EMAIL OF THE DAY

“I am a political junkie, as my husband will attest. I am a 33 year old wife and a mom of a 15 month old boy living in a wealthy liberal enclave of Los Angeles called Hancock Park where people go to the farmers market on Sunday, discuss the “plight of the poor” as their nannies stroll their young ones in Bugaboo Frog ($800) strollers on the magnolia tree shaded sidewalks on Fridays, and bash Bush, well, everyday. My husband (much less interested in this election than I am) and I are the only Bush-voters on the block, I believe.
So, here we are channel surfing and when my husband leaves the room to get a soda, I go to CNBC. I like Tim Russert. Well, there you and Christopher Hitchens are having a truly salient and honest Iraq discussion. First off, I cannot believe that Mr. Hitchens isn’t wearing a scarlet letter at Vanity Fair. I loved Vanity Fair: the celebrities, the dishy stories, the politics, the photography. Truly, it has become a Bush-hating guide and the Moveon.org bible (although I can’t really determine who is worshipping who). It is as if they are saying, “If Kerry can’t win this on his own, we gotta at least be unofficial PR managers for him ourselves…”.
Anyway, as you begin talking I think, terrific, a Bush supporter where you never expected one! And then in the midst of your brilliant thoughts, honest assessments, fair criticism and straight talk, I realize that you will not vote for Bush and I wince. I even begin to look more to Christopher to be the lone spokesman for my views. And then I stop. Hold on! Are your views any less brillant because you won’t vote for Bush? No. Are there still areas of agreement? Yes. Are you still clear and focused on the issues? Yes. Am I afraid of the bad news in Iraq that may hurt my candidate?…yes…
I realized Andrew, that I am somehow afraid of it all for an election and that you and Christopher were swimming in a bigger pool of thought. Regardless of the election, there must be leadership, stewardship, and focus for Iraq to succeed. However noble the goal, the success is in the doing. I was so afraid to admit that Bush hasn’t done all the “doing” that I almost shut out a staunch war advocate (in this case) just because he wasn’t towing party line. With new eyes I watched the final 15 minutes and loved them. Here were 2 journalists not discussing some petty quirk of Bush, but policy. You were not slamming Bush at every turn, but admiring the coherent goal and admonishing the failings of the pursuit of that goal. It was empowering as a viewer to watch the optimism without losing the realities.” – more feedback on the Letters Page.

ABOUT THAT NYT PIECE

I thought it was fun enough, but, sadly, Matt Klam doesn’t seem to grasp how deeply revolutionary the new medium is beginning to be. It was also skewed toward the leftward part of the blogosphere – and it failed to distinguish adequately enough, I thought, between blogs that are journalistic and those that are blatantly activist. It’s not that DailyKos or FreeRepublic are “nastier”; it’s that they’re unabashedly partisan, help organize politics as well as comment on it. But, hey, there’s plenty of space for all kinds of blogs; and no piece can cover it all. The good news is that I think we may have reached a blogging tipping point in terms of public awareness. This piece helps advance that. And it was a jolly read.

NOW, NOVA SCOTIA: Yet another Canadian province allows gays to marry. I know this sounds esoteric, but Canada does make a difference here for the U.S. It’s country deeply intermeshed with this one; it is relatively easy for gay couples to go there, get married and come back with an even deeper sense of their own equality. And the psychological impact of having your relationship affirmed and supported is profound. The truth is: there is no real struggle over whether gays will get married in this country. They are and they will. Gay marriage is a social fact. What is disputed is whether society will accord these relationships any legal validity, whether such couples will live constantly with the threat of their de facto marriages being derailed by the meddling of hostile relatives, using Republican-sponsored law to undermine them and break them up. Canada and the rest of the civilized world adds a huge amount of weight to the gay side of the debate. It shows gay couples that many parts of America are the exception, not the rule. And the idea of marriage as both imaginable and a right will percolate down to the next gay generation and make marriage seem a no-brainer. That goes for younger straights, as well, who already have very few issues with two dudes loving each other and living together as a married couple. What I’m saying, I guess, is that this social movement is unstoppable. All you can do is persecute, harass and marginalize those who are a part of it. But you can’t stop them loving one another, or committing to each other, or getting actual marriage licenses (from Canada) that will reinforce the revolution. For a long time, I urged conservatives to co-opt this social change rather than resist it. For the most part, I failed. But the real victims of this, in the very long run, will not be gays. It will be conservatives.

WOLF ON HEINZ

Naomi Wolf and I agree on something: Teresa is a much bigger drag on the Kerry ticket than anyone is now admitting. Her appalling speech at the DNC did a huge amount to deny Kerry any bounce. Here’s why:

So Laura Bush, in speaking warmly of her mate’s ‘wrestling’ with issues of war and peace, enhances his potency. This does not contradict my earlier point about appealing to swing voters; it has been well established that modern women maddeningly long for men who are tender in private but authoritative in public. Unfortunately, Teresa Heinz Kerry’s speech, which all but ignored her husband, did more to emasculate him than the opposition ever could. By publicly shining the light on herself rather than her husband, she opened a symbolic breach in Kerry’s archetypal armor. Listen to what the Republicans are hitting Kerry with: Indecisive. Effete. French. They are all but calling this tall, accomplished war hero gay.
The charges are sticking because of Teresa Heinz Kerry. Let’s start with ‘Heinz.’ By retaining her dead husband’s name – there is no genteel way to put this – she is publicly, subliminally cuckolding Kerry with the power of another man-a dead Republican man, at that. Add to that the fact that her first husband was (as she is herself now) vastly more wealthy than her second husband. Throw into all of this her penchant for black, a color that no woman wears in the heartland, and you have a recipe for just what Kerry is struggling with now: charges of elitism, unstable family relationships, and an unmanned candidate.

