Stark Deserves Justice

I’ve been a lurker of late.  The damn elections.  And sometimes, watching crap unfold, you just can’t help but throw in your two cents.  My two cents are cross-posted in Orange

Looking at the MSM’s coverage of the attack on Mike Stark today, I’ve been struck by the lack of serious concern for Stark’s rights.

“A fight kind of unfolded. . . . The Senator was rushed to the back.  He [Allen] is okay,” local NBC reporter Henry Graff said as the tape of the assault on Stark played in the background.

Of course, the progressive blogosphere understands that Mike Stark was assaulted because he was trying to assert a very basic First Amendment right to question his government.  But from the initial NBC affiliate report, through the early print media accounts, the story seemed subtly spun as “Allen saved from rabid blogger.”

I can live with that, I suppose.  I’ve come to expect it from almost all MSM news reporting.  But where I draw the line is when the police agencies designed to protect the citizenry seem to mimic the “attack the victim” mentality of the media.
Stark reported the assault to the appropriate authorities.  And this is their official response:

“We will find out who the people are, give him the information and he can go to the magistrate and try to obtain a warrant for them,” Charlottesville Police Lt. Gary Pleasants told the Post.

Taken from the Raw Story account via the Washington Post.

Since when do police officers respond to assault victims by saying, “Yeah, we’ll get the name of the guys who did it, and then you can try to prosecute this situation if you want.”

Is that what they tell victims of Domestic Violence in Virginia?  Is it what they tell old women who are mugged?

There is evidence that a crime was committed.  An unwanted battery.  Perhaps there is a defense.  Perhaps Stark did something more than ask a question of his Senator to invoke the attack.  Perhaps the attackers had some legal authority to use force as they did.  But the evidence in the public record says that there is probable cause that a battery was committed.  A battery that may have been committed by the agents of a Senator.  A Senator with a history of insensitivity and apparent favor for questionable uses of force.  Such evidence ought to be met by the authorities with something more than, “Yeah, you handle it yourself.”  There ought to be a full investigation.  Reports ought to be forwarded to a prosecutor.  And a charge should be authorized or not.  If the police and prosecuting officials are incapable of setting politics aside to conduct the necessary investigation, and to make the necessary determinations, then the case should be assigned to a non-interested agency with no such conflict.  But an important right is at stake.  And it shouldn’t be laughed off by a half-assed investigation.

Fringe elements on the far right and the far left sometimes speculate about a politically fueled civil war.  Taking it to the streets.  Getting the guns out.  The failure to seriously investigate this battery encourages that reality.  Because if this incident ends with a “no harm, no foul” verdict, then the next time one of us is out exercising our legitimate rights to question our officials, and some wing-nut cadre decides they want to manhandle us, some of us are going to have to seriously think about defending ourselves.  Stark showed admirable restraint today.  But if assaults are the new norm, then reasonable defense is the new solution.

So we ought to encourage Virginia’s finest to do their job.    If you are not too busy with your GOTV efforts, perhaps you’ll give the Charlottesville Police Chief a call tomorrow.  He encourages us to call for quality of service issues.  (434) 970-3289.

Here’s to Stark.  And a more perfect union.

What are Republicans proud of?

 Are they proud of being good in scaring the bejesus out of everyone in each election cycle?

To judge it from their latest ads and talks, the War on Terror is won by terror.

Are Republicans proud of hurting Democrat politicians more effectively than Al Qaeda terrorists?

Are Republicans proud of giving nice promises to their libertarian or Christian base, but never delivering to them?

Are Republicans proud of achieving new corruption standards? Are they proud of accusing the opponents of ethical failures, while doing things far worse?

Are Republicans proud of George W. Bush? Who is proud of George W. Bush? That guy did his worst in following security briefings prior to the 9/11. He did his absolutely worst with Katrina. He is continuing to do his worst in Iraq.

[Sorry, it’s just a few scattered one-liners. I have no time or flow to connect them into a beefy diary.]
[Crossposted at Daily Kos.]

