A BOUNTY of Fitzmasses comes your way.

Booman recently posted this little essay: Keeping Things in Balance.

After a parapraph that was a truly tortured attempt to remain “neutral” regarding Obama’s rightward rush while still supporting him, the second and last paragraph stated:

But I will say this. If anyone in the Obama campaign is listening, tell your candidate to take his foot off the centrism accelerator. He’s feeding the left more centrism than they can digest all at once. We all knew and expected that you would tack to the center once the nomination was secured. But you definitely should dole this stuff out in a more piecemeal fashion. You’re actually starting to damage the unity, motivation, and credibility of your base. And that has its costs.

After my laughing fit subsided I decided to write a reply to this post.

Which grew.

Here it is in its entirety.

But I will say this.If anyone in the Obama campaign is listening, tell your candidate to take his foot off the centrism accelerator. He’s feeding the left more centrism than they can digest all at once. We all knew and expected that you would tack to the center once the nomination was secured. But you definitely should dole this stuff out in a more piecemeal fashion. You’re actually starting to damage the unity, motivation, and credibility of your base. And that has its costs.

The “unity, motivation, and credibility” of Obama’s base, eh? And dissing that base “has its costs” ?

AHHHHH HA HA  HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA !!!!

“And that has its costs!!!???”

PLEASE, Booman.

Stop it.

Yer killin’ me!!!

The leftiness base has no unity, motivation, or credibility left. Dkos has been a crock of dithering shits for about four years now…as you should well know…and the whole rest of the left blogosphere amounts to a hill of beans compared to the votes in any one swing state.

So…of what “costs” do you speak?

Most of the so-called left is gojng to vote for Obama no matter what he does. A good part of that group will make excuses for his actions…”Oh, it’s only practical politics” (Myself included. The only difference between me and you folks is that  I have been consistent in that stance, witness my support of Hillary Clinton as well as Barack Obama during the primaries.)…and the stubborn, embittered few? The angry-and-feeling-dissed middle aged white female vote (recently given the nasty label “the Puma/Cougar vote” by the MSM) and the die-hard leftiness clones who are still holding out for Kucinich?

Please. Win one precinct in Ohio and you have already outnumbered THAT vote.

So what costs do you mean, Booman?

The Obama people can add and subtract.

Can you?

Money?

C’mon.

He has already solved that problem by opting out of public financing.

What’s left?

Morality?

(Parse parse parse…)

To win, or not to win: that is the question:
Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous politics,
Or to take arms against a sea of crooks,
And by opposing lose to them? To lose: to rule
No more; and by a sleep to say we end
The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks
That politics is heir to, ’tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wish’d. But to lose, to sleep;
To lose perchance forever!!!??? Ay, there’s the rub.

(Parse parse parse…)

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OK. I think I’ve got it.

FUCK those leftiness motherfuckers.

Yes. Fuck ’em!!!

Rightward…HO!!!

Yes I can!!!

And yes he will.

Bet on it

Yon prince hath a lean and practical look.

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Bet on that as well.

And get used to it, too.

I think you are looklng at 8 years of practical politics.

A BOUNTY of Fitzmasses fer y’all!!!!

That should make you very happy. Just think. Eight more years of complainability.

AHHHHH HA HA  HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA !!!!

HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO !!!!

Yours truly…

Santa

P.S. Mrs. Claus and I are actually quite tickled.

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We just LOVE a good joke!!!

IDF fatally shoots Palestinian youth in Beit Ummar

Five months after the incidents in Beit Ummar subsequent to the death of the Sabarna cousins, once again a teenager has been killed by the IDF and the IDF’s presence at the funeral leads to the injury of more Palestinians.  Bekah Wolf of the Palestine Solidarity Project, located in Beit Ummar, gives background for the incident:

The Israeli military has been slowly escalating its intimidation tactics in Beit Ommar over the last three days, often patrolling the streets at sundown, provoking youth by parking outside of the mosque and waiting for young boys to come and throw stones before shooting tear gas and rubber-coated steel bullets.

