Spare me from bright young things

John Emerson at Seeing the Forest looks at the battle for the Democratic Party’s soul:

Recently some of the bright young Ivy League things of the Yglesias sort confessed, with no apparent embarrassment, that they had initially supported Bush’s ill-conceived Iraq War primarily because they had been unwilling to be seen on the same side of the fence as the anti-war hippies they knew. Kevin Drum has expressed regret that Robert Scheer is writing for the LA Times (and has his doubts about Bob Somerby too), Brad DeLong went ballistic when Barbara Ehrenreich was given some column inches by the New York Times, and the usually-astute “praktike” made a dismissive remark about Greg Palast on a comment thread somewhere. This whole tendency was eloquently summed up by the commentator “Petey” on Yglesias’ comments: “Screw the Hippies”.

The goal is to cleanse the Democratic party of any smirch of anti-war sentiment, thus giving the American people only a choice between two different war policies. I find it hard to list the number of ways this is wrong.

First of all, I think that American military policy, at least as long as Bush is in office, is the big political issue of our time. War is a serious question and our answer to the question shouldn’t made on the basis of election demographics. If war is the wrong choice but the American people want war, we should get to working changing their minds. Contrary to Petey’s belief, one of the functions of politics is to define issues, rather than merely finding out what people already think and doing that. (Petey’s cynicism is amazing: when I mentioned that even the “new European” Poles mostly oppose the Iraq War, Petey’s brilliant response was “How many electoral votes does Poland have?” I find that response to be hideously corrupt. You have to win elections to do anything, but the big questions shouldn’t be used as bargaining chips like artichoke subsidies and shrimp imports.)

This is the crux though: for people like Beinart, like Kevin Drum or Matt Y., what matters is the political game rather than the outcomes it causes in the real world. These people don’t really care about the US workers made jobless through Bush’politics, the soldiers and especially the civilians killed in his wars, they care on whether or not the political game is played well, they care about their own little spiteful revenges on all those imagined bogeymen who make the Democratic Party so …embarassing to a bright young thing on his way up inside the Beltway. Caring about these things isn’t cool, fighting for principles is not smart or realistic.

What is needed is very much a purge within the Democratic Party, one in which people are put against walls, lose their cozy jobs and appointments and blood flows. Only then will the Democratic Party become a good opposition party, when it becomes clear you either oppose or get fired, make a stand against Bush or lose your seat.

The vote’s been stolen, again, part 5

Yet another “computer glitch”, this time in Franklin County, Indiana, recorded straight ticket Democratic votes as libertarian votes:

BROOKVILLE, Ind. — A hand recount of ballots cast using optical scanning technology gave a Democrat enough extra votes to bump a Republican from victory in a county commissioner’s race.

The erroneous tally was caused when the Fidlar Election Co. scanning system recorded straight-Democratic Party votes as votes for Libertarians in southeastern Indiana’s Franklin County.

Stupid election rules

Over at archy, John McKay has found a very very silly example of stupid election rules:

Leaving aside all issues specific to this election–which party is ahead, which party is challenging–has any one ever heard of anything so stupid? Has it ever occurred to any reader that, after casting their vote, they have a responsibility to call the county and ask them if they counted it? Has it ever occurred to any reader that they have to remind the county to count their vote before the county will do so?

Keep in mind that this is not happening in Flaming Cross, Alabama where the last Democrat left in 1989. This is King County, Washington. This is Seattle!!! In some districts of Seattle the Republican Party hasn’t bothered to put forth a serious candidate in decades. In some precincts, if we get to two Republican votes, we throw them both out because it means the bastard voted twice. These are Democratic officials making the Democratic candidate jump through small, flaming hoops held high above the ground. This is not a state policy. In the rest of the state, Republican county officials have cheerfully handed the lists of provisional voters over to the Republican Party for them to prepare their challenges to the vote total.

Barack Obama

Jeanne d’Arc makes two very good points about Barack Obama:

If Sullivan wants to argue that Obama sounds like a Republican, he’s welcome to his fantasy, but find me one Republican who isn’t being pushed out of the party, who could say “I am my brother?s keeper” without choking on the words. Cain’s question is the core of the every-man-for-himself Republican philosophy. It is the conscience of the left that grows uneasy when God hears the blood crying out from the ground. Our unwillingness close our ears to the sound of blood is what they most deride in us.

The second thing that bothered me, even though it was coming from people who felt the power of that call to progressive values and didn’t try to spin it away, was the emphasis on Obama as a “star.” Folks, this isn’t American Idol. I do not want to hear one more time that we witnessed the political birth of the first African American president. He will be or he won’t be, but Obama’s career plans are the least important thing to care about here.

At least they have their priorities straight

Atrios, our main man at the Democratic Convention, is puzzled by the real media’s behaviour:

Some of us believe that the pair of conventions could provide the media with a platform for communicating to the American people just what the difference between the two parties are, and to discuss what direction our country should be taking.

The media, however, are desperate for a simple hook or gotcha event – something which would be genuinely newsworthy. Like an expensive haircut. Oh, and more free drinks.