Scoble on the campaign trail?

Uberblogger Robert Scoble is traveling with the John Edwards campaign, but he’s “keeping [the blog] relatively politics free” and is “not going to write a lot about John Edwards.” Huh?

Anyway, this is the interesting part:

I’m wearing my ConvergeSouth shirt in honor of Sue Polinsky, who really is responsible for getting us in a position for me to get here.
First stop of the morning … New Orleans’ neighborhood « Scobleizer

W00t! Shoutout to Greensboro’s Converge South, and to conference diva Sue Polinsky. I can see the network forming before my eyes.

But wouldn’t it have made more sense for a blogger like Ed Cone (who has some credibility talking about politics and an interested audience) to be with him? I guess Edwards is trying to reach geeks, not Democrats. Fair enough.

Elizabeth Edwards, keeping it real

Cross-posted from OrangePolitics.

I just read this article by my friend Micah Sifry about Elizabeth Edwards. He says she is the “only person who I think we can genuinely say is participating in the blogosphere, as opposed to just using it.” One of his supporting examples is Eliabeth’s visit to OP to answer some questions I had raised about the location of their new home and the status of their voter registration.

As usual, she responded openly and directly. As I wrote to Micah, Elizabeth is so smart and fierce and charming it’s scary. Further proof was seen in her graceful handling of that clown Chris Matthews on live TV recently. I sometimes have complaints about her husband’s policies (the same I have of almost every Democrat), but as a person I only admire her more the more I get to know her. I wish nothing but the best to the entire Edwards family.

Good luck in NOLA!

We're history's actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.

This is it!

I have had a lot of strong feelings in the past week about this country. The level of division is staggering. One friend tells me that people have been moving geographically into ideological enclaves in recent decades, which helps to explain why not only do we disagree so strongly with each other in this country, we also just can’t understand those who don’t think like us. I am also reminded of George Lakoff’s explanation of the difference in how liberals and conservatives think. Lakoff has helped me to understand how it is that our values can be so far apart that people who don’t think like us come across as either stupid or evil. For example, if you think that Bush is fighting terrorism (as many people seem to believe) then anyone who is against him must appear to be for terrorism.

Thoughtful people can see that this is not the case. In fact, when taken from a reality-based perspective, many people feel that Bush has made the country less safe by stoking the fires of religious extremism (both at home and abroad). In fact, a recent New York Times story exposed the division in new terms (that have been amplified by bloggers). In “Without a Doubt” Ron Suskind describes the “faith-based presidency” in which decisions are made based primarily on Bush’s personal intuition and his faith*, not facts. (*Which comes from where? I don’t think he even goes to church regularly.)

In the summer of 2002, after I had written an article in Esquire that the White House didn’t like about Bush’s former communications director, Karen Hughes, I had a meeting with a senior adviser to Bush. He expressed the White House’s displeasure, and then he told me something that at the time I didn’t fully comprehend — but which I now believe gets to the very heart of the Bush presidency.

The aide said that guys like me were ”in what we call the reality-based community,” which he defined as people who ”believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.” I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. ”That’s not the way the world really works anymore,” he continued. ”We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality — judiciously, as you will — we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”

Faith, Certainty and the Presidency of George W. Bush by Ron Suskind, New York Times Magazine, Oct 14, 2004.

Even though I took an entire course on the civil rights movement when I was in college, it took the documentary February One to drive home two important points to me about how that movement manged to impact so many people: 1.) Although it seemed random to observers, the four men who started the sit-ins at a Greensboro lunch counter on 2/1/1960 were very strategic about what they were doing. And 2.) what they did was effective because it was covered by the media and therefore reached into homes across the nation. (Can you imagine shots of protesters in the street on your local evening news? The media is failing us – this is why blogs are becoming more and more important.)

In light of these lessons, I am finally seeing our anti-imperialist movement gain the momentum, visibility, and critical mass to be seen, heard, and felt across the country. It was Eminem’s “Mosh” video that made this really hit me. It’s kind of sad that a egotistical, white, homophobic rapper would be the harbinger of this widespread and growing dissent, but the world is different than it was 50 years ago. Eminem reaches people in a way that the Independent Media Center never will. This is big.

So here’s my election prediction: I think that this year’s voter mobilization effort will be in our children’s history books, although it might not include the part I like about the grassroots, people-driven effort triumphing over imperialism and corporate greed. Either way, I believe that this will be a defining moment of my era, just as the peace movement was in the 60’s and the civil rights movement in the 50’s.

I occasionally think (as my boyfriend does) that it will be a Kerry landslide, but mostly I think it will be a nail-biting Kerry victory. There will be legal battles no matter what the outcome. The losers will not recognize the legitimacy of the winner. In the entirely possible and extremely horrifying event of a Bush victory, I think we will witness the solidification of the next huge grassroots social justice movement of our time. At the last Bush inauguration there were almost as many protesters as celebrators on the parade route. This time most of the furs, fake cowboy boots, and ten-gallon hats will not brave the streets which will be full of patriots objecting to another four years of hate in the Whitehouse. This time, no-one will be able to ignore us.

If Kerry wins, we will have an uphill struggle against complacency. Many people who have been involved this year through MoveOn, ACT, Howard Dean‘s campaign, and the Democratic Party will think their job is done. They may go back to being “normal” members of society, as if democracy functions on it’s own without caretaking. They may ignore the fact that Republicans will still be in control of Congress, and working at every level to deny our rights, and give themselves more freedom.

So remember, no matter what happens tomorrow, the struggle is just beginning. We must remain engaged so that Florida 2000/presidential selection/Bush in the Whitehouse never happens again! Democracy doesn’t work without all of us participating. Keep the media on their toes and speak truth to power!

Fundamental Truth at the DNC

I guess I was too busy being cynical last night to notice the Buddhist influence in John Edwards’ speech.

Like all of us, I have learned a lot of lessons in my life. Two of the most important are that first, there will always be heartache and struggle–you can’t make it go away. But the other is that people of good and strong will can make a difference. One lesson is a sad lesson and the other’s inspiring.

 

The Four Noble Truths (the foundation of Buddhism):

  1. Life means suffering.
  2. The origin of suffering is attachment.
  3. The cessation of suffering is attainable.
  4. The path to the cessation of suffering.

So Long DP, It’s Been Swell

On the question of the whether John Edwards will help or hurt Erskine Bowles. I just posted the following comment at EdCone.com:

If Bowles can’t take advantage of the increased Democratic resources flowing into N.C., it’s his own fault. Have you seen his site lately? I’m glad to see it’s been redesigned, but it’s now apparent that he’s running in the wrong primary.

The headlines:
“Homeland Security”
“Lowes Motor Speedway… Richard Petty .. Bush series”
“Fiscal Discipline… Republicans and Democrats Together”
“Fight special interests”

I sure want to beat Richard Burr, but I’m still waiting for one compelling reason to help Bowles.

I am increasingly convinced that Clinton spoiled the already-ailing Democratic party when he played his presidency so thoroughly to the center. It clearly worked for him personally, but it’s something other Dems can’t do without outright imitating Republicans. And even if they could get away with it, what’s the point?

What the hell are they fighting for? I look forward to the Democratic Party’s ultimate demise, although it’s going to be a rough time for the country until someone else gets their shit together.