The increasing terrorization of the village culminated at approximately 9:30 pm Friday when a 17 year old boy, Mohammed Anwar Al-Alami, was shot in the heart and killed.

Soldiers first entered the southern West Bank’s town at 4 pm and began slowly circling the village, often stopping in the center of town, shooting a few tear gas canisters, but otherwise staying in their jeeps. They were not searching houses nor made any other indication that they were engaging in any authorized operation. Shortly after sundown, at approximately 9 pm, they began arresting residents: blindfolding and handcuffing nine men in total and bringing them to the entrance of the village. Four were later released, five remain in Israeli custody. Several more jeeps and Armored Personnel Carriers (APC’s) entered the village. Young boys began throwing stones and empty bottles which bounced off the armored military vehicles harmlessly. Still, for the Israeli military a rock against reinforced metal is reason enough to end the life of a young man, about to finish his final exams and graduate from high school.

Mohammed was quickly rushed to the hospital, but he had been shot in the chest and the bullet entered his heart, killing him almost instantly.

The account continues from Christian Peacemaker Teams:

On Friday, 27 June around 11:00 p.m., an Israeli soldier in Beit Ummar, a village north of Hebron, shot and killed a 17-year-old Palestinian youth, Mohammad Al-Alameh, member of a family with whom the Christian Peacemaker Teams has had frequent contact over the years.

The shooting occurred minutes after local contacts in Beit Ummar made a call to the Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) in Hebron, saying that the Israeli soldiers were entering homes and detaining civilians. Two CPTers, Tarek Abuata and Marius van Hoogstraten, rushed to the village by taxi, accompanied by Nathan Harrington, a visitor to CPT, who was on crutches.

When the team arrived half an hour later, rocks littered the main street. Israeli soldiers marched up and down the block with assault rifles held in a firing position, amid clusters of Palestinian men huddled in quiet shock.

Abuata attempted to photograph the troops, but was tackled to the ground without warning by an Israeli soldier. Another soldier knocked Harrington off his crutches when he approached to help Abuata. While Abuata and Harrington sat on the pavement, a third soldier threatened Van Hoogstraten and demanded his video camera. He removed the tape before returning the camera to Van Hoogstraten.

Abuata rose and confronted the soldiers, saying, “You killed a 17-year-old boy tonight. Why? His blood is on your hands.” The soldier nearest to him smiled, and Abuata asked, “Why are you smiling? Do you have no conscience? Will you do anything the government orders you to do? Are you not accountable to God?”

More troops emerged from jeeps and advanced up the street. The assembled men of the village did not respond. CPTers followed the soldiers and Abuata continued: “What you are doing is wrong. Why are your fingers on the trigger? How would you feel if a foreign army came to your city with guns drawn? This is an illegal occupation!”

The soldiers finally climbed into their jeeps and raced off, throwing a sound bomb that caused several Beit Ummar villagers and the CPTers to hit the pavement.

The following morning, Van Hoogstraten and Abuata accompanied the Al-Alameh family and a large crowd to bring the body from the hospital in Hebron to the family’s house, and then to the mosque. Two armored vehicles parked between the watchtower at the entrance to the village and the cemetery gate. Soldiers stood nearby, including the officer who claimed to have shot the youth.

Community leaders kept young men away from the soldiers, but eventually someone lobbed a stone at one of the jeeps. Though an officer responded by shooting live ammunition, no one was injured.

As the throng returned after the conclusion of burial, the army followed them into the village. Over the next hour, CPTers witnessed intermittent exchanges of stones and gunfire and heard reports that one man from Beit Ummar sustained a head injury and another an injury to the shoulder.

A link to video showing Abuata engaging the soldiers is available at http://www.youtube.com/user/cpthebron.

The story by Christian Peacemaker Teams is reproduced with permission.

Cross-posted at Beyond Bethlehem and Daily Kos.

Keeping Things in Balance

Atrios:

One thing about blogging during the campaign is that you end up pissing people off on all sides. There are those who, understandably, think it’s vitally important that Barack Obama be elected and so important that asshole bloggers like me should refrain from any and all criticism lest my mighty blog powers cause Obama to fail. And there are those that get mad because I’m completely in the tank and don’t criticize Obama enough. And everyone in between.

