Macaca vs. the Thesis

The comparisons are being made between the flap over Bob McDonnell’s thesis and George Allen’s infamous gaffe that opened the era of YouTube politics.  The comparisons to the 2006 Senate election are apt – but not in the obvious way.

Allen’s “macaca moment” was a key reason he lost his Senate seat, but it didn’t happen in a vacuum.  Opponents had long alleged that Allen was a closeted racist and Confederate sympathizer.  His verbal gaffe gave those opponents visual evidence – and another chance to dredge up those accusations.  Macaca wasn’t the issue, it was just the event that exposed a major issue.

Through “Thesisgate” the Deeds campaign is seeking to re-define McDonnell by exposing old writings which suggest his views are out of line with the electorate.  In the 2006 race, the obvious parallel actually came later on, when desperate Allen campaign blasted eventual victor Jim Webb for novels which he had written depicting graphic and bizarre  scenes.

“Read the Thesis” means “Read our parts of the Thesis”

In the Commonwealth I currently call home, the fight for Virginia’s governorship is becoming downright Jerseyan thanks to Creigh Deed’s attempt to leverage an old grad school paper written by Bob McDonnell.

Deeds is following an important rule – when negative information is out there about an opponent, the best thing is to keep it alive for as long as possible.  Since the McDonnell thesis is 90 pages long, the Deeds folks have selected the juiciest clips and added their editorial content.  It’s a good way for them to excite a base which is currently unexcited and raise some money.

Missing in a lot of the coverage is a link to the actual thesis.  I had to do about 20 minutes of searching before I found and downloaded McDonnel’s work.  If you haven’t actually read the thesis, it really is heavy on the involvement of church and family, but also has some harsh treatment of federal social programs – such as welfare, which was reformed six years later.

Since few voters will bother to read 90 pages, they may go back to their own memories of writing college papers.  How many people who took political science or current events courses would want their words revisited?   During my time at UMass, the Journalism department offered a class called “The Press and the Third World.”  I took it during my sophomore year, and usually sat next to a friend of mine with whom I worked at the campus radio station’s sports department.  (The class fulfilled a requirement for our major, but we were both aspiring sports journalists.  The subject matter was not in our area of expertise.)  Every Tuesday, our professor would look over the New York Times – what he called the “newspaper of record” for America – and express disgust that the Third World was rarely covered.  And when it was, he would express disgust that the stories would only cover corruption, violence, or the bizarre.

We could have pointed out that the local Springfield, Mass. television stations only covered corruption, violence, or the bizarre in Western Massachusetts, or that regional news outlets usually cover the regions they are based in.  We could have pointed out that his gripe was with media in general, not in American media’s treatment of the Third World.  Actually, one of our classmates brought that up during discussion one day, and was shouted down by other students as the professor encouraged them.  My friend and I shut our mouths, parroted back the professor’s comments when it was time to take a test, accepted our A- grades and went back to WMUA to cover sports.  The content of those papers would be wholly inconsistent with the content of this blog, but the Worker’s World Party might enjoy them.  (Although, I believe I criticized Jon Stewart’s coverage of the Middle East in my final paper.)

With a heavily college-educated voting populace who can identify with the college writing process, McDonnell’s thesis may not have quite the impact that Deeds would hope.

Facebook… without the “not sucking”

FamousDC and Politico have both already weighed in on “Republicanville” – which is, apparently, supposed to be a Facebook-type social network for Republicans.  Meghann Parlett at TechRepublican has the best take on it, and it only takes two words: she calls it a “walled garden” – an online utility exclusively for Republicans that doesn’t really help counter the left-leaning tendencies of other social networks, online news sites, or (most importantly) the last two election cycles.

For the last few years, this has been a consistent trend.  I’ve seen people try to bill themselves as “conservative comics,” and they almost always suck.  “Conservative filmmakers” tend to make good factual documentaries (sometimes), but lousy dramas and comedies.  Conservative alternatives to pop culture entities are never as cool as those entities because the “conservative alternative” is by definition all about politics first, rather than entertainment.

That’s not to say that Republicanville will be a wasteland – surely, with enough financial backing, they will recruit membership.  But “walled gardens” aren’t the places to make a difference.

More people will agree with you if you serve punch and pie

A YouTube channel with TV ads is basic blocking and tackling for a giant trade group like the National Association of Manufacturers.  But beyond ads opposing cap and trade, the NAM YouTube channel is more than just a political sounding board; NAM uses their channel to tell stories about the people they represent: workers and businesses who make stuff.

