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Archive for June, 2008

McCain Salutes Russert, Obama Makes The Ask

Two e-mails landed in my Gmail inbox late last night, the first from the McCain campaign and the second from Obama’s team. Notice the order and the subject matter:

Gmail inbox: Russert vs. Obama store

In case your eyes are as bad as mine (or you aren’t using Firefox 3.0’s nifty zoom feature) how about we blow up the relevant detail of that image:

Detail of Russert vs. Obama store e-mails

So John McCain’s staff sends out a tribute (complete with video) to the too-soon late, great “Meet the Press” host and NBC Washington bureau chief Tim Russert, and 45 minutes later, Barack Obama’s staff sends out a commercial solicitation. Remember the Titans vs. Buy More Stuff.

I’m reminded of WashingtonPost.com’s botched e-mail alert the morning Sean Taylor died, and just a tiny bit that recent Sunday e-mail from Newsweek that somehow managed to omit that edition’s only negative story about the Obama campaign. This one is a bit more esoteric — how many outside the Beltway are on both candidate’s e-mail lists?

Well, just about any reporter covering national politics. They matter, right? And unlike WPNI’s newspaper and magazine, the Obama camp at least has a rapid response team. I have no doubt this e-mail alert was prepared and schedulded well in advance of Friday afternoon’s terrible news. But because e-mail alerts can be timely, they must be timely. The Obama campaign must know this — after all, they beat all other presidential candidates with the first campaign e-mail of the New Year.

Would it have been so difficult to recycle a few of the candidate’s comments from earlier in the day? They needn’t even go as far as the McCain campaign did — the specially-recorded tribute video is a little more personal than McCain’s tarmac remarks early Friday afternoon, reflecting on the fact that he made 52 appearances on Russert’s “Meet”. [Update: As Sean Hackbarth notes in the comments, this was clearly something McCain himself wanted to do.]

Checking my inbox archives, I see this is the first time the Obama campaign has flogged its online store in an e-mail subject line since the last Christmas shopping season. But they have sent no e-mail acknowledging (let alone mourning) Russert’s untimely passing, and I can’t even find a release on the website. I know the Obama campaign is sort of running against insider Washington, but wasn’t Russert pretty much the best kind possible?

For anyone who bothered to open up those e-mails in succession last night or today, the juxtaposition looks like this:

McCain letter about Russert Obama store e-mail pitch

Especially when you consider that national political reporters who worked alongside or in competition with Russert are the most likely to have noticed this discrepancy, the advantage here goes to McCain.

P.S. The McCain e-mail could use more color and better design, but they should get credit for rendering the text in actual ASCII/Unicode characters.

P.P.S. A personal favorite “Meet the Press” episode was the morning of May 27, 2007, where Russert’s calm, methodical questioning laid bare Bill Richardson’s surprising inability to defend himself on almost anything, from the serious to the trivial. Russert managed to do gotcha without seeming gotcha, and the hour-long interrogation was one of his most effective. That was the real end of Gov. Richardson’s presidential campaign. The transcript is here.

All the Rage #11: Britain’s Got Wikipedians

For the third time in four weeks, an article about a British television show takes the top spot in our exploration of the top 10 most-edited articles on the English-language Wikipedia for the week of June 1 to June 7. Hat tip as usual to WikiRage creator Craig Wood for making this feature possible. Let’s get started:

  1. Article: Britain’s Got Talent
    Britain’s Got Talent on Flickr via garretkeough.Why: Simon Cowell’s latest show actually named its winner in time for last week’s edition, but apparently there was more to stay about it. Sustained editing and discussion of how best to organize the article continued until June 4, but now the edits are trailing off as the article stabilizes.
    Detail: I think for the first time, we have the same #1 two weeks in a row, although if not for week nine’s asterisk edition, I think Indy IV would have preceded it.

  2. Article: Harold Innis
    Why: Featured Article on June 1. Heavily vandalized
    Detail: I had never heard of the guy, but the article certainly demonstrates that he was interesting. But what’s more interesting to me is what appears to be no mere vandalism, but a hacking of the MediaWiki software. But be careful clicking on that link, especially if you have a large monitor. The heavily pixelated background is NSFW in the extreme, though it takes a moment to realize the fact.