I actually think all perspectives, except the crazy people who imagine the Obama campaign is funneling lots of money to me, have merit. It is vitally important that Obama win this election, and the importance of that towers over most day to day stuff.

Per usual, Atrios is a voice of reason. Bloggers will be bloggers, and criticizing what we see as poor strategy or bad policy is in our DNA. On the other hand, pushing back against the obsessions with unimportant crap and keeping in mind the larger stakes involved in this election is not going in the tank for Obama. I can keep two conflicting things in my mind simultaneously. For example, I can be extremely upset and disappointed with Obama’s position on FISA without letting that strong disagreement color my interpretation of every other thing he is doing. I can see the repudiation of Wesley Clark’s recent comments as a short-term win with long-term risks without actually giving two craps about the issue either way. I can agree with his criticisms of MoveOn.org’s Gen. Betrayus ad campaign without seeing it some kind of ‘move to the center’.

But I will say this. If anyone in the Obama campaign is listening, tell your candidate to take his foot off the centrism accelerator. He’s feeding the left more centrism than they can digest all at once. We all knew and expected that you would tack to the center once the nomination was secured. But you definitely should dole this stuff out in a more piecemeal fashion. You’re actually starting to damage the unity, motivation, and credibility of your base. And that has its costs.

Fighting Religious Oppression With Smooches!

Crossposted from Left Toon Lane, Bilerico Project & My Left Wing


click to enlarge
Pride in Madrid…

There is a tasteless Inquisition joke in here somewhere

In a country where Catholic majority views on homosexuality clash with the government’s recognition of gay marriage, gay pride organizers use smaller regional venues to build momentum for a national parade in Madrid.

[..]

Spain’s giant national gay pride parade is set for Saturday, July 5th in Madrid. An estimated 1.5 million people are expected for a gay pride parade winding down the streets of the country’s capital city.

Like parades in the U.S., Spaniards plan to celebrate recent gay rights victories. Re-election of the progressive Socialist party in the spring – despite condemnations by the Catholic church and the Pope – ensured gay marriage rights will not be rolled back anytime soon.

Tom Schaller Begs the Question

I like Tom Schaller and admire his work but I don’t understand why he submitted such a light piece of analytical work to the New York Times. Schaller argues that Obama has no chance to win in North Carolina, Georgia, or Mississippi. He might be right, but all he uses to justify his opinion are demographics and history. What little analysis he offers he reserves for Mississippi.

Mississippi, the state with the nation’s highest percentage of African-Americans in its population, illustrates how difficult Mr. Obama’s task will be in the South. Four years ago, President Bush beat John Kerry there by 20 points. For the sake of argument, let’s assume that Mr. Obama could increase black turnout in Mississippi to 39 percent of the statewide electorate, up from 34 percent in 2004, according to exit polls. And let’s assume that Mr. Obama will win 95 percent of those voters, up from the 90 percent who voted for Mr. Kerry four years ago.

If that happened, the black vote would yield Mr. Obama 37 percent of Mississippi’s statewide votes. To get the last 13 percent he needs for a majority, Mr. Obama would need to persuade a mere 21 percent of white voters in Mississippi to support him. Sounds easy, right?

But only 14 percent of white voters in the state supported Mr. Kerry. Mr. Obama would need to increase that number by 7 percentage points — a 50 percent increase. Mr. Obama struggled to attract white Democrats in states like Ohio and South Dakota. It strains credulity to believe that he will attract three white voters in Mississippi for every two that Mr. Kerry did.

The 2004 results in Mississippi were a straight up 60-40 advantage for George W. Bush. The third party candidates combined failed to gain one percent of the vote. Schaller doesn’t speculate about the potential impact of third-party candidates in this year’s election. The Libertarian candidate, Bob Barr, is a southerner who might peel a few percentage points off John McCain’s edge. Here are some other factors that Schaller ignores.

Most obviously, there is current polling in the state. The latest Rasmussen poll shows McCain up by a mere 50-44. And the FiveThirtyEight projection has McCain leading by 53-44.

