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GOP Goose is Cooked: Democrats land haymaker as Bush babbles on

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LiberalFighter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-04 07:22 PM
Original message
GOP Goose is Cooked: Democrats land haymaker as Bush babbles on
Hartford Advocate January 29, 2004
Alan Bisbort

First, the caucuses and primary both inspired record voter turnout and a surge among college-aged voters, a trend that, if continued into November, could mean bad news for the Republican Party. This is especially bad news for Bush. Not only did Democratic doings bury his State of the Union Address, but he lost his final chance to set the agenda going into the election. His recycled litany of tired cliches ("stay the course"), fraudulent policies (privatizing Social Security, tax givebacks to the rich), fear-mongering and broken dreams went over like ice cream in Antarctica.

Secondly, the results are proof that the pundits -- none of whom came close to predicting them -- are, as I've long suspected, pulling stuff out of their asses on a 24-hour, 7-day-a-week basis. I have this recurrent fantasy that all these people, from Tim Russert to Matt Drudge to Sean O'Hannity-reilly-coulter to even "respected" journalists like Dan Rather and Bob Schieffer are machines whose brains have been replaced with harmless mush wired directly to Karl Rove's red phone. Every time he rings them up, their brains scream: INCOMING! Their lips begin to move, and the words that come out of their mouths are market-tested White House fabrications.

Third, the polls (also bearing little resemblance to the reality of the results) are largely meaningless now. This is more bad news for the White House, which had previously found ways to skew them through Orange Alerts and manufactured news events. #snip# reported that more Americans are dropping home phone lines and using cell phones as their only contact point. Since FCC rules forbid pollsters from dialing cell phone users -- a violation with a $500 penalty per call -- the only Americans whose opinions polls are registering are the few at home these days. Indeed, in most homes, both adults work second jobs, manning Wal-Mart aisles or wiping mad cow drool off McDonald's tabletops. Eventually, all polls will come down to one hearing-impaired widow in rural Missouri: "Eh, what's that? What do I think of the job George W. Bush's doin? Whistle Ass Bush? That pitiful boy still president?"

More
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Terran Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-04 07:43 PM
Response to Original message
1. amusing, but...
...give me a break on this:

Indeed, in most homes, both adults work second jobs...

I mean, yeah, *I* work a second job, but my partner does not. I don't believe for a second that a majority of American households are working two extra jobs. There aren't enough jobs to go around for that.
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bleedingheart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-04 09:11 PM
Response to Reply #1
5. for the poor two jobs is a reality...
Many of my cousins aren't so well off and they work their regular 40 hour a week job at the convenience store...then they pick up extra hours doing telemarketing, waitressing, ..etc

Did I mention that the 40 hour a week job is actually..38-39.5 so that they don't qualify for benefits?
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fizzana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-04 09:14 PM
Response to Reply #1
6. That's just hyperbole for effect
The bottom line is the column is dead right in its analysis. Last night most of the pundits who even mentioned it, expressed complete surprise at the exit polls that showed just how angry people are.
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DBoon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-04 09:33 PM
Response to Reply #1
7. Actually I think the statement is true
Edited on Wed Jan-28-04 09:35 PM by DBoon
If you look at figures regarding female workforce participation.

Most middle class and professional folks I know (myself and friends and neighbors) are in this situation.

Most wives stay at home for the few years their children are of pre-school age, then it's back to the workforce.

This is a major change with my father's generation during the 1950's, where being a housewife was a full-time occupation.

The 2 income household disguises a serious drop in American living standards since the 1960's.
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proud patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-04 07:47 PM
Response to Original message
2. That headline should be headline of the year
:evilgrin:
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rocktivity Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-04 07:49 PM
Response to Original message
3. It's always nice to have your diagnosis concurred with
Howard Dean, for example, is probably not out of the race...he was pilloried for his post-caucus rant. But as a friend put it, "The press will overplay Dean's performance..."