  3. Article: Yves Saint Laurent (designer)
    Why: The French fashion designer whom I would not have won an “alive or dead?” guessing game until his death on June 1 was announced.
    Detail: It’s actually a surprisingly short article for a business celebrity or a most-edited page. My guess is that Saint Laurent didn’t do much publicity. The article’s two photos are from when he was fairly young. I can’t ever recall seeing him answer Vanity Fair’s Proust questionnaire like Karl Largerfeld has done. Heck, Lagerfeld picked the music and DJs for a radio station in Grand Theft Auto IV. Yves Saint Laurent, not so much.

  4. Bo Diddley in Japan poster on Flickr via timburts.Article: Bo Diddley
    Why: The American rock singer, songwriter and rectangular guitarist died at age 79 on June 9.
    Detail: I wondered what the last version of the page before his passing was announced looked like, so I looked it up. It’s substantially the same and approximately even the same length, but now is more tightly written. One image has been removed, likely because it wasn’t clearly released under a public license. It may be tempting to think of the latter change as making Wikipedia worse, but Wikipedia is quite conservative when it comes to approving images for use, probably to avoid being sued. This actually makes the “information wants to be free” types on Wikipedia strong defenders of copyright, which is kind of ironic.

  5. Article: Ran (film)
    Why: Featured Article (FA) on June 1.
    Detail: The article is fairly long, but apparently its suitability for the front page fell under dispute almost as soon as it went up. The page seems fine to me, and I’m not sure this wasn’t just a case of a user from WikiProject Music sniffing that his work was better.

  6. Article: Confederate government of Kentucky
    Why: Featured article on June 3.
    Detail: You can always count on certain articles which have reached FA status resulting in some debate on the associated talk page, even though these are pages which have supposedly reached enough stability that they’ve been so approved for the front page. Headline on the latest talk page debate: “’provisional government’ or ’shadow government’ a better term?”

  7. Article: 2008 Danish embassy bombing
    Why: The Danish embassy in Islamabad was the site of a suicide car bombing on June 2, killing five. Al-Qaeda reportedly claimed responsibility on June 5, citing the Jyllands-Posten cartoons as motivation.
    Detail: With no natural disasters to meticulously document this week, Wikipedia’s newshounds instead focused on building up this article. With the breakdown of country-by-country responses and substantial number of news citations (48) it certainly looks more than a little like it.

  8. WWE wax figures on Flickr via greggoconnell.Article: One Night Stand (2008)
    Why: It’s a WWE pay-per-view event that aired on June 1.
    Detail: WWE has been dominating the bottom half of these lists for awhile. Long enough now that maybe we should think about it. Apparently one of the entertainment/media subcultures that has really taken to Wikipedia is professional wrestling and its fans. They may be more active than fans of any other professional sport; playoffs and championships pages sometimes show up here when they come around, but the 2008 NBA Finals are nowhere to be found, though it’s not a bad page. I used to have a WWE-related page watchlisted and for awhile, noted the changes each day. Kudos to WP:PROWRESTLING, or WikiProject Professional wrestling (you don’t capitalize “wrestling”). They’ve created 5 Featured Articles, which is pretty good, considering the subject matter.

  9. Article: Giovani dos Santos
    Why: At first I thought he might be Baby Diego from “Children of Men” but apparently he’s a 19-year-old “attacking midfielder or forward, who plays for Barcelona and the Mexican national team.”
    Detail: Why him, why now? Looks like the surge of interest owes to Santos transferring to Tottenham Hotspur in London, a deal worth between four and eight million pounds.

  10. Article: Night of Champions (2008)
    Why: It’s a pay-per-view WWE event coming up on June 29.
    Detail: “The official theme song is “Devour” by Shinedown.[3]”

  11. Holdovers this week: Britain’s Got Talent

    Falling off the list: Among non-featured articles, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Phoenix (spacecraft), Eurovision Song Contest 2009, Deaths in 2008 (just #15 this week), Nepal, 2008 Sichuan earthquake, Eurovision Song Contest 2008

    Recurring themes: Simon Cowell, professional wrestling

    Honorable mention: Clocking in at #25 is Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2008, the name of which makes you wonder if he ran in 2004 or if Obama supporters want to imply there will be a 2012 re-elect.

Images courtesy garretkeough, timburts and greggoconnell on Flickr.

Krauthammer’s Forgotten Column

Charles Krauthammer is one of the country’s most influential conservative thinkers, indeed one of the country’s most influential newspaper columnists. Right?