Schaller doesn’t consider any benefit that Obama may have derived from the organization he did in the state during the primary. He doesn’t discuss the competitive senate race between Roger Wicker and former governor Ronnie Musgrove. He doesn’t even acknowledge the recent upset in Mississippi’s First District special election, where a Democrat won carrying several counties that Bush carried with over 70% of the vote. Schaller doesn’t mention Bush’s 39% approval rating in the state, nor does he mention the impact of Hurricane Katrina on the GOP brand in the state.

Schaller’s analysis takes no account of Obama’s superior political skills that far outrun what John Kerry had to offer. And, very tellingly, Schaller doesn’t acknowledge that John Kerry made zero effort in Mississippi, while Obama plans to ask the people for their votes. In particular, as today’s New York Times reports, Obama has an aggressive outreach program to evangelical Christians.

Schaller also fails to mention John McCain’s weaknesses. McCain is not a southerner and does not connect easily with the South’s religious culture. He’s called some leading evangelicals ‘agents of intolerance’ in the past, and has rebuked other evangelical leaders in this election cycle. Polls show that people are concerned about his age and that he will not represent a significant change from Bush’s policies. He has less money to spend, and he isn’t organized in Mississippi, where the primary came long after he had secured the nomination.

There are many factors that differentiate 2004 from 2008, especially in a state like Mississippi that was devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Schaller only acknowledges the possibility of increased black turnout as significant game changer.

His analysis of North Carolina and Georgia is short and to the point.

Mr. Obama can write off Georgia and North Carolina for the same reasons that Mississippi is beyond his reach — although the math in those two states is slightly less daunting.

The last two polls out of North Carolina have Obama down by 2 and 4 points, respectively…both within the margin of error of the poll. Neither of them assume that Obama will get 95% of the black vote, as Schaller assumes in Mississippi. Schaller’s analysis is so thin that he’s really just begging the question. As for Georgia, it’s too early to tell how Bob Barr will do there, but it is his homestate.

I’m not saying that Obama will win any southern states for certain. But he has an excellent chance to win Virginia and North Carolina. And I think Obama can compete in Florida, Georgia, and Mississippi. At the very least, readers of the New York Times deserve a more robust analysis than that provided by Schaller.

Poor Judgement or …?

We currently have special ops in Iran doing whatever Bush wants them to do to hurt the Iranian regime. You know, the folks who didn’t attack us on 9/11. But when given the option of employing special ops forces to track down Osama bin Ladin, what did Bush do? Well, exactly what he has been doing:

Late last year, top Bush administration officials decided to take a step they had long resisted. They drafted a secret plan to make it easier for the Pentagon’s Special Operations forces to launch missions into the snow-capped mountains of Pakistan to capture or kill top leaders of Al Qaeda. […]

The new plan, outlined in a highly classified Pentagon order, was intended to eliminate some of those battles. And it was meant to pave a smoother path into the tribal areas for American commandos, who for years have bristled at what they see as Washington’s risk-averse attitude toward Special Operations missions inside Pakistan. They also argue that catching Mr. bin Laden will come only by capturing some of his senior lieutenants alive.

But more than six months later, the Special Operations forces are still waiting for the green light. The plan has been held up in Washington by the very disagreements it was meant to eliminate. A senior Defense Department official said there was “mounting frustration” in the Pentagon at the continued delay.

The story of how Al Qaeda, whose name is Arabic for “the base,” has gained a new haven is in part a story of American accommodation to President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan, whose advisers played down the terrorist threat. It is also a story of how the White House shifted its sights, beginning in 2002, from counterterrorism efforts in Afghanistan and Pakistan to preparations for the war in Iraq.

And why exactly Republicans are stronger on matters of national security? 9/11 occurred on their watch. They bungled the war in Afghanistan and let the Taliban and Al Qaeda regain the former strength. They attacked a country (Iraq) that was no threat to us, and wasted billions of dollars degrading our military readiness and running up massive debts, while creating instability in the Middle East that contributed to crude oil prices in excess of $140 a barrel, two of the main reasons our economy is in the tank. They allowed North Korea to develop nukes. They failed to accept a deal with Iran in 2003 that would have ended Iran’s nuclear program and its support for Hamas and Hezbollah. And now they are using our special forces to provoke a war in Iran while refusing to go after the criminals that actually attacked our country.

