Posted on 07/26/2010 1:39:05 AM PDT by militanttoby
Sarah Palins speech to the 2008 Republican convention impressed more than a few doubters, including even some members of Journolist, an online community for liberal journalists.
This speech is gangbusters, wrote Ari Melber of the Nation. Her tone is pitch perfect. Adele Stan of the Media Consortium agreed: Palin is golden.
The exuberance appeared to unnerve the Guardians Michael Tomasky. People get a hold of yourselves! Tomasky wrote to his fellow Journolisters. Its a very good speech with good lines. But theres very little substance.
Rebecca Traister of Salon wrote to say she was grateful for Tomaskys message discipline. (This is a reassuring sentiment, since at the moment, I feel like were in End Times.) But the rest of the country apparently didnt agree. Polls a few days later showed Obamas lead in the race had narrowed to virtually nothing.
Palins speech had been remarkably effective. This troubled members of Journolist. On Sept. 8, 2008, five days after Palins national debut, some members of the group discussed producing coordinated propaganda designed to wound Palin and boost Obama.
At an appearance in Colorado immediately following the convention, Palin had remarked that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had gotten too big and too expensive for the taxpayers, a point that seems commonplace now, but that at the time struck some as controversial.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...
Welcome Back, Dad
I've been trying to convince my fellow conservatives that they have been wasting their time in a fruitless quest for a new Ronald Reagan to emerge and lead our party and our nation. I insisted that we'd never see his like again because he was one of a kind. I was wrong! Wednesday night I watched the Republican National Convention on television and there, before my very eyes, I saw my Dad reborn; only this time he's a she. And what a she! This was Ronald Reagan at his best -- the same Ronald Reagan who made the address known now solely as "The Speech," which during the Goldwater campaign set the tone and the agenda for the rebirth of the traditional conservative movement that later sent him to the White House for eight years and revived the moribund GOP. Welcome back, Dad, even if you're wearing a dress and bearing children this time around.
~Michael Reagan, talk radio host and son of President Ronald Reagan
I watched that speech and it was good. Since then I gave heard conservatives repeat the exact things Journo-baggers said about Palin. The repetition works.
You got that right! bttt
Raw Journolist emails on Palins first miscue
By The Daily Caller 3:47 AM 07/26/2010
http://dailycaller.com/2010/07/26/raw-journolist-emails-on-palins-first-miscue/
Adam Doster
Sept 8, 2008, 2:18pm
Misunderstanding housing policy in the midst of a major housing crisis
Speaking before voters in Colorado Springs, the Republican vice presidential
nominee claimed that lending giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had gotten too big and too expensive to the taxpayers. The companies, as McClatchy reported , arent taxpayer funded but operate as private companies. The takeover may result in
a taxpayer bailout during reorganization.
Now, you can all jump on me about how Im underestimating VP Palin. But really? The HuffPo hed is misleading this is not a gaffe, it just shows her policy vapidness. I wouldnt be surprised if we see a lot more of these over the next two months.
Adam
Adam Serwer
Sept 8, 2008, 2:19pm
But shes so AUTHENTIC! Authentic non-elitist Americans dont worry about this stuff, they worry about how to teach their kids how to shoot m-16s and use withdrawal as birth control.
Harold Pollack
Sept 8, 2008, 2:22pm
That quote is too general to be damaging. It would take Dean or Doug Holtz-Eakin about 30 seconds to interpret Palins comment in a policy-plausible way.
Adele Stan
Sept 8, 2008, 2:37pm
this is not a gaffe. its more likely a lie. suits her big-govt-out-to-screw-ya narrative. and harolds right; this is too easy for the average voter to accept.
dont mistake palin as a stupid hick. shes pretty smart..
Dana Goldstein
Sept 8, 2008, 2:42pm
Agree with Harold. And whats more, this is something McCain or any other Republican (Romney) would totally say. Sure, they got too big and dependent dependent on the taxpayers for a bailout. We may not agree with the ideology behind the statement, but its no proof of Palins particular ignorance.