When I was on Bloggingheads a few weeks ago, I briefly mentioned a then-recent Krauthammer column that caught my attention and made me think hard about current U.S. (and European) policy toward Iran vis-à-vis its nuclear (weapons) program. I thiink it’s important enough to quote at length. Here’s how it began:

The era of nonproliferation is over. During the first half-century of the nuclear age, safety lay in restricting the weaponry to major powers and keeping it out of the hands of rogue states. This strategy was inevitably going to break down. The inevitable has arrived. …

The EU-3 negotiations (Britain, France and Germany) [with Iran] went nowhere. Each U.N. Security Council resolution enacting what passed for sanctions was more useless than the last. Uranium enrichment continues.

When Iran’s latest announcement that it was tripling its number of centrifuges to 9,000 elicited no discernible response from the Bush administration, the game was over. Everyone says Iran must be prevented from going nuclear. No one will bell the cat.

Krauthammer acknowledges, remarkably but rationally, that Iran will get its nuclear weapons whether we try to bribe them to do otherwise or not. And thanks in part to the pyrrhic invasion of Iraq and as well to North Korea’s development of WMD, preemption “is spent.” This is a huge concession from one of the standard-bearers of the political philosophy popularly, if somewhat erroneously, termed neoconservatism. So what to do?

Begin by making the retaliatory threat in response to Iranian nuclear aggression so unmistakable and so overwhelming that the non-millenarians in leadership would stay the hand or even remove those taking their country to the point of extinction. …

For the sake of argument, imagine a two-layered anti-missile system in which each layer is imperfect, with, say, a 90 percent shoot-down accuracy. That means one in 100 missiles gets through both layers. That infinitely strengthens deterrence by radically degrading the possibility of a successful first strike. Even Mahmoud Ahmadinejad might refrain from launching an arsenal of, say, 20 nukes if his scientific advisers showed him that there was only an 18.2 percent chance of any getting through — and a 100 percent chance that a retaliatory counterattack of hundreds of Israeli (and/or American) nukes would reduce the world’s first Islamic republic to a cinder.

Of course, one can get around missile defense by using terrorists. But anything short of a hermetically secret, perfectly executed, multiple-site attack would cause terrible, but not existential, destruction. The retaliatory destruction, on the other hand, would be existential.

This is hardly dovish, promising Iran that nuclear devastation of Israel (or any other ally) would mean the destruction of Iran — in effect, we would tell Iran that Israel’s safety is now very much in its interest.

But it’s also not quite what you’d expect from one of the strongest supporters of the Iraq war. My left-leaning roommate called it “uncharacteristically sharp and honest for him.” Maybe, just maybe, that’s part of the problem.

Because the column sank like a stone.

Krauthammer’s column regularly appears on more than one website, and when I searched then and again tonight, I found very little pickup. At WashingtonPost.com, the highest-profile of all, it received just 21 linkbacks from the blogosphere. At the high-traffic NRO.com, there were only 4 linkbacks. And at the lesser-read Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (at least some subset of Blog P.I. readers will probably find this association ironic) it was a whopping zero. (Of course, this post will bump each up by one.) Compare to his most recent column, taking a familiar position against cap-and-trade, which picked up 59 linkbacks just from its appearance on WashingtonPost.com.

No major blog, liberal or conservative, gave his Iran column any serious thought. The only sustained discussion of the column was at the mid-level left-leaning blog Foreign Policy Watch, which simply disagreed with his premise:

Of course, one of the larger concerns surrounding the prospect of North Korea’s failure to disarm and the possibility of a nuclear-armed Iran is that they could inspire balancing, follow-on nuclear programs elsewhere in their immediate regions. But it’s not inevitable that this will happen. Nor is it inevitable, for that matter, that North Korea won’t see its disarmament obligations through to the very end, or that Iran is racing toward nuclear weapons acquisition and there is nothing capable of preventing this outcome. Such fatalism is misguided, to say the least, and would lead to very poor policy if taken seriously. …

That is not to say there aren’t potent concerns for the future of antiproliferation efforts; there are. But to translate this into such sweeping pessimism, going so far as to say “the era of nonproliferation is over,” is intellectually lazy and politically dangerous, particularly if it means adopting purely defensive responses as opposed to vigorous preventive diplomacy designed to blunt such outcomes in the first place.

Maybe they’re right and Krauthammer is wrong. But considering the perceived admission against interest, one would think this column would spark more debate.

Conceding that Iran will succeed in developing nuclear weapons is clearly an unpopular position to take, no matter which political party you belong to. The national consensus, international consensus even, is that Iran must be dissuaded from developing a nuclear arsenal. There are disagreements about how to do it, but the argument that “the era of nonproliferation is over” is clearly something that no one wants to hear.

