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Archive for August, 2006

On The Relevance of Caca (And Mohawks)

Not to keep picking on AMERICAblog, but it is an influential site with 70K+ readers daily, and one of its chief contributors completely botched a development in the George Allen story yesterday. Here’s Joe in DC, commenting on the latest explanation for “macaca”:

The Allen campaign has come up with another very tortured explanation for the “Macaca” scandal. Apparently, in their world, calling Mr. Sidarth a “shithead” is somehow acceptable. Seriously, that’s their explanation. They’re claiming that Allen meant to call the guy “a shithead.”

Makes this whole thing even more suspicious, considering shithead doesn’t sound a lot like macaca – yet a French slur for dark-skinned north Africans sounds exactly like macaca, and George Allen speaks French and his mom was a white French citizen from north Africa. Gee what a coincidence.

The post is based on a report at Hotline On Call by my former colleagues, Jonathan Martin and Marc Ambinder. Here’s what they wrote:

According to two Republicans who heard the word used, “macaca” was a mash-up of “Mohawk,” referring to Sidarth’s distinctive hair, and “caca,” Spanish slang for excrement, or “shit.”

Said one Republican close to the campaign: “In other words, he was a shit-head, an annoyance.”

Did Joe in DC actually read what Hotline reported? It seems more like he skimmed it, and thought he saw what he wanted to see. And in the comments, you have to scroll past two dozen comments to find someone who grasps the relevance of “caca.” If this new explanation is true, and I don’t dismiss it out of hand as Joe does, it reinforces the argument that Allen is mean-spirited and a lousy extemporaneous speaker, and doesn’t really say anything about his alleged racist tendencies.

Meanwhile, AMERICAblog and Media Matters and doubtless others are pointing out that the MSM reports are leaving out the fact of Allen’s mother’s heritage. That’s certainly a valid cause to take up, and it should be reported as part of the story. Because the origin of “macaca” is rapidly turning into a Rohrschach test, it’s important that all the relevant details get in. But if that is worth including, then so is the fact that S.R. Sidarth has indeed sported a mohawk-like hairstyle, and they definitely do not call for greater reportage of that underreported fact. Perhaps Aravosis should tweak the site’s tagline to: “Because a great nation deserves the partial truth.”

That said, they do have a point. So far, the only MSM outlet that matters in this race, but by no means the only outlet that bloggers are watching, has reported on the latter argument in the Metro section — that “faux-hawk” photo helps — but left the former to the letters section. I’m almost tempted to judge it a make-up call for splashing the initial story on A1 in the first place. Almost.

P.S. Apparently “Colbert” is the new “First”/”Frist”/”Fitz”. Also, this guy? Wow.

Murder, She Blogged

Or, as the case may be, didn’t.

In midday, when the arrest of a suspect in the JonBenet Ramsey case was breaking across the news networks, I wondered to what extent, if any, the political blogosphere would pick up on it. While it’s not a political story (even considering John Ramsey’s unsuccessful run for the Michigan state House in 2004), political bloggers are frequently current events bloggers, and this is nothing if not current.

In the mid-afternoon, I detected no response at all. Late in the evening, as this Memeorandum round-up shows, the only bloggers on the case are conservative bloggers. There’s Wizbang, there’s La Shawn Barber, there’s Sister Toldjah and there’s Hot Air.

Turning to Technorati, it seems that nobody on the left is covering it for its own sake, apart from Jeralyn Merritt, who also happens to be a Denver-based criminal justice attorney. Shakespeare’s Sister and a couple of Daily Kos diarists mention it, but only for the fact that cable news is talking about the arrest rather than whatever happened today in Iraq (not that they identify a particular news story being overlooked). Well, there is dKos diarist Ghost of Frank Zappa, who in a very short post admits: “I for one always thought it was the parents. I owe them an apology I guess.”