Bush’s Trojan Horse Challenge Of Democratic Victory

Vote flipping is happening already in Florida, Texas, Arkansas, and Missouri. Funny little thing is that the machines are flipping Democratic votes into GOP votes. Not a peep heard from Bush Team about such voter fraud, which many see as the only November Surprise that the GOP can use to win the midterms. Not a peep until the possibility arises that Bush Team may not have control over all electronic voting machines. Now, we have a national security interest to be investigated by the feds and possibly laying the groundwork for a post-election challenge filed by the GOP.
The 2000 election showed that every vote truly does count, except when technical “glitches” and fraud strip voters of their rights. The MSM has reported a few stories about vote flipping used to steal Democratic votes from early voters. But, on election day, “more than 80 million Americans will go to the polls, and a record number of them – 90% – will either cast their vote on a computer or have it tabulated that way.”

Bush Team is unconcerned about such vote flipping fraud even though for many counties there is no way to determine how widespread the vote flipping is because there is no process in place for poll workers to report such “minor issues” and many poll sites do not have a “central database of machine problems” so that problem machines can be shut down.

No precautions, remedies or investigations because it’s a minor issue when we actually have Democratic votes being recorded in the GOP tally box.

But, the possibility that such vote flipping could transform GOP or independent party votes into Democratic votes is now a national security issue worthy of a federal investigation before election day. The Bush Team is actually digging for links between Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and vote machine company Smartmatic.

The Treasury’s CFIUS (Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States) is probing  whether the Smartmatic voting machines compromise national security.  Federal officials are investigating whether Smartmatic, which is a South Florida parent company of California-based Sequoia Voting Systems, is “secretly controlled” by President Chávez. The probe was triggered when Democrat Rep. Carolyn Maloney wrote a letter to the Treasury last May stating concerns that Smartmatic purchased Sequoia last year. Rep. Maloney was concerned about a newspaper report that the Venezuelan government owned 28% of Bizta, which is a company operated by 2 of the same people who own Smartmatic. However, Bizta bought back those shares.

Why would a Chávez link to an electronic voting company be a matter of a national security interest? There is a concern that “if the Venezuelan government is involved, Smartmatic could be a ‘Trojan horse’ designed to advance Chavez’s anti-American agenda.”

How could Chávez advance any “anti-American agenda” if he is in fact linked to the voting machine company?  After all, it is Americans who will be casting the votes for American candidates and initiatives written by Americans. The true concern of Bush Team is that Bizta and Smartmatic worked with a Venezuelan telephone company to supply electronic voting machines for Venezuelan elections, including the controversial win by Chávez in 2004.  So, Bush Team is assuming that Chávez won by manipulating the vote count. Therefore, the concern is that Chávez, given that he hates Bush, may choose to rig the midterm elections so that the GOP lose control of DC by flipping votes to Democrats in the 17 states where the machines operate, including 4 counties in Florida: Palm Beach, Indian River, Pinellas and Hillsborough.

But vote flipping has not been elevated to a national security interest when the head of a major voting machine company is linked to the GOP. The chief executive of Diebold told Republicans in pre-2004 fund-raising letter that he is “committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year.”

Still, how can Chávez implement an “anti-American agenda” just by rigging machines to produce a victory for Democrats?  Answer is that Bush Team sees Democrats as “anti-American,” unpatriotic wimps who don’t support his war and his policies for the US or the world.

However, Bush’s definition of “anti-American” is not likely to pass any CFIUS smell test for what constitutes a national security interest. It is one thing when CFIUS is investigating a transaction when a foreign government wants to buy control over US ports and security. The question then is whether a foreign government would have access permitting enemies or bombs to enter this country.  It is quite another when CFIUS is used to attach the national security interest label to voting equipment unless there is some evidence that foreign operatives will then have access to placing bombs in the machines.

It’s all quite fishy and sounds like Bush Team is laying the groundwork for a post-election challenge based on “anti-American” vote flipping that will be based on secret evidence withheld from the public on grounds of national security.

Patriot Daily: News of the day, just a click away!

