BY DAN
KENNEDY
Notes and observations on
the press, politics, culture, technology, and more. To sign up for
e-mail delivery, click
here. To send
an e-mail to Dan Kennedy, click
here.
For bio, published work, and links to other blogs, visit
www.dankennedy.net.
For information on Dan Kennedy's book, Little People: Learning to
See the World Through My Daughter's Eyes (Rodale, October 2003),
click
here.
Wednesday, June 30, 2004
MENINO SLAMS KERRY. Oh, my.
Boston mayor Tom Menino is going public with his anger at Senator
John Kerry. Kerry's been indecisive, to say the least, in trying to
balance his desire not to offend the Boston Police Patrolmen's
Association and his need to maintain a good relationship with Menino
heading into the Democratic National Convention.
Today's Boston Herald
lead
story, by David Guarino and
Noelle Straub, quotes Menino as calling Kerry's campaign
"small-minded" and "incompetent." Menino, understandably, is
exercised over Kerry's decision not to speak at a gathering of the US
Conference of Mayors, hosted by Menino, rather than cross the police
union's picket-line-that-isn't-really-a-picket-line. The mayor's also pissed at Kerry-camp leaks alleging that Menino hung up on Kerry sometime Sunday. Menino told the
Herald:
Maybe they should use some
of their energies to get their message across to the American
people instead of trying to destroy the integrity of someone who
is on their team, to try to discredit someone on their team. They
have better things to do.
The only truly surprising thing is
that Menino decided to unload even though media sentiment has been
going his way, with most commentators castigating Kerry for refusing
to stand up to a union whose aggressive tactics have been widely
criticized.
In today's Boston Globe, for
instance, Glen Johnson reports
that Kerry's critics - and some supporters - think the senator's
machinations over the mayors' conference were "protracted, messy, and
guided by self-interest."
Globe columnist Scot Lehigh
quotes
Menino as saying that this could have been a "Sister Souljah" moment
for Kerry - that is, an opportunity to stand up to an important
Democratic constituency that's out of line, as Bill Clinton did in
1992 in speaking out against a rap singer who'd talked about killing
white people.
With things going Menino's way, he
could have just sat back and enjoyed it, and allowed Kerry to stew in
a mess of his own making. But that's not how the mayor does things.
He had to get it off his chest even though most people already agree
with him.
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Tuesday, June 29, 2004
ALAN SIMPSON ON THE "LIBERAL"
MEDIA. Here at Media Log Central these days, it's all Clinton,
all the time. Day and night, we slog through My Life, a
project that's taking almost as long as it did for him to live it,
never mind write it. Is it "eye-crossingly
dull"? At times.
But I love a critique offered by
former Republican senator Alan Simpson, of Wyoming, about the
so-called liberal media. It appears on pages 692-693, and I quote
Clinton at some length:
Simpson laughed at how
willing the "elitist" press was to swallow anything negative about
small, rural places like Wyoming or Arkansas and made an
interesting observation: "You know, before you were elected, we
Republicans believed the press was liberal. Now we have a more
sophisticated view. They are liberal in a way. Most of them voted
for you, but they think more like your right-wing critics do, and
that's much more important." When I asked him to explain, he said,
"Democrats like you ... get into government to help people. The
right-wing extremists don't think government can do much to
improve on human nature, but they do like power. So does the
press. And since you're President, they both get power the same
way, by hurting you."
Liberal in a way. That sums
up what I've been saying about allegations of liberal media bias for
years. There are critics who deny there is any liberal bias on
the part of the media, or that if there was, it has long since burned
itself out. In fact, there is a liberal bias on certain cultural
issues - abortion rights, gay issues, and the social agenda in
general.
But the media are moderate to
conservative on economics (when was the last time you saw a positive
story about organized labor anywhere except in the Nation?)
and agnostic on foreign policy (if George W. Bush's Iraq misadventure
had been an unqualified success, the media would be hailing him as a
new Caesar).
Perhaps most important, journalists
counter the accusation that they are liberal by going after liberal
and/or Democratic politicians like crazed weasels. Just look at what
they did to Clinton. And Al Gore.
Those distinctions are important to
keep in mind as the 2004 presidential campaign moves ahead. The media
should be tough on John Kerry - and Bush. But their coverage of the
Gore campaign four years ago amounted to a wilding. That can't happen
again.
LITTLE PEOPLE MAKES
THE CONNECTION. Tune in this Thursday at 11 a.m., when
I'll be a guest on The
Connection, on WBUR
Radio (90.9 FM), talking about Little
People: Learning to See the World Through My Daughter's
Eyes.
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Monday, June 28, 2004
KERRY'S DIVORCE AND THE GOP.
Get ready for the next John Kerry media feeding frenzy. Following the
court-ordered
release of Illinois
Republican Senate candidate (make that former candidate) Jack
Ryan's seamy divorce papers, anti-Kerry forces are now demanding the
same treatment for Kerry and his first wife, Julia Thorne.
According to Drudge,
the push may come from the Tribune Company, which was in the
forefront of the Ryan case because of its ownership of the Chicago
Tribune. The company also owns Boston's WLVI-TV (Channel 56),
which would give it legal standing. Not to rely on Drudge, but does
anyone doubt that the media and the Republicans would love to see
Kerry's divorce records made public, just to find out what's in
there?
I have to admit that I hadn't paid
much attention to the Ryan's case, other than to share everyone's
amusement at the sex-club
allegations. Until this
morning, I hadn't realized they'd been released by a judge, Robert
Schnider. Good Lord - what was Schnider thinking? And of course, even
though Schnider's ruling only pertains to his jurisdiction, it's
going to be pretty easy to make the case that what's good for Ryan is
good for Kerry.
If Ryan and his ex-wife wanted
their sealed records to remain sealed, that should have been
respected. Voters should have been trusted to make what they would of
the Ryans' refusal to go public.
Same with Kerry and Thorne.
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Saturday, June 26, 2004
YOU SAY "AZZAWI," I SAY
"AHMAD." A couple of Media Log readers pointed me to
this
excellent post by Juan Cole
on the matter of that top official for Saddam Hussein who's been
linked to Al Qaeda.
As I noted
earlier, even promoters of this link, such as the Weekly
Standard's William Kristol and Stephen Hayes, have conceded there
was a possibility that they were talking about two different people
with the same name.
Well, Cole shows that they
don't have the same name. Never mind! He writes:
The al-Qaeda employee in
Malaysia is named Ahmad Hikmat Shakir Azzawi.
The Iraqi intelligence agent is
named Lt. Col. Hikmat Shakir Ahmad.
...
Do you notice how they are not
the same?
Cole adds, "Isn't it a shame that
we have these key people doing important things who are either
incompetent ignoramuses or dumb as posts?" Well, uh, yes. More than a
shame.
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Friday, June 25, 2004
DUBYA AND ADOLF. This really
is incredible. I wouldn't be surprised if this has been pulled before
you can see it. But the Bush-Cheney campaign has put up an ad on its
website that makes use of that spot comparing George W. Bush to
Hitler that was uploaded to MoveOn.org
some months ago as part of a contest, and that was yanked as soon as
it was discovered.
Hurry! Watch
it while you still
can!
In a blast e-mail titled
"Disgusting," Kerry-campaign manager Mary Beth Cahill
writes:
Yesterday, the Bush-Cheney
campaign, losing any last sense of decency, placed a disgusting ad
called "The Faces of John Kerry's Democratic Party" as the main
feature on its website. Bizarrely, and without explanation, the ad
places Adolf Hitler among those faces.
The Bush-Cheney campaign must
pull this ad off of its website. The use of Adolf Hitler by any
campaign, politician or part is simply wrong.