So what explains the disporportionate interest in the story? I don’t really know the answer. Is this because conservatives tend to be “law and order” types? Possibly. Conservative bloggers such as Dan Riehl and Scared Monkeys have been avid chroniclers of the Natalee Holloway disappearance, but there are no lefty bloggers I’m aware of who have paid much attention to that case at all.

Another possibility: I’ve always considered conservative bloggers to be a bit more of hobbyists than their liberal counterparts. The leftosphere is primarily animated by their animus to President Bush, the Iraq war, and these days, Joe Lieberman. Their eyes are always on the prize, whereas conservatives are more likely to blog for the sake of blogging. The rightosphere is also without a president to unseat, a Congress to win back, and a war to end — hence the irritation of the Kossacks with having a trifle such as this all over the TV news.

That said, I’m still not sure that explains the whole thing. Are liberal bloggers more serious? Are conservative bloggers more cosmopolitan? If you’ve another theory, do share.

Hakuna Macaca, What A Wonderful Phrase…

The George Allen “Macaca” controversy continues to reverberate around the blogosphere, but as yet I haven’t seen anybody focus on the Virginia bloggers — the ones who will actually be voting to retain or boot him from office, and who first pushed the story into the national media’s consciousness. So I have.

Not all of the Virginia bloggers offered intelligent commentary, but that was certainly no impediment to being included in Blog P.I.’s latest round-up. This is a long, long, long post — and it’s all below the jump. Follow me:

Continue reading ‘Hakuna Macaca, What A Wonderful Phrase…’

The Worst Best-Dressed List

The handsome President Ahmadinejad rocks his khaki “Ahmadi jacket” at the UN and state speeches, as well as during the aforementioned globally broadcast interview with Mike Wallace.

The jacket can also be spotted this fall on Brooks Brothers models worldwide, and can be yours for $59.99 (sale price). “A classic spring jacket in cotton poplin. Short-waisted style is detailed with a button-down collar, zip front, darted back. Interior and exterior pockets. Dry clean. Imported.”

The estimable Catch Up Lady makes other, er, interesting juxtapositions, such as Kim Jong Il with the Backstreet Boys’ A.J. McLean.

She also points up the Evo Morales sweater phenomenon, which exemplifies the kind of anti-cool the Williamsburg kids are sure to pick up on before the next Arctic Monkeys album hits the Internets.

Today, Blog P.I.; Tomorrow, Slate

On Monday afternoon John Dickerson covered the extensive use of YouTube by anti-Lieberman bloggers, territory that Blog P.I. happened to cover over a week ago.

This illustrates a problem for writers in the era of the web: It’s incredibly difficult to be the first person to write about something. The sheer number of worthwhile blogs out there also reduces the chances that whomever really was first gets any credit for it at all. And I am absolutely not referring to myself: In fact, more than a week before I wrote about the YouTube-ing ways of the so-called Lamontsters, a non-partisan Conn. blog had already discussed the phenomenon.

And you know who else beat us, this time by only a matter of hours? One of Dickerson’s own colleagues, who didn’t get a hat tip from him, either.

Update: Rolling Stone, somehow completely oblivious of the Lamont-Lieberman primary, is declaring the Va. Senate general election “The First YouTube Election,” on account of Sen. George Allen’s YouTelevised “Macaca” gaffe (about which more later).

Good Bye Cruel World: The Suicide Bloggers

Warning: This post contains “language.”

There are perhaps as many ways to read Daily Kos as there are registered users (over 100K as of last week). I bet casual readers stick to the front page. Regular community members might dig into the diaries first. Righty bloggers looking for outlandish statements probably stick with the most-recommended diaries along the left-hand side.

But my favorite point of entry is the page collecting all diaries tagged GBCW, an initialism meaning “Good Bye, Cruel World.” dKosopedia, the dKos community’s answer to Wikipedia, defines the tag thusly:

The “Good Bye Cruel World” diary is when a Kossack decides that DailyKos has become too (fill in the blank) or isn’t nearly (fill in the blank) enough for him or her to continue visiting the site. General chaos ensues in the Comments as other Kossacks agree, disagree, wish the diarist good luck or good riddance.