Does any rational person see this record of failure as evidence of competence, much less a strength, when it comes to protecting America?

Feingold on FISA

the senate returns next tuesday and will once again take up the fisa legislation. there’s still a fight to be waged, and fewer and fewer people to do it. here’s a video taped message from russ feingold:

All week I’ve read your emails, seen your comments online, and heard your phone calls.  You don’t want the flawed FISA bill to become law.  I hear you and I wanted to let you know that I’m going to do everything in my power to stop this bill.
Much as I would like to I can’t respond to each one of you individually so I’ve decided to respond online via video. I’d appreciate if you would take a moment to watch and pass it along to your friends and family or anyone you know that cares about preserving our right to privacy.

 

Thank you all for standing with me and speaking out about stopping the FISA bill.  It’s going to be an uphill battle but your words of support are a constant reminder of why this particular battle is worth waging.

Sincerely,

Russ Feingold
United States Senator

contact your senator…again if you already have, and harry reid as well as obama’s senate office and express your feelings regarding the importance of this issue.

he and dodd need all the support they can get.

Supreme Court Continues to Restrict Scope of Capital Punishment

The 8th Amendment of the Constitution, in its prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment, holds at its core the fundamental American values of fairness, dignity, and justice.  Last week’s Supreme Court decision on Kennedy v. Louisiana reaffirmed these values by once again finding the death penalty as not only an ineffective deterrent against crime, but also incongruous with the nation’s “evolving standards of decency and redemption that mark the progress of a maturing society.” (Trop v. Dulles). The court appealed to the “precept of justice” in holding that punishment is to be proportioned to the crime, and in the case of capital punishment this is indeed “a narrow category.”

In delivering its opinion, the court held that the application of the death penalty had to rest on a “national consensus” that a death sentence was an inappropriate punishment to the crime of child rape.  The decision of the court also made significant reference to Roper v. Simmons, a 2005 ruling that appealed to international norms in ruling the death penalty an inappropriate punishment.  While the Supreme Court did not explicitly cite international human rights law in its decision, the values of decency, fairness, and dignity upon which it relies are shared universally.  Moreover, the language of international law pervades the friend-of-the-court brief submitted by Leading British Law Associations, Scholars, Queen’s Counsel and Former Law Lords.  The brief, heavily referencing the UN Commission on Human Rights, hinges its argument on a “well-established global consensus” that “nations that retain the death penalty must progressively narrow the class of offenses punishable by death.”  This amicus brief, and the Supreme Court ruling that upheld its conclusion, affirms an internationally held respect for the value of human life within the American court system.

By “repeatedly taking note of other nations’ practices in considering the application of the death penalty,” and by simultaneously holding itself to the standard of national consensus, the Supreme Court expressed the implicit view that international norms are compatible with and even complementary to our national values. (See Redemption).  This view underlies the Opportunity Agenda’s commitment to engaging the discourse of human rights here in the US.  As affirmed by the Supreme Court in their approach to Kennedy v. Louisiana, universal rights are fundamentally in sync with core American values.

Clark was Right

I have no problem with Obama refusing to get into a debate on John McCain’s military record. But that doesn’t mean that Wes Clark, former NATO commander and also a “war hero” for his service in Vietnam was wrong to say that McCain’s military service does not ipso facto qualify him to be Commander in Chief. Indeed, as he pointed out there is a lot in McCain’s record that suggests he is ill suited to make the informed strategic decisions that will be necessary in the coming years to address the many foreign policy issues that are likely to arise, not just in Iraq, but in India/Pakistan, Eastern Europe, Africa and Eastern Asia.

