Is There A Rick Perry Sized Hole In The Race?

RCP hears Texas Gov. Rick Perry is considering a run at the presidency. Jonathan Bernstein believes he'd have a shot:

Why Perry? As Texas governor, he would have rapid access to the kind of money it takes to compete seriously. And while there’s no guarantee that he would inherit the Bush network in Iowa, New Hampshire, and other early states, as well as the national Republican network, he would almost certainly have a bit more of a head start than any other late entrant.

Nate Silver seems to agree:

Is it hyperbolic to suggest that if Rick Perry ran for the GOP nomination he might be the favorite? He'd crush in the South.

Obama As A “Third Culture Kid” Ctd

Many readers are echoing this one:

I know you have a fantastic group of readers, but this reader's post must be in the top 10 I have ever read on The Dish. If there is any way you can tell this person, please do.

You just told him. Another differs:

Your reader claims that "TCK’s are usually unable to view the world in a simplistic dualistic way. On the contrary, they are usually over-achievers, get advanced degrees, and are infinitely curious about the world."  That may (or may not) be true.  But you could just as easily argue that TCKs will never know some really important things – can never know them – precisely because they've never had the experience of growing up in one culture which they knew (however erroneously) to be the way the world is. 

Think of Flannery O'Connor's quip that she could see more from her front porch in Milledgeville, Georgia, than she could on any tour of Europe.  That isn't simply an indictment of the kind of smug and self-important cosmopolitanism on display in your reader's letter.  Nor is it simply a defense of the kind of organic experiential knowledge that is only possible when one is rooted to a particular place and time.  At bottom, it is a profound statement about the limits of human knowledge itself. 

Travel the world and try to transcend your culture all you want, but you won't ever succeed.  Not really.  As Alasdair Macintyre put it, we are never more (and sometimes less) than the co-authors of our own narratives.  There will always be a part of us that it is the product of the time and place and family in which we first came of age, perhaps especially when we are reacting to that experience and trying to "transcend" it.  And even if by some miracle we actually succeeded in that project, then whatever else we may have gained, we will also have lost the ability to be truly a part of any culture from the inside. 

That's not a fate that I or many so-called Middle Americans want.  Believe it or not, we actually love this country.  We are interested in and honor its people and its history.  We are rooted in and not ashamed of the local communities and neighborhoods and families of which we are a part (even if, because we love them, we want to change them for the better). 

Obama got that in 2008.  Or at least he did once he got raked over the coals by HRC for denigrating the cultural and economic anxieties of working class white people in his now infamous "clinging to their guns and Bibles" speech.  It would be a catastrophic mistake for him to forget that lesson in 2012.  Obama's background makes him unique.  It makes him who he is.  But so does mine as a gay southern Evangelical whose family has been living here for generations.  And so does yours as a first generation gay Catholic Anglo-Irish immigrant. 

The game of "Who sees the world more broadly?" is a silly one to play.  And also dangerous in these times when what we really need are shrewd leaders who are so intimately familiar enough with American politics and culture that they not only see the breadth of our problems, but also their depth.

Covering The Sideshow

Fallows begs the press to mostly ignore Gingrich because "the chance of Newt Gingrich becoming the 45th President of the United States is zero":

[T]he press faces a chance to learn from the lessons of the Trump bubble. Each of these men, Gingrich and Trump, is a familiar national figure; neither of them will be the Republican nominee. Because of celebrity and personal pizzazz, they naturally are more tempting to cover than other longshots who are also not going to win the nomination. But if Gingrich coverage turns into Carnival Barkers Part Deux, we'll end up giving headline attention to disputes that have more to do with reality-show celebrity than with how Republicans will choose their issues and their candidate. The trick of balance, therefore, is to be fair to Gingrich and his arguments as long as he is in the race, much as should be the case with Rick Santorum, Herman Cain, and others, while not letting what happened with Trump happen again.

Oy. When will the meta-journalism hand-wringing stop? Gingrich has been fascinating and landscape-altering these past few days. His candidacy has ripped open a real rift within the party. But we should all earnestly be above reporting on this? Why do journalists send so much energy telling other journalists what they should not cover?

A Wound That Healed Long Ago?