All the Rage #10: Indiana Jones and the Federated Democratic Republic of Simon Cowell

A look at the top 10 most-edited articles on the English-language Wikipedia from May 26 through June 1, according to the handy Wikirage edit-monitoring online tool.

  1. Article: Britain’s Got Talent
    Why:The British (which I assume means original) version of Sim Cowell’s other show wrapped up on May 31.
    Detail: The show as won by angelic-faced 14-year-old “street dancer” George Sampson. To see his final performance, click here (actual dancing begins at about 1:50). And apparently vandalism has been bad enough that the article is locked until June 3.

  2. Article: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
    Why: The new Indy flick may not be all that good, but that doesn’t seem to have diminished its popularity much.
    Detail: Thousands of words have been spilled on the Talk page about the supposed original Lucas script and title, Indiana Jones and the Saucer Men from Mars. Visit that page quick, because it will probably be deleted within the week. Also of note, this was probably the top-most edited article last week but I’m pretty sure my clumsiness denied it that title, and it merely made the #2 slot. Either way, it’s the first time since this series started that any article has been in the same slot in consecutive weeks.

  3. Article: Phoenix (spacecraft)
    Why: The much-celebrated unmanned space probe landed on Mars to much fanfare on May 25.
    Detail: NASA typically makes many photos and details available about its grander projects, which makes for highly informative, highly detailed Wikipedia articles.

  4. Article: Eurovision Song Contest 2009
    Why: Making its second appearance on the list, following its (possibly erroneous) #1 showing last week.
    Detail: Not much seems to have changed since last week, except someone has added a really cool map. One thing I failed to note last week is that this page is about an event that won’t be held until next May; the 2008 version just wrapped up. That’s something, all right. Many of these pages document ongoing events, but I think this is the first time we’ve seen an article show up about an event so far in the future.

  5. Article: D. B. Cooper
    Why: The article about the mysterious hijacker was the Featured Article on May 30.
    Detail: It’s more than thirty years later, but there are still enough claims about Cooper’s identity and whereabouts for Wikipedians to argue about the details almost indefinitely.

  6. Article: The Strangers
    Why: I’d never heard of it until now, but apparently it’s a horror film released just this weekend.
    Detail: The same thing happened in the fifth edition of this series, with the film Prom Night. Like the mixed martial arts and professional wrestling events (to say nothing of the reality TV shows) that have made this list recently, the lowbrow are as drawn to Wikipedia as anyone.

  7. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why:
    Detail: Passing this week: Director and actor Sydney Pollack, Blazing Saddles actor Harvey Korman, Star Trek producer Robert Justman, and you remember that movie, Lorenzo’s Oil? The real Lorenzo Odone passed away at age 30 in Fairfax, Virginia — living 20 years longer than doctors would have thought. Oh, and Australia’s most infamous female child murderer.

  8. Article: Nepal
    Why: When the week began, the South Asian country was a monarchy, and now it’s a democracy. Then again, the Maoists won, so it’s debatable how much progress they made.
    Detail: The change in form of government raised numerous questions among Wikipedia editors, among them whether a new article titled Kingdom of Nepal was needed, or whether the current page should be moved to Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal. So far, the answer is no to both.

  9. Article: 2008 Sichuan earthquake
    Why: The earthquake in China isn’t making front page headlines in the United States anymore, but it’s still making news.
    Detail: This article fell off the list last week, after being the #2 entry in our eighth edition.

  10. Article: Eurovision Song Contest 2008
    Why: This is the contest just concluded, and the first time we’re seeing it here. Strange how the 2009 contest has ranked higher than the current one.
    Detail:

  11. Holdovers this week: Eurovision Song Contest 2009, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Deaths in 2008 (probable).

    Falling off the list: Stanley Cup, Dima Bilan, Eurovision Song Contest, UFC 84, Union of South American Nations, Rob Knox, Lion and Manuel Marulanda.

    Recurring themes: Reality TV shows by Simon Cowell or competitions similar to Simon Cowell’s reality TV shows, natural disasters, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.

    Honorable mention: Sydney Pollack, who came in at #11 and would have made the list if I had anything to say about it. I suppose I could have made a lot of tiny little changes to the page in hopes of propping it up, but by the time I knew it was too late. Oh, and I wouldn’t actually recommend doing so.