But don’t take my word for it. Here is the best defense I’ve seen of General Clark’s statements about McCain yet, from another former General, Robert S. Gard Jr., at Huffington Post. He says it far better than I could:

On CBS’s Face the Nation, General Clark said that he believed John McCain was “untried and untested.” Journalist Bob Schieffer asked him to explain what he meant. How could Clark make such a claim when “you’re talking about somebody who was a prisoner of war? He was a squadron commander of the largest squadron in the Navy. He’s been on the Senate Armed Services Committee for many years. How can you say that John McCain is un-untested and untried?” And here’s General Clark’s answer:

>

Because in the matters of national security policy making, it’s a matter of understanding risk. It’s a matter of gauging your opponents, and it’s a matter of being held accountable. John McCain’s never done any of that in his official positions. I certainly honor his service as a prisoner of war. He was a hero to me and to hundreds of thousands and millions of others in Armed Forces as a prisoner of war. He has been a voice on the Senate Armed Services Committee, and he has traveled all over the world. But he hasn’t held executive responsibility.

As a retired military officer and a soldier who served his country for over thirty years, I can tell you that there’s nothing in what Wes Clark said with which I disagree. He has not only stated the facts, he knows something about them. John McCain was a prisoner of war, an officer who served as a squadron commander, and has been and is a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. John McCain can put his service to country up against anyone’s. But General Clark has served also — and with great courage: he was wounded four times in Vietnam — and like John McCain, he has met and seen the enemy.

Is what Wesley Clark said true? Let’s check some other facts: John McCain made claims about progress in security by walking through the streets of Baghdad. But as I recall, he was protected by at least a platoon of American soldiers and helicopters lying overhead. In matters of national security, as General Clark pointed out, “it’s a matter of understanding risk,” and it’s “gauging your opponents;” and it’s also a “matter of being held accountable.”

… [B]eing a prisoner of the Vietnamese and serving on the Senate Armed Services Committee does not automatically qualify one for the position of Commander-in-Chief — understanding risks, gauging your opponents and being held accountable does. We must end this glib obeisance to sacrifice and ask deeper questions: is a man who sings “bomb, bomb, bomb … bomb, bomb Iran” a man who understands risks? Is a man who says that we must keep our troops in Iraq until we achieve an ill-defined “victory” really know how to gauge America’s opponents. If we want to hold people accountable, then let’s stand behind my friend Wes Clark — and hold John McCain accountable for what he’s said.

Clark didn’t question McCain’s service or his patriotism. What he did question was McCain’s judgment. And isn’t that what Obama has claimed all along, that judgment is the key issue for determining who should have his or her hands on the nuclear button? Rejecting General Clark was wrong. It’s not too late to defend him with the basic theme of Obama’s camapign: John McCain lacks the judgment to be given command over the largest military on earth.

In politics one can run away from an opponent’s perceived strength or one can attack it straight on. The more Democrats run away from McCain’s perceived strength of being superior in the area of national security, the greater that strength will become. Unlike Bush who swift boated Kerry, we don’t need to slander McCain’s military record. We just need to tell the truth. I suggest Obama allow General Clark and others to do that if he is unwilling to do it himself, without rejecting the messenger or suggesting that any statements about McCain’s qualifications to be the head of our Armed Forces are off limits. Why build up your opponent’s strength? Why make McCain’s military service more than what it is in the minds of the public. The Republican’s aren’t afraid to attack Obama on his perceived strengths. Let’s not be afraid to attack McCain on the only thing he supposedly has going for him: his national security bona fides.

Because as General Clark said, when you look at them closely “there’s no there there.”

Can the Blogosphere Please Grow Up?

Barack Obama gave a speech today in Independence, Missouri. You can read the transcript here. It was another moving, excellent performance of the kind we’ve come to expect from Obama. Apparently, we now take it for granted that Obama will give a great speech, because we no longer give him any credit for them. He spoke of patriotism and of what it means to love this country. Here’s just one example:

I believe those who attack America’s flaws without acknowledging the singular greatness of our ideals, and their proven capacity to inspire a better world, do not truly understand America.