Mike Stark will press charges against George Allen

The news was all over blogtopia (yeah yeah yeah Skippy) this afternoon: Calling All Wingnuts proprietor, law student and gadfly Mike Stark was assaulted today by several members of Senator George Allen’s staff. (Don’t sweat the provocative headline; read the story itself. It’s a real corker. Violent outbursts, indeed.)

Well, Mike is fighting back. He’s pressing charges against Senator Macaca.

I will be pressing charges against George Allen and his surrogates later today. George Allen, at any time, could have stopped the fray. All he had to do was say, “This is not how my campaign is run. Take your hands off that man.” He could have ignored my questions. Instead he and his thugs chose violence. I spent four years in the Marine Corps. I’ll be damned if I’ll let my country be taken from me by thugs that are afraid of taking responsibility for themselves.

All I can say is you go, Mike.

h/t Crooks and Liars

Keith Olbermann Can Rest Easy

The ratings are out for the October broadcast month, the first full month of the 2006-2007 TV season, and for those of you who are fretting about whether the bravery of MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann would motivate his bosses at NBC to send him packing a la Phil Donahue, you can probably rest easy. Keith’s numbers are quite literally going through the roof, and he seems to be bringing the rest of MSNBC’s primetime lineup along for the ride.
In October 2005 Olbermann’s 8pm numbers were already on the rise, but they were not necessarily the stuff of which job security is made. He was delivering 381,000 total viewers — 53,000 fewer than his 7pm lead-in, Chris Matthews’ Hardball, and 2,000 fewer than Rita Cosby which then occupied the 9pm MSNBC slot. He fared a little better among Adults 25-54, the “money” demographic advertisers crave. At 145,000 Adults 25-54, Olbermann was already # 1 at MSNBC, 8,000 ahead of “Hardball” and 10,000 ahead of “Rita Cosby.”

Relative to his CNN and FOX competition however, Olbermann was a very, very distant third in October 2005. Bill O’Reilly over at FOX was delivering 603% more total viewers and 257% more Adults 25-54. At CNN Paula Zahn was delivering 116% more total viewers and 61% more Adults 25-54.

What a difference a year makes:

Olbermann delivered 637,000 total viewers in October 2006.

  • That is an increase of 67% versus October 2005
  • Olbermann left the other MSNBC talk shows in the dust, delivering 39% more viewers than “Hardball” (457,000 viewers, +5% versus a year ago); and 52% more viewers that Joe Scarborough’s 9pm show (418,000 viewers, +9% versus Rita Cosby a year ago).
  • Olbermann is still number 3 behind FOX and CNN, but not by all that much. O’Reilly is still way ahead at 2,081,000 viewers, but that is -22% and more than half-a-million viewers versus a year ago. Paula Zahn is also -22% and beat Olberman by a mere 2,000 viewers.
  • Olbermann was delivering 10% of the total 3-network total viewer pie (FOX, MSNBC, and CNN) in October 2005. In October 2006 he is up to 19%. That represents a 111% share increase.

Olbermann delivered 233,000 Adults 25-54 (the “money” demographic) in October 2006.

  • That is an increase of 61% versus October 2005
  • Again this places Olbermann well ahead of the other MSNBC talk shows. He is delivering 34% more Adults 25-54 than “Hardball” (174,000 Adults 25-54, +5% versus a year ago); and 53% more Adults 25-54 than Joe Scarborough’s 9pm show (152,000 Adults 25-54, +13% versus Rita Cosby a year ago).
  • Again, Fox’s Bill O’Reilly still leads the time period with 470,000 Adults 25-54, but that is -9% versus a year ago, and over at CNN Paula Zahn is now in third place behind Olbermann with 217,000 Adults 25-54, -7% versus a year ago.
  • And again, Olbermann’s share of the 8pm 3-network Adult 25-54 pie is way up — from 16% in October 2005 to 25% in October 2006 — a 56% increase.

Those stodgy and conservative executives at NBC and parent company General Electric are probably wishing they had clamped a lid on Keith Olbermann some time ago. He is after all one of the very few main stream media figures who dares speak truth to power. With numbers like these though — and those numbers are still on the rise — those of us who worry about Keith can probably rest easy.