Cahill is being just a tiny bit
disingenuous, making it sound like the Bush campaign is comparing
Kerry to Hitler. Actually, the Bush campaign is desperately trying to
pretend that the Kerry campaign is comparing Bush to Hitler.
Quite a stretch, given that we're talking about an unsolicited
contest entry for which MoveOn.org apologized many months ago. That's
disgusting, all right.
Here's
how the New York Times covered the story today. But why didn't Adam Nagourney mention the Hitler pix? The liberal media would never soft-pedal the vicious negative campaign tactics favored by the Republicans, would they?
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Thursday, June 24, 2004
GUILT BY NON-ASSOCIATION.
John Kerry today is fending off a smear launched from outer space.
The Associated Press reports
that Americans
Coming Together (ACT), a
liberal independent organization working to defeat George W. Bush,
has hired some ex-cons to help with its door-to-door
canvassing.
Is this a good idea? Well, giving
former inmates a chance to earn a living certainly doesn't sound like
such a bad thing to me. But that's not the point. You could think
it's a terrible idea and still shake your head at this story. The
AP's David Lieb calls ACT "crucial" to Kerry's hopes, and
writes:
America Coming Together,
contending that convicted criminals deserve a second chance in
society, employs felons as voter canvassers in major metropolitan
areas in Missouri, Florida, Ohio and perhaps in other states among
the 17 it is targeting in its drive. Some lived in halfway houses,
and at least four returned to prison.
But wait! Farther down, Lieb adds
this:
Although it works against
the re-election of President Bush, ACT is an independent group
not affiliated with Kerry's campaign - federal law forbids such
coordination. Yet ACT is stocked with veteran Democratic
political operatives, many with past ties to Kerry and his
advisers.
Allison Dobson, a spokeswoman
with the Kerry campaign, said there is no coordination with ACT,
and of the policy: "We're unaware of it and have nothing to do
with it."
This isn't even guilt by
association - it's guilt by non-association.
Not surprisingly, today's Boston
Herald goes huge with this, blowing out the front
with a headline that screams "CROOKS FOR KERRY." The story,
by David Guarino, credits the AP, and treads pretty much the same
path as Lieb - that is, sounding the alarm that a pro-Kerry
organization is providing honest work to ex-cons, while at the same
time noting that Kerry's campaign, by law, has nothing to do with the
group.
And just to complete the circle,
Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie issued
this statement:
It is disturbing that the
voter mobilization arm of the Democratic Party is proudly hiring
felons convicted of sex offenses, assault and burglary to go house
to house and handle sensitive personal information.
Democrat voters should be leery
of opening their doors to political operatives until the Democrats
can assure them that a convicted felon won't be on the other
side.
I suppose Gillespie deserves at
least a little credit for not using the word "Kerry." Would that the
AP and the Herald could be so precise.
RADIO REMINDER. I'll be the
guest host of Counterpoint this Saturday from 7 to 10 p.m. on
WRKO Radio (AM 680). We'll be taking calls, so pick up the phone and
punch in 617-266-6868.
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Wednesday, June 23, 2004
WILL MITT ROMNEY TRY TO OUTLAW
GAY PARENTHOOD? I'm sure he won't. (Although I'm not so sure he
wouldn't try if he thought he could.) Which is what makes his
testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday a prime
example of political hypocrisy, even by his low standards.
During his opening
statement, he said
this:
But marriage is not solely
for adults. Marriage is also for children. In fact, marriage is
principally for the nurturing and development of children. The
children of America have the right to have a father and a
mother.
Of course, even today,
circumstances can take a parent from the home, but the child still
has a mother and a father. If the parents are divorced, the child
can visit each of them. If a mother or father is deceased, the
child can learn about the qualities of the departed. His or her
psychological development can still be influenced by the
contrasting features of both genders.
Are we ready to usher in a
society indifferent about having fathers and mothers? Will our
children be indifferent about having a mother and a
father?
But we already live in a society
that is pretty much indifferent about having fathers and mothers, do
we not? Single women choose to have kids. Gay and lesbian couples
choose to have kids. For that matter, single women and gay couples
sometimes adopt kids, suggesting not just indifference on the
part of society but, rather, active participation. Would Romney stop
any of this? Of course he wouldn't. (Again, maybe he would if he
could.)
A few moments later, Romney
said:
Scientific studies of
children raised by same sex couples are almost non-existent. And
the societal implications and effects on these children are not
likely to be observed for at least a generation, probably several
generations. Same sex marriage doesn't hurt my marriage, or
yours. But it may affect the development of children and
thereby future society as a whole. Until we understand the
implications for human development of a different definition of
marriage, I believe we should preserve that which has endured over
thousands of years.
Preserving the definition of
marriage should not infringe on the right of individuals to live
in the manner of their choosing. One person may choose to live as
a single, even to have and raise her own child. Others may choose
to live in same sex partnerships or civil arrangements. There is
an unshakeable majority of opinion in this country that we should
cherish and protect individual rights with tolerance and
understanding.
But there is a difference
between individual rights and marriage. An individual has rights,
but a man and a woman together have a marriage. We should not
deconstruct marriage simply to make a statement about the rights
of individual adults. Forcing marriage to mean all things, will
ultimately define marriage to mean nothing at all.
I highlighted the part where the
governor acknowledges that same-sex marriage doesn't hurt anyone
else's marriage, and I'm glad to learn that he won't be sporting a
"Protect Ma and Pa" button anytime soon. But again, the hypocrisy
here isn't even hidden - it's shimmering right on the
surface.
Marriage is about children. We
don't know what the effects may be of raising children in gay and
lesbian households. So we shouldn't rush into this. But Governor
- much of what the legal definition of civil marriage is all about is
making it easier to raise children. Tax incentives. Rights of
inheritance. Joint medical insurance. And on and on.
Today's best take is by the
Boston Globe's Scot Lehigh, who observes
that Romney appears to be running against his own state in order to
advance his fevered national ambitions. Lehigh writes, "Can Romney be
an effective governor by continually taking on the culture and
candidate of the state he leads? Or will Massachusetts voters
eventually grow tired of watching their chief executive raise his
national profile at the state's expense?"
AGAIN. I hope we're not
getting inured to the horror of terrorist beheadings in the Middle
East. Somehow, yesterday's execution
of Kim Sun Il by terrorists allegedly tied to Abu Musab Zarqawi (who
is believed to have personally beheaded Nicholas Berg) didn't seem
like as big a story as it should have.
The danger is that each
decapitation - of Daniel Pearl, of Berg, of Paul Johnson, and now of
Kim - will make us progressively numb to the horror of what's taking
place. We should remember each victim. You don't have to support
George W. Bush misadventure in Iraq to acknowledge that these men
gave their lives in the war against terrorism.
ZZZZZ. Right-wing journalist
Mark Steyn hits me where it hurts. He's linked
to my less-than-flattering profile
of him, and adds this commentary: "Warning: May cause drowsiness. Do
not attempt to read before operating a motor vehicle or heavy
machinery." Oof!
MEDIA LOG ON THE AIR. Tune
in to WRKO Radio (AM 680) this Saturday from 7 to 10 p.m. I'll be
hosting Counterpoint,
the station's liberal alternative to its 165 weekly hours of
conservative and right-wing talk.
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Tuesday, June 22, 2004
UNHAPPY FATHER'S DAY. There
is something so raw and ragged in Jimmy Breslin's column about his
daughter's
death that reading it is
nearly unbearable. His attempts to put some distance between himself
and the tragedy he describes - "the daughter," "the mother" - only
underscore what a terrible moment he is describing. I'm not going to
quote one more word from it. Just
read it. Read the whole
thing. It will break your heart.
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SADDAM AND OSAMA REDUX.