Of course, precisely because America isn’t perfect, precisely because our ideals constantly demand more from us, patriotism can never be defined as loyalty to any particular leader or government or policy. As Mark Twain, that greatest of American satirists and proud son of Missouri, once wrote, “Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.” We may hope that our leaders and our government stand up for our ideals, and there are many times in our history when that’s occurred. But when our laws, our leaders or our government are out of alignment with our ideals, then the dissent of ordinary Americans may prove to be one of the truest expression of patriotism.

The young preacher from Georgia, Martin Luther King, Jr., who led a movement to help America confront our tragic history of racial injustice and live up to the meaning of our creed – he was a patriot. The young soldier who first spoke about the prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib – he is a patriot. Recognizing a wrong being committed in this country’s name; insisting that we deliver on the promise of our Constitution – these are the acts of patriots, men and women who are defending that which is best in America. And we should never forget that – especially when we disagree with them; especially when they make us uncomfortable with their words.

It would be hard to find a more eloquent defense of dissent in this county, but the blogosphere decided to dissent about something other than the war or FISA or torture today. They decided to throw a tantrum over one sentence from this speech that referred negatively to MoveOn.org (without mentioning their name). You should read the full context of his remarks (the offending sentence is highlighted).

My concerns here aren’t simply personal, however. After all, throughout our history, men and women of far greater stature and significance than me have had their patriotism questioned in the midst of momentous debates. Thomas Jefferson was accused by the Federalists of selling out to the French. The anti-Federalists were just as convinced that John Adams was in cahoots with the British and intent on restoring monarchal rule. Likewise, even our wisest Presidents have sought to justify questionable policies on the basis of patriotism. Adams’ Alien and Sedition Act, Lincoln’s suspension of habeas corpus, Roosevelt’s internment of Japanese Americans – all were defended as expressions of patriotism, and those who disagreed with their policies were sometimes labeled as unpatriotic.

In other words, the use of patriotism as a political sword or a political shield is as old as the Republic. Still, what is striking about today’s patriotism debate is the degree to which it remains rooted in the culture wars of the 1960s – in arguments that go back forty years or more. In the early years of the civil rights movement and opposition to the Vietnam War, defenders of the status quo often accused anybody who questioned the wisdom of government policies of being unpatriotic. Meanwhile, some of those in the so-called counter-culture of the Sixties reacted not merely by criticizing particular government policies, but by attacking the symbols, and in extreme cases, the very idea, of America itself – by burning flags; by blaming America for all that was wrong with the world; and perhaps most tragically, by failing to honor those veterans coming home from Vietnam, something that remains a national shame to this day. And yet the anger and turmoil of that period never entirely drained away. All too often our politics still seems trapped in these old, threadbare arguments – a fact most evident during our recent debates about the war in Iraq, when those who opposed administration policy were tagged by some as unpatriotic, and a general providing his best counsel on how to move forward in Iraq was accused of betrayal.

Most Americans never bought into these simplistic world-views – these caricatures of left and right. Most Americans understood that dissent does not make one unpatriotic, and that there is nothing smart or sophisticated about a cynical disregard for America’s traditions and institutions.

Even this extensive quoting doesn’t put these comments in their full context. To get the full context you need to read the parts where Obama describes the formation of his respect and love for America, its institutions, traditions, and ideals. Only then will you truly understand why he feels strongly opposed to the more strident and wide-sweeping attacks the left sometimes makes on this county.

I am tired of hearing people on the left complain about Democrats that did not want to be associated with the General Betrayus advertisement and that went so far as to condemn it. I condemned it as the stupidest, most self-defeating, and predictably self-defeating political advertisement I have ever seen. I am still stunned that MoveOn placed that advertisement without running it by anyone in Congress to see if they would stand by its message. Of course they weren’t going to stand by it. I can’t think of a viable party in any country in the world that would stand by an advertisement that accused the commanding general in the field in a time of war of betraying his country merely because he was going to testify before Congress. It’s as if eight-year olds were devising this public relations strategy, and the people that are still defending them are like two-year olds.