Right on Keith!!!

2002 Warnings Ignored

   Break it, you buy it.  The Fall of 2002 was a critical one for decisions about Iraq. What did Republicans and fiscal conservatives do? You know, the guys who like to pose as reliable stewards of the economy.  They must have demanded realistic cost-benefit scenarios, right?  Disasters were predicted. They must have tried to derail the train, right?

   You’d think they left their brains on vacation.  Nothing makes them any more trustworthy now. A return to red flags of the time, to see the warnings they ignored…    

   Yale economist William Nordhaus wrote The Economic Consequences of a War with Iraq in October 2002.  He noted that the Administration was
silent on the costs of war.  Neither the study from the Congressional Budget Office nor that from the Democratic Staff of the House budget Committee estimated the cost of a protracted war.
 

The reports exclude complete estimates of the total costs of occupation, peacekeeping, democratization, nation-building, and post-occupation humanitarian assistance.

    Nordhaus estimated the occupation for a decade to cost $75 Billion to $500 Billion, reconstruction and nation-building to cost $25 Billion to $100 Billion, and humanitarian assistance to cost $1 Billion to $10 Billion.  

    He itmized early warning signs of economic and political miscalculations:  
 

  The Bush administration has made no serious public estimate of the costs of the coming war. The populace and the Congress are unable to make informed judgments about the realistic costs and benefits…

   The Bush administration has not prepared the public for the cost or the financing of what might prove an expensive adventure…

   [U]nilateral actions, particularly those taken without support from the Islamic world, risk inflaming moderates, emboldening radicals, and spawning terrorists in those countries

   [S]trategists may be deluding themselves on the reaction of the Islamic world and the Iraqi people to American intervention….

    The war in Iraq threatens to claim the scarce resources and attention of the United States for many years, distracting the country from other troubling spots, like North Korea or the Israeli-Palestine conflict.  The administration concentrates on Iraq, while slow growth, fiscal deficits, a crisis of corporate governance, and growing health-care problems threaten the economy at home….

   Notwithstanding all the warning signs, the administration marches ahead, heedless of the fiscal realities and undeterred by cautions from friends, allies, and foes.

 
   In December 2002 came estimates the cost of the war could run as high as $200 Billion, reported the Washington Post.  

A recent conference by the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies considered three scenarios for a war with Iraq. …

   A worst-case scenario (5 percent to 10 percent probability) envisaged fighting for three to six months, massive political unrest in the Middle East, terrorist attacks against the United States and large-scale damage to Iraqi oil facilities. … [This] would have “serious adverse effects” on the U.S. economy, according to Laurence H. Meyer, a former Federal Reserve Bank governor now with the Center for Strategic and International Studies. The worst-case scenario would likely lead to a global recession.

   More pointedly, Christopher Farrell criticized the lack of candor of the Bush Administration, commenting on the same report in Business Week for conservative readers.  

If the price of war in Iraq starts escalating, however, to $200 billion, $400 billion, $1 trillion, how does the government propose to meet the tab? By borrowing and sending the budget deficit into the stratosphere? By cutting government spending on just about everything else? By rescinding tax cuts and maybe levying a surcharge on the wealthy? By depreciating the currency with that old standby and enemy of the people, inflation?

    James Fallows interviewed a good variety of people for his article in the Atlantic Monthly of November 2002.  He  foretold almost every disaster, both long-term and short-term:

  • the immediate humanitarian crisis
  • the destruction of infrastructure
  • many billions of U.S. dollars for reconstruction and post-conflict security forces
  • the hunt for Saddam Hussein
  • severe language/communication difficulties
  • delay in setting up a plausible new government
  • expansion of Iranian influence
  • “warlordism” and ethnic-regional feuds

At a Pentagon briefing… Rumsfeld asked rhetorically, “Wouldn’t it be a wonderful thing if Iraq were similar to Afghanistan–if a bad regime was thrown out, people were liberated, food could come in, borders could be opened, repression could stop, prisons could be opened? I mean, it would be fabulous.”

