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Can I Get A Witness? [Nov 18, 2004]
Ladies and gentlemen, Ms. ZZ Packer, a better writer than I'll ever be, which, admittedly, isn't saying much. But the above-linked piece hits on a theme that has bogged me down since the election, preventing me from effectively writing my novel about the time-travelling robot. She understands our current political predicament far better than the "Fuck The South" crowd, who are surprisingly numerous, ever will. Money quote:
"The more progressive religious-minded folk understand that stating that the Democrats are “for abortion” is like saying every gun owner is “for homicide,” and we all know that’s just not the case. The progressive and moderately religious are, by and large, for real solutions, and rather than foolhardily trying to legislate all sexual behavior, they advocate sex education, birth control and the morning-after pill to reduce unwanted pregnancies. These people know how to talk to the red states and swing states because, more often than not, they live in them. But if we continue shipping in the Prada and Birkenstock crowd to talk about abortion, gay marriage and Iraq to the small-town Main Streeters on their way to Home Depot, we’re toast."
Joshuah Bearman follows along those same lines. There is a way to overcome the fundies, my friends! Let this site serve as a beacon light of hope.
You would think that indicting certain evil Dominionist leaders would slow them down, but not in today's Washington. It's always cute when Josh Marshall eats his Wonkies, the nutritious cereal for wonks. He's got Tom DeLay pinned to the wall. I can't imagine the Hammer is exactly trembling at the sight of Marshall's coffee-deprived blog puss, but Talking Points Memo is the place to go right now if you're a Congressional corruption fetishist.
What else? Oh, yes. I wrote this piece for the Stranger. It's a better-edited version of the stuff I was posting here last week, with some amusing anecdotes about my recent book tour added. The article concludes that being a writer is kind of humiliating. There are definitely some perks, but it's still kind of humiliating. And the food description paragraph alone should pretty much put to rest the stupid regular-guy persona I briefly adopted last week.
I have no working-class credentials, and won't falsely claim them. I grew up in a suburb of Phoenix. My dad owned a bus company and my mom was a schoolteacher. Nope. I'm just another non-fishing, non-hunting big-mouthed middle-class Jew. But you can trust my opinion.
This is a no-spin zone.
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The National Book Awards Office Pool [Nov 17, 2004]
I've refrained from commenting on this year's inevitable National Book Awards controversy because no one cares what I think, because I don't care what I think myself, and because, let's be real, it doesn't matter who wins the National Book Award. Of my 100 favorite books of all time, not one has won the National Book Award for fiction. I'm sure many of you can say the same.
The only way the public at large could be made to care about the "five women from New York," all of whom, I'm sure, are very good writers, is if their story gets optioned and that option then gets made into an animated film. While I appreciate the hard work of the many people who keep the temple of literature standing, and I'll pitch in where I can, I don't have any illusions that literature occupies a place in our culture any more important than, say, opera. It's necessary that books continue, but American Literature with a capital L only matters to an audience that's just large enough to keep it from collapsing.
I couldn't believe it when, at the beginning of the NBA ceremony, Nicolette Sheridan threw off her towel and jumped into Garrison Keillor's arms. It was the sexiest moment in American literature since Marilyn Monroe sang "Happy Birthday, John O'Hara," in 1957. ABC will do anything to promote Desperate Housewives. Thank goodness the FCC is helping to prevent American children from seeing a black man and a white woman possibly having sex.
Soon, TV is going to have to get subversive to escape the state censors. This British kids' show from the 1970s may point the way. Please don't drink milk while watching the video.
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Let The Healing Begin [Nov 16, 2004]
As those of you who attend this virtual church know, I've recently transformed myself from a smart-assed parodist of pompous psuedo-literary political fulminators into a concerned citizen who wishes to heal the cultural rift that's causing America to eat itself from within. Just a view more days of these pills, and the shift will be complete. The night sweats are an unpleasant side effect, but that's a sacrifice I'm willing to make for America.
Many years ago, when I was a reporter for a weekly newspaper in Chicago, I travelled to Indiana to do a story on the closing of a garment factory whose owner was moving operations to Mexico. There I was, a journalism-school graduate who'd grown up in suburban Phoenix, a guy with every opportunity in the world, some of which I hadn't yet blown, and I was trying to tell the stories of women my age whose lives were basically over. I wrote a decent piece that no one read, and the night before I left I hooked up with one of the women, who I found sexy because she was training to be a bounty hunter.