Did Saddam Hussein have ties to Al Qaeda? No one has been
dropping off any secret dossiers here at Media Log Central, so all I
know is what I read in the press. But the current uproar, over the
9/11 Commission report, strikes me as weird on several
levels.
For one thing, it would seem to me
that if anyone was stacking the deck against the White House, it
would be fairly simple to identify the culprit. Not so. Some
conservatives - including Vice-President Dick Cheney - are
blaming
the media, claiming that
they mischaracterized the findings of the report. "The press, with
all due respect, [is] often times lazy, often times simply
reports what somebody else in the press said without doing their
homework," Cheney said on CNBC last week.
Yet New York Times columnist
William Safire, who believes in the Saddam-Al Qaeda link just as
fervently as Cheney, says the media are blameless, and that in fact
it was the staff of the 9/11 Commission that played down the
relationship. In his column yesterday, Safire reported that the
commission's findings were written up by its staff chief, Philip
Zelikow, who ignored evidence that contradicted the anti-Bush
conclusion he wanted to reach, and who did this behind the backs of
both the Republican chairman, Tom Kean, and the Democratic
vice-chairman, Lee Hamilton. Wrote
Safire:
Cheney's ire was
misdirected. Don't blame the media for jumping on the politically
charged Zelikow report. Blame the commission's leaders for ducking
responsibility for its interim findings. Kean and Hamilton have
allowed themselves to be jerked around by a manipulative
staff.
Now it's true that Safire's column
had the added advantage of exonerating his employer, which had come
under particularly heavy criticism for its news reports dismissing
the Iraq-Al Qaeda link. But Safire's evidence is pretty hard to
contradict.
The Weekly Standard, the
leading neocon magazine, decides not to decide this week, running a
cover
line that reads: "There
They Go Again: Why the 9/11 Commission and the Media Refuse to See
the Ties Between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda." (Yes, I know the
subhead is too small to read; I've got the print version.) Hmmm ...
if the media accurately reported what was in the commission's report,
how is it their fault?
Inside, editor William
Kristol and staff writer
Stephen
Hayes recycle some of the
evidence regarding Saddam's alleged ongoing relationship with Iraq.
Both Kristol and Hayes have been known to truck in some
Chalabi-by-way-of-Feith fantasies, but they are serious people, and I
don't take their findings lightly. I was particularly struck by the
charge that the 9/11 Commission ruled out the possibility that
terrorist mastermind Mohamed Atta met with a top Iraqi intelligence
official in Prague, several months before 9/11, partly on the basis
of Atta's cell-phone records. Hayes writes: "It is entirely possible
that Atta would leave his cell phone behind if he left the country.
In any case, the hijackers are known to have shared cell phones." No
kidding.
But I'm always suspicious when the
White House's supporters are willing to make a better case than the
White House itself. Take, for instance, the matter of Ahmed Hikmat
Shakir, who reportedly attended a January 2000 Al Qaeda planning
meeting in Malaysia, who is known to have possessed contact
information for top Al Qaeda officials, and who may have been a
high-ranking officer in the Fedayeen Saddam. Now that's a
pretty definitive tie, I think we would all agree.
Both Hayes and Kristol concede that
they might be writing about two people with the same name. And, in
fact, today's Washington Post reports
that is apparently the case. After 9/11 Commission member John
Lehman, a former secretary of the Navy, repeated the Shakir
allegations over the weekend, a "senior administration official" was
quoted as saying the apparent tie was the result of confusion over
two similar names. Read Spencer
Ackerman on this,
too.
In any case, such evidence does not
explain the Bushies' obsession with Iraq, especially given the
finding that Al Qaeda had much closer ties with Iran
and Pakistan. Of course,
Pakistan is now our "friend," and Iran is too big and scary to
invade. Iraq remains what it has been from the beginning - a war of
convenience, fought because the White House thought it would be easy.
Getting out the electron microscope to find evidence that Saddam and
Osama bin Laden worked together doesn't change that.
CLINTON'S PSYCHE, TOO MUCH WITH
US. Here's the thing, President Clinton: if you're going to write
about your affair with Monica Lewinsky, and you're going to submit
willingly to questions about it - as you did with Dan
Rather on Sunday - then
you've got to expect that not every interviewer is going to be as
polite and understanding as Rather or, say, Oprah.
You could have set different ground
rules. You could have made it clear that you weren't going to run
around psychobabbling about your inner child. You could have talked
about health care, or global debt relief, even though that would have
cost you a few sales.
So don't throw
a nutty when someone like
David Dimbleby lets you have it on the BBC.
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Monday, June 21, 2004
UH, OH. The latest on
Air
America Radio is the worst
news yet. According to this
front-page story in today's Wall Street Journal, the liberal
network went on the air with just $6 million - not the $30 million it
had claimed - and it's now $2 million in debt. The story further
reports that the network is downscaling its ambitions and putting new
financing in place, so no need to give up just yet. But don't look
for a Boston affiliate any time soon. To say the least. (Via Romenesko.)
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FUN WITH BILL AND DAN. So
there he was, in all his shining, frustrating glory - Bill Clinton,
one
on one with Dan Rather, on
60 Minutes. The interview was fascinating to those of us who
find Clinton himself fascinating, but depressingly short on
substance. On CNN's Reliable Sources yesterday, Howard Kurtz
told
Rather, "You've covered a lot of ground in this interview, from the
economy to Kosovo, but inevitably you came to Monica
Lewinsky."
Well, maybe. But, in watching it,
it seemed to me that nearly the entire interview was taken up with
Lewinsky and a few other personal matters, punctuated mainly by
Clinton's explanation of how he warded off a kiss from Yasser Arafat
at that momentous outdoor news conference with Yitzhak Rabin. Clinton
did a pretty good Rabin imitation, too.
Clinton's fault, or Rather's? It's
hard to say, since we can't see the outtakes. Rather told Kurtz that
what we saw last night was culled from four hours' worth of
interviews, so maybe the more serious stuff was left on the
cutting-room floor. Still, Clinton is well known for his eagerness to
please, and I'm sure he realizes that his tawdry personal life will
sell far more books than a recitation of how he managed to balance
the budget.
Among the oddities of the book
world's blockbuster mentality is that a phenomenon like Clinton's
My Life starts to seem old even before anyone has had a chance
to read it. At 957 pages, the book is going to feel like a project to
those who actually determine to read the thing. The New York
Times' Michiko Kakutani, obviously a faster reader than Media
Log, has already whipped through her advance copy and
pronounced
it to be a mess:
The book, which weighs in
at more than 950 pages, is sloppy, self-indulgent and often
eye-crossingly dull - the sound of one man prattling away, not for
the reader, but for himself and some distant recording angel of
history.
Ooh, I can't wait! Meanwhile,
remember, the thing won't even be available to the rest of us until
Tuesday.
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Friday, June 18, 2004
THE HORROR, AGAIN. The wires
are reporting that American hostage Paul
Johnson has been executed
by the terrorists who were holding him, presumably in Saudi Arabia.
The early word is that he was decapitated, just like Nicholas Berg
and Daniel Pearl before him. You could see this coming, but that
doesn't make it any less sickening.
Although this particular group of
terrorists has been demanding the release of prisoners in Saudi
Arabia, the focus of terrorism in that country in recent weeks has
been to get Western workers - especially Americans - to
leave.
I'd say it's going to work,
wouldn't you?
This is terrible, terrible news,
and further evidence - as if we needed any - that our enemies are
intent on dragging the entire world back to the eighth
century.
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STEYN'S FANS RESPOND!
Someone was kind enough to post my Mark
Steyn profile to
Lucianne.com,
so the hate mail is rolling in. Have
a look at what they're
saying over on the right side of the Web.