   The transforming vision is not, to put it mildly, the consensus among those with long experience in the Middle East. “It is so divorced from any historical context, just so far out of court, that it is laughable,” Chris Sanders told me. “There isn’t a society in Iraq to turn into a democracy. That doesn’t mean you can’t set up institutions and put stooges in them. But it would make about as much sense as the South Vietnamese experiment did.” Others made similar points.

    Fallows wasn’t taken in by a gushing Rumsfeld.  

Merely itemizing the foreseeable effects of a war with Iraq suggests reverberations that would be felt for decades. If we can judge from past wars, the effects we can’t imagine when the fighting begins will prove to be the ones that matter most.

   Today, Republicans and fiscal conservatives may claim to disagree with the President, transparently for political advantage.  When it mattered, they weren’t there. They ignored warnings of disaster.  They went on vacation rather than work.
   They can go on vacation permanently, and take their laziness with them.  You want respect?  Earn it.

Dia De Los Muertos

Liberal Street Fighter

Though the subject matter may be considered morbid from the Anglo Saxon perspective, Mexicans celebrate the Day of the Dead joyfully, and though it occurs at the same time as Halloween, All Saints’ Day and All Souls Day, the traditional mood is much brighter with emphasis on celebrating and honoring the lives of the deceased, and celebrating the continuation of life; the belief is not that death is the end, but rather the beginning of a new stage in life. – Wikipedia entry

These are dark days, with worshippers of death and fear ascendant. It’s easy to believe their cries of hatred, their warnings of disaster. After all, everywhere you look they highlight signs of decay, of destruction, of division and hatred. Perhaps no mask is more frightful that the rictus distorting the face of our Commander in Chief, head Evangelical of the so-called free world. If you want, you can easily believe that this America we live in now is all we’ll be, the historical cancers of slavery, racism, genocide and warlordism have metastisized and overwhelmed the healthy civic body, leaving only an undead creature in search of new victims to devour.

Today, in the spirit of Dia De Los Muertos, let us look away from all of that. Today, lets celebrate instead those who’ve fought dark times before, survived dark times before, PREVAILED in times that were much like what we face now.
I don’t mean just the leaders, not just Elizabeth Cady Stanton, more than Joe Hill,  not just Chief Joseph, not merely Martin Luther King Jr. or William Lloyd Garrison or Cesar Chavez. The authoritarians are the ones who have no choice but to elevate “great men” for them to FOLLOW. These are only examples who’ve impacted on my memory, but your spiritual ancestors may be completely different. Our luminaries are only representatives of vast numbers of people most of us might never know by name, unless they were the grandfather who told you stories of old strikes, of meals of crusty toast with chipped beef gravy on top while sitting at his knee. Perhaps another who sat at an old formica kitchen table with tales of the struggle against the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the mission schools, or stories related at family get-togethers of sitting at the back of the bus, grandmothers who remembered having no opportunity to pursue their own dreams because of their gender. Maybe your forebearers told stories of shame and having to hide who they loved, or the pressure to hide the fruits of having loved, of being spirited away to give birth in shame.

THIS Dia De Los Muertos, remember their struggles, but remember their COMMUNITY. Remember that unlike the right, unlike the worshippers of division and death, we can look back with joy and fondness at people who sang and danced and loved and communed DESPITE their struggles, despite the exploitation, the hatred, the discrimination and fear. They formed communities, they formed unions, they formed sewing circles and barn raisings and volunteer organizations. They rallied with their neighbors, mended fences, found common ground with NEW neighbors different from themselves. It’s easy to remember the nativists, the klansmen, the misogynists and gay bashers and jingoists and bundists … but also remember that there were ALWAYS good people opposing them, forging bonds, talking and working together to build a brighter, broader, more inclusive future. While there were slavers, there were abolitionists. When other men jeered and sniped, remember there were women who reminded others that a woman was every bit the equal of a man and should have a voice, and there were sons who listened to them.

