are over, people are going into Rove-watch mode. When and where will the October surprise come from? Who’s going to be in on the whisper campaign? How many Democrat registration forms are going to be destroyed? How many people impersonating FBI Agents are going to try to scare African-American voters on The Day?
Archives for 2004
Josh Marshall
has published a post with an extended quote from his own article in The Atlantic this summer that very clearly makes the distinction between the two foreign policy stances at play in this election. I wonder if John Robb has a reaction to this. Unfortunately for me I haven’t been following his site closely enough of late.
My own view is that non-state actors and others outside the state system were some of the prime movers, though often hidden, behind most if not all of the battles of the latter period of the Cold War. The fighting occurred within the context of the state system, with one side or the other jockeying for control of one of the dozens of proxies for either the US or the Soviet Union, but that doesn’t mean it was just an extension of earlier state-centric battles. Just because groups were coopted by one side or the other doesn’t obviate the fact that there were a lot of non-state actors of great – primary -significance. Iran-Contra, Afghanistan in the Soviet era, the rise of narco-terrorists in Columbia and elsewhere in Central America – all of these involved non-state actors and weren’t primarily about a state per se but much more diffuse control and power issues. You might say I agree with the Democratic vision as expressed in the article and would take the analysis even further.
The big news of the day
is from Google, which has announced the Google Desktop Search application. John Battelle has the story.
Cam Barrett takes a look back
to the early days of the Wesley Clark campaign: Presidential Campaign Graphic Identities. In particular, it’s interesting that no one was in charge of the file when Cam got to Little Rock. The political consultant in me would think that’s the first thing you have to have – an in-house person who can stickhandle all of the basic stuff – design, printing, distribution. All that stuff that you need to win but can’t waste time at the top doing.
If you want to understand
the level to which US Republican support has sunk, one only has to follow the Sinclair Broadcasting affair. The NYTimes has the basic story: Talking Points Memo (the link goes to one entry, but scroll down to read lots more, including a letter to Marshall from Reed Hundt, former chair of the FCC).
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