Harold Pollack
Sept 8, 2008, 2:44pm
On Adeles hick front, I would emphasize that its Palins small-mindedness, not her small-town roots, we find so appalling. Hubert Humphrey hailed from Wallace, South Dakota, Harry Truman from Lamar, Missouri, Jimmy Carter from Plains, Georgia.John Edwards, etc.
Ezra Klein
Sept 8, 2008, 2:46pm
I think you are all reading the quote too closely and giving the context too little weight. When McCain gave the first part of his speech before Walter Reed High, it was fine. If Obama had done it, it wouldve ended the election. Similarly, Palin cant be seen to be unaware of what shes talking about right now, even if the actual issue is technical. The subject, in other words, is only important so much as it gives folks time to talk about the deeper failing.
Ryan Avent
Sept 8, 2008, 2:54pm
Agreed. If we were the GOP, wed be taking this opportunity to shout long and loud how unprepared Palin is*She doesnt even know what Fannie and Freddie are..in the middle of a housing crisis! Of course shes learning from the master, who thinks a housing crisis means having to fire the staff at one of his seven mansions.* The actual content of the quote wouldnt matter, nor would the probably reasonable defense mounted by her supporters.
Thats the difference in the game as played by us and by them.
Michael Tomasky
Sept 8, 2008, 2:58pm
So why arent Dems doing that? Just wundrin
Michael Kazin
Sept 8, 2008, 3:00pm
They seem to have been infected by Kerryitis, one hopes in a milder strain. More town meetings in Western PA aint gonna cut it
Kathleen Geier
Sept 8, 2008, 3:01pm
Im unsure. Her ignorance is alarming, and Id like to think it would make voters worry about whether shes really up to the job.
On the other hand, the GOP obviously takes great pride in being the stupid party. And hey its worked!
If we made an issue of this, not sure if it would be a winner or a loser.
Luke Mitchell
Sept 8, 2008, 3:03pm
Michael Isnt this something that can be fanned a bit by, say, the Guardian?
Robert Kuttner
Sept 8, 2008, 2:03pm
Yes, but they just take every opportunity to play hardball, and too often our folks play beanbag.
Michael Tomasky
Sept 8, 2008, 3:05pm
I now think the whole Palin narrative is a loser for Ds. If she doesnt flub up, she was underestimated and shes brilliant and the Dems were sneering elitists. If she does flub ub, its the liberal media that was out to get her from the start.
Keep the firepower aimed at McCain, get the story back on him. If something *big* comes out about her, fine. Until then, maybe try to catch her in the Bridge lie, but otherwise leave her alone.
Michael Tomasky
Sept 8, 2008, 3:06pm
The Guardian? Youre kidding right? Remember the Clark County letters?
David Roberts
Sept 8, 2008, 3:08pm
Thats the difference in the game as played by us and by them.
Namely, we suck at it and we always lose, even when historical circumstances are overwhelmingly in our favor. God, cant this thing just be over.
Katha Pollitt
Sept 8, 2008, 3:11pm
I dont understand this. i thought this time, the Dems got it about needing to be aggressive. obama said over and over he wasnt going to be a patsy. How come we get it and they dont????? If the Dems lose this by being too lofty, I will become a Buddhist nun. there will really be no point to all the work and effort and hysteria we go through every four years. Obama, remember, is supposed to be this fabulously talented politician. So???
Adele Stan
Sept 8, 2008, 3:12pm
I think turning the story back to McCain now that Palins in the mix is almost wishful thinking.
Luke Mitchell
Sept 8, 2008, 3:15pm
Re: Clark County Letters, fair enough! But it seems to me that a concerted effort on the part of the left partisan press could be useful. Why geld ourselves? A lot of the people on this list work for organizations that are far more influential than, say, the Washington Times. Open question: Would it be a good use of this list to co-ordinate a message of the week along the lines of the GOP. Or is that too loathsome? It certainly sounds loathsome. But so does losing!