My point here is: Thank God I'm not the only one thinking about these issues. Read this post from the almost unimaginably thoughtful writer David Neiwert. He lays out a blueprint for how Red and Blue types can begin to move toward mutual understanding. Since the post itself is longer than Don Quixote, let me summarize a bit.
Toss out the 20 percent or so of voters who believe that they are superior because they happen to live in Portland or Brooklyn and who think that the best way to get back at the Republicans is to stage a shopping boycott the day after Thanksgiving. Then dump the 30 percent who believe that George W. Bush is paving the way to the Rapture and that homosexuality is a crime against God. That leaves us with 50 percent or so of voters, in both states, who are willing to listen to reason. Cue Paul Reubens.
Shh! I'm trying to listen to reason!
Here are Neiwert's money paragraphs:
"There will be inevitable differences. We won't always see eye to eye on some subjects, especially when they are products of differences in religious beliefs: abortion, gay rights, evolution. What has to change is how we react to these differences. Instead of dismissing people as hopeless ignoramuses for disagreeing on these matters, liberals need to operate from a basis of mutual respect for differing but sincerely held beliefs.
Of course, this respect will not always be reciprocated. This will be especially the case for the hard-core right wing that has an entrenched presence in rural America. Those are not the people whose minds can be changed. And in these kinds of cases, liberals should feel no compulsion to be "sensitive." Indeed, failing to stand up to them with appropriate strength is a recipe for getting bulldozed, as liberals have for the past decade.
But for the bulk of rural Americans, when liberals come up against these kinds of "moral values" friction points, there are two ways to effectively respond: 1) deflecting the conflict by emphasizing the common ground in real-life issues like saving farms and jobs; and 2) stressing their own deeply held moral values, including fairness and inclusiveness, as the basis of their positions -- thereby refuting the charges of amorality with which they are regularly accused by the right."
The Democratic Party seems to be catching on. But to beat the Republicans, it's going to take a lot of work, not just talk about "values." They're going to have to, like the Republicans, set up a series of propaganda organizations that can reach churchgoers in large numbers. And I don't use the word propaganda perjoritavely. The Christian Right have essentially sold people the bill of goods that God is a Republican who wants the United States to rule the world. It's going to take a lot more than sincerity to counteract that noise.
At the same time, I wish that people would stop, and by stop, I mean start, calling me to help regenerate the faith component of the Democratic Party. I don't even have faith that I'll wake up in the morning without vomiting. Now go away. I have to support the administration and its policies in my work.
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The Real World: Fallujah [Nov 15, 2004]
My apologies to anyone who read an earlier version of this post, which had a bit of a maudlin and didactic feel. But that's what happens when you're going about your innocent business looking for blown-up pictures of Tara Reid's nipple and your wife sends you a video, backed by hard-edged German techno music, of fetuses mutated by depleted uranium exposure. Note to wife: It's not healthy to spend too much time in the comments section of The Daily Kos.
That said, look very hard at these pictures of what's really going on in Fallujah. If Americans are going to support this war, then they need to see the truth, so they can make an honest assessment. As for me, I don't think my tax dollars should go toward our soldiers dumping fly-specked corpses in a ditch and Iraqi toddlers losing their limbs. Then there's the undeniable fact that our own people are getting the crap blown out of them as well. What a bunch of heartless schmucks we have running this country.
And that's the undidactic version. You can only imagine.
Now then. I would, as usual, like to shut Andrew Sullivan up. So, fine. The murder of Dutch filmmaker Theo Van Gogh was a horrible atrocity, and the people who killed him are a menace to civilization and modernity. I have quite a few Dutch friends and have spent many semi-conscious hours in Amsterdam, and I can say without a doubt that the Dutch are a good and tolerant, if somewhat uptight, people who never meant anyone any harm except during the 17th Century. This situation must be very hard for them.
I doubt that I'm what Sullivan considers a "liberal pundit," but I'll have to do. And, you know, he doesn't really bother me that much these days. At least he acknowledges that our country has been largely taken over by far-right Christian lunatics. Christopher Hitchens, on the other hand, continues to fulminate against the evils of Islamic fundamentalism while ignorning the rise of fundamentalism in the country that he rents on an hourly basis between sojourns to trouble spots.