Celebrate the artists, the writers, the musicians and performers who forged bonds between different groups of people, who showed us all that it’s okay to be different, that different can be wonderful and exciting. Remember that every time that culture tried to expand our ties, broaden our conversations, help us see the world anew, the authoritarian minded tried to silence them, ban them, attack them, but over time the artists prevailed. From the churches and the juke joints, the beer halls and the smokey bars, from the salons to the corner table at the Algonquin, from coffee houses to underground clubs … we can remember fondly those who found beauty and strength in the everyday and in the sublime and IN EACH OTHER. THIS Dia De Los Muertos, read their words, sing their songs, dance to their tunes, enjoy their paintings and sculptures and their videos. Remember that no matter how loudly, how violently, how insistently those afraid of openness and sharing and difference and change tried to stop it, the songs got sung, the rugs got cut, the words got read.

Politics is merely the way change is eventually ratified and made the new status quo, and we’re sadly in a period where the easily frightened and the weak of spirit have waged a vociferous campaign to try to beat back those of us who want to love and live and grow. They’re winning right now, but that is temporary. Remember on this Dia De Los Muertos that they’ve tried this before, that they’ve even prevailed before, but only for a time. Now it’s time to honor the eventual victors, the activists and workers and creators and mothers and fathers and daughters and sons who slowly fought back, who’ve moved us closer together. The tide of history was on their side, and if only we would remember them, treasure them, take heart from their memories and stories, if only we would hear the whispers of their spirits in these next few days, we’ll remember that we can and will prevail. Turn away from lying fearmongers and fake saviors promising salvation in a broken political party, a party that is actively helping the authoritarians. They too truck in fear, and those of us who love life have no real desire to wallow in fear. Stop giving in. Remember those who fought before, and fight now for what you believe. Stop making compromises with the lesser of two very terrible evils.

We can and will prevail, we will find a way to become a font for peace again. It doesn’t matter how you add to the struggle, it not necessary for all of us to become politicians or full-time activists. You can help those who do that vital work by volunteering for them, or donating to them, or by merely talking to your neighbors, chatting with the frightened and cowed who you encounter in your daily life. Smile and quietly talk back to those who spread hate and fear. We are where we are because those with no faith in humanity TALKED TO EACH OTHER, and refused to compromise. We can do the same, because we believe in community, not division, and in community there comes strength.  The fight, the struggle, the great human show continues, and throughout history given time and perserverance it has been the cultivators, not the extractors, who have brought beauty, peace and prosperity to the world. Over the next couple of days, remember them fondly, and let those memories inform your choices as we face the struggles ahead.

The Show Will Go On

What is Higher Broderism?

What is Higher Broderism and why does it hate left-wing bloggers? Higher Broderism is a school of thought, best exemplified by Washington Post reporter David Broder, that Washington DC elites should provide the common wisdom to the ragged masses beyond the beltway. Moreover, Higher Broderism believes that the only acceptable politics is centrist. It’s not so much where the center is at any given time, it’s the centrism itself. Therefore, politicians that occassionally buck their own party, like Joe Lieberman and John McCain, reside on the Mt. Olympus of Higher Broderism. In this view, it is more virtuous of Lieberman to buck the winds of his party and support the President on Iraq than it is odious for him to be wrong on the issue.

Here is how Broder put it in a September 21, 2006 editorial:

Now, however, you can see the independence party forming — on both sides of the aisle. They are mobilizing to resist not only Bush but also the extremist elements in American society — the vituperative, foul-mouthed bloggers on the left and the on the right who would convert their faith into a whipping post for their opponents.

The center is beginning to fight back. Michael Bloomberg, the Republican mayor of New York, is holding a fundraiser for Sen. Joe Lieberman, a Democrat running as an independent against the bloggers’ favorite, Ned Lamont.

His election is important, as is Republican Sen. Lincoln Chafee’s in Rhode Island, because both would signal that independence is a virtue to be rewarded.