And I know all the arguments. There is no argument that can trump what actually happened. The anti-war movement never recovered. Our dissent was marginalized. And why? Because, as Obama said, the country doesn’t buy into ‘cynical disregard for America’s traditions and institutions.’ The pro-war faction has always understood this. That’s why during the Vietnam War the FBI developed their COINTELPRO program to actually incite the New Left to greater acts of violence and radicalism. If you burn an American flag, people stop listening to you. If you plant a pipe-bomb on government property people will want you thrown in jail. Real patriots work to make America live up to its ideals, but they don’t attack the institutions themselves because they believe in them. There is an art to effective dissent and there is also an art to undermining legitimate dissent. The Betrayus campaign couldn’t have failed these tests more spectacularly.

If you listen to what Obama is saying, you’ll understand why doesn’t agree with the kind of dissent MoveOn opted for:

As I got older, that gut instinct – that America is the greatest country on earth – would survive my growing awareness of our nation’s imperfections: it’s ongoing racial strife; the perversion of our political system laid bare during the Watergate hearings; the wrenching poverty of the Mississippi Delta and the hills of Appalachia. Not only because, in my mind, the joys of American life and culture, its vitality, its variety and its freedom, always outweighed its imperfections, but because I learned that what makes America great has never been its perfection but the belief that it can be made better. I came to understand that our revolution was waged for the sake of that belief – that we could be governed by laws, not men; that we could be equal in the eyes of those laws; that we could be free to say what we want and assemble with whomever we want and worship as we please; that we could have the right to pursue our individual dreams but the obligation to help our fellow citizens pursue theirs.

For a young man of mixed race, without firm anchor in any particular community, without even a father’s steadying hand, it is this essential American idea – that we are not constrained by the accident of birth but can make of our lives what we will – that has defined my life, just as it has defined the life of so many other Americans.

That is why, for me, patriotism is always more than just loyalty to a place on a map or a certain kind of people. Instead, it is also loyalty to America’s ideals – ideals for which anyone can sacrifice, or defend, or give their last full measure of devotion. I believe it is this loyalty that allows a country teeming with different races and ethnicities, religions and customs, to come together as one.

And even more specifically:

I remember, when living for four years in Indonesia as a child, listening to my mother reading me the first lines of the Declaration of Independence – “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal. That they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” I remember her explaining how this declaration applied to every American, black and white and brown alike; how those words, and words of the United States Constitution, protected us from the injustices that we witnessed other people suffering during those years abroad. That’s my idea of America.

I never lived in a foreign country, but I studied enough history and philosophy to develop a deep and abiding respect for our country’s institutions that is very similar to Obama’s. And I formed the same understanding of patriotism, which I see as a combination of a defense of our institutions with a constant call to improve upon them. I’m no shrinking violet when it comes to criticizing America but I never do it with wanton disrespect or cynical disregard. And I’m politically astute enough to know that a majority of Americans will not listen nor will they be convinced by arguments that show that kind of disrespect to any of our institutions…including the armed forces.

MoveOn blundered when they launched the Betrayus advertisement and the blame for their decision lies with their decision makers, not with the people that do not care to be associated with their decision. But my problem with the Blogosphere’s reaction goes deeper.

There is a stunning lack of maturity in the progressive movement. Maybe it is because we are young and have been out of power our whole lives. But surrogates need to understand something. Obama is the candidate. The candidate wants to push his message. If you become the message, you’re no longer pushing the narrative. If you want fame for yourself or publicity for your organization more than you want to elect the candidate or achieve your organization’s goals, then you’re part of the problem, you’re making the candidate’s job harder, and you should expect to get a stiff-arm from the campaign. If a surrogate goes off message he or she will get disowned in order to reclaim the narrative that the candidate wants to focus on. Surrogates need to understand this going in and not take it too personally when they get tossed in front of a bus. I am positive that Wesley Clark understands the rules of the game, but it is quite obvious that most of the blogosphere does not.

Barack Obama doesn’t want to discuss John McCain’s military service. It is not a narrative that benefits him. He doesn’t want his allies gratuitously attacking the military and its generals. That is not an association that helps him. It’s nothing personal. It’s strictly politics. And if your ego gets bruised everytime the candidate stiff-arms an off message progressive, you best get into another line of work.