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The game at present is something like this: half or so of this country is on some kind of retro Sixties/Seventies trip. Which is in some ways an improvement over the retro Fifties/Sixties trip that filled the Nineties, worse in others, but still pretty bad overall.
The rest of us, who think the present and future are things to embrace rather than avoid (as they do), are strongly worn by it all. Because this bit didn't begin in, say, 1995- it's been the motif since at least '81, when Reagan's Presidency began a repeat/revision of the Roaring Twenties and FDR's era. We're now revisiting Nixon's second- and partial- term, in quite a few ways.
I'm of the school that Democrats have to straddle this 'cultural' division to some extent, continue some of this vague schizophrenia a bit longer. That means two wings to the Party. The liberal (Blue State) wing is basically just upset at the situation and all the false accusations and the unwillingness of the electorate to see the present for what it is or could be. The centrist (Red State) wing doesn't seem to 'get' the pattern to the retro game they're playing in well enough. And, stuck in the middle and bewildered, is a pile of Democratic political operatives who haven't been all that good at coming up with survival strategies or a success strategy. Not that I blame them all that deeply- the Electorate is some pretty bad stuff to work with in the best of times- but the comprehensive work of becoming a ruling party again needs some fresher people and revised perspective.
I think we've seen all the pre-1980 Old Democrats get wiped out pretty comprehensively- except in the consultant corps, perhaps. That is about all the Creative Destruction that is necessary, except maybe some hints to Republicans-by-selfdiscovery who need to be shown the door.
As for Evolution, I think the element that is needed is intellectual- I'm all for the centrist Democratic wing calling themselves Progressives, which seems fairly appropriate, and as far as I am concerned Dean can be their spokesperson or representative if that's what that wing wants. (It's Dean washing all over the ideological map, which is partially his doing- a certain amount of equivocating- and partly that of others- miscoverage-, that most annoys me about him.) I guess it reflects in some ways the more basic problem, the inability of the Liberal wing so far to come up with the distinguishing principle by which to define its fight in a historical sense, in an American context, in the present. I guess I've already broadcast my opinion on this often enough- Liberals have to decide to own the 14th Amendment, liberalism itself is not enough, and that commitment forces them into a set of fights they are quite ready for and mostly identical to what is already being done.
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