Saturday, June 18, 2005
I’m Not Alone
Ken Baer’s posting this morning was critical of the Democratic leadership. The first three comments were less than complimentary. I offered my support.
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The Informationist Defense of Neocons Continues in Uzbekistan
Matt Yglesias posted a glib observation about the incoherence of U.S. Policy in Uzbekistan. I saw an opportunity to resume my hopeless quest for a rapproachement between liberal internationalists and neocons in a setting less charged than Iraq.
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Friday, June 17, 2005
Wading Further Into Controversy
A couple of days ago, Ivo Daadler launched an important discussion asking What Now in Iraq? He listed a few possibilites, but in my opinion he omitted the critical one--admittign the truth and building forward from there. I humbly submitted a discussion of The Missing Option, figuring that it was time for me to wade even further into the waters of controversy:
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The Candidate We Deserved
Joshua Michael Marshall found some polls that led him to wonder whether Kerry could win a “do over” election held today. I saw an opportunity to continue expressing my distaste for the direction that the Democratic Party has taken since Bill Clinton handed the baton to Al Gore.
Can we do over the primaries while we’re at it?
I spent time volunteering for the Kerry campaign, but I never for a moment believed that he would be a good President. When a Republican friend commented that she believed that Kerry would be a disaster, I could reply only that it was possible to be both a disaster and an improvement.
Kerry did not deserve to win that election. He ran a campaign premised entirely upon the idea that Bush deserved to lose. An additional eight months worth of data might have convinced a few more voters that he was right--but he still wouldn’t have deserved to win and he still wouldn’t make an effective President.
The Democratic Party went into the primary season with one goal in mind: Don’t offend anyone who already dislikes Bush. We got the milquetoast candidate we deserved--a Senator with a long and undistinguished career. Until we’re prepared to do better, we don’t deserve a do over.
I volunteered for the Kerry campaign, even though I wasn’t certain that I was working for the right guy. Were a do-over held tomorrow, I still wouldn’t be sure.
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Neoconservatism, Liberal Internationalism, and Informationism
Lots of good stuff on TPM Cafe’s America Abroad blog the past couple of days. First Jim Lindsay resumed his discussion about the best future course for our Iraq policy. I added my two cents:
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Freedom to Tinker
Another lead into the blog world. I spoke to Fred von Lohmann over at EFF. He pointed me towards Ed Felten’s Freedom to Tinker blog.
He was right. Felten’s got consistently interesting post. But his main reason in pointing me there was to meet JD Lasica, who is in the midst of a virtual book tour promoting Darknet. While I was poking around, I noticed that Ed also has a book club going; I left a note suggesting that he take a look at Digital Phoenix.
I also exchanged thoughts with JD about our respective books. I discovered, though, that Freedom to Tinker doesn’t let commenters include links in their posts. A bit of a deterrent, I’d say, but perhaps an intentional one. Seems to violate what I think I’ve been learning about blogging.
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Thursday, June 16, 2005
Perhaps I Missed the Point, or Digital Phoenix Emerges
A couple of days ago, I realized that I’d been having so much fun blogging about politics that I’d forgotten to hawk my book. Turns out that TPM Cafe has a books table (that seems to get almost no traffic). So I started my first discussion thread, introducing Digital Phoenix and urging people to read it.
I actually got some responses. Well, two to be precise, and both from Petey. He posed a couple of interesting questions; I replied. Somehow, I fell that if I started a thread, I really should see it through.
Now let’s see if anyone else is interested.
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Wednesday, June 15, 2005
In Which I Fail to See a Difference
Apparently, yesterday’s NYT ran an article about young interns enjoying the good life as summer interns at the Heritage Foundation. Matt Yglesias thanked an attentive reader for calling his attention to what he saw as an apalling diference between conservatives and liberals (or Republicans, and Democrats, if you will). One of the interns apparently expressed a desire to work as a pharmaceutical industry lobbyist. Matt saw this as an expression of the ideological bankruptcy on the rights, and as evidence that its ascendancy would be short-lived.
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