Nader “Primaries” Obama

TNC slams Ralph Nader and Cornel West's call for a liberal primary challenge:

Despite the claims of working on behalf of the poor, I'm forced to wonder if any of this would be happening had Obama returned a few phone-calls and put in some face-time. The presidential fetish on exhibition here, paired with a non-critique of Congress, the non-recognition of the need to build a more left-leaning electorate is amazing and anti-democratic. Nothing better evidences that than seeing Nader, a man who evidently believes Obama an "Uncle Tom for the corporations," turn around and praise Sarah Palin for her "conservative populism." This isn't progressive. It's personal. And it's reactionary.

Justin Elliott explains why the primary challenge is a total pipe-dream. Adam Serwer offers a more balanced, but still critical, take on West and Tavis Smiley's critique of Obama from the self-identified black left. Frankly, I think a Palin-Nader ticket would be clarifying.

Netflix’s Gamble, Ctd

A reader writes:

I noticed you mentioned Netflix splitting into two companies (Qwikster is a simply Screen shot 2011-09-20 at 3.43.33 PM horrendous name). If you haven't heard, Netflix evidently forgot to see if the company name was available on Twitter. Check out the @Qwikster account – the avatar of Elmo smoking a joint is a great image for the new company. Techcrunch has a great article rounding up some of the snarkiest responses to the Qwikster Twitter page. My favorite: "So I just got first @Qwikster dvd and it smelled like pot. Hey @Netflix PR team maybe do some research next time."

Dish fave:

Hey little @qwikster dude! Whatever Netflix offers you for the account will be a low-ball bid. Get in touch dude, I have a lawyer for you.

But selling the handle might not be so easy:

Someone should probably tell Jason that selling Twitter handles is strictly against Twitter’s Terms Of Service, and attempts to do so can quickly result in the banhammer being dropped. Then Qwikster gets their name, free of charge.

Assassination In Afghanistan

Former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani was slain yesterday. Anand Gopal is terrified:

Remaining Northern Alliance figures will likely close ranks and conclude that any sort of rapprochement with the Taliban is impossible. Some, like strongman Abdul Rasoul Sayyaf, have reportedly looked to cultivate ties with India as a counterweight to what they see as an assassination drive spurred by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI). Ex-Alliance commanders, aided by U.S. programs to create local militias, will likely accelerate their drive to rearm, possibly setting the stage for a future civil war.

Jacob Stokes shares a slightly more optimistic take. Read Matthieu Aikins and Dexter Filkins for more hand-wringing about the impending collapse of talks.

Is Christianism All Hype? Ctd

Walter Russell Mead parries my criticism by recalling the intolerance of his youth:

The Left has been winning most of the cultural arguments, but its fear of the Right grows even as the country continues by and large to move culturally toward tolerance and acceptance of diversity.  My guess is that this is due to the country’s equally pronounced drift toward the Right on a number of political and economic issues.  New Deal values and suspicion of unfettered free markets were much more widespread in those far off halcyon days when I first attended the still-segregated Pundit Elementary School: this was a much more collectivist country in 1958 than it is today.

This misunderstands my concerns. I have experienced firsthand the progress Mead cites, as my once flaky idea of marriage rights has come to pass and as DADT has fallen. I can see how abortion is now embedded in American society – even after a generation or two has vowed to stop it. But this, far from proving the Christianists redundant, has only made them more determined to fight harder. In fact, I think the very progress Mead cites has emboldened, infuriated and energized them. And that revived fundamentalist right is now threatening to take back power at a national level.

And one key development has also occurred. The Christianists were once in the Democratic party, engaged in an endless and bitter but integrating coalition with economic liberals and secular progressives. And this helped soften the hard edges, even when they were dictating policy. Today, the GOP is controlled entirely by the religious right, and its manner of thinking has altered to a purely religious one. Policies dependent on circumstances are now doctrines (no tax hikes ever) unable to be altered. Foreign policy is dictated by Christianist dogma (on, for example, Israel) rather than prudential advancement of national interests. As the society has moved on, the GOP has become more noticeable for its white-knuckled resistance to all such change.

Today's GOP, for example, favors repeal of the repeal of DADT, a constitutional amendment to ban all relationship rights for gay couples, criminalization of all abortion including cases of rape and incest, the undermining of evolution in education, disbelief in climate change, support for torture, cheers for the death penalty, and a global Judeo-Christian war against Islam. Yes, reality in a changing, more individualized world, is stacked against them. But that doesn't mean reactionaryism doesn't have traction. Closing the EPA is a radical stance, compared with, say, Nixon's environmental policies. Calling the very term gay the "work of Satan," as Bachmann has, is not the spirit of Reagan in the Briggs Initiative. Embracing torture 20 years after Reagan signed the UN Convention against it is another grim development. The expulsion of all pro-choice Republicans from the party is another. Yes, Dick Cheney has a gay daughter. Like Mead, I thought that would make a difference. But the GOP subsequently stripped his daughter of any rights (even private contracts) in her relationship in Virginia, launched successful efforts in a majority of states to ban recognition of gay relationships in state constitutions – and the Bush administration backed the Federal Marriage Amendment. The drug war – far from over – is actually being intensified against casual pot-smokers.