Yes, Hitch, occasionally the left does "apologize for religious fanatics," and also for Cold-War relics like Fidel Castro and pompous faux-Guevara powermongers like Hugo Chavez. But how can an ostensibly intelligent person ignore the ascencion to power of fanatics equally as dangerous and much better-funded? No, Republicans aren't murdering filmmakers in broad daylight. Nor are they kidnapping people and beheading them on television. But should that really be the standard for acceptable behavior?
If you're going to oppose religious fanaticism, then oppose it in all its forms, and open your eyes. Because Bush isn't a secularist. The real "vicious theocratic challenge" to our country is coming from within. Do we have the courage to meet that challenge? Inquiring minds want to know.
Meanwhile, I desperately need to tone down this site and give it a mild redesign. My rock n roll period has ended and my graphics style should reflect that. But my webmaster has fallen in love with an actress and is having trouble leaving the greater Los Angeles area. Would any one of you good people be willing to step into the breach? It really won't be hard. I promise.
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Here Come The Dominionists! [Nov 15, 2004]
I've spent some time the last couple of weeks in this space delivering paranoid warnings about Dominionism, the far-right Christian cult that has taken over the Republican Party and seeks to establish a political system in the United States based on its interpretation of Biblical law.
This is really happening, right now. In our country. And it's not a fringe movement. Tom DeLay, The Speaker Of The House Of Representatives, has said that God is "training" him to "stand up for a Biblical worldview." By "Biblical worldview," he means dismantling the foundations of civil society by any means necessary. No tactic is unethical, because it's all for God.
For the last 25 years, the Dominionists, and I call them that because "Christian right" seems too mild a term, have gone about the quiet business of taking over the Republican Party. This isn't exactly news, but now the other shoe has dropped. It's no accident that 11 states passed laws prohibiting gay marriage this year. Homosexuality is illegal according to Dominionist theology. It's no accident that schoolboards around the country, not just in the South, are starting to make it difficult to teach evolution, which never happened, according to Dominionist theology. All this talk about "activist judges" stems directly from the writing of Gary North, a Dominionist philosopher. And I quote:
"So let us be blunt about it: we must use the doctrine of religious liberty to gain independence for Christian schools until we train up a generation of people who know that there is no religious neutrality, no neutral law, no neutral education, and no neutral civil government. Then they will get busy in constructing a Bible-based social, political and religious order which finally denies the religious liberty of the enemies of God."
Again, let me reiterate. This isn't the writing of a lunatic from the edge. Well, it is, but that edge is the leading edge. According to Dominionism, Christians are mandated to occupy all secular institutions, dismantle them, and ready the world for Christ's return.
All this goes back to the work of the late R.J. Rushdoony, a clearly unhinged man whose seminal text, The Institutes Of Biblical Law, is a guidebook for Dominionism. And I quote: "Man is thus primarily and essentially a religious creature who is truly understood only by reference to his Creator and his ordained destiny under God. Man's destiny, to bring all things under the dominion of God's law-word, confronted man from the beginning of his creation."
You still think this talk is loony? Go to Theocracy Watch, a website that specifically, exhaustively, and legitimately catalogs the encroachment of Dominionism onto American life. It's freaking everywhere, and dominant at the highest levels of government.
This is not about Christianity. It's not even about evangelicalism. If you want to believe that Jesus Christ will return and lift his followers up to heaven, leaving the rest of us to claw one another's eyes out on Earth, that's your business and your right.
I'm telling you, people. Our country is being run by the equivalent of the disciples of L. Ron Hubbard. Their America is a cult.
More to come. This is my quest, and you must fight with me. As Julie Newmar said today about her neighborly conflict with Jim Belushi, "A truce is not done in a superficial manner. There are some folks who must go through a ring of fire to understand life's rules. There are a few of us — very few — who are already there."
You go, Catwoman!
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More great things from the South [Nov 13, 2004]
My post criticising the ubiquitous "Fuck The South" meme sparked an interesting discussion on Hit And Run, the interactive portion of Reason magazine. I'll let the variety of arguments speak for themselves. So read them.
Also, a few readers have pointed out to me that while the Wright Brothers did use a North Carolina hill and a strong breeze to launch their aircraft, the majority of the planning and construction was done in Ohio. Just another example of what emerges when Blue and Red states cooperate.