That passage contains both central elements of Higher Broderism. First, note that “vituperative, foul-mouthed bloggers” like myself are morally equated with “doctrinaire religious extremists”. My sin is not necessarily that I am wrong, but that I lack civility. But, the second element is the so-called independence that is exemplified by Joe Lieberman and Lincoln Chafee. Now, I’ll admit a little ambivalence about celebrating Sheldon Whitehouse’s butt-whupping of Lincoln Chafee a week from today. I want more Lincoln Chafees in the Senate, not less. But Whitehouse is a better representative for the people of Rhode Island. Chafee is a good guy that should have switched parties or gone independent, like Jim Jeffords. He didn’t, and now he is going to lose. That’s a loss for the GOP and for the nation, but it is a gain for Rhode Island. And considering the damage done by Bill Frist’s senate, it is, at least in the short-term, a gain for the nation. The fact that David Broder cannot distinguish between the civility and independence of Chafee and Lieberman belies the problem with his analysis. Lieberman in neither civil nor independent. He’s just beholden to certain interests, and he is consistent in that regard.

To gain a better understanding of the first element of Higher Broderism, that insiders should dictate common wisdom, we need to look at another Washington Post columnist, Sebastian Mallaby. Mallaby recently tackled the issue of ‘trust’. What does it mean when the American people lose their trust in government and in big business? Well, it’s bad.

There are powerful reasons trust tends to decline and accountability advances. Mobile societies tend to have weak bonds; the Internet makes it easier to hold people accountable and encourages acerbic negativity. And the absence of trust can feed on itself. Leaders function under stifling oversight; this causes them to perform sluggishly, so trust continues to stagnate. But occasionally there is a chance to escape this trap: A shock causes trust to rise, leaders have a chance to lead and there’s an opportunity to boost trust still further.

We’ve recently had a double opportunity. The boom of the 1990s boosted trust in business; the 2001 terrorist attacks boosted trust in government. But CEOs and politicians abused these gifts with scandals and incompetence. Such is the cost of corporate malfeasance and the Iraq war: Precious social capital is destroyed by leaders’ avarice and hubris.

This is another example of Higher Broderism. First, note that “the Internet makes it easier to hold people accountable and encourages acerbic negativity.” That quote is almost like a Zen Koan, if you think about it. What makes this a classic of the Higher Broderism genre is its failure to confront the central truth it raises. Blind faith in either the government or big business is misplaced and stupid. What Mallaby quietly and tacitly laments is that it is also stupid and misplaced to place blind faith in Washington Post reporters and columnists.

Another example of Higher Broderism can be seen today in an interview that ABC The Note’s Mark Halperin gave with right-wing nutcase Hugh Hewitt. Halperin coined the term Gang of 500 to denote the “”campaign consultants, strategists, pollsters, pundits, and journalists who make up the modern-day political establishment” They are “the 500 people whose decisions matter to the political news and campaign narrative we get from the major media.”

Hugh Hewitt: And so, given that we know that proportion is there, I don’t know the relevance that the fever swamp generates some antagonism towards you, that Daily Kos yells at you, doesn’t in any way, I think, not you personally, but media, doesn’t in any way change the basic underlying problem, which is that you’ve set up sort of castles full of liberal and hard left reporters, and that they’re criticized from the left doesn’t in any way diminish their left wing bias, does it?

Mark Halperin: Not at all. It only adds to the current problems, or the previous problems of the left wing bias on a lot of issues. What it adds is, people feeling cowed from the other direction, and it adds to the general lack of respect, which we have brought on ourselves, because look, we are too weak, and we are too superficial, and we have failed to stand up to power, as we should, if we’re going to play a proper role in a democracy. So the left criticisms, I think, don’t diminish the liberal bias, but they do make weak organizations, already under siege, more under siege, taking fire from a different direction.

Once again, the left wing bloggers are disparaged by proponents of Higher Broderism. In this case, we are adding to the general level of disrespect and cowing journalists into [yes, this is what he is saying} being less weak and superficial. I might rephrase this as “we are making them engage in real reporting which can border on the shrill.”