Some of these are amicable splits; just the other day, Mike Stark from the right-wing talk radio-baiting blog Calling All Wingnuts announced he is taking some time away from the blogosphere. Like almost all bloggers who quit, he’ll be coming back, but unlike most bloggers who quit, he actually says so. At his own site,  in fact, he has posted eight times since the initial announcement.

But primarily, the GBCW category is where the rejected and the dejected, the angriest of the so-called Angry Left, can be found posting one last screed before they walk away for good (or so they promise). Most have been rated trolls one too many times and have finally given up. Their suicide notes, if you will, are often widely-noticed and tend to attract hundreds of replies.

It would be foolish to actually compare them to suicide bombers, save for how “suicide bloggers” rolls off the tongue, but you could at least say they drag a lot of other people into a really bad scene on the way out. For example, here’s wintersmute signing off with the artfully-titled “FUCK DAILY KOS!”:

Ok so it’s Monday. After a long weekend of research on the Democratic Party, I’ve decided to no longer support the party. My choice right? Damn right. So I’m heated. I need to vent. Where do I decide to vent?.. on a thread backing Democratic elections. What do I get? Turned into a troll.

Imagine that. And so it also happens to the more traditional trolls:

Seriously, sooner rather than later, you guys are all going to beg for forgiveness for being so f_cking wrong.  9/11 was an inside job and it’s coming out. … This site is totally bogus.  Sorry to say, but it’s grown to be apart of the 9/11 cover up whether you know it or not. Thanks for the helping hand in making the world a terrible place.

Some ”suicide bloggers” have sought to end their time at Daily Kos peacefully. Take jmgotham, who in late June requested an assisted suicide. To his mortal frustration, most respectfully declined:

“If you really wanted to be troll-rated … you’ve got to be a lot more vitriolic, and spell a lot of things wrong, and really make up a whole lot more shit. You were too nice. You could also just leave.”

Others understand this intuitively. Take for instance a GBCW post from just this month. Short-term community member ErrinF fought not just with the community for supporting Democrats above progressive values, but also with the blogware Scoop, which doesn’t allow users to delete their accounts. Hence the  infamous title: “Delete my fucking account, Kos” (the word seems to come up a lot in GBCW diaries). One memorable passage goes:

The amount of blind conformity that goes on in America is what fuels the corrupt two party system. DailyKos exemplifies blind conformity, and I regret any and all association I have had with it. I should be allowed to delete my account and go; Why should I be forced to stay amid this pathetic cult of personality? The herd mentality that goes on here sickens me now, AND I WANT OUT. Regardless of my personal experience here, EVERYBODY WHO SIGNED UP TO THIS WEBSITE SHOULD BE FREE TO DELETE THEIR ACCOUNTS IF THEY SO WISH TO. For Kos to deny us this is downright fascist.

The post picked up some 1800 comments, a large number even by Daily Kos’ standards. dKosopedia called it one of the “most famous GBCW diaries in the history of Daily Kos.” Veteran Kossack YetiMonk recently summarized the flare-up and subsequent fallout well. The diary inspired several parodies, the best of which is probably “Paint my fucking house, Kos”:

I want out of this farce of a website. I thought this was on open forum for painters to discuss their brushes. Instead, it is little more than the internet wing of the Housepaint Duopoly machine. Now that I want out, a fair minded and liberal website would let me paint my house and go.

Sometimes the suiciders complain about “censorship,” sometimes they complain about the advertising, and sometimes they just seem like they want to cause trouble. The vast majority who grow disillusioned probably just fade away, never to be heard from again. But what’s the fun in that?

If there’s as many points of entry at Daily Kos as there are registered users, there’s certainly as many points of exit as there are abandoned accounts.

