelight where BooMan, who was interviewed for Bloggers on the Bus, produced a transcript of the famously "non-existent" tape (which he also hadn't heard), with Michelle Obama quoted as repeatedly saying "why'd he," not "whitey." Trying to wrap my mind around that little-discussed development just makes my brain hurt.

Labels: Blog War of 2008, Bloggers on the Bus, Eric Boehlert

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 8:58 AM 3 comments links to this post

Sunday, June 21, 2009

I stand with John Conyers and Glen Ford

Black Agenda Report:
From the day he took office, President Obama has pursued a two-part healthcare strategy. First, he would categorically reject a single-payer solution to the healthcare crisis, one that would treat healthcare as a right, and would pay for it by breaking the stranglehold of the private sector. To protect the profiteers, Obama turned on the progressive wing of his own party, ruthlessly eliminating them from White House-sponsored healthcare events, to give the impression that the Obama plan was the only option. But in fact, there was – and still is - no Obama plan, just mouthfuls of generalized rhetoric that changes with the moment, as Obama constantly woos the insurance, drug and hospital corporations.

Congressman John Conyers, the Dean of the Congressional Black Caucus, has gathered 79 co-sponsors for his House version of a single payer healthcare bill, HR 676. President Obama tried to make Conyers a non-person, and encouraged committee chairmen to keep Conyers and other single payer advocates out of their healthcare hearings. Conyers, who entered Congress when Obama was only four years old, lambasted the President for taking single payer “off the table before we start, without a hearing.” As long as “the corporate healthcare people” dominate the discussion, said Conyers, “you are going to have some sad version of the same crap you were supposed to be fixing in the first place.”

In the end, it may be worse than Conyers fears...

Labels: health care

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 8:55 AM 1 comments links to this post

Words they didn't teach you on the mainstream blogs

Some new jargon that will come in handy in upcoming posts: NSI, BPC, and "nothing edge."

NSI is Nano-Scale Incrementalism...

... and it's the best-case offer you'll get from the Brave Progressive Class (BPC, natch), the suave neo-insiders who periodically invite you to a glorious kabuki-jerk of self-satisfaction...

... to wanly shadow-push the political envelope, via the awesome power of the nothing edge.

Labels: coinages, health care

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 8:00 AM 2 comments links to this post

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Other than that, Mrs. Clinton, how did you enjoy the liberal blogosphere?

Amanda Marcotte:
The problem for liberal bloggers is that while we automatically have better ethical standards than the mainstream cable news media by virtue of not using Matt Drudge as our guiding light, we don't get the benefit of the doubt the way they do, because we're not as shiny or expensive.
Well, every problem needs a solution. And what could be more elegant and ethical than Drudge for ProgressivesTM!

Labels: Blog War of 2008

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 11:28 AM 6 comments links to this post

Friday, June 19, 2009

Are clue sticks on back-order?

I pretty much can't bear to read what any "progressive" blog writes about health care "reform."

Do I have to exhume Charles Schulz to draw the Finance Dems as Lucy Van Pelt and all you daring leftwing agitators as Charlie Fucking Brown, rearing back for a sacroiliac-shattering punt?

Every time you beg for a "public option" instead of demanding single payer, you're driving a nail into a lot of people's coffins... and a pile of blood money into the hands of Big Insurance.

It would be churlish of me to pick on any one of y'all with a link, so whoever you are — and you just wrote a handwringing piece about how so-and-so is blocking the "public option" — just know that you're, to put it as nicely as I can think to say, not part of the solution.

Labels: health care

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 11:11 AM 3 comments links to this post

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Progressive blogosphere officially pronounced dead: an Open letter to Open Left



Time of death: Wed Jun 17, 2009 at 14:29:00 PM CDTW.

Coroner's statement:
"You might notice that this is journalism" -- Chris Bowers
Of course, there's always the possibility that the progressive blogosphere died contemporaneously with Dickens's Marley.  But this seems to make it official.

To commemorate the event, here's an e-mail I sent to Chris Bowers and Paul Rosenberg at Open Left, which includes a previous (as yet unanswered) message to Paul only.