Beyond driving home the message about the importance of manufacturing America, NAM provides genuinely interesting content that establishes the importance of manufacturing jobs – and provides users with information they didn’t already know.  Ice cream is always a welcome addition, too:

(In the interest of full disclosure, I worked on a project for NAM once.  It had nothing to do with their YouTube Channel – but I really wish it had.)

Politics: Showbiz or Sports?

Matt Lewis had a neat post at PoliticsDaily yesterday, talking about how the dreaded “24-hour news cycle” that has (paradoxically) made political discourse more pundit/sound bite-driven has also done the same for sports.

Here is just one example: Recent speculation on ESPN about dissention brewing among Favre’s new Viking teammates (some of whom are loyal to the Vikings’ former quarterback) reminded me of the never-ending leaks that flowed out of the McCain campaign and onto the pages of Politico — usually in regard to Sarah Palin. Be it a campaign or a football team, one disgruntled “unnamed source” can provide a days’ worth of material for cable networks– all of which need to feed a 24-hour news cycle.

A former colleague once called Washington, D.C. “Hollywood for Ugly People” – a town driven by a core industry (electoral politics) with many auxiliary sub-industries (lobbyists, contractors, regulators, think tanks, etc.).  But there’s also a highly competitive streak, just as one might find among professional athletes, but among people who can’t do this.

Instead of show business for the homely, maybe politics is sports for the weak?

We have two more days before Ted rises, so…

When the news broke about Ted Kennedy’s death last week, two things became imminent: 1) A televised re-telling of the Kennedy legend, played out over several days; and 2) a well-crafted obituary that criticized Kennedy imagery, penned by Massachusetts’ own Dan Flynn.

My Mom will enjoy Flynn’s take on Kennedy’s dicey version of Catholicism (that allows de facto divorce), but Flynn also discusses the near-royal status the Kennedy family enjoyed and the changing  policy positions Ted Kennedy embraced throughout his career that signified a lack of substance beyond his last name.  While maintaining a respect for the deceased, Flynn pokes holes in the images that have been all over the TV over the past few days:

The caricature that Ann Richards and others painted of George H.W. Bush — “born on third base and thought that he hit a triple” — more resembled Ted Kennedy, a gregarious rogue enabled by wealth, power, and a famous last name. The privilege that shielded the playboy senator from the consequences of his actions acted as a double-edge sword by ensuring that he also never learned from the mistakes he didn’t suffer from.

Sunday Funnies: Ethics fraud at 7-11

I have some friends and co-workers who have been either working for or volunteering their time for the Chris Christie campaign in New Jersey, and according to them, the election is getting ugly – even by New Jersey standards.  In one of the ultimate pot-and-kettle moves, incumbent Governor Jon Corzine is trying to hang ethics allegations on his opponent – who, incidentally, is one of about a half dozen New Jersey politicians who likely won’t end up in jail at some point or another.

I enjoyed the Christie campaign response – maybe not the most side-splitting political ad ever, but it certainly handles the issue well:

$25 million a year isn’t as easy as it sounds

Furor over athletes’ salaries is nothing new.  From the rise of professional baseball in the 19th century to the salary explosions across all major sports in the 1980s and 1990s, the fans who live and die with their teams have groused about how much the athletes they root for make.  And recently, discussions of executive compensation have fallen into the same category.

They have something else in common: the CEO of a Fortune 500 company and the quarterback of the New York Giants both earned their highly visible positions by winning a largely invisible process where many people competed.  It’s not an easy climb to get to the top of the mountain.

To that point, check out this story out of Louisville about a journeyman minor leaguer named Kevin Barker.  Of course, Barker is getting paid to play a game, but he’s certainly not living a life I would want to live when I reach 34.

At the ballpark Barker, 34, is known as the “old man” among teammates a decade younger. He is old to be playing in the minors, old to be living in a rented apartment near River Road with blankets, not curtains, covering the bedroom windows.

That doesn’t matter to Barker. What matters is making it back to the major leagues. After all, with road trips and home games — which he leaves for in early afternoon and returns from late at night — he is rarely at home. He doesn’t even know his address. He has his mail sent to Louisville Slugger Field so, if need be, it can be forwarded to his next stop.

Lion facts

SimbaTrappedHere are some things you might not know about lions:

According to National Geographic (yes, that’s a link to their kids’ website, but I’m assuming the facts are still good – it’s not like they’re lying to children, so back off) lions are not the “King of the Jungle.”  Despite a fancy title, they inhabit plains and grasslands.  Lions are somewhat inept at hunting, with just one kill per seven tries.  Sometimes they swipe food killed by other animals, and within the pride, the hunters who do all the work, the lionesses, are not the ones who eat first.  Male lions, whose main roles are marking territory, get to visit the zebra buffet first.

So comparing someone to a lion – though occasionally valid – may not always be a compliment.