And yes, I realize that the B52s aren't a very hip reference. So how about this: The South is the birthplace of crunk. There are many afficionados of that fine and subtle musical form in the cities of Atlanta and Houston, specifically, who will be glad to have a calm discussion with you if you insult their homes again. And on their new album The Dirty South, The Drive-By Truckers sing, half in-character, half-not, "Don’t piss off the boys from Alabama/you know they won’t let it slide."
Let's be civil, people. These should be your friends. Underground Texas rap and The Drive-By Truckers are for everyone.
From the Reason posts, an expanded list of great Southern things began to emerge. Feel free to add if you see fit:
Willie Nelson, William Faulkner, Hunter S. Thompson, Andre 3000 and Big Boi, Elvis, The Polyphonic Spree, Norah Jones, Blues, Jazz, Rock & Roll, bourbon, corn dogs, moonpies, Coke, Pepsi, Bill Hicks, Sam Kinison, Mike Judge, the Shenandoah Valley, the Smoky Mountains, mint juleps, Thomas Wolfe, Walker Percy, hush puppies...and twins!
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A Call To Something Greater Than Arms. [Nov 12, 2004]
This evening, I received an email from a gentleman in Woodland, California. His name matters not, but his attitude does, for his attitude, and the attitudes of those who share his attitude, are headed down a dangerous path. The notice went:
"So's here's the deal, the blue states will join in confederacy with Canada; the red states can turn their clocks back two hundred years. Have fun."
Sir, I take grevious offense at that remark. People down here are suffering as much as you are under Bush. Possibly even more. Just because someone votes for the other candidate doesn't mean they're going to "get what they deserve." We all deserve better, and we're all Americans under this goddamn union. Many of your friends are from the Red States. Many of you have relatives in the Red States. There are many gay people down here, and young people who need good health education. Don't abandon us.
Are you really going to let regional differences tear you apart? Nay, I say. You all are going to shut the hell up and get along with your many good Southern neighbors. You'll work together to bring this country up from its knees. This is not a war, for war is the refuge of the weak. The forces of hatred and intolerance know only war. In all regions of this country, we stand for goodness and the integrity of the human spirit, not the negative shibboleths of bigotry and fear. We rise above.
No, this will be a movement of peace, and it will wash over the country like a cleansing wave. All hail the glorious worker's revolution! May it reign in heaven for one thousand years.
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The Poetry Of The Blue States [Nov 11, 2004]
I'm going to wrap up another busy week of literary onanism encouraging you all to donate money to the students of Harlem's Frederick Douglass Academy, who, thanks to the hard work of my new friend Lee Isles and many others, now possess their own copies of The Old Man And The Sea and The House On Mango Street, two books whose only commonality is the fact that their titles begin with "The." Now Lee is trying to raise money so the class can enjoy a unit on The Harlem Renaissance. Read these letters from students if your heartstrings aren't already tugged, and please donate through the link above if you see fit.
Now then, what else? Brutal, senseless slaughter in Fallujah. Move along. Nothing to see here.
And, since it seems to be my current destiny to track ridiculous, immature, and pompous generalizations about the "Red States" by residents of the "Blue States," I would like to present you with a poem by a writer named Adam Wasson, which may serve as the eulogy to this terrible genre of writing. Thanks to Susan Mainzer for calling it to my attention. And now,
My State is Blue
by Adam Wasson
Today you are joyous while I’m filled with rue
I canvassed, I voted, what more could I do?
I said invasion and you said “rescue”
Your state is red; my state is blue
You protect companies I want to sue
I’m pro-first amendment, you like number two
You promote abstinence; I like to screw
Your state is red; my state is blue
You say “be strong” and I say “be true”
I say “homophobia,” you say “value”
You’re killing health care and I’ve got the flu
Your state is red; my state is blue
You like the Cowboys, I side with the Sioux
My pets go “meow” and your pets go “moo”
You think that crap in the Bible is true
Your state is red; my state is blue
I fought the good fight, did all I could do
There are millions of me, and yet more of you
Oh Cheney, Cheney, you bastard, I’m through
Your state is red; my state is blue
Adam, there are so many words that rhyme with "blue." It's easy! Let me try a verse.
I like Bruce Springsteen but you like the Crue
You'd rather shoot children than go to the zoo.