Bingo. Of course, Kerry cannot help the fact that his wife’s a walking embarrassment. But he can keep her waaaay in the background. And pray.

TURNAROUND IN AFGHANISTAN

Almost all the reporters or human beings I read who have been there are beginning to say that Afghanistan is a big success story. Hitch, who just returned, was almost giddy with enthusiasm yesterday. Bergen’s on board. And here’s another missive of optimism. (Hat tip: Glenn.) You can read this either way, I suppose. It can make Iraq look worse in comparison – or it can be seen as a sign that, even when things look dire, the power of the franchise and a skillful leader, like Karzai, can turn things around. Maybe in Iraq too. Man, I hope so.

DERBYSHIRE AWARD NOMINEE

“Radical Islamists were surely watching in July when the Senate voted on procedural grounds to do away with the Federal Marriage Amendment. This is like handing moral weapons of mass destruction to those who use America’s decadence to recruit more snipers and hijackers and suicide bombers. One vital goal of the war in Iraq, and the war against terrorism, is to bring democracy to the heart of the Islamic world. Our hope is to make freedom so attractive that other Muslim countries will follow suit. But when radical Islamists see American women abusing Muslim men, as they did in the Abu Ghraib prison, and when they see news coverage of same-sex couples being “married” in U.S. towns, we make our kind of freedom abhorrent-the kind they see as a blot on Allah’s creation. Preserving traditional marriage in order to protect children is a crucially important goal by itself. But it’s also about protecting the United States from those who would use our depravity to destroy us.” – Charles Colson, Christianity Today.

CHE WHAT? The moral perils of lionizing Guevara. Terrific piece by Paul Berman.

OAKESHOTT AND BERLIN: Noel Malcolm sees Oakeshott as having a more enduring legacy. I agree. I haven’t read Paul Franco’s new book, but his previous tome was exhaustive and smart.

PULLING BOONDOCKS

What wimps the Washington Post editors are for pulling the latest Boondocks strip. I actually met Aaron McGruder with Bill Maher out in L.A. and I’m sure I’d disagree with him on almost everything, but he’s a very gifted cartoonist and speaks with a fresh, clear voice. South Park with soul, if you will. His reality-show parody of “The Apprentice,” “Can A N***a Get a Job?,” is pretty damn funny, and it deals with some generational divides among blacks. I laughed and learned something. Why couldn’t the tired old p.c. souls at the Post? Anyway, here’s the strip. It carries on all week. See, Big Media? You can’t stop us any more, can you?

LESBIAN EMAIL OF THE DAY

“Andrew, there is nothing wrong with life as a media whore, and, in fact, I applaud it. After seeing you pop up on a few programs recently, my girlfriend – who is not one to frequently compliment men as to live up to the stereotype of the man-hating lesbian – asked, “Is that the Andrew who you read online? I like him. He’s smart. And cute.” In five years together, I can’t say that I’ve ever heard her say that about a guy before.
Just a couple of quick things –
First, I don’t think for a second that you’re not supporting Bush strictly on ‘the gay thing.’ As you correctly pointed out, you’ve had no shortage of criticism of the guy on a number of issues, not the least of which have been the war and the economy.
But I don’t think that your record can beat the real problem. There’s a perception that we – by nature of being gay – must not like the Republican candidate because Republicans are always bad for gays. This is what makes so many gays single-issue voters (a concept completely devoid of logic since I’d be hard-pressed to find any presidential candidate who has done anything for us as gays). When people encounter a gay who votes for the Republican, they just can’t resolve it. We’re in denial, or full of self-hatred, or just dumb.
Now that you’ve come out against Bush, I don’t think that people can help themselves but assume that your reason is – despite what you say – because of The Gay Thing. We need to fit into people’s happily constructed assumptions of what gays should do when it comes to politics. Like you, there are lots of people calling me and rejoicing in the fact that I can’t support Bush this time around just so they can say, ‘I told you so – you can’t be gay and vote Republican.’
They need us to live up to their expectations, even if what we say, do, and think is the opposite.
Sad, but true. And if anyone else calls me and gleefully suggests that I’ve finally comes to my senses by voting for the Democrat, I might be sick. But trust me – the sickness is precipitated by the fact that it’s nauseating that Bush is the best that the GOP can do.” More not-so-lesbian feedback on the Letters Page.

MEDIA-WHORE UPDATE

I’m on CNBC’s Capital Report today on blogging – at 7 pm EDT. Guests include Jeff Jarvis, John Hinderaker and Mike Isikoff. A new edition of the Sully and Hitch show, hosted by Tim Russert, will also be on CNBC over the weekend. It airs on Saturday at 7 pm and 10 pm, and Sunday at 1 am EDT. The chat lasts an hour, covers everything from the election to Iraq to faith and secularism. Hitch is voting for Bush, but he shares much of my concern about the incompetence of the war effort in Iraq. Tune in.