My concern is that fundamentalist religious thinking has now permeated every aspect of one major party – from foreign policy to economics and social policy. The social progress we have made has not disproven that – it has merely intensified the passion the Christianists feel. So too has the war after 9/11 in which Islam became reified on the religious right as the enemy, and in which pragmatic attempts to engage the Muslim world – especially in its democratic revolutions – are regarded as blasphemous, if it requires any cooperation from Israel, a sacred ally in Rick Perry's mind.

Compare the GOP with the Tories they once shadowed. The Tories were prepared to raise some taxes to cut the debt. They have pioneered and embraced conservative environmentalism. They are backing full marriage equality for gays. They leave abortion and the death penalty to the individual consciences of legislators, without taking a party position. But they are also emphatically in favor of private enterprise, and a prudent foreign policy – and are cutting spending in ways that the GOP has only ever aired theoretically. This is what conservatism used to be. And like Mead, I am old enough to remember it.

“President Zero”

Lucas Baiano, who Weigel dubs "the Michael Bay of political video-making," is now working for Rick Perry. His first ad:

Ed Morrissey claps:

Substantively it’s a bit weak; I’d have expected Perry to toss in a few statistics about job creation in Texas, especially with a video titled “Proven Leadership.” He has plenty of time to make that argument, of course, and this is a good introduction to the campaign’s central theme — and a good demonstration of how tough Perry will be on Obama in a general election, assuming he gets the nomination. Notice the emphasis on “President Zero”?

Amy Davidson, who is less favorable, thinks the ad previews the GOP's general election message:

The Hill thought the opening looked like “a trailer for a zombie movie,” and, on the whole, it has the logic of something Jerry Bruckheimer would have put together: doom impending, accentuated by news clips, then the hero comes, surrounded by hopeful, neighborly faces. … Perry’s extremism may ultimately cause his party to turn away from him, but his ad gives an idea of the direction any Republican is likely to take: the dominant sentiment, for all the Americana, is not one of nostalgia, but of fear.

1.6 Million Views

The Alabama soldier who told his dad he was gay on the morn of the end of DADT has racked up a huge viewership on Youtube. I've now watched it several times. I don't quite know why it compels so much. But one thing that struck me: the way the man's head swivels sharply from time to time from left to right and back again. It's almost as if he cannot stare straight ahead and focus on what he is saying. He needs some relief, some physical action to assuage the tension built up over his entire life, some way of facing this moment and then finding an escape from it at the same time.

This is gay America, ladies and gentlemen: the ordinariness, the humanity, the pain, the promise. And the outreach to his father before his mother makes it all the more powerful. I remember my own dad's amazingly open love for me even as he absorbed the news of my sexual orientation (and later, when he heard of my HIV diagnosis, when his face fell like a detonated building). I remember my first boyfriend who was in the airforce and whose father was a general in the airforce. He told me one night that he would love to tell his own dad who he was – but that he was afraid his own father would be forced to expel him from the service. I saw then in one instant the pain a patriot and a family man feels when having to choose between his inner nature and the things he loves. No more.

I am more than usually depressed about the news these days. Maybe that makes it all the more necessary to stop at moments like these and remember that we can move forward, we can alleviate unnecessary pain, we can overcome bigotry and we can make this place a better, more inclusive, stronger country than ever before. Yes. We can.

Quote For The Day III

"There is still time, Sean [Hannity], and I think on both sides of the aisle you’re going to see people coming and going from this race…In the Republican race, in this primary, I think people are still going to be coming and going because there is still time. And I’m still one of those still considering the time factor,” – Sarah Palin.

Quote For The Day II

"The reason we are where we are, though, is that the Palestinians and Israelis have both lost all faith in the peace process. After Oslo, the Israelis got … the Second Intifada. And the Palestinians continue to watch the territory beyond the Green Line "settled" by Israeli extremists with a viable Palestinian state no where in sight. The Palestinian leadership feels this is the most extreme Israeli government with which they have ever interacted, and they have no faith whatsoever in the U.S. administration being able to shepherd along peace negotiations. And why should they? All they have seen, over the past few years, is this Netanyahu Administration put domestic Israeli political coalition-building over strategic concerns — while insulting its only ally (that would be the United States) at every available turn," – Andrew Exum, reviewing Obama's speech to the UN.

The Obstructionists

The president has proposed several short term measures to help prevent a double-dip. Almost all of them have been supported by Republicans in the past. Lindsey Graham even called Obama's current proposals the kind of stimulus he had wanted in 2009. And the American public favor all of them, in margins that range from crushing to substantive. Even Republican voters back all of them save two – extending unemployment benefits and a payroll tax cut:

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Gallup concludes:

This is the second Gallup survey conducted in the last two weeks showing that the American public broadly supports Obama's jobs plan. A majority of Americans interviewed this past weekend believe the plan would help at least a little to create jobs and improve the economy.

Many of the proposals embedded in the plan receive majority support, and Americans strongly endorse the idea of paying for the plan by raising taxes on higher-income individual taxpayers and by eliminating tax deductions for some corporations. While Republicans are considerably less positive about the potential efficacy of the plan than are Democrats, a majority of the former favor a number of Obama's proposals, and also favor eliminating tax deductions for corporations to help fund the plan.

Something can be done here. And something should be done here. I don't believe these measures will transform the growth rate, or do much but keep us afloat for a while longer. But they are a test of the GOP establishment. Can they not even agree on these things? If not, why not?