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Thursday, June 17, 2004
INSIDE BUSH'S BRAIN. Is
George W. Bush barking mad? Until recently, I can't say I seriously
considered the question. Recently, though, I linked
to an item on the not-especially-reliable Capitol
Hill Blue website that
portrays Bush as raging against the world as he lurches about the
White House, quoting from the Bible and denouncing his
enemies.
Now comes meatier fare - a
Salon review
of three books on the presidential psyche. Unfortunately the
reviewer, Laura Miller, uses up most of her space on Justin Frank's
Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President, even
though she calls it "a sloppily written and edited book, padded with
repetitions and laced with dubious psychological theories," not to
mention overtly partisan.
But Frank is at least
well-qualified to explore Bush's brain: he's a clinical psychiatrist
at George Washington University medical Center. Miller
writes:
While the conventional
wisdom might suggest that Bush fears being unmasked as a dolt,
Frank believes that Bush's rigidity - also manifest in his
ironclad daily routine - protects him from inadvertently revealing
the darker emotions he's never come to terms with. In addition to
the fear of not living up to his father's example, there's the
anger at being expected to, and the fear of the destructive power
of that anger should it ever be unleashed. The primitive moral
vision Bush subscribes to - in which the world is divided into the
good, "freedom-loving" people of America and "evildoers" like
Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein - is another inflexible schema
that imposes order on the internal chaos that's always threatening
to rise up and swamp him. Maintaining such control takes a
considerable amount of energy, according to Frank, which may be
one reason why Bush needs so much sleep and finds it so hard to
concentrate.
As Miller observers, such
characteristics do not guarantee presidential failure; some of our
best presidents have been psychological basket cases. And it's always
hard to know how seriously to take psychoanalysis from afar. ("Not
very" would seem to be a pretty good guide.)
Still, this is fascinating stuff,
and may help explain how we got to where we are today.
O.J. AND REAGAN, TOGETHER AT
LAST. Looks like Frank Rich's column in next Sunday's New York
Times will be a must-read.
NEW IN THIS WEEK'S
PHOENIX. Write, twist, smear, and sneer: meet
Mark
Steyn, the most toxic
right-wing pundit you've never heard of.
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Wednesday, June 16, 2004
DO AS THEY SAY. But not as
they do: Jack Meyers reports
in today's Boston Herald that one of the Boston police unions
taking part in the FleetCenter blockade hired non-union contractors
for $75,000 in repairs to its own headquarters. Meyers
writes:
Union officials admitted
to the Herald they gave the work to a cop's relative, following a
policy to favor blood relations over union brotherhood.
"We have a policy where we try
to give [contracting work] to police or police-related
family-owned companies," said Jack Parlon, head of the detectives
union.
HINDUSTAN VIA HOOSIERVILLE.
The Herald's computers are at it again. A month ago, the
Herald website included a reference to Indian Orchard, in
Western Massachusetts, and sent
readers to an archive of stories about India. Today, the
same thing happens with a
Cosmo Macero (sub. req.) reference to Indiana.
Does anyone care? Probably
not.
MICHAEL GOLDMAN, LYING LIAR.
Earlier this week Goldman sent out an e-mail - complete with photo -
telling everyone he was going to join a group of topless female
mujahadeen warriors. (Sorry, you'll have to take my word for
it.)
Today comes the truth: the longtime
Democratic political consultant's talk show for Bloomberg
Radio, called Simply
Put and currently heard on weekends, is going daily. Boston
Globe columnist Scot Lehigh has
the details.
Goldman's co-host, Tom Moroney,
actually leaked
the news (sub. req.) on May
30 in his farewell column for the MetroWest Daily
News.
Lehigh writes:
For someone who has been
talking to Goldman about campaigns and politics for two decades,
it's hard to imagine an election season without his strategic
perspective, his irrepressible energy, his imaginative spin - and,
yes, his deep-on-deadline calls that are nigh unto impossible to
end.
Well, yes. But I'm not sure what
Lehigh is talking about. I'm going to keep calling
Goldman.
As Lehigh also notes, this is a
huge comeback for Goldman, who spent many months recovering from a
life-threatening leg infection. Last fall I did an hour on Simply
Put from Bloomberg's Boston studio. Goldman had come in, against
doctor's orders, and was in obvious pain, although that didn't stop
him from joking around both during and after the show.
Making the full-time move into talk
radio is something Goldman has wanted for years. I'm glad it's
finally happened, and I only wish we could listen to him and Moroney
in Greater Boston without having to tune in to the Internet stream or
subscribe to satellite radio.
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Monday, June 14, 2004
IS DEMOCRACY UNDEMOCRATIC?
There's more than an element of gamesmanship behind Democratic
efforts to take away Republican governor Mitt Romney's power to
appoint a new senator if John Kerry is elected president. But if the
legislature approves a bill to supersede Romney's power of
appointment with a special election, guess what? The voters will
decide. And the last I checked, the Republicans will be allowed to
put up a candidate if they so wish.
You'd never know that from reading
this
editorial in today's
Boston Herald, though. Calling the bill "one of the most cynical, selfish, outrageous votes ever on Beacon Hill," the
editorial claims that it would guarantee a Democratic victory, since
only a Dem "can muster the financial resources to successfully
compete within such a short timeframe."
Well, I don't know. Romney could
run himself, leaving Lieutenant Governor Kerry Healy in charge.
Romney has told us repeatedly that she's qualified, so it must be
true. Romney could almost certainly raise and spend more money than
any of the Democratic congressmen who are thinking about running. Or
how about David
D'Alessandro, the retiring
John Hancock chief, who says he's interested in running for office?
He sounds like kind of a liberal, but he could prove to be a Bill
Weld-style Republican. That should appeal to the Herald's Bill
Weld-style deputy editorial-page editor, Virginia
Buckingham.
This much is sure: cynical though
the Democratic power grab may be, letting the voters decide, rather
than the governor, isn't necessarily a bad thing. Unless you're Mitt
Romney - or the Herald editorial board.
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MORE ON KERRY WAFFLES. I've
been on deadline and unable to blog today, but Media Log reader Steve
Brady (see
comments) did send along
some more information on "Kerry," "waffle," and Google. It turns out
that you need to enter the word "waffles" (not "waffle," as Mickey
Edwards erroneously reported). Do that, and the first site you'll be
referred to is JohnKerry.com.
Wired.news reports
that Kerry is the victim of a "Google-bomb" prank by right-wing
bloggers. So what was Edwards's point exactly?
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Saturday, June 12, 2004
HOW LAZY CAN YOU GET? Look
at what former Republican congressman Mickey Edwards writes
in today's Boston Globe:
One of my colleagues at
Princeton said recently that if one went to Google and typed in
the word "waffle," Kerry's name would come up. I haven't
checked it out, but a newly reported Los Angeles Times poll
found that nearly half of voters questioned called Kerry a
flip-flopper.
"I haven't checked it out."
Okay, it's a jibe, but in order for it to work there ought to be
something to it, right? Well, go over to Google,
enter "waffle," and click on "I'm Feeling Lucky," which is where
other politically oriented jokes reside (for instance, try this with
"weapons of mass destruction").
Done? What do you have?
"Welcome
to Waffle House!" The
waffle with two eggs, sausage, or bacon sounds particularly good,
although it could prove fatal.
Now, go back to Google, enter
"waffle" again, and hit the regular "Google Search" button. Results 1
through 10 are for recipes, movies, anything but politics. Result
#11, though, takes you to GeorgeWBush.com,
home of the Bush-Cheney re-election campaign. I clicked, but the
page
to which Google linked does not actually have the word "waffle" (or
"waffler") on it. Google probably found an outdated page in which
some Bushoid referred to Kerry as a "waffler." No, I don't know it
for a fact, but unlike Edwards I at least tried to check it
out.