Ezra Klein
Sept 8, 2008, 3:18pm
Nope, no message coordination. Im not even sure that would be legal. This is a discussion list, though, and I want it to retain that character.
Katha Pollitt
Sept 8, 2008, 3:20pm
I think what you say is kind of like, ignore the swiftboaters, you only lend them credibility by taking them on. Palin matters because she is in the spotlight. Shes the celebrity. shes the personality kid!
We cant be passive. she wont destroy herself her flubs will be explained away or equated with slips by the Dems or rebraned as amusing foible (like GWBs Grecians) and the charlie gibson media will go along.
Michael Cohen
Sept 8, 2008, 3:14pm
Adam, in an ideal world this would be a big deal, but dont you know by now that the GOP operates under different rules. For example, John McCain said this in January and no one batted an eye:
People talk about a stimulus package. Fine, if thats what we want to come up with. But stop the spending first.
For a guy who has spent 26 years in DC you would think that he would understand the basic tenets of fiscal policy or the role of government spending in serving as an economic stimulus . . . but alas he does not.
So really this is pretty minimal stuff . . .
Luke Mitchell
Sept 8, 2008, 3:23pm
Fair enough, Ezra! The list is great at as it is and I didnt mean to suggest anything out of bounds. I am still curious about the reluctance of the left media to organize, though. The message discipline on the right seems to be one of its key advantages.
Adam Dorster
Sept 8, 2008, 3:31pm
I was only pointing out the line because I thought it telling, not questioning why it wasnt considered a big deal or advocating for people to throw down the gauntlet about it. I know in the grand scheme of things its small potatoes and can be easily explained away. But I honestly believe that in this election cycle, she and McCain will pay for their shallowness. I dont know why. I have no reason to believe so. Just a hunch.
A
David Roberts
Sept 8, 2008, 3:34pm
Just read past messages on this list, Luke. Everyone here is a /journalist /or an /independent analyst/. Their job is to /say what they think/, not to support Obama. Suggest that they focus on more electorally helpful and equally true messages, and they will bridle.
There simply is nothing on the left like the partisan media on the right. The left has no media soldiers, only ironically distanced media observers. Dems should do this. Dems should do that. Why isnt Obama saying this? Why isnt Obama saying that? All from a great height, with great detachment.
Im not bashing. Im guilty too. I just despair. Were going to lose again, for all the same damn reasons.
Katha Pollitt
Sept 8, 2008, 3:41pm
Well, Okay, j-list isnt the place. But people who think message discipline is a good idea can start another list, and promote the weekly message there.
Jaana Goodrich
Sept 8, 2008, 3:57pm
Four More Years. Four More Years. Four More Years.
Thats what I would use against McCains attempts to capture Obamas message of change. Use the message that really drives the Republicans and show it to the voters.
Ed Kilgore
Sept 8, 2008, 4:18pm
I agree with Jaana, in a bit more detail. All this wailing and gnashing of teeth about Palin getting away with something Obama couldnt get away with, or the net convention bounce, or insufficient message-coordination in the progressive media, obscures the giant, unmistakable, uncomplicated bullseye McCain has now painted on his back with indelible ink: The Maverick Meme. Look at the latest McCain ad: he and Palin are identified as fighting the Republicans and fighting oil companies and drug companies. Youd never know they were GOPers, or supported virtually all of Bush policies (except for those they oppose FROM THE RIGHT) from these ads.
It requires no particular strategic genius or message coordination to recognize that we and the Obama campaign have the next two months to demonstrate that McCain and Palin represent the status quo party, the status quo ideology, and status quo policies. That is not terribly difficult. If it doesnt work, then I think we have to begin
to consider the possibility that the country actually wants another conservative administration led by someone less despicable or incompetent than George Bush. Either way, I dont think day-to-day tactical brilliance is that critical, and I also doubt that all of us grinding away at the same tactical talking points like cicadas matters much, either. Either McCain pulls off the maverick deception, or he loses. Everything else is secondary, IMO.