The problems of Higher Broderism are manifold. The most important aspect is for news coverage. When the Government decides to, I don’t know, invade Panama for no discernible reason, the Gang of 500 jumps into action and justifies the action. They become part of a psychological operation that is perpetrated on the country. They do not see it as their job to question the decisions made by ‘experts’ in the Pentagon, the CIA, or the National Security Council. If the government says Hugo Chavez is our villain of the week, then he suddenly becomes, not the twice elected and popular President of Venezuela, but a left-wing dictator. No fact-checking required.

David Halberstam demonstrated a long time ago, in The Best and the Brightest, that raw brain power and an Ivy League education are no guarantees that government employees will not make bone-headed decisions, like invading countries in Asia and then losing wars. This adminstration doesn’t even have the raw brain power part of the equation.

Another problem with Higher Broderism is that makes civility an unambigious virtue without any regard for the times and circumstance in which we live. We didn’t eradicate slavery and Jim Crow with civility and civility was not a virtue in those debates. Likewise, civility is not a virtue in the face of the disaster in Iraq, the abandonment of habeas corpus, and ‘unitary executive’ theory of government. These are moral questions, constitutional questions, and the side that is morally and constitutionally correct has been losing.

In fact, the left, as a whole, has been losing in no small part because of our unwillingness to match the right-wing in their level of foul-mouthed, acerbic, vituperative negativity. The President is saying we hate the armed forces and that we want to enable the terrorists to strike again. What’s the civil response?

In many ways the proponents of Higher Broderism have something in common with the administration. They both lament the fact that they can no longer control the message. I can’t imagine this country being mobilized to attack Panama again. Or Grenada. Not with blogs about to educate the public. Rick Santorum says the Iraq war will be won or lost at home. That’s really what the Gang of 500 thinks. That’s what the DC insiders think and what the Pentagon thinks. They’ve lost the ability to maintain public resolve. They really think the wars in Vietnam and Iraq were lost because the media was ineffective, or worse, a fifth column. You see, this blogging is interfering in their imperialism.

For Broder and his cohorts, the only reason WMD mattered was because it gave Powell a way to prevent a totally unilateral attack on Iraq. The WMD argument was the triumph of bipartisanship and internationalism over the worst instincts of the Bush administration. So, when we didn’t find them all they could say was, “it could have been worse.”

That’s Higher Broderism in a nutshell. Why didn’t they care about the Downing Street Memos? Because it hurt our resolve. They are not in the business of rooting out the facts. Not really. They are in the business of aiding and abetting one foreign policy disaster after another. When Lawrence Walsh started bringing home the goods on the Iran-Contra bandits in 1992, the Gang of 500 earned their name by ganging up on him and asking for bygones to be bygones. When Gary Webb uncovered narcotics and cocaine trafficking by the Contras, they helped to ruin his career.

They keep crying that left-wing bloggers are making their jobs harder. You bet we are making their jobs harder. The American people deserve better than Higher Broderism

Open Thread

John Kerry makes ill-advised joke. John Kerry gets criticized. John Kerry gets shrill and vituperative:

But if anyone should apologize, Mr. Kerry said, it is President Bush and his administration officials who started the ill-conceived war. He said his remarks, which he conceded were part of a “botched joke,” had been distorted and called the criticism directed at him the work of “assorted right-wing nut jobs and right-wing talk show hosts.”

“If anyone thinks a veteran would criticize the more than 140,000 heroes serving in Iraq and not the president who got us stuck there, they’re crazy,” Mr. Kerry said in a statement. “I’m sick and tired of these despicable Republican attacks that always seem to come from those who never can be found to serve in war, but love to attack those who did.”

“I’m not going to be lectured by a stuffed-suit White House mouthpiece standing behind a podium, or doughy Rush Limbaugh, who no doubt today will take a break from belittling Michael J. Fox’s Parkinson’s disease to start lying about me just as they have lied about Iraq,” Mr. Kerry went on. “It disgusts me that these Republican hacks, who have never worn the uniform of our country lie and distort so blatantly and carelessly about those who have.”

“Doughy Rush Limbaugh”?? What would David Broder say?