Applesauce
Pat Cunningham offers an unabashedly liberal perspective on national politics. A note of caution: The language gets a litttle salty on some of the sites to which this blog links. So, don’t say you weren’t warned. By the way, this blog’s name is inspired by the Will Rogers quote, “All politics is applesauce.”

Archive for April 29th, 2008

A couple of things I didn’t know at first

5 comments April 29th, 2008

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If you’ll bear with me, I have a personal story to tell here that relates to a few of the issues that loom in this year’s presidential race.

During my vacation up North last summer, I read Malcolm Gladwell’s best-seller “Blink — The Power of Thinking Without Thinking.”

Toward the end of this wonderful book, Gladwell writes of what he calls “A Revolution in Classical Music.” Sounds boring, I thought, but the tale turns out to be about music only in a sociological sense.

Not so long ago, Gladwell notes, there were very few female musicians in symphony orchestras.  The problem, as the evidence now makes irrefutably clear, was latent sexism.

 Auditions were held where the maestros who were doing the hiring could see as well as hear the prospective employees, and thus biases, unconscious or otherwise, came into play.

Lots of orchestra bosses had the notion that women weren’t well-suited to play certain instruments — trombones, for instance. And even with regard to more presumably feminine instruments like strings, women applicants weren’t always judged purely on the merits of their music.

But when the idea arose that auditions should be held with the musicians unseen behind screens, the world of classical music changed forever.  The bosses had no choice but to make hiring decisions without regard to gender. Not even their subconscious prejudices could influence the process.

Writes Gladwell: “In the past 30 years, since screens became commonplace, the number of women in the top U.S. orchestras has increased fivefold.”

Two experiences of my own last year were not unlike what those orchestra maestros must have felt when they discovered their perhaps unconscious biases against women musicians.

Both of these cases involve prominent bloggers, one who writes under a pseudonym and the other whose face I never saw in a photo until he died.

The pseudonymous blogger is known to readers of the Hullabaloo site simply as Digby.  I’ve long been a big fan of Digby, whose work I frequently cited in a blog I had before this one.  When Digby won some kind of hotshot award, I considered it well-deserved. But when the plaque (or whatever) was conferred at a gala ceremony, Digby turned out not to be the clever guy I had expected.  She’s a clever woman.

I was almost embarrassed at how surprised I was.  Why did I assume that Digby was a man?  Do male pundits write differently from their female counterparts?  I wasn’t the only one.  Nobody in the blogosphere knew Digby was a woman, and expressions of surprise abounded. (Incidentally, she still hasn’t revealed her real name.)

The other blogger in this tale was Steve Gilliard, who ran a popular site called The News Blog until his death from heart and kidney problems in June 2007 at age 42.

Gilliard, a great writer and passionate partisan, was hugely influential among liberal blogs.  His expertise on military history in the Middle East added authority to his perspectives on the war in Iraq, and he was quoted widely.

As a great admirer of Gilliard, I was shocked at news of his sudden death — and shocked again to learn that he was black. Why, I asked myself, should I be surprised?

As this presidential campaign season progresses, with issues of race and gender at the forefront, I occasionally think of the musicians in Gladwell’s story and of the writing talents of Steve Gilliard and Digby.

I can’t help but wonder how the American people would react if they could read the position papers and the statements in debates offered by John McCain, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama without knowing that one was a septuagenarian, one a woman, and one a black man.

What roles do our prejudices, even if they’re only subconscious, play in our opinions of these candidates?

When we look back on the great statesmen of American history, most of them are politicians who were never heard or seen (except in drawings or paintings) by most of the public they served. 

It used to be that the only way Americans had of judging their leaders was to read what they had to say. (Of course, the race and gender angles were taken for granted.  Only white men were eligible.)

So, there are two other questions to consider here before closing: 1) How would today’s politicians fare in the kind of system that gave us Jefferson and Lincoln, et al? And, 2) How would those giants of long ago fare in the kind of system we have today, with its white-hot media focus and its obsession with trivialities?   

Barack Obama has found his running mate — and she’s 82 years old

Add comment April 29th, 2008

Politics aside, this is just plain fun to watch:

The Clinton-McCain gas-tax holiday plan

Add comment April 29th, 2008

Hillary touts it in this ad:

Barack Obama debunks it in this speech:

Obama blasts Wright in no uncertain terms

8 comments April 29th, 2008

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There’s a good overview HERE,  and various reactions can be found HERE and HERE and HERE and HERE.

As for me, I’m not sure if this is the beginning of the end of this issue as a political distraction.  Nor can I yet guess whether Obama’s remarks today will help him in next Tuesday’s balloting in North Carolina and Indiana.

But one thing’s for sure, Obama’s break with his former pastor is complete and final.

POSTSCRIPT: If I read one more time that Obama has thrown Wright — or anybody else has thrown anybody else —  ”under the bus,” I’m going to hurl.  It’s time for that expression to be thrown under the bus.  It’s sooo last year, y’know?

Open thread

12 comments April 29th, 2008

OK, let’s give this thing a try.

I’m going out for a while, so you’re free to engage one another here on whatever subjects you like.

But play nice, please.

What oughta be a law (or not a law)?

Add comment April 29th, 2008

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The Chi Trib’s political blog, The Swamp, TELLS US about a gimmick cooked up by U.S. Rep. Peter Roskam (above) of the 6th Congressional District of Illinois, west of Chicago.

Roskam, a Republican, is running a competition for the best legislative ideas from his constituents. What do you want to bet that the winners will be no-brainers (in one way or another)?

Incidentally, Roskam,  a right-wing rubber stamp for the Bush administration, defeated Democrat Tammy Duckworth in the 2006 election.  During the campaign, he decried those who would “cut and run” from Iraq — an insensitive comment considering that Duckworth lost both her legs in Iraq when the Blackhawk helicopter she piloted was shot down.

Associated Press drinks McCain’s Kool-Aid

15 comments April 29th, 2008

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It’s astonishing how the nation’s principal wire service is buying into the Republican line concerning a TV ad about John McCain’s rhetoric regarding Iraq.

Josh Marshall explains HERE.

POSTSCRIPT: By the way, when are the AP and the other media going to give the Rev. Wright treatment to the racist neo-confederate who serves as an ADVISER to McCain’s campaign?  Just askin’.

POSTSCRIPT II: Well, well, well. Lookie HERE: Three years before McCain argued on the campaign trail that U.S. forces could be in Iraq for 100 years in the absence of violence, he decried the very concept of a long-term troop presence. Another flip-flop by Mr. Straight Talk.

Rezko witness says plan was for Hastert to pick a hack to replace prosecutor Fitzgerald

8 comments April 29th, 2008

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Last week, I passed along a REPORT that a potential witness in the Tony Rezko corruption trial was prepared to testify about efforts involving the White House to get U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald fired.

Now we have TESTIMONY from another witness to the effect that the plan was for Fitzgerald to be succeeded by a hack chosen by then-House Speaker Dennis Hastert and that said hack would kill the federal investigation of Rezko’s questionable activities.


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