THE UPPER CLASS HACK

I was sorry to hear that Paul Foot, one of Britain’s most dogged journalists, died of a heart attack last Saturday. The Telegraph obit does him justice. His Marxist views were silly when they weren’t fueled with anger and hatred, but he had a keen nose for actual injustice and often sniffed it out. I liked this testament: “There are more people walking the streets of Britain who have been freed from prison by Paul Foot than by any other person.” They were all innocent, of course. And few journalists can claim to have done such tangible good in their lives.

TOWARD CLARITY ON IRAN: Amir Taheri agrees with the Dish that the subject should be front and center in the campaign.

SOMERBY ON WILSON: Bob Somerby’s a major hater of this blog, but he’s often got good things to say and a sometimes extraordinary diligence in rooting out the truth. He’s no fan of Bush’s, to say the least, but he can see through the Joe Wilson carapace of cant:

Let’s compare two important statements-Bush’s famous 16 words, and Wilson’s amazing new admission:

BUSH: The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.

WILSON: I never claimed to have “debunked” the allegation that Iraq was seeking uranium from Africa.

Finally! This is what we’ve always told you – Wilson had no way of knowing if the 16-word statement was right or wrong. He had no way to debunk it! But throughout his thrilling and best-selling book, he calls this statement a “lie-lie-lie-lie,” over and over and over again. But then, grinding overstatement like that has been the problem with Wilson all along (as the three senators correctly note). And now, alas, Dems will start to pay a price for investing so much in his presentations.

Well, they would if the media were willing to debunk the fraud they so ably hyped. But they won’t, will they?

LIVING WITHOUT SMELL

A strangely moving account of living with no sense of smell. Imagine being susceptible to drinking perfume, or not noticing a gas leak, or having no olefactory sexual instincts. It does have some advantages though:

I will have to soldier on, and draw what comfort I can from a recent exchange with an ex-boyfriend who, as we reminisced about our relationship said wistfully, “You were the best girlfriend in the world. You let me bring curry home from the pub every night and I could fart as much as I liked.” I’m putting it in my next personal ad.

Here’s another site exploring a world without scent. The beagle is incredulous, of course.

MORE MOORE: He doctors a date and misrepresents a newspaper headline.

ON OHIO: Another reader weighs in:

The blog seems to have it partially wrong while the reader letter is partially right. Bush is trying to cut in Kerry’s Catholic base around Cleveland. The problem is that he risks further alienating liberal and moderate Republicans as well as Independents in the Cleveland suburbs. Running an abortion ad is high stakes poker because most campaigns view the risk as greater than the reward. Also the conventional wisdom says that the loser tends to be the one who brings it up. Bush is obviously convinced that his economic message isn’t viable in the area and has therefore resorted to his nuclear daisy-cutter. This is about fear not opportunity. Bush has plenty of wedge issues working against Kerry among traditional Catholics without dropping the a-word.
Another thing to consider is the choice of the medium. 60 Minutes? Why would you broadcast this message to such a wide audience? Granted the audience does tend to skew older, but why run the risk when you can target the message more precisely to a more narror audience and cheaper as well?
Finally the blog does contain one piece of wisdom explaining why. “Because according to Voinovich, the Bush administration has not been doing enough to stop Ohio from “bleeding jobs.” That’s a fairly damning source. Even if the recovery numbers are there, Voinovich clearly doesn’t want to be on the wrong side of the perception.

It’s obviously knife-edge close in Ohio. And that cannot be too encouraging for an incumbent.

PEROT-MCCAIN VOTERS

Kevin Phillips believes they’re the key to a possible Kerry victory. Money quote:

The alternative–at once bolder and riskier, but with a larger potential electorate–involves targeting the ordinary Republicans who rejected at least one generation of Bushes to back Perot or McCain. These voters–not a few thousand elites but millions of the rank and file–are concentrated in the middle-class precincts of swing states like Maine, New Hampshire, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Colorado and the Pacific Coast.

I can’t say I think Phillips’ proposal of economic populism for a Kerry candidacy would work. But his analysis of Bush’s weakness strikes me as sound.

SHIFTY SANDY

I’m gob-smacked, as the Brits say, by the news that Sandy Berger stole documents relating to the Clinton administration’s record on terrorism and has apparently lost some critical documents. It seems to me that Berger has admitted to intentionally lifting key documents, and keeping them from the purview of the 9/11 Commission. Berger ascribes this to “sloppiness.” How can stuffing papers down your pants be a function of “sloppiness’? It’s a function of someone doing something he knows he shouldn’t. It’s theft. But what was his motive? Are the Clinton people that scared of people discovering their negligence with regard to al Qaeda? Or is there something else at play? Right now, I have far more questions than answers. But this strikes me as a huge deal. Berger’s actions seem designed to undermine a vital part of the job of the 9/11 Commission. He should be prosecuted aggressively; and the real reasons for his subterfuge need to be flushed out.

ON OHIO

A reader suggests an alternative explanation for the Bush campaign’s anti-abortion ads in Cleveland:

The suggestion that the Bush campaign is running abortion ads in the Cleveland market only because they are having problems with its base — to be baseless. Here is why:
Cleveland is Democrat territory. Period. The Republican Party has no base in Cleveland. However, the Democrat voters in that area are Catholics and pro-life. Until his failed run for the presidency, even Dennis Kucinich who was the mayor of the city and represents the city in Congress, was against abortion. I see this effort by the campaign as a way of cutting into the Democrat base. Nothing more. Nothing less. If the campaign can peel away a few percentage points from the Kerry column in Cleveland, it will certainly help them win the state.

More feedback on the Letters Page.