and your opportunity to express, in fewer than 500 words, why you don’t care.
February 24, 2008
The Journalist-Poet, or, Postmodernistastes [Dan Collins]
So doth the Astronomer looke upon the starres, and by that he seeth set downe what order nature hath taken therein. So doth the Geometritian & Arithmetitian, in their divers sorts of quantities. So doth the Musitians intimes tel you, which by nature agree, which not. The natural Philosopher thereon hath his name, and the morall Philosopher standeth uppon the naturall vertues, vices, or passions of man: and follow nature
Dems 2008: Hillary tries her hand at mocking the Obamessiah [Karl]
The video is at the HuffPo, along with a whole lot of horrified Obamaniacs. Not a bad start, though she might want to crib from the faux ads that have run on Rush Limbaugh’s program.
Assassin Nation [Dan Collins]
From William Kern at The Moderate Voice: One of the most disturbing questions that Barack Obama’s candidacy raises is this: What if he were murdered? If Barack Obama won the Democratic nomination and was gunned down before November, what effect would this have on the presidential race? In this uncomfortable op-ed from Mexico’s Excelsior newspaper, Francisco MartÃÂn Moreno outlines what he sees as the danger to the United States and the rest
Dems 2008: Al Gore is no John Hancock [Karl]
Dan Gerstein, a Democratic strategist supporting Barack Obama for president, submits a bizzare column to the Politico: Over the last few weeks, the euphoria Democrats felt over the embarrassment of riches we have for presidential candidates has given way to befuddlement over the embarrassment of a process we have for nominating one of them. Can’t tell the difference between (or the rationales for) a caucus and a primary? No worries: Just
Dems 2008: The Obama counter-current [Karl]
Beneath the surface of Barack Obama’s 10-0 run of primary and caucus victories over Hillary Clinton, a counter-current to the tide of Obama-mania has been developing.  It goes back as least as far as Dahlia Lithwick’s “letter from a young, hip, cynical former Obamaniac” in Slate, followed the next day by John Dickerson asking: Isn’t the generation that Obama has so successfully courted usually the first to toss overhyped products, even the overhyped
Election 2008: Who says negative campaigning doesn’t work? [Karl]
McClatchy’s David Lightman, for one: Hillary Clinton apparently thought that she had a killer sound bite during Thursday’s debate when she ripped Barack Obama as a promoter of “change your can Xerox.” Instead, the audience booed, critics winced and once again the New York senator’s attempt to demonize her rival fell flat, another illustration of how 2008, at least so far, is the year that negative campaigning just doesn’t work