* * *

Paul (and Chris),

Not that you haven't, but please disregard my previous message.

I had been under the misapprehension that Open Left was a progressive blog, but I have since been educated that it is neither.

Well, that's not fair. Your site is plainly dedicated to being incrementally more progressive than the new Beltway class's default position, and it would be churlish of me not to acknowledge that.

In any case, I am chagrined at my misunderstanding, and I profoundly apologize for my inappropriate actions:

* Advocating for single-payer health care
* Suggesting improvements in left-of-center Middle-East commentary
* Critiquing a brand of "journalism" that tells voters who didn't prefer Obama to "slither back to their ratholes."

No doubt, someone who would do such things should be publicly branded as an "hysteric" and a "deranged hate stalker."

Really, what sort of depraved individual would urge a key progressive site -- and a journalistic one, no less -- to maintain a better standard for progressive commentary than:

* Pronouncing that "Obama is a great man"
* Brusquely defending as "logical" a fannish George Lakoff post that termed Obama "deeply progressive"
* A priori dismissing a congresswoman's claim that she was bullied by Obama (whose last intraparty challenger was conveniently smeared as a racist... and then there's Blair Hull, Alice Palmer...) and by dead-fish mailer Rahm Emanuel
* Insisting that "Progressives need to understand that our fates for several years to come are tied, fundamentally and completely, to Obama's success as President"
* And completely invalidating the blogosphere's media critique: "Presidents generally get about the media coverage they deserve."

Please don't trouble yourselves to consider the validity of my points. You guys are A-list journalists, and I'm an iconoclastic C-list blogger with no political connections and no aspirations for same. If the blogosphere was ever intended to be a platform for people like me, with our dirty liberal ways, that was so 2003. Career liberals are the Big Men on Campus now, and rank has its privileges.

And no worries, I'm done commenting at your site. Feel free to lock my account.  Or, if you prefer, you can delete it entirely, thus removing my offending comments and -- even better -- my rebuttals to the various personal attacks that were my due for harshing the mellow of the Glorious New Progressive Status Quo.

While you're at it, this might be an ideal choice for background music:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-DoRYYHJL8

Best wishes,
"Vastleft"


On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 3:08 PM, [Vastleft] wrote:

Hi, Paul.

I've been thinking. From what I can tell, you and I aren't really that
far apart politically.

I wish you'd find a way to disagree with me that doesn't belittle me
because I'm snarky and irreverent. If you could get past our style
differences, and different wiring about what constitutes civility, we
might be able to have some productive conversations online.

I think I've triggered your hot buttons because of the following:

* If someone (such as Lakoff) who is a generally respectable figure
does something well below his standards, I think he deserves to be
ribbed about it, commensurate with the low-standard of what he wrote
or did, not commensurate with one's prior estimation of him
* Ditto for the progressive blogosphere. I see the blogosphere needing
a lot of rethinking about some foibles that threaten its credibility
(notably truthiness, groupthink, and bullying).
* Religion. I see a huge difference between "respecting religion,"
which I don't because all evidence I'm aware of says it's based on
falsities, and disrespecting religious people, which I don't
(certainly not as a rule), because I'd be disrespecting a lot of great
people. You seem to see disrespectful talk about religion as something
hostile, whereas I consider it honest and healthy and overdue.

I'm not asking you to adopt my values, commentary style, pet issues,
etc. I'd just like you to try to see past our style differences and
stay in the ring on topics of mutual interest. If I'm wrong, deck me
on the merits of my arguments, not on your perception of my low
character and shrill technique.

Finally, I'm not saying my approach is beyond reproach, but speaking
of throwing out baby with bathwater, criticize what you don't like
about my style... *and* my content, please! You just might find I'm a
lot more thoughtful about the issues than you'd imagined -- or maybe
you'll show me the error of my ways.... Ya never know.

Regards,
"Vastleft"

Labels: Blogosphere, Open Left

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 9:44 AM 14 comments links to this post

Monday, June 08, 2009

Atheist's Lullaby



Thanks for visiting. For more Vastleft posts and multimedia, see here.

Labels: atheism, religion, songs and doggerel

posted by Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy at 6:27 AM 1 comments links to this post


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