TYING THE KNOT

If you get a chance to see the new documentary, “Tying the Knot,” you won’t be disappointed. It shows how the denial of marriage rights to gay couples, especially in the heartland, is so inhumane. And it presents the marriage rights debate in a clear and movng fashion. I saw it earlier this year (full disclosure: I’m in it) and left it choked up about the cruelty that still gets inflicted on people merely because they’re gay and trying to form a stable relationship. It’s gotten solid reviews. Go see it.

QUOTE OF THE DAY I: “No matter how you feel about Bush, watching him speak is difficult. It’s like watching a drunk man cross an icy street,” – Tucker Carlson, last night on Real Time with Bill Maher.

QUOTE OF THE DAY II

“Who cares? No one reads Andrew Sullivan’s blog.” – Sean Hannity, last night on Fox News, responding to Willie Brown’s citation of this blog’s criticism of Bush’s debate performance. Sorry, Sean, but last month, we were a tiny bit shy of two million separate visits, a record. The day Hannity lashed out, we got 120,000 separate visits – a record in the more than four years this blog has been in existence.

CONSERVATIVE KERRY

David Brooks, as usual, has a fair column today. If you read between the lines, you’ll discover what is, in fact, the private consensus of many conservatives who are publicly supporting Bush: that the president’s heart is in the right place but he has a tenuous grasp of the instruments of government and how to wield them. But what strikes me in Brooks’ defense of Bush is how it’s traditionally a liberal defense of a liberal president. It’s liberalism that has historically enunciated grand, abstract themes and conservatism that has always emphasized the difficulty of translating abstraction into reality, of finding the proper means to achieve certain ends, of the limits of our intellect when faced with the world of practical life. In that philosophical sense, it is Kerry who is the practical conservative in this race; and Bush who is the airy-fairy idealist. If Bush didn’t have the abstract theological support of evangelical Christians, he wouldn’t have a, well, prayer.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“In Iraq, no doubt about it, it’s tough. It’s hard work. It’s incredibly hard. It’s – and it’s hard work. I understand how hard it is. I get the casualty reports every day. I see on the TV screens how hard it is. But it’s necessary work. We’re making progress. It is hard work. You know my hardest, the hardest part of the job is to know that I committed the troops in harm’s way and then do the best I can to provide comfort for the loves ones who lost a son or a daughter or husband and wife.” – president George W. Bush. Reassured that he’s on top of things in Iraq? Me neither.

PRESIDENT OUT-OF-IT

Here’s what president Bush said last night about training new Iraqi troops:

“The best way for Iraq to be safe and secure is for Iraqi citizens to be trained to do the job. We’ve got 100,000 trained now, 125,000 by the end of this year, 200,000 by the end of next year.”

Most people would agree that this is a critical factor in winning the war in Iraq, perhaps the critical factor. Spencer Ackerman points out the following:

According to internal Pentagon documents recently obtained by Reuters, only 22,700 Iraqi forces have received enough training to be considered even “minimally effective.” Barely 8,000 of the 90,000-strong police force have completed a full eight weeks of training–after a year and a half of occupation. While Lieutenant General David Petraeus wrote in a Washington Post op-ed on Sunday that the Iraqi civil-intervention force is “now conducting operations,” the leaked Pentagon documents show that training hasn’t even begun for its 4,800 members. And perhaps most significantly, while Bush promised 200,000 Iraqis would be trained by the end of the next year, the documents state that it will take until July 2006 to train 135,000 Iraqi police officers.

Again, the problem isn’t the will or the resolve. It’s that our commander-in-chief doesn’t seem to have a clue about what’s actually happening on the ground. And that he’s not telling the truth – knowingly or unknowingly – to the American people.

MAN BEHIND THE CURTAIN

Here’s Jay Nordlinger, an honest, civilized guy, telling his fellow Kool-Aiders the truth:

I thought Kerry did very, very well; and I thought Bush did poorly – much worse than he is capable of doing. Listen: If I were just a normal guy – not Joe Political Junkie – I would vote for Kerry. On the basis of that debate, I would. If I were just a normal, fairly conservative, war-supporting guy: I would vote for Kerry. On the basis of that debate. And I promise you that no one wants this president reelected more than I. I think that he may want it less.
Let me phrase one more time what I wish to say: If I didn’t know anything – were a political naxeff, being introduced to the two candidates for the first time – I would vote for Kerry. Based on that infernal debate.