My shit smells like roses, but yours is just poo.
Your state is red; my state is blue.
What a goofball. Have a great weekend.
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Ted, Ted, Ted [Nov 11, 2004]
Just when I thought it was safe to do actual work again, the left's most offensive and annoying writer, Ted Rall, has once again undone the hard work of millions of people with a snide column full of half-assed snobbery. I thnk the following quote will give you an idea:
"But if militant Christianist Republicans from inland backwaters believe that secular liberal Democrats from the big coastal cities look upon them with disdain, there's a reason. We do, and all the more so after this election. ... By any objective standard, you had to be spectacularly stupid to support Bush... So our guy lost the election. Why shouldn't those of us on the coasts feel superior? We eat better, travel more, dress better, watch cooler movies, earn better salaries, meet more interesting people, listen to better music and know more about what's going on in the world."
What, exactly, Ted, are "cooler movies"? Do you think you're better than Bush voters because you preferred Garden State to Torque? And do you and your friends really "earn better salaries"? Because I know a lot of really marginal types in Blue States and a lot of pretty-well-off people in Red States. So you've been to Paris and Thailand and have seen The New Pornographers live. So you "dress better" than someone who works in a factory all day. That doesn't make you any less provincial.
Rall spends a paragraph decrying his suburban Ohio upbringing. It was an "OK place to grow up" with "decent public schools." But apparently there weren't any good Chinese restaurants and people there didn't appreciate young Ted Rall's dream of growing up to become a perpetually angry purveyor of paranoid line art. That's such an original viewpoint. Never before has a sensitive and artistic young man felt hemmed in by his surroundings and misunderstood by his peers.
People have always escaped the suburbs and the country for the cities. Of course the cities offer more diversity and opportunity. But they also offer endless opportunities for smug insularity. Ted Rall, you're certainly prolific. And when your work isn't expressly, didactically political, you even have insight. But as a secular liberal Democrat who, for the moment, doesn't live in one of the big coastal cities, I can tell you for certain that you're not "more interesting" than anyone else, and that your favorite bands suck.
Here are some letters from American soldiers who died in Iraq, sent to their friends and relatives in unsophisticated small towns and suburbs. Many of them, I'm sure, supported Bush, and are, therefore, "spectacularly stupid." I'm sure they'll be glad to know that Ted Rall watches cooler movies than they do.
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Don't Fuck The South [Nov 10, 2004]
I know I promised I wouldn't post again this week, but I've been receiving emails all day about this site, because people think I'll find it "funny." Well, it's not funny. The writer makes some valid points about how the South seems to get a disproportionate amount of federal pork. That, I'll give him. But as for the rest of his (or her) argument, I can say one word: Nonsense.
The South isn't the only region of the country that is over-pious about its churchgoing and aggressive in trumpeting its "values." You can find equal culprits all over the country. This isn't a regional conflict we're in, it's an intellectual one, and people live on both sides of the debate in every state. Northern stereotypes about the South are snobbish and annoying. Enough already!
I was born in Memphis, grew up in Phoenix, got married in Nashville, went on my honeymoon in North Carolina, and live in Austin. Many dear friends grew up in and still reside below the Mason-Dixon Line. The South is diverse. It's varied. And yes, it's ignorant in many ways. But I've never lived in a more segregated place than Chicago, the epitome of a great Northern city, and have never seen as much concentrated poverty and injustice in this country as when I lived in Philadelphia, the birthplace of our Constitution. So spare me the superiority rap.
The south gave us Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, Michael Jordan, Hank Williams, Tennessee Williams, fried chicken, Gone With The Wind, Truman Capote, pecan pie, barbecue, Mark Twain, and manned flight. The list goes on and on. Thomas Jefferson and George Washington were both from Virginia, both founding fathers and both gun-toting slave owners. If you say 'fuck the South," you're saying fuck Nashville and Charlotte and Charleston, and Atlanta, and Austin, and New Orleans, and Athens, Georgia, the city that gave us the B52s and R.E.M. and...OK, well, fuck R.E.M. But that has nothing to do with the South.
I assume this person is a Democrat. The last three Democratic Presidents came from Texas, Georgia, and Arkansas, respectively. I say this to all of you who think it's funny and wise to say "fuck the South." If you fuck the South, you're fucking yourselves.
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