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TIME: The Incredibly Shrinking Democrats

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question everything Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-02-08 12:12 AM
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TIME: The Incredibly Shrinking Democrats
Thursday, Apr. 24, 2008
The Incredibly Shrinking Democrats
By Joe Klein
TIME

(snip)

There is an immutable pedestrian reality to American politics: you have to get the social body language right if you want voters to consider the nobler reaches of your message. In his 1991 book, The Reasoning Voter, political scientist Samuel Popkin argued that most people make their choice on the basis of "low-information signaling" — that is, stupid things like whether you know how to roll a bowling ball or wear an American-flag pin. In the era of Republican dominance, the low-information signals were really low — how Michael Dukakis looked in a tanker's helmet, whether John Kerry's favorite sports were too precious (like wind-surfing), whether Al Gore's debate sighs over his opponent's simple obfuscations were patronizing. Bill Clinton was the lone Democratic master of low-information signaling — a love of McDonald's and other assorted big-gulp appetites gave him credibility that even trumped his evasion of military service.

The audacity of the Obama campaign was the belief that in a time of trouble — as opposed to the peace and prosperity of the late 20th century — the low-information politics of the past could be tossed aside in favor of a high-minded, if deliberately vague, appeal to the nation's need to finally address some huge problems. But that assumption hit a wall in Pennsylvania. Specifically, it hit a wall at the debate staged by ABC News in Philadelphia — viewed by an audience of 10 million, including a disproportionate number of Pennsylvanians — that will go down in history for the relentless vulgarity of its questions, with the first 40 minutes focused exclusively on so-called character issues rather than policy. Obama was on the defensive from the start, but gradually the defensiveness morphed into bitter frustration. He kept his cool — a very presidential character trait — and allowed his disdain to show only when he was asked a question about his opponent's Bosnia gaffe. "Senator Clinton deserves the right to make some errors once in a while," he said. "What's important is to make sure that we don't get so obsessed with gaffes that we lose sight of the fact that this is a defining moment in our history."

It is the transcendent irony of this campaign that Obama, who entered the race intent on getting past the "dorm fights of the '60s," has now become deeply entangled in them. Each of the ABC moderators' questions were about controversies that erupted in the '60s. The Rev. Jeremiah Wright's black-nationalist sermons had their roots in the black-power movement that corrupted Martin Luther King Jr.'s "beloved community." The sprouting of flag pins on the lapels of politicians was a response to the flag-burning of antiwar protesters; the violence of Weather Underground members like William Ayers, with whom Obama was said to be "friendly," was a corruption of the peace movements as well. All of these occurred before Obama reached puberty — and they helped define the social atmosphere in academic communities like Chicago's Hyde Park, where Obama now lives. For 40 years, the Republican Party has feasted on the secular humanism, feminism, distrust of the military and permissiveness that caricature such communities. For 40 years, the Democratic Party has been burdened by its inability to break free of those stereotypes.

(snip)

In order to have an election about those big challenges, we need to shove some serious social issues — like gun control and, yes, even abortion — and phony character issues to the periphery. But Obama is going about it the wrong way. "After 14 long months," he said in his concession speech, "it's easy to get caught up in the distractions and the silliness and the tit for tat that consumes our politics, the bickering that none of us are immune to, and it trivializes the profound issues." What's wrong with that, you might ask? It's too abstract, too detached. Too often, Obama has seemed unwilling to get down in the muck and fight off the "distractions" that are crippling his campaign. Obviously, this is strategy — his appeal has been the promise of a politics of civility (and as a black man, he wants to send low-information signals that he is neither angry nor threatening). But what if, after ABC had enabled the smarmy American-flag-pin question from an "average citizen," Obama had taken on George Stephanopoulos and Charlie Gibson directly, "Why aren't you guys wearing pins? Why isn't Hillary?" Indeed, this was Clinton's strategy in an earlier debate, upbraiding her questioners from MSNBC — and it may have turned the tide in her favor in Ohio and Texas.

(snip)

There was a warmth and a feistiness to Clinton in Pennsylvania — the very qualities that Obama was lacking. She had embraced the shameless rituals of politics, including some classic low-information signals, downing shots of Crown Royal and promising lower gas prices, attacking her opponent over trivia and threatening to "obliterate" Iran. It was enough to earn the ire of the New York Times editorial page, which harrumphed, "By staying on the attack and not engaging Mr. Obama on the substance of issues ... she undercuts the rationale for her candidacy that led this page and others to support her: that she is more qualified, right now, to be President." Well, tsk-tsk and ahem! It helps to be a warrior, for one thing. It helps to be able to take a punch and deliver one — even, sometimes, a sucker punch. A certain familiarity with life as it is lived by normal Americans is useful; a distance from the ιlite precincts of academia, where unrepentant terrorists can sip wine in good company, is essential. Hillary Clinton has learned these lessons the hard way; Barack Obama thinks they are "the wrong lessons." The nomination is, obviously, his to lose. But the presidency will not be won if he doesn't learn that the only way to reach the high-minded conversation he wants, and the country badly needs, is to figure out how to maneuver his way through the gutter.

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1734643,00.html


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tularetom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-02-08 12:22 AM
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1. Why yes Obama needs to become a guy we'd like to 'have a beer' with
fuck that shit.

To paraphrase Groucho Marx - "I wouldn't want to have a beer with any politician who would want to have a beer with me."

In fact I don't want a politician who sits around drinking beer with anybody. There are a lot of fucking problems in this country. The president doesn't have time to drink beer he needs to spend his time cleaning up the mess bush has left.

I'm sure Obama doesn't want to have a beer with me. Neither does Hillary but at least Obama doesn't insult my intelligence by pretending he does.
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MannyGoldstein Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-02-08 12:26 AM
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2. The Clintons Are Lying Narcissists
That they would jeopardize our taking back the White House after losing the nomination is sickening in the extreme.

Thank God that they have been defeated. I only hope that the Democratic Establishment has the fortitude to publicly disown them - it's the only thing that has a chance of making them go away.
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facepalm Donating Member (75 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-02-08 11:31 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. whoa whoa whoa there mister chicken counter
your eggs haven't hatched yet. Since when has Hillary been defeated and since when has anyone rejected the Clinton legacy? She has just as much claim to the white house as Obama.
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Indenturedebtor Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-02-08 04:20 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Math
Would you bet me 100 bucks that she has a chance at winning 70% of the remaining pledged delegates?

I doubt it :eyes:

McDeath will self-destruct, and I disagree with this article that the American public is only capable of making it's choices based on the kind of nonsense we've seen recently. That's just the only thing the Media is offering at this time.
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