The trouble is: given what Bush has done these past eighteen months, and given his abilities, I’m not sure he can do better. We may have just had a man-behind-the-curtain moment. We are at war – the most dangerous war we have ever been in. And this guy is in charge?

EMAIL OF THE DAY I

“I agree with your blog on the debates. On the one hand Kerry is getting through with the wedge of his argument: hey, I didn’t break this thing, you did! That said, this still leaves Kerry’s problem: his critique of the war really does imply unilaterally bugging out unless you take seriously that the UN and France are going to magically calm the situation over there. Plus, Kerry might be forced to concede more succinctly that, yes, he really would have been OK with continued containment (not removal) of Hussein and show how that might have been pulled off. But Bush did show up with his squinty hat on–even if his talking points represented the last word in wisdom on the debate over Iraq and terrorism. Repeating them isn’t enough.

It was an “enlightening” debate, though, as you said. Kerry should have been here at the convention, including recognizing without apology (rhetorically) that he DID protest the war in Vietnam and making his claim that this did NOT mean he hadn’t fought honorably in Nam, thus framing his service/dichotomy before the easily anticipated Swifties-or-something-like-it thing.The Dem pols get so cynical that they start relying on tactical dirty-tricks stuff or cleverly playing different messages in different towns.

All in all I think Bush is very fortunate that a lot of folks have locked in their vote already–I would guess that this is a 2-3% bounce for Kerry. As someone who distrusts the impulses of the Dem base (way more lefty and anti-Israel than the Kerry on view) this doesn’t make me happy but there you go. I don’t think the center of gravity of America cottons all that much to intellectualist rationalizations for enrolling terrorists in self-esteem summer camps, but people also don’t want a President who comes off as auditioning for Dumb and Dumber.”

EMAIL OF THE DAY II: “I got home late and didn’t see the debate on its first run, and just as I sat down to watch the rebroadcast on C-SPAN, I got a phone call that I had to take. So I put the TV on mute, and spent the next hour or so talking on the phone and just watching the candidates. It was pretty interesting, actually. It’s often said that part of what people look for in the debates are facial expressions, posture, body language and just relative poise, and at least on that measure, Kerry won in a landslide. Watching on C-SPAN’s split screen there was a stark contrast between the candidates. Kerry looked confident, stood fully upright throughout, even looked commanding. Even when being criticized (and you could guess when that was happening), Kerry just smiled, nodded and took it. Bush on the other hand often looked irritable, kept oddly twitching his lips (which was pretty noticeable on mute), rolled his eyes, hunched over the podium, sighed (that horrid crime Al Gore was convicted of), and basically looked insulted that he had to be there-as if he was thinking “but I’ve already TOLD you that talking point.” I know that stuff doesn’t count for much, but Kerry scored whatever posture points there were to be had.

KERRY’S MANNER

It was, as I hoped, an enlightening debate. No, it didn’t include any real logical breakthrough and on the issues, I found myself agreeing more with Bush than Kerry. But from the very beginning, Kerry achieved something important. In tone and bearing, he seemed calm, authoritative, and, yes, presidential. I watched the C-SPAN version on a split screen, and in that context, it was particularly striking. In stark contrast to the Bush-Gore debates, it was Bush who was grimacing, furrowing his brow, almost rolling his eyes and at the very beginning, looking snippy and peevish. He seemed defensive throughout and because his record was front and center – and Kerry’s long record in the Senate almost unmentioned – he was actually on the defense. He seemed physically smaller and more mobile than Kerry – and more emotionally alive. Their voices were contrasts too. I can see now for the first time why Kerry has a good reputation as a debater. It wasn’t, I think, because he debated well. In fact, he debated poorly. He failed time and again to go in for obvious kills, failed to do what he really should have done, which is skewer Bush’s conduct of the war, not his decision to launch it in the first place. But his tone was strong, clear, unwavering. And in some ways, this was critical to undermining Bush’s constant assertion that Kerry is weak, vague and inconstant. In fact, Kerry didn’t have to prove logically that this was the case (which would be hard to do); he undermined it merely by his tone and manner. For many people, who have only heard of Kerry from Bush ads or sound-bites or from droning campaign speeches, it will be the first time that Kerry seems strong. In the simple, symbolic man-versus-man contrast, Kerry often seemed bigger. That strikes me as a big deal.