“I Don’t Know Anything About the Blogs”

In a characteristically counterintuitive piece for TNR.com, Ryan Lizza argues that the “second half” of Lamont/Lieberman will fade as a national issue because, as an unnamed DSCC insider tells him, the national party isn’t going to busy itself much with Connecticut this fall:

Why would we spend money defending a seat that will be blue either way?

Later, a different (I think) Senate aide tells him the primary won’t induce Democrats to campaign on immediate withdrawal from Iraq, either:

Our Iraq policy has been driven by [Harry] Reid and [Carl] Levin. To be honest, they could give a rat’s ass about the blogs. In other words, these are policy-based decisions, and aren’t driven by the politics of Connecticut or anywhere else.

Not even a rat’s ass? Really? That might come as a surprise to the readers and commenters at Reid’s Give Em Hell, Harry blog, among the most popular blogs written by an elected Democratic official — almost up there with Conyers Blog, written (or “written”) by a more traditional netroots ally.

It also calls to mind Lamont’s absurd defenestration of Jane Hamsher late last week, for which he apparently paid no price in terms of blogger support (even from Hamsher). And let’s not forget Dem consultant Steve Elmendorf, who paid the ultimate price — excommunication from the left by Markos Moulitsas — for daring to admit:

The bloggers and online donors represent an important resource for the party, but they are not representative of the majority you need to win elections. The trick will be to harness their energy and their money without looking like you are a captive of the activist left.

And what happens if Lizza is right, the Democrats give nothing more than lip service to Lamont, and the Conn. Senate race fades from the national scene? How vocal will the netroots be about their dissatisfaction? How damaging would that be to blogger-politician relations? Might Chuck Schumer, chairman of the DSCC, be the next pariah Democrat — or at least the next Rahm Emanuel?

Could it be that what seemed less than 100 hours ago like the first major gate-crashing will actually end up building more barriers between Beltway Democrats and the party’s online activists?

Upon Further Review, John Aravosis Is Only Half-Unserious About National Security

I first ran across John Aravosis’ take on the British terror arrests via Conn Carroll in yesterday’s Blogometer. Carroll quoted Aravosis asking:

[I]sn’t it queer that the emergency [red alert on U.S. airlines] is declared within a day of Republican party leader Ken Mehlman launching an all-out offensive against Democrats following Joe Lieberman’s loss in Connecticut, an offensive in which Mehlman, the White House and Republican operatives are claiming that Democrats no longer care about national security or the war on terror.

Aravosis frames the events of the last 48 hours as the White House surreptitiously moving against against a) the Democratic party, and b) American business travelers. That Bush is using Lieberman’s defeat against Democrats, and second, that he’s imposing stifling aviation rules without justification. (Aravosis’ judgment on the credibility of the Scotland Yard-scotched terror plot has evolved, which I’ll get to a bit later.)

Look, I agree the color-coded system is capricious and unhelpful to the public, and if the no-water on airplanes policy persists past a few weeks, I’ll join him in decrying that (I would also endorse the notion that the shoe-checks have outlived their usefulness, though they were useful at first). But in dysfunctional government policy and hardball politics he sees actual malice. Take this post, filed early yesterday afternoon:

In today’s NY Times, Dick Cheney warned that the Lieberman loss would embolden “Al Qaeda types.” It is reasonable to assume that Cheney, like Bush, knew about the unfolding scandal in Great Britain.

Think about this for a minute. It shows how evil the Bush/Cheney team really is. Knowing that this story was about to break, Cheney invoked Al Qaeda in purely political terms.

Cheney and Aravosis are actually making the same mistake on purpose, and both for political reasons. They both purport to believe that “al Qaeda types” are even following the primary defeat of a hawkish opposition party member, so they can politicize the war, for dovishness and calculation.