At long last ... Result #44 brought
me to a
different "Waffle House,"
put together by some Kerry-hating cretin who has a banner on his site
reading "Make the French Happy! Vote for John Kerry." There's also
something called "Kerry = Al Qaeda Employee" and an animated graphic
starring the, uh, senatorial unit. Is this what Edwards is referring
to? Oh, wait, never mind - Edwards has already admitted that he
doesn't know what he's referring to.
As for Edwards's citation of the
LA Times poll, the flip-flopper finding is accurate, but
here's
what he leaves out:
... Kerry led Bush by 51%
to 44% nationally in a two-way matchup, and by 48% to 42% in a
three-way race, with independent Ralph Nader drawing 4%.
Lifting Kerry is a powerful
tailwind of dissatisfaction with the nation's course and Bush's
answers for challenges at home and abroad. Nearly three-fifths
believe the nation is on the wrong track, the highest level a
Times poll has recorded during Bush's presidency.
Edwards's column is called
"The
Iconoclast," and is
apparently intended to provide some pro-Bush counterweight to the
op-ed page's generally pro-Kerry tilt. That's fine. But dishonest,
selective, lazy spin isn't in anyone's interest - certainly not the
reader's.
OPERATIC. Media Log reader
Elisabeth
Riba corrects my
assertion
that you have to pay for the Web browser Opera.
It turns out that there's a free version available if you don't mind
looking at ads. I don't, so I downloaded the latest version and gave
it a quick spin. I was unimpressed - it seemed a bit slow, and type
spacing looked weird. But I know there are Mac users who swear by it,
so I'll keep playing with it to see whether it's me or the
software.
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Friday, June 11, 2004
THE INCREASINGLY UN-MAC-FRIENDLY
WEB. Not that today is an entirely slow news day (although I've
had about enough of Reagan's funeral), but the words at the top of
the screen say that Media Log is at least occasionally supposed to be
about technology. So today, for you handful of fellow Macintosh
users, I'd like to call attention to a dirty little secret: the
pathetic state of Web-browsing software for those of us who "think
different."
If you're a Windows user, you
probably browse with Microsoft's Internet Explorer. There are other
options, but IE is the standard by a considerable margin. If a site
doesn't work properly with IE for Windows, then you can be reasonably
sure that there's something wrong with the site. If only it were that
simple in the Mac universe.
It was just about a year ago that
Microsoft announced
it would no longer work on new Mac versions of Internet Explorer.
Bill Gates and company have been true to their word. Though the
company has released occasional maintenance upgrades to
Mac
IE 5.x, there will be no
significant new features coming out of Redmond.
Mac IE is still probably the most
compatible with the widest range of websites. For instance, there are
certain graphics on BostonPhoenix.com
that work only with IE. But IE is bulky and slow, and there's just no
reason to use it all or even most of the time when there are faster
alternatives available. (And in an unforgivable act, Microsoft has
even rendered streaming video on its own MSNBC.com
site unworkable except with the Windows version of IE.) The problem
is that those alternatives have their own shortcomings.
If there's a Mac standard today,
it's Apple's free Web browser, Safari,
which comes pre-installed with OS X. Safari is a fine program in many
ways. It's fast and reliable. But, again, it's not suitable to
all-the-time use. For instance, the cascading menus on
Newsweek's
site don't even show up
with Safari, making it difficult to navigate. Some sites render
horribly with Safari (such as Boston Herald columnist
Cosmo
Macero Jr.'s site, for some
odd reason), yet fine with other programs. Also, I tend to print out
a fair amount of stuff, and Safari has no way of letting you embed
headers and page numbers - a real problem if your printouts go flying
before you can staple everything together.
A final complaint: Safari is now up
to version 1.2, but that's only for users who've upgraded to Panther
(OS X 10.3). Those of us still using Jaguar (OS X 10.2) are stuck
with 1.0.2.
My favorite browser these days -
though, again, it ain't perfect - is Firefox,
a lightning-fast, stripped-down version of Mozilla
Navigator, the free,
open-source program on which Netscape (remember?) is based. Mozilla
has its own adherents, and I use it occasionally for some Web-design
work. But Firefox is so much faster that there's no comparison.
Nearly every site I visit renders cleanly. For certain forms-filling
tasks, though, Firefox chokes, forcing me to switch to Safari. In
addition, Firefox refuses to hand off streaming-media tasks to
RealOne and the Mac version of Windows Media Player, forcing me to
save an icon on my desktop and start it up separately. Not a big
deal, but a pain nevertheless.
Firefox is in beta - I'm using 0.8,
although a 0.9 test version recently became available. So the program
should continue to improve. Unless Apple intends to start putting
some serious development resources into Safari, I'd guess that
Firefox is going to be the browser to watch.
I've also played briefly with
Mozilla's Camino
and with Opera,
the latter of which features a truly loathsome innovation: you
actually have to pay for it. In neither case have I seen any evidence
that I should explore further, though I could be wrong.
The larger issue, of course, is
what this means for those of us who use and love Macintosh computers.
I have resisted switching to Windows for years. Yet if there's a
reliable standard for browsing in Windows, but not on a Mac, then
Apple's vaunted ease-of-use claim begins to look pretty silly.
Besides, Apple is finally beginning to make its coolest new products,
such as the iPod and the iTunes Music Store, compatible with both Mac
and Windows.
I want to keep using Macs for as
long as possible. At some point, though, that choice is going to
start looking more like a fetish (not that there's anything wrong
with that!) than a wise decision. If Steve Jobs is retooling Apple
for a post-Macintosh future, I wish he would tell us.
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Thursday, June 10, 2004
REAGAN AND AIDS. One of
Ronald Reagan's most shameful legacies was his indifference toward
the then-emerging AIDS epidemic. This press briefing, conducted by
Reagan spokesman Larry Speakes in 1982, is a good reminder of what
things were like then.
Granted, Reagan doesn't appear
personally in this briefing, and much of this has more to do with
what some people thought was a laff riot at the time. But the Reagan
White House's lack of interest in a disease that would soon decimate
the gay community is palpable.
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press
Secretary
PRESS BRIEFING BY LARRY
SPEAKES
October 15, 1982
The Briefing Room
12:45pm EDT
Q: Larry, does the President
have any reaction to the announcement - the Centers for Disease
Control in Atlanta, that AIDS is now an epidemic and have over 600
cases?
MR. SPEAKES: What's
AIDS?
Q: Over a third of them have
died. It's known as "gay plague." (Laughter.) No, it is. I mean
it's a pretty serious thing that one in every three people that
get this have died. And I wondered if the President is aware of
it?
MR. SPEAKES: I don't have it. Do
you? (Laughter.)
Q: No, I don't.
MR. SPEAKES: You didn't answer
my question.
Q: Well, I just wondered, does
the President -
MR. SPEAKES: How do you know?
(Laughter.)
Q: In other words, the White
House looks on this as a great joke?
MR. SPEAKES: No, I don't know
anything about it, Lester.
Q: Does the President, does
anyone in the White House know about this epidemic,
Larry?
MR. SPEAKES: I don't think so. I
don't think there's been any -
Q: Nobody knows?
MR. SPEAKES: There has been no
personal experience here, Lester.
Q: No, I mean, I thought you
were keeping -
MR. SPEAKES: I checked
thoroughly with Dr. Ruge this morning and he's had no - (laughter)
- no patients suffering from AIDS or whatever it is.
Q: The President doesn't have
gay plague, is that what you're saying or what?
MR. SPEAKES: No, I didn't say
that.
Q: Didn't say that?
MR. SPEAKES: I thought I heard
you on the State Department over there. Why didn't you stay there?
(Laughter.)
Q: Because I love you Larry,
that's why (Laughter.)
MR. SPEAKES: Oh I see. Just
don't put it in those terms, Lester. (Laughter.)
Q: Oh, I retract
that.