Hey, that's almost word for word what I posted a few days ago! And Dean's finishing second in NH, albeit by an unexpectedly wide margin, shows that the people realize that the mainstream media are trying to manipulate them.


rocknation

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colonel odis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-28-04 09:06 PM
Response to Original message
4. the pundits could be irrelevant
by the time we get to the election. watching chris matthews last night try to vamp for a couple of hours almost made me feel sorry for him. then i snapped out of it and remembered what a pompous, spitting jerk he is.

blogs, forums like this, and access to alternative news sources could eliminate the need for tired-ass, partisan representatives of corporate interests to tell us what we're supposed to think.

last week dean was pronounced dead 150 million times. he may not have come in first last night but he looked a far cry from dead, to steal the title of a townes van zandt album. information delivery is changing very quickly. perhaps for the best, the media isn't.
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loudsue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-29-04 12:10 AM
Response to Reply #4
8. Hats off to the colonel...
Good post!!

I'm in total agreement!

:kick:
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joefree1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-29-04 01:52 AM
Response to Reply #4
9. You betcha
Great post and welcome to DU!

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AverageJoe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-29-04 03:42 PM
Response to Reply #4
15. Townes Van Zandt rules!
and I agree with your post, too! :-)
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demdave Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-29-04 02:06 AM
Response to Original message
10. Opinion column not LBN
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calimary Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-29-04 02:28 AM
Response to Original message
11. Here's what I emailed to Janet Reynolds, senior ed. Hartford Advocate
Dear Ms. Reynolds,

My reaction to Alan Bisbort's commentary "GOP Goose is Cooked" (and, for that matter, an earlier piece of his from the archives - "Republicans on the Ropes")? I am on my knees, praying to God, begging for Bisbort's words to find their way to EVERY AMERICAN VOTER by November.

Bisbort just pegs it so accurately - this is EXACTLY the way I feel about the horrendous, completely apalling situation our country is in, not to mention how things are with the rest of the world in the last three miserable years! What keeps me on stun is how many people are still fooled by these greedy, sneaky, power-crazed Chickenhawks. That's what makes the discovery of Bisbort's columns and opinions especially savory. I'm mighty glad you guys are running him. I wish every paper did.

Thanks!


By the way, Janet Reynolds is apparently Alan Bisbort's boss or some such. She's Group Publisher and Senior Editor. Her email is jreynolds@newmassmedia.com


Folks, brethren and sistren (?!),

It is VITALLY important that we make an effort to contact publishers, editors, writers, when they issue something terrific. I was originally going to email Alan Bisbort himself, but when I sought the contact info, the management listings are what came up. So I went to the top of the list from his online publication. Positive reinforcement is SO important, to counter-act the seemingly monopolistic barrage of all-conservative-all-the-time. They seldom hear from people who believe as we do. They only hear the other guys. And they hear them all the time. So, they only have one side of the story upon which to build their own conclusions. We don't get a chance to lobby for OUR views!

What to do, then? Stuff like the above. CONTACT people. Email a writer, reporter, editor, publisher, whichever information you can find. Often it's easier than this was. Usually you'll find the writer's email or other contact info, even phone numbers, at the bottom of the piece. Or, you'll see the author's name underlined in the byline itself, or in another color print, indicating this is where to click, and THAT'S where you find their contact info. AND THEN USE IT!

They need to hear from us because if we don't weigh in with counter-wisdom, and set the record straight, they're just gonna be caught in a shallow, one-dimensional political world. I bet they don't even realize how many of us there may actually be. Consider the reactions of various talking heads on Primary Night - couldn't believe the turnout. We HAVE to let them know that
a) they're not publishing in a vacuum,
b) their stuff is welcomed, falling on eager eyes,
c) what's in their stuff REALLY IS what other people are also thinking,
d) this is exactly the kind of thing they should keep publishing, because, believe it or not, there's a hungry and vastly underfed market out there wanting and waiting for it.
e) if they cater to this audience, they'll benefit with bigger readership/subscribership, stronger appeal to advertisers/underwriters.