Ed Kilgore
Sept 8, 2008, 4:28pm
Just to make my point completely clear, if you made me Progressive Message Czar for today, Id order everyone to link to Toles cartoon from yesterday. It says everything important that needs to be said.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/opinions/cartoonsandvideos/toles ;
Greg Anrig
Sept 8, 2008, 4:37pm
Plus the cartoon has the added virtue of being funny. Remember that bit where Obama made fun of the Republicans for taking pride in being ignorant about the tire pressure gauges? He and Biden could easily make the Toles idea a riff in their stump speeches. Its the right message and the one theyve been making. They just need to stick to it and try to find new, clever, funny ways to keep hammering away at it. And in the process make it clear that McCain is even more dangerous than Bush.
Nico Pitney
Sept 8, 2008, 4:41pm
Obama took your advice to heart
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/politicalintelligence/2008/09/a_good_line_but.html
* *
*A good line, but not Obamas*
Scott Helman
Boston Globes Political Intelligence Blog
September 8, 2008
Campaigning in Terre Haute, Ind. on Saturday, Barack Obama, mocking claims by John McCain and Sarah Palin that they will challenge their Republican Party if elected, got off a pretty good line. Maybe what theyre saying is, Watch out George Bush, Obama said with sarcasm, according to NBC News. Except for economic policies, and tax policies, and energy policies, and health care policies, and education policies, and Karl Rove-style politics except for all that, were really going to bring change to Washington! Were really going to shake things up!
It wasnt Obamas line, though. It came from Washington Post cartoonist Tom Toles, whose cartoon Friday featured these words along with a drawing of McCain and Sarah Palin in front of the White House: Watch out, Mr. Bush! With the exception of economic policy and energy policy and social issues and tax policy and foreign policy and Supreme Court appointments and Rove-style politics, were coming in there to shake things up! (See the cartoon here.)
Asked about the borrowing, Obama spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Obama used Toless lines unwittingly, after being alerted to them by a friend who didnt mention the source.
This came to Senator Obama from a friend who didnt indicate where he had gotten it from, but the questions it raises certainly continue to ring true, Psaki said in an email. He did not know it was from a cartoon and now that he does he will certainly credit the cartoonist.
In fact, the campaign says, Obama used the line again while campaiging today in Michigan, this time crediting the cartoon in The Washington Post.
Greg Anrig
Sept 8, 2008, 4:44pm
And of course the Globe turns it into a story about plagiarism!
Adam Serwer
Sept 8, 2008, 4:45pm
well of course, dems are all big phonies.
Adam Serwer
Sept 8, 2008, 4:46pm
its not like the mccain campaign stole their theme of change from anyone else this election cycle.
Ed Kilgore
Sept 8, 2008, 5:01pm
Well, the Obama follow-up should be: Sometimes it takes a cartoon to fight a cartoon, and the real cartoon is the latest ad from my opponents, which claims they are the original mavericks whove devoted themselves to criticizing Republicans and fighting oil and drug companies. Daffy Duck is the only character who could approve
that message.
Todd Gitlin
Sept 8, 2008, 9:37pm
On the question of liberals coordinating, what the hells wrong with some critical mass of liberal bloggers & journalists saying the following among themselves:
McCain lies about his maverick status. Routinely, cavalierly, cynically. Palin lies about her maverick status. Ditto, ditto, ditto. McCain has a wretched temperament. McCain is a warmonger. Palin belongs to a crackpot church and feels warmly about a crackpot
party that trashes America.
Repeat after me:
McCain lies about his maverick status. Routinely, cavalierly, cynically. Palin lies about her maverick status. Ditto, ditto, ditto. McCain has a wretched temperament. McCain is a warmonger. Palin belongs to a crackpot church and feels warmly about a crackpot
party that trashes America.
These people are cynical. These people are taking you for a ride. These people are fakes. These people love Bush.
Again. And again. Vary the details. There are plenty. Somebody on the list posted a strong list of McCain lies earlier today. Hammer it. Philosophize, as Nietzsche said, with a hammer.