MR. SPEAKES: I hope
so.
Q: It's too late.
This transcript is taken from the
prologue to Jon Cohen's 2001 book, Shots in the Dark: The Wayward
Search for an AIDS Vaccine, the full text of which can be found
here.
NEW IN THIS WEEK'S
PHOENIX. The obit desk meets
the undead.
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Wednesday, June 09, 2004
USELESS AND POINTLESS
KNOWLEDGE. Let me confess up front that my sole exposure to
Christopher Ricks's Bob Dylan scholarship consists of reading
occasional references to it in Alex
Beam's Boston Globe column.
That said, I don't think I would be any less dubious if I were to sit
down and read Dylan's Visions of Sin, Ricks's 500-page opus,
which is the subject of this
Charles McGrath piece in
today's New York Times. McGrath writes of
Visions:
At various points he
compares Mr. Dylan to Marvell, Marlowe, Keats, Tennyson, Hardy,
Yeats and Marlon Brando, to cite just a few of his references....
Other chapters ... draw insightful and persuasive parallels
between, say, "Lay Lady Lay" and John Donne's poem "To His
Mistress Going to Bed," between "Not Dark Yet" and Keats's "Ode to
a Nightingale," and between "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" and the
Scottish ballad "Lord Randal."
Whoa! The problem with Ricks - who
splits his time between Boston University and Oxford - is the same as
that of many academicians who are drawn to pop culture. By comparing
Dylan to the Great Poets, Ricks both overpraises and diminishes
Dylan's gifts. Although Brando makes sense.
Maybe a few of Dylan's songs can
hold up on the page; "Desolation Row," a Ricks favorite, certainly
comes to mind. But Dylan isn't a poet so much as he is a singer/
songwriter/ musician/ kick-ass rock-and-roller. His genius flows from
the combination of his lyrics, his music, and his uniquely urgent,
idiosyncratic singing. (Never mind his voice; Dylan is among the
greatest singers rock has produced.)
I don't think they'll be publishing
"Can't
Wait" in any poetry
anthologies 50 or 100 years from now. But I hope people will still be
listening to Time
Out of Mind, the 1997
album whence it came.
IT'S ALL IN THE WRIST. If
you or I made a really small sundae, it would be a really small
sundae. But if MIT alumnus Kevin Brown makes one, it's something that
he "invented," earning him a huge
spread on the front of
today's Boston Globe Food section. Go figure.
AT LEAST IT'S NOT THE
ONION. An alert Wonkette
reader passes along one of her finds: a piece on the website Capitol
Hill Blue claiming that aides to George W. Bush "privately express
growing concern over their leader's state of mind." Writes
site publisher Doug Thompson:
Worried White House aides
paint a portrait of a man on the edge, increasingly wary of those
who disagree with him and paranoid of a public that no longer
trusts his policies in Iraq or at home.
"It reminds me of the Nixon
days," says a longtime GOP political consultant with contacts in
the White House. "Everybody is an enemy; everybody is out to get
him. That's the mood over there."
The president also reportedly veers
between quoting from the Bible and vulgarly denouncing his
enemies.
File this under: interesting if
true. And: unlikely. But highly entertaining!
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Tuesday, June 08, 2004
HE REALLY DID CALL HIM A
LIZARD. That's for you fans of Boston political trivia.
Christopher Hitchens's distaste
for Ronald Reagan would be rather more credible if he didn't spend so
many of his waking hours licking George W. Bush's boots. Hitchens, in
Slate, calls Reagan "a cruel and stupid lizard," as well as
"an obvious phony and a loon." Hitchens must feel so relieved to be
able to bash a right-winger again. It's been a long, long time. But,
Hitch, come on: not just the dead ones, okay?
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THE REAL RONALD REAGAN. Two
good against-the-grain pieces for your
consideration. The first, in Salon, by Barry Goldwater
biographer Rick Perlstein, is a useful reminder that Reagan was often
unpopular during his long political career, and that he was even the
object of a substantial recall effort when he was governor of
California.
Though Perlstein gives Reagan
credit for being more flexible and pragmatic than George W. Bush, he
warns against embracing the gauzy image that has increasingly
surrounded him during his long decline. Perlstein writes:
It is a quirk of American
culture that each generation of nonconservatives sees the
right-wingers of its own generation as the scary ones, then
chooses to remember the right-wingers of the last generation as
sort of cuddly. In 1964, observers horrified by Barry Goldwater
pined for the sensible Robert Taft, the conservative leader of the
1950s. When Reagan was president, liberals spoke fondly of sweet
old Goldwater.
Nowadays, as we grapple with the
malevolence of President Bush, it's Reagan we remember as the
sensible one. At the risk of speaking ill of the dead, let memory
at least acknowledge that there was much about Reagan that was not
so sensible.
The second, by Joshua Green,
appeared in the Washington Monthly in January 2003, but it
seems especially pertinent now. Green's take on Reagan is somewhat
different from Perlstein's: according to Green (now at the
Atlantic Monthly), Reagan really was something of a
closet moderate, especially after the bellicose first two years of
his presidency. Here's the heart
of Green's argument:
Reagan is, to be sure, one
of the most conservative presidents in U.S. history and will
certainly be remembered as such. His record on the environment,
defense, and economic policy is very much in line with its
portrayal. But he entered office as an ideologue who promised a
conservative revolution, vowing to slash the size of government,
radically scale back entitlements, and deploy the powers of the
presidency in pursuit of socially and culturally conservative
goals. That he essentially failed in this mission hasn't stopped
partisan biographers from pretending otherwise. (Noonan writes of
his 1980 campaign pledges: "Done, done, done, done, done, done,
and done. Every bit of it.")
A sober review of Reagan's
presidency doesn't yield the seamlessly conservative record being
peddled today. Federal government expanded on his watch. The
conservative desire to outlaw abortion was never seriously
pursued. Reagan broke with the hardliners in his administration
and compromised with the Soviets on arms control. His assault on
entitlements never materialized; instead he saved Social Security
in 1983. And he repeatedly ignored the fundamental conservative
dogma that taxes should never be raised.
Trouble is, Green continues,
Reagan's hagiographers on the right have airbrushed out the
non-conservative parts of his record in order to turn him into a
right-wing icon - and a weapon to use against the rest of us. He
writes: "As with other conservative media efforts - Rush Limbaugh,
Fox News Channel, The Washington Times - the purpose of the
Reagan legacy project is not to deliver accuracy, but enhance
political leverage."
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Monday, June 07, 2004
MODIFIED LIMITED HANGOUT.
The Boston Globe came half-clean yesterday in the matter of
that James M. Taylor column
seeking to debunk global warming. The paper published
a letter from Harvard professor John P. Holdren noting that Taylor's
professional affiliation, Environment & Climate News, is
"a publication of the ultra-conservative, antiregulation Heartland
Institute, where Taylor works."
That's good as far as it goes. But
as Media Log revealed
last week, the Heartland Institute isn't just a right-wing
think tank - it also includes among its directors current and retired
officials of such oil- and automobile-industry giants as ExxonMobil,
Amoco, and General Motors, companies that directly benefit from any
seeds of doubt they are able to sow with regard to global
warming.
If the Globe wants to run
stuff from right-wing organizations, that's its business. But if it
publishes propaganda bought and paid for by industry, it has an
obligation to disclose that to its readers. (Actually, it shouldn't
run such garbage in the first place. And yes, there are some
perfectly respectable scientists it could turn to for an independent
anti-global-warming perspective.)
The Globe still owes an
apology to its readers.
ANOTHER SIDE OF REAGAN.
Check out Greg Palast's Ronald Reagan obituary.
The headline: "Killer, Coward, Con-Man; Good Riddance, Gipper ...