It really makes a difference. I went to hear Robert Scheer speak, a few months ago, and his wife attended. He's a columnist whose stuff appears in alternet and the L.A. Times and other places. He's wonderful. His wife is an editor at the San Francisco Chronicle, I believe it is. He said, and she confirmed while there, that the editorial staff looks at all the letters that come in. They're seriously read and discussed, to determine the best ones to use every day. They look at trends (how many people are writing in about the same matter or article) and how stuff is written (shorter is better, and write it as well as you can, so you'll be taken seriously).

I do this whenever I can, although not nearly often enough. I actually get responses. Helen Thomas has responded to me several times. I've had more than a dozen, no - probably over two dozen writers or editors get back to me about stuff, and if nothing else, they acknowledge my email. Frequently it's a personal note from them, although Bob Herbert and Paul Krugman send automatic responses reflective of the large quantities of emails they get. Even so, the input is noted by these writers. Having been one, myself, I always want to know how my stuff is going over, and how many people are agreeing with me and how many wanna string me up. I guarantee if you do it more than once or twice, you WILL get a response from somebody who either thanks you or encourages you in your shared feelings or appreciates something specific you mentioned in your email. I had one writer in Canada email me back to thank me and she added that she liked my reference to "The Silenced Majority." You WILL hear back from some of these people. And that, in turn, will make YOU feel better.

Until our conventional media wakes up and starts doing its job again, it is unfortunately up to us as individuals and consumers to be the message-bearers and the information-brokers. When I was in radio, we were ALWAYS aiming to be part of the "watercooler talk" at work later that day, or the next morning, based on something they'd heard us do. ALWAYS. These writers and editors WANT TO KNOW what people think. Even if they are conservative (YES, write the bad guys, too!) and sneer at your email, I'll betcha said sneer will be WIPED OFF their faces when they start getting dozens if not hundreds of oppositional input from readers. Even they have to acknowledge impressive shows of opposition.

Sorry to blather on, but man-oh-man this is important.

Remember Buckminster Fuller's reminder about the "trim-tab effect." A trim-tab, as I understand it, is a little teeny movable part at the edge of a rudder in a larger-sized boat. Big ships need 'em to enable the turning process. A big ship is a heavy ship and it takes lots of effort and energy to turn her. You have to start by enabling the turning DEVICE - ie: rudder. So, you adjust the trim-tab. The trim-tab turns, and that turns the rudder, also. The rudder, then, turns the ship. Each one of us can be a trim-tab to turn our ship of America back around in the correct direction. Each one of us can be a trim-tab to turn our ship of America back around in the correct direction. That’s what he meant by “think globally, act locally.”

For whatever it’s worth.

XOXOXO


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colonel odis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-29-04 09:23 AM
Response to Reply #11
12. good point
the working press is human like everyone else. if they get thank-yous for favorable coverage of the democrats, rather than constant criticism for being in the pockets of the republicans, they'll probably feel more inclined to continue that favorable coverage.

of course, reporters, being geniuses who have complete and absolute understanding of the human condition, will sense a groundswell and a turning tide against bush. perhaps their coverage will begin to show that.

but then, if bush really starts sinking in the polls we all know that will just get us into another war or a "terrorist attack" on our own soil.

whadya gonna do?
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Atman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-29-04 10:27 AM
Response to Reply #11
13. You should've asked why her employer disagrees
The Advocate is a dumping ground for the Tribune Media Company. They put the real news there that they refuse to place in their "real" newspaper, The Hartford Courant. The Courant regularly blows Bush and anything republican, then tosses critical comments about Bush in this free liquor store rage.

Ask here WHY? Isn't the TRUTH the TRUTH, regardless of where you publish it? Ask here why her boss didn't feel her comments were worthy of a "real" newspaper.

The Advocated is just the distraction to make us feel like there is an "alternative" to corporate whore news...but it is also just another arm of the same corporate whore...Tribure Media Company.
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WingNOT Donating Member (669 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-29-04 10:42 AM
Response to Reply #11
14. Coudln't have put it better myself !
Like your style Calimary - you are a *TRUE* activist. I hope people use you as a role model !

:-)
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