I dont know about any of you, but Im not waiting for any coordination. Get on with it!
Lindsay Beyerstein
Sept 8, 2008, 11:00pm
I bet it was a mistake born of ignorance.
If she knew the truth, then she also knew that she would appear to be making an elementary mistake which could damage her credibility with anyone who cares about these issues, Republicans as well as Democrats.
There are plenty of merely spurious or misleading things she could have said about Fannie and Freddie that would have been just as ideologically satisfying and harder to debunk.
Adele Stan
Sept 8, 2008, 11:04pm
I really doubt that.
Lindsay Beyerstein
Sept 8, 2008, 11:37pm
If she knew perfectly well that Fannie and Freddie were private companies, why would she go out of her way to lie in a way that made her look stupid?
If she knew what she was talking about, she wouldnt have had to resort to such an obvious falsehood to advance her narrative.
Palin got savaged on the gubernatorial campaign trail for her shaky grasp of economics. One of her opponents in that race characterized her statements about the state budget as gibberish.
Rick Perlstein
Sept 9, 2008, 10:02am
I suspect theres a heavy Shock Doctrine/Predator State angle to the takeover that hasnt been exploredthat the right sees taking over F and F as a prelude to selling them off. Already, one of my wingnuts sent me a triumphant email claiming that this is one more pillar of the New Deal the conservative movement has now pulled down. Sarah might be setting up that kind of interpretation when she says F&F
equal Big Government.
There are those who will scoff at these sentiments, but only out of a misplaced form of jealous rage. The ridicule of weak, empty people means nothing. Jesus Himself was ridiculed by such as these, then ascended to the right hand of God Almighty.
I thank God for Sarah Palin. Praise God for blessing us so.
:-/
Gitlin. President of the SDS. His utopian dream wasn't the Soviet Union but Vietnam under Ho and Cuba under Fidel. David Horowitz writes about him here in Unholy alliance: radical Islam and the American left.
Todd Gitlin
Sept 8, 2008, 9:37pm
On the question of liberals coordinating, what the hells wrong with some critical mass of liberal bloggers & journalists saying the following among themselves:
McCain lies about his maverick status. Routinely, cavalierly, cynically. Palin lies about her maverick status. Ditto, ditto, ditto. McCain has a wretched temperament. McCain is a warmonger. Palin belongs to a crackpot church and feels warmly about a crackpot
party that trashes America.
Repeat after me:
McCain lies about his maverick status. Routinely, cavalierly, cynically. Palin lies about her maverick status. Ditto, ditto, ditto. McCain has a wretched temperament. McCain is a warmonger. Palin belongs to a crackpot church and feels warmly about a crackpot
party that trashes America.
These people are cynical. These people are taking you for a ride. These people are fakes. These people love Bush.
Again. And again. Vary the details. There are plenty. Somebody on the list posted a strong list of McCain lies earlier today. Hammer it. Philosophize, as Nietzsche said, with a hammer.
I dont know about any of you, but Im not waiting for any coordination. Get on with it!
. . .
This guy is a journalism professor at Columbia.
I’m glad transcripts are coming out because these “discussions” are even worse in their full context.
Sickening.
We truly need a reckoning in this nation. Reading this made me want to ktfo every one of these communist a holes.
Communist a-holes is right. Check this one:
ALYSSA ROSENBERG, GOVERNMENT EXECUTIVE: Ive gotta be all non-partisan on GovExec, so I hope youll all indulge me a minute here. On Monday night in Manassas, the band warming up the crowd before Obama arrived played I Need You To Survive. I think the core lyrics are pretty good statement of principles for progressives, especially going forward from a victory like this one:
It is his will, that every need be supplied.
You are important to me, I need you to survive.
You are important to me, I need you to survive.
I pray for you, You pray for me.
I love you, I need you to survive.
I wont harm you with words from my mouth.
I love you, I need you to survive.
It is his will, that every need be supplied.
You are important to me, I need you to survive.