KERRY’S CASE…: Substantively, both men were frustratingly themselves. I winced whenever Kerry mentioned Halliburton and cringed when he went back to Vietnam. The notion that all our problems will be over in Iraq if only we have a summit is ludicrous. The pathetic isolationist strains – about spending money there that we should be spending here – were depressingly off-key. His best line was in asserting very clearly that he has had one position on Iraq all along; that Saddam was a threat and that there was a right way and a wrong way to remove him; and the president chose the wrong way. I largely think that’s hooey. (There was no way that France and Germany were ever going to support the removal of Saddam; further diplomacy in the winter before last would have been pointless; etc etc.) But it was rhetorically effective as a self-defense. I’m not sure it will persuade many people who have thought about this a lot; but it will appeal to the nervous middle – who may decide this election.

… AND KERRY’S FAILURE:But the missed opportunities were stunning. At one point Kerry even got Bush to agree that terrorists were streaming over the border. And then he failed to ask why Bush hadn’t sent enough troops to secure the border! He kept implying that the goal was to bring the troops home, and only at the very end did he assert that we were there to win, not to withdraw. Uh-oh. His assertion that WMD proliferation was the major threat to the U.S. was, on the other hand, very convincing – and by that point of the debate, the president was reduced to echoing him. In fact, Kerry was strongest, it seemed to me, at the very beginning, when his stature rose merely by being there, and at the very end, when he seemed commanding. He had the best closer.

PRESIDENT OUT-OF-IT: What to say about Bush? Let’s get the compliments out of the way. When asked to skewer Kerry’s character, he was classy and genuine. His anecdote about the war widow was heartfelt and poignant. He had a few good lines – and skewered Kerry easily on the $87 billion. He also kicked Kerry’s elegant Brahmin butt on the coalition point, reminding him that Poland exists. (Kerry was effective, however, in detailing the relatively small contribution of most of the allies. But why oh why did he not mention the obvious parallel of the vast coalition Bush’s father put together for the first Gulf War? If I were a debate judge – and I’ve had my fair share of debate experience – I would have flunked Kerry on the spot.) The few laugh-out-loud Bushisms – especially the point about the insurgents fighting “vociferously” – were worth the price of admission. On the more general point about alliances, Bush did well – espcially on the International Criminal Court, and on the need to base foreign policy fundamentally on the defense of the American people. More Americans will agree with him on this than with Kerry. Still, there were major weaknesses. If you believe, as I do, that the Iraq war is beginning to spiral downward, Bush was not reassuring. He seemed as out of it as ever. When Kerry rightly pointed out the failure of Bush to revamp the CIA or to secure Soviet nuclear material, Bush simply and sadly responded that every morning some guy comes in and briefs him on national security. Now I feel better. And you don’t want to be the president who is forced to say, “Of course I know Osama bin Laden attacked us.” Moreover, his fundamental critique of Kerry – that by criticizing the war, he had made himself unworthy to be commander-in-chief – was dumb and border-line offensive. It implies that if you’ve ever criticized the president’s war conduct, you cannot succeed him in office. Huh? By that logic, the only credible alternative to Bush is someone who has agreed with him every inch of the way. Memo to Bush: we live in a democracy.

THE IMPACT? Kerry has to gain, I think. At the very least, this was a draw on the president’s most favorable turf. I saw it among a group of Dartmouth college students who were mainly pro-Kerry but who included a solid pro-Bush presence. It’s odd to hear them laughing out loud at their war-president; and groaning openly at some of Kerry’s remarks. Afterward, only the Bush supporters seemed concerned that their candidate had lost ground. They should be. Watching Bush last night, I saw a president who sometimes didn’t seem in control of his job, a man who couldn’t and didn’t defend the conduct of the war except to say that it was “hard work,” who seemed defensive, tired, and occasionally rattled. He had some strong points; and I agree with him on the basic matter of whether we should have gone to war. But the argument that we might be better changing horses in the middle of a troubled river gained traction last night. In some ways, this might turn out to be a version of the 1980 Carter-Reagan match, when Reagan was able to convince people, by his persona and presence, that he was up to the job. Yes, Bush is not as bad as Carter and Kerry is, of course, no Reagan. But the dynamic was somewhat similar. In other words, Kerry gets back in the game, reassures some doubters, buoys his supporters, and edges up a little. Oh, and one young man in the audience had just returned from serving his country in Iraq. Yes, he’d seen the war upfront. He knows what were doing over there first-hand. And he’s voting for Kerry.