But what ground rules would Aravosis put on Cheney’s discussion of foreign policy matters? Only if he promises not to mention Democrats? Not within 15 days of an election? Aravosis isn’t criticizing the substance of Cheney’s remarks, but instead that he made any remarks at all.

And I don’t have time to check and see if Aravosis has criticized Bush for calling terrorists “evil,” but if thinking strategically about approaching elections is “evil,” then I don’t know what you’d call Jack Abramoff.

Flash forward to this morning, where Aravosis starts walking back from his verdict on the terror arrests yesterday: That the threat was not legitimate, and the U.S./British reaction was wildly overblown. Conservative bloggers seized on his coments — see Stephen Bainbridge and Pejman Yousefzadeh, plus George Gooding with a bigger picture view — identifying it as more evidence that the left-wing blogosphere is unserious about terrorism, as charged. Carroll put a “tin-foil hat” on him; earlier this week, Jacob Weisberg made a similar argument, saying Ned Lamont’s supporters “appear not to take the wider, global battle against Islamic fanaticism seriously.”

And Aravosis even wrote it like he knew he was mistaking bad timing as a conspiracy:

Do I sound as if I don’t believe this alert? Why, yes, that would be correct. I just don’t believe it. Read the article. They say the plot had an “Al Qaeda footprint.” Ooh, are you scared yet? What that really means is that they found NO evidence whatsoever that the plot had anything to do at all with Al Qaeda, but the plot simply made them think “gosh, this is something Al Qaeda would do.” That’s what a footprint means. Nice, but no cigar.

That’s increasingly untenable, as more information comes out and more arrests are made. Today Aravosis writes:

Intelligence successes are generally more effective when they remain private, but of course if a threat still exists, and can be minimized through public disclosure, that’s a legitimate reason for exposure. Still, considering the past (and present) political use of terror threats, I think skepticism about timing and motives is understandable. They boy who cried wolf writ large.

Well, that’s better. Still, he doesn’t really address his previous exculpation of previous U.S. terrorism arrests:

Were these guys totally innocent? Probably not. But there’s no reason to believe they were any more Osama’s right-hand than Jose Padilla, the famed dirty-bomber who I think is now only being charged with jay-walking or something. Then there were the famous six Muslim-American guys in New York state, supposedly operating their own al Qaeda cell. Not so much. Or how about the Al Qaeda cell in Florida trying to blow up the Sears Tower? Oh that’s right, they were just some demented friends squatting in a warehouse and “thinking” about it. And then there’s the famous plot to blow up the Brooklyn Bridge – with a single blow torch.

Padilla didn’t get very far as a prospective terrorist, but the legal battle surrounding him has been about how to handle al Qaeda arrestees, not about whether he committed conspiracy to commit jaywalking. In the case of the Buffalo Six, all six were convicted of providing material support to al Qaeda, and one was later killed by a U.S. Hellfire missile in Yemen. He identifies correctly the Miami case as one where there really was no case, and I’ll grant him that. Hey, I’ll even throw in Joel Hinrichs, the Sooner Boomer, the suicidal Oklahoma sudent who detonated himself outside Memorial Stadium during a football game in 2005, of whom conservative bloggers fanned many erroneous rumors. But as for the Brooklyn Bridge, I’m not sure where “a single blow torch” comes from, but Iyman Faris knew Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and he too was convicted.

Besides, there’s no proof that the 7/7 suicide bombers received practical support from Osama bin Laden either, but they were deadly nonetheless.

It’s more problematic that he doesn’t mention Richard Reid [Update: Spelling corrected; see this comment] or Lockerbie. Maybe terrorists haven’t had much luck with blowtorches or crop dusters, but for Aravosis to leave out all previous terrorist attacks involving planes in favor of other, lesser examples of terrorist attempt or intent, while blithely dismissing those and mangling the facts, sure, it’s fair to say that John Aravosis, for one, is not very serious about terrorism.