A lot of horribly ugly stuff got repudiated tonight. But it doesnt end here. We need to keep making the case to the folks who disagreed with us, the folks who booed McCain during his concession speech tonight.
Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2010/07/21/obama-wins-and-journolisters-rejoice/#ixzz0umZJbqUt
Thanks for copying those emails to the thread.
I added some “new names” to the thread BuckeyeTexan has of the “JournoListers”.
You can find the list here:
JournoList: 122 Names Confirmed (with News Organizations)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/2558838/
I did a little digging and found a little about each of these “new faces”.
KATHLEEN GEIER - Talking Points Memo (TPM)
I only found her profile from TPM in Googles Cache, but Im assuming this is the person from the list.
I found her at TPM through a link on DU. I also found her name referenced by fellow JournoLister Katha Pollitt in a column about McCain which you can read here: http://www.thenation.com/blog/mccain-may-be-old-hes-still-threat
Note: Interestingly there is also a Kathleen Geier that lived in Wasilla, Alaska during the 80s. I do not think they are the same person though.
ROBERT KUTTNER -
Co-Founder & Co-Editor of The American Prospect
Co-Founder of The Economic Policy Institute
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Kuttner
Writer at Huffington Post (info. from Google search revealing his profile, and recent columns there)
JAANA GOODRICH -
Blogger, Echidne of the Snake
Contributing author, The American Prospect (see J. Goodrich)
NICO PITNEY -
National Editor, The Huffington Post
Previously the Deputy Research Director at the Center for American Progress and Managing Editor of ThinkProgress.
(see bio at HuffPo: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/the-news/reporting/nico-pitney )
SCOTT HELMAN -
The Boston Globe
This from a guy who thinks the whinly little b!tch speaks more than applause talking points.
Yeah...non-partisan. Here she is on GovExec in 2007 helping Democrats in a scheme to prosecute Bush staffers:
Employee advocates cite disparities in Hatch Act enforcement
Repetition does work, so how about this:
Palin is not the messiah, nor is she another Reagan. Government under President Palin will not make our economy perfect, nor will it cure bad breath. All I can say for her is that she is so far the best hope our country has to more back in the direction of a limited and constitutional government that allows the American people to solve our own problems. If that’s not enough for her to earn our votes, then we no longer deserve freedom and prosperity.
Amen.
“While other members of the group debated whether to coordinate a pro-Obama message or, more precisely, whether to concede that such a message was being coordinated Todd Gitlin of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism had already made up his mind. Gitlin, whose job is to train the next generation of Americas most elite journalists, wrote this impassioned plea on behalf of the Obama campaign:
On the question of liberals coordinating, what the hells wrong with some critical mass of liberal bloggers & journalists saying the following among themselves:
McCain lies about his maverick status. Routinely, cavalierly, cynically. Palin lies about her maverick status. Ditto, ditto, ditto. McCain has a wretched temperament. McCain is a warmonger. Palin belongs to a crackpot church and feels warmly about a crackpot party that trashes America.
Repeat after me:
McCain lies about his maverick status. Routinely, cavalierly, cynically. Palin lies about her maverick status. Ditto, ditto, ditto. McCain has a wretched temperament. McCain is a warmonger. Palin belongs to a crackpot church and feels warmly about a crackpot party that trashes America.
These people are cynical. These people are taking you for a ride. These people are fakes. These people love Bush.
Again. And again. Vary the details. There are plenty. Somebody on the list posted a strong list of McCain lies earlier today. Hammer it. Philosophize, as Nietzsche said, with a hammer.
I dont know about any of you, but Im not waiting for any coordination. Get on with it!
(end snip)
Isn’t it time we do a phone call and email campaign to seek this man’s firing? Anybody game? I’ve had enough of this crap. It’s time to fight fire with fire. This man doesn’t deserve to be teaching finger painting 101, much else journalism.
Perhaps it’s time to flood the dean’s office with righteous indignation about this school teaching dishonest propaganda and calling it ‘journalism’.
It’s time to demand this man’s resignation and/or firing from Columbia.
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