GT_QUEEN-IRELAND-110518

Alex Massie yawns at the Queen's visit to Ireland:

If your view of Ireland is of a strange land, filled with terrorists and grudge-bearing contrary types who change their question any time anyone looks like answering it, then certainly you'll probably think the Queen's visit is of great import. For the rest of us these things were largely settled long ago. Evidently the "peace process" needed some kind of "conclusion" before such a visit could be contemplated at official levels but, if anything, it merely confirms what we already knew: these islands are bound together by culture as well as history and economic self-interest. Affinity matters.

He later admits that the importance of the visit is a "question of perspective." I have to say that the perspective of central Dublin cleared of all human beings on the street for security reasons was not exactly an historic moment of reconciliation.

(Photo: Queen Elizabeth II visits the Guinness Storehouse on May 18, 2011 in Dublin, Ireland. The Duke and Queen's visit to Ireland is the first by a monarch since 1911. An unprecedented security operation is taking place with much of the centre of Dublin turning into a car free zone. By Irish Government – Pool/Getty Images)

The GOP Civil War Over The Ryan Budget

David Frum agrees with Gingrich's original criticisms:

[T]he American public will not accept this kind of reform and will smash any politician who tries to force it upon them. There are ways to reduce the fiscal burden of Medicare, but telling seniors to buy their own damn healthcare is not going to be one of them. I wish it were somebody other than the Kenyan-anticolonialism-sharia law candidate making that argument, but it’s an important argument from any source.

Imagine The US Deported Your Spouse

Glenn Greenwald sighs:

I genuinely can't comprehend how any person could watch this video — and there are tens of thousands of couples in the same situation — and support this outcome; that includes — perhaps especially — "small government" conservatives incessantly insisting that the Federal Government should not be intervening in people's lives and making decisions for them.  Imagine if you were barred from living on the same continent as the person you love most and had to watch your own government try to deport them from your country all because they're not the gender the government decrees you should have for your spouse (the group Stop the Deportations suggests actions here for those so inclined)

VFYW Contest Dissents

Many readers are writing in with sour grapes over not being awarded the window book yesterday. One common misunderstanding:

It’s hard enough taking the crushing blow of spending futile hours finding a window, and I don’t even mind not being picked as a winner – but seeing another reader credited as the only one who correctly guessed the hotel was too much for me to take!

As we indicated in the results, more than 200 readers correctly guessed Gustavia Harbor, and about a quarter those 200 mentioned Hotel Gustav.  But only one of those 50 or so correctly guessed a difficult view in the past.  We define “difficult” views as those in which only 10 or fewer readers correctly guess the specific location; if a reader is among those 10 or fewer, we flag his or her email address with a “Correct Guesser” label to reference for future contests.  This process, while frustrating for many readers, is the fairest way to break ties and reward those who are consistently the most accurate.  We simply don’t have the funds to award a free $30 book to every reader who correctly guesses a location (this week’s tab alone would have been over $5000). To avoid this issue, we could simply publish only exceptionally difficult views, but that would alienate scores of casual participants.  We try to maintain a mix of difficult, medium, and easy views for the Dish’s large and diverse readership.

One particularly disgruntled reader – the one who lives near Hotel Gustav and linked to its webcam – writes:

I can see how you might award the other contestant a book had we BOTH correctly answered. BUT to disregard and overlook my entry to give your other reader the opportunity to be a winner because he has been so close so many times? Seriously? Sounds like progressive kindergarten to me. I am sure if your “winner” knew that he actually lost, he would be humiliated by your generosity.

My invitation to come down for a visit no longer stands.  And if you think the view from the Hotel Carl Gustaf is beautiful, you should have seen the view from the window of our guest cottage …

Self-Flagellation Of The Day

I already conceded the point, but the emails are priceless. A reader writes:

You said "it was once unthinkable that a pro football team would be backing gay rights." Ahem…  The San Francisco Giants are a baseball team.  Dude, you're so gay.

Another:

They won the World Series last year.  Edgar Renteria won the World Series MVP.  Welcome to America.

Another:

I will be the 100th person to email you and tell you that the SF Giants are a pro baseball team, not a pro football team. The football Giants are the New York Giants. The San Francisco Giants are the former New York Giants, the baseball team, not the football team. In fact, the current NY Giants were once often called the New York Football Giants so as not to confuse them with the New York Baseball Giants, now the San Francisco Giants. Not to be confused with the Yomiuri Giants of the Japanese baseball league who unhelpfully wear uniforms nearly identical to the SF Giants, formerly the NY Giants (not the football NY Giants).

I hope that clears everything up.