I will at least allow that he is serious about his opposition to Bush because he disagrees strenuously with his national security policy. I just don’t think Aravosis has any idea what to replace it with, and he’s not above sticking to bad conclusions that make Republicans out to sound as bad as possible.

P.S. Jim Treacher asks: “Why do the beverages hate us?” Along with other clever lines that would’ve made a good header to this post. [Update: He's now hosting a poll asking: What do we call this un-quenching imbroglio?]

P.P.S. Greetings, Instapundit readers! Is there a better Instalanche than a pre-lunch time link before the professor heads to class (I presume) for three hours? Nay, I believe there is not. Well, maybe on a Monday.

It’s Not Whether You Win Or Lose…

Can it really be that as yet only one writer in the political mediasphere, bloggers or journalists, has thought to compare Joe Lieberman’s Tuesday night concession speech non-concession:

As I see it, in this campaign we just finished the first half and the Lamont team is ahead. But, in the second half, our team, Team Connecticut, is going to surge forward to victory in November.

With his infamous 2004 New Hampshire primary self-delusion:

We are in a three-way split decision for third place!

Apparently so. Beating me to the punch is none other than David Sirota:

You may recall that after he was crushed in the New Hampshire primary, he proudly boasted that “we are in a three-way split decision for third place” — as if he really thought voters were stupid enough to think that was a good thing and that he was well on his way to winning the nomination. Similarly, today he is claiming that the Democratic Party primary election is just the “first half” of the election process — again, thinking voters are so stupid they don’t see that what he’s really doing is giving the big middle finger to American democracy.

I wouldn’t call Lieberman’s stubborn refusal to admit the obvious after the first primary a “middle finger to American democracy,” but it strikes me as a valid argument this time around.

The comparison is reason enough for me to believe that, despite the rumors, Lieberman will stay in this one to the bitter end. And really, no matter what happens, bitter is how it will be.

P.S. If that wasn’t reason enough, this might be.

Blog P.I. Sells Out

A few weeks ago I promised to not blog about clients without giving a sufficient heads up. Tonight I’ll go one better, and mention that the subject of this post (other than my own disclosure issues) is a client of the entertainment division at New Media Strategies. Which is why I’ve been asked to tell you about…

“The Hill”! Here’s the shill: It’s a six-part documentary series that starts airing on Sundance at 9 p.m. EDT August 23rd. So if you don’t have digital cable, you can probably skip this post. But I’ve seen the first three half-hour episodes, and it’s pretty good — consider it the rumored “Real World: DC” season MTV that never seems to happen. Especially during the later years where they had to get jobs to keep them from getting drunk and fighting (not that it worked). It follows actual Hill staffers doing actual Hill staffer duties on the actual Hill, and opens against the 2004 presidential election.

There’s less drinking and fighting in “The Hill,” but it does have the next best thing: Rep. Robert Wexler (D-Fla). If the name rings a bell, and the congresscritter pictured above somehow puts you in the mind of “cocaine” and “prostitutes,” well, there’s a very good reason: He made some news recently for discussing those subjects (jestingly) with Stephen Colbert. Prior to this summer, he was perhaps best known in the District for being the only Democrat to offer a compromise Social Security overhaul, which is depicted in the show. He also supported the invasion of Iraq, so if you’d like to see an actual Dem official scratch his head (perhaps not literally) about what to say now, then this is for you. I’d watch it myself — if I had digital cable.

I have also been asked to relate the fact that tomorrow night at Timberlake’s (1726 Conn. Ave NW) DC Drinking Liberally (local chapter of nationwide lefty blogger drinking club) is hosting a screening. Also present will be the show’s featured characters: Eric Johnson, Lale Mamaux, Halie Soifer and Jonathan Katz, playing themselves as chief of staff, communications director, foreign policy adviser and unspecified strategist guy. Most importantly, appetizers are free and drinks are a dollar off.

This was an unpaid advertisement.