More Proof Only the Good Die Young." It lacks the mythic sweep of
Hunter Thompson's kiss-off
to Richard Nixon. But there's nothing in Palast's screed that's even
remotely inaccurate.
Good grief. If it were me I would
have waited a week, but what the hell.
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Sunday, June 06, 2004
RONALD REAGAN, 1911-2004. I
turned on NPR in my car late yesterday afternoon and heard a long
clip of President Reagan giving a speech. I called Mrs. Media Log and
said, "Turn on the TV. I think Reagan just died." Sure
enough, he had.
Reagan was never my guy. But unlike
some liberals, I did not contemplate jumping off the nearest ledge
after he was elected in 1980. I was disgusted enough with Jimmy
Carter that year that I voted for the independent, John Anderson,
which I knew was as good as a vote for Reagan. So I had nothing to
complain about.
I thought Reagan was a bad
president then, and I still do. But he looks better today than he did
during his eight years in office. To the extent that his massive
military build-up helped topple communism, it was a good thing. If
the tax reform that he and Democratic moderates such as then-senator
Bill Bradley shepherded into law had actually held, we'd have a much
better system today. Even the enormous budget deficits melted away
pretty quickly once Bill Clinton pushed through his desperately
needed tax package in 1993. That doesn't mean Reagan's deficits were
good; it just means that they turned out not to be as big a deal as
they seemed at the time.
His darkest legacy is not
Iran-Contra but rather a component of that scandal: his support, both
overt and covert, for the right-wing death squads that fought on
behalf of the pro-US governments of El Salvador and Guatemala and
against the Sandinista government of Nicaragua. It was a terrible
thing when the people that the United States was supporting were
implicated in the massacre of nuns, peasants, and other innocent
people. Reagan was never held fully accountable for those atrocities,
and he's certainly not going to be now.
On the other hand, despite his
well-known disengagement from day-to-day details - and, at times,
from reality itself - Reagan exhibited a certain maturity and
judgment that is all too obviously lacking in the White House today.
It is unimaginable that Reagan would have more than 100,000 troops
bogged down in a war we didn't have to fight.
Reagan wouldn't have ignored the
horrors of Saddam Hussein's regime, but he would have used such
time-honored techniques as sanctions, United Nations involvement (not
that he was any fan of the UN), and clandestine efforts to mount a
coup against Saddam. George W. Bush claims to be a Reaganite, but he
misses entirely how flexible and nuanced Reagan could be.
BETTER THAN REAL BOXING. It
hasn't gotten a lot of attention, but one of the more amusing Boston
media stories of recent days is the brawl between Globe boxing
(and football) writer Ron Borges and New York Times freelancer
Mike Katz. Bruce Allen covers it here,
here,
and here.
At one point Allen seems to side with Borges, posting an anonymous
e-mail he received:
Mike Katz may be 5-5 and
old but he is also about 250 pounds and just about the biggest
prick walking the face of the earth. A truly horrible guy who
treats the rest of the media like crap and regularly shoves around
ushers, other writers, etc. In talking to a few buddies who
witnessed the "fight" it was a few seconds long, Katz started it
and Borges had no choice but to defend himself.
However, Allen also links to
this
David Weber story in
yesterday's Herald (check out the "Tale of the Tape" graphic)
in which it's reported that the "enraged" Borges, responding to an
invitation from Katz, "allegedly lunged across the table and hit Katz
across the back of his head with an open-hand slap, knocking his
eyeglasses and beret to the floor." Weber also writes:
Acquaintances of both
writers described Katz as a "short, fat" man in his 60s who walks
with a cane and wears a neck brace because of chronic back
problems. Borges, who played football at the University of
Massachusetts many years ago, is described as being in his 50s and
in much better shape.
Nice! Too bad there's no
video.
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Saturday, June 05, 2004
CASUAL TEEN SEX: THE ABRIDGED
VERSION. I've been too busy this week reading about
Judith
Miller's sex life and
Alexandra
Polier's non-sex life to
have set aside enough time to wade through the New York Times
Magazine's big cover story last week on teenagers'
sex lives. But since I've
already had to fumble through several conversations about this, I set
aside some time this morning, and read all 7400 words of
it.
Written by freelancer Benoit
Denizet-Lewis, the article - which brings new meaning to terms like
"friends with benefits" and "hooking up" - is a ripping good read.
After all, it's about sex. But if you haven't read it yet, you
probably never will. So in the best tradition of Slate's
"series-savers," I will bring you up to speed:
1. Teenagers are still having
casual sex.
2. The Internet makes it
easier.
3. Most adults think this is bad. A
few think this is good.
As magazine feature-writing,
Denizet-Lewis's story is first rate. As sociology, it's highly
suspect. Other than the technological advances that ease the
logistics of casual teen sex, there is nothing in here that is
persuasive on the matter of things being much different from what
they were 20, 30, or 40 years ago. In fact, Denizet-Lewis is too
honest to claim otherwise, although there is much huffing and puffing
designed to make you think things have changed dramatically.
If you were getting it then, you'd
probably be getting it today, too. And if - like, I suspect, most of
us - you weren't getting any then, things probably wouldn't be
much different in 2004.
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Friday, June 04, 2004
DRUDGE AND CLARK REVISITED.
For anyone who still cares, Alexandra Polier's account of her
non-sex
non-affair with John Kerry
in the current New York magazine contains pretty convincing
evidence that Wesley Clark really did play a key role in passing the
rumor along to the media, or at least in further inflaming their
loins.
You may recall that Drudge fingered
Clark at the time, writing that the then-Democratic presidential
candidate had told reporters that Kerry was about to "implode" over
an intern scandal. Clark supporters and some other Democrats were
upset that pundits - including Media Log - were accepting Drudge's
word rather than investigating the Republican dirty-tricks
machine.
Well, check this
out from Polier's piece:
Drudge claimed Clark
himself had told reporters on his campaign bus that Kerry was
going to "implode" over a scandal, but when I called Wesley Clark
Jr., a screenwriter in L.A., who had helped out on his father's
campaign, he told me Drudge had ignored the context of his
father's quote. "He was reacting to the latest issue of The
National Enquirer, which had just run a front-page story about
Kerry and possible scandals, when he said that."
But? What do you mean "but"?
This is confirmation, not contradiction. It also comports perfectly
with what Boston Globe columnist Tom Oliphant told
me at the time in
describing the background of a column he'd written on Clark's role in
spreading the rumor:
In addition to summarizing
the background to Clark's behavior, I also wrote that his comments
directed attention [to] (some said specifically mentioned)
the piece in The National Enquirer before it was published. The
piece was transparently a clip job, but the effect was to increase
the level of chatter by a lot. Drudge took it down to the next
level, which I described as a frenzy about a story that hadn't
been written concerning an allegation that hadn't been
made.
Chris Lehane, who'd earlier worked
for Kerry and who ended up on Clark's campaign, also figures
prominently - and negatively - in Polier's piece.
DEBASING THE BASE. In an
interesting juxtaposition showing that both George W. Bush and John
Kerry are trying to appeal to the middle, the New York Times
today reports
that some conservative activists - mostly smaller-government types -
are disgusted with Bush, while the Boston Globe
details
liberal discontent with Kerry.
Make of it what you will. Bush sure
as hell is no centrist, but he's certainly not a conservative in any
commonly accepted sense of the word, either. Radical right-winger is
more like it. Kerry is sort of a moderate liberal. I
guess.
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Thursday, June 03, 2004
WHO'LL STOP THE RAINES?
You'll not find a more vacuous piece of political analysis all week
than former New York Times executive editor Howell Raines's
debut for the Guardian on the shortcomings of John Kerry. You
may have learned about it, as I did, from today's
Boston Herald. Well,
here
it is in all its
unexpurgated glory.
Sorry to quote the same stuff as
the Herald wire report, but this riff on Kerry just screams
out:
I personally find him
easier to talk to than Al Gore, but there's no denying that he's
ponderous. And he's pompous in a way that Gore is not. With Gore,
you feel that if he could choose, he would have been born poor and
cool. Kerry radiates the feeling that he is entitled to his sense
of entitlement. Probably that comes from spending too much time
with Teddy Kennedy, but it's a problem. The TV camera is an x-ray
for picking up attitudinal truths, and Kerry's lantern jaw and
Addams Family face somehow reinforce the message that this guy has
passed from ponderous to pompous and is so accustomed to privilege
that he doesn't have to worry about looking goofy. It's as if
Lurch had gone to Choate.
Good grief. I'm not sure which is
worse - that a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist is eager to allow
such non-thoughts to be published under his byline, or that he was
actually in charge of the World's Greatest Newspaper for a
year-and-a-half. It is becoming easier to understand why his reign
was such a fiasco, isn't it?
By the way, the headline over
Raines's ditty is "Must Do Better." No kidding.
PRESS BOXED. Both the
Globe
and the Herald
report today that media workspace at the Democratic National
Convention is getting squeezed. Some reporters may not even be able
to work inside the security zone, meaning they're going to get the
Richard Reid treatment every time they want to wander inside the
FleetCenter.
Just thought I'd point out that if
the show had been moved to the South Boston convention center, as it
should have been, the entire media horde could have been housed in
big, comfortable, cheap tents in the parking lot, which was done with
great effectiveness at the Republican gathering in Philadelphia four
years ago.
NEW IN THIS WEEK'S
PHOENIX. The New York Times confesses
its sins in hyping Iraq's
non-existent weapons capabilities and terrorist ties. So what took so
long?
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Wednesday, June 02, 2004
WHY ALCOHOL AND NEOCONSERVATISM
DON'T MIX. So who was the drunken neocon who blurted to Ahmad
Chalabi that the United States had broken Iran's secret code?
According to today's New York Times story
on how Chalabi allegedly came to learn about this intelligence
coup:
American officials
reported that in the cable to Tehran, the Iranian official
recounted how Mr. Chalabi had said that one of "them" - a
reference to an American - had revealed the code-breaking
operation, the officials said. The Iranian reported that Mr.
Chalabi said the American was drunk.
Chalabi has been accused of then
turning over the secret to Iranian officials, as grotesque a breach
of security as can be imagined.
Here
is what the Washington Post says:
The FBI is investigating
an intercepted Iranian message that alleges Iraqi exile leader
Ahmed Chalabi told Tehran officials that the United States had
broken Iran's secret code, U.S. officials said.
The message alleges Chalabi said
he had been told about the code-breaking by a drunken U.S.
official, one senior Bush administration official said.
Josh Marshall all
but names a suspect, but I
would need my own secret decoder ring to figure out whom he's
referring to:
I'll try not to be too
coy. There are a number of folks who could fit that bill.
But for anyone who's followed this story, there's one guy who's
just got to jump right to the top of the list: an expert on Iran
who is extremely close to Chalabi, served as his civilian
Pentagon handler for some time in Iraq after the war, and is known
for comparing Chalabi to Mohammed and other equally august
worthies.
In April, Marshall had
this
to say about Chalabi's declining fortunes:
There are still more than
a few of the Chalabi crowd here in DC who persist in calling this
charlatan the "Leader of Free Iraq", as they did for last several
years or 'the greatest Arab since Mohammed' as one of his
acolytish handlers often refers to him. (Believe me, I'm not
making this stuff up.)
Last August, Marshall
wrote,
"There's another neocon at DOD who, I'm told, has often called
Chalabi the most important Muslim since the Prophet Mohammed." But no
name there, either.
Media Log seeks enlightenment. If
Marshall has ever named his suspect, drop me a line at
dkennedy[a]phx.com.
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Tuesday, June 01, 2004
AND NOW, THE REST OF THE
STORY. The Boston Globe recently announced that it will
begin accepting ads on the op-ed page. A column
today that attempts to debunk concerns about global warming, by one
James M. Taylor, would appear to fall into that category.
Unfortunately, the Globe presents it not as a paid ad but,
rather, as an earnest opinion piece by someone who is identified only
by the respectable-sounding title of "managing editor of
Environment & Climate News."
More about that in a moment. First,
though, a few words about Taylor's wacky column, written ostensibly
to make fun of the movie The Day After Tomorrow, a
global-warming nightmare thriller. At first I figured Taylor would
simply point out that the various global-warming scenarios are more
complicated and less spectacular than Hollywood would have it. Within
a few paragraphs, though, Taylor was espousing the most extreme views
held by industry and its right-wing supporters. To wit: that if there
is any global warming taking place at all, it is slight, and in any
case will take place at night, while you're sleeping; and that the
concomitant rise in carbon-dioxide levels is good for you. Taylor
writes:
Most recent and unbiased
scientific research indicates that temperature change caused by
rising concentrations of greenhouse gases will be moderate,
perhaps 1 degree Celsius in the next century; most of the warming
will occur at night and during the winter; and higher
concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide (which plant life
needs to thrive and survive) will lead to a greening of the planet
that will enhance global food production.
Now, in fact, the case for
human-caused global warming is a bit more complicated than
environmentalists would have you believe, which I discovered
when I dipped my toe into this turbulent water nearly three years
ago. But the overwhelming consensus of scientific opinion is
definitely not on Taylor's side. The simple-minded virulence of
Taylor's screed should have set off alarm bells when it arrived at
the Globe. It certainly set off Media Log's alarms. And it
took me no more than a few minutes on Google to learn that Taylor's
piece never should have seen the light of day - except in one of
those new op-ads.
Environment & Climate
News, as it turns out, is a publication of the Chicago-based
Heartland
Institute, a right-wing
organization founded in 1984 that is "devoted to turning ideas into
social movements that empower people." How nice. Scroll down its home
page, and you will see that it promotes relatively benign,
conservative-oriented causes such as school choice - and some truly
out-there ideas, such as the notion that genetically modified crops
are necessary to preserve water resources, that new air-pollution
standards "will do significant economic harm but little environmental
good," that the government should do nothing about the obesity
epidemic, and that second-hand cigarette smoke is
harmless.
It gets better. According to
Disinfopedia.com,
the Heartland Institute's directors include current and retired
officials of ExxonMobil, Amaco, General Motors, and Philip Morris.
Its funding comes from ExxonMobil and a number of right-wing
foundations, including the notorious John M. Olin Foundation and the
Scaife Foundations. (As in Richard Melon Scaife, who reportedly once
told
a journalist attempting to ask him a question, "You fucking communist
cunt, get out of here.") In addition, Heartland co-founder David
Padden is a right-wing activist long involved in such organizations
as the Cato Institute and the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
According to Bill Berkowitz,
writing
for WorkingForChange.com, "The Heartland Institute ... is one of the
foremost right-wing purveyors of the carbon dioxide is good for you
theory."
Op-ed pages are where newspapers
publish opinion pieces, and by their very nature the authors of those
pieces are not expected to be as disinterested as, say, reporters who
cover political campaigns, homicides, or the stock market. On the
other hand, neither are op-ed editors supposed to publish discredited
propaganda that's been bought and paid for by corporate and
right-wing interests, especially when those interests are not
disclosed.
The Globe has been
apologizing a lot lately, even when it shouldn't
have. Well, Taylor's
ridiculous piece is something that's definitely worth an
apology.
Meanwhile, the Globe's
advertising salespeople must be wondering how they'll ever manage to
sell an op-ad when the editorial side is giving them away.
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MEDIA LOG ARCHIVES
Dan Kennedy is senior writer and media critic for the Boston Phoenix.