David Weigel | March 28, 2008
I usually write these threads in a hurry, tossing in notes from the past week and checking them with quick links. Only recently have I been using a PC with (pre-installed) Windows Vista to do that. If you want an OS that crashes your browser in the middle of long stretches of writing, by all means, get yourself some Vista.
I'm on this short al Jazeera segment about race and campaign '08. Also, I forgot to link my appearence a little while back on the fun Washington Week in Review podcast.
Unconvincing Quote of the Week
"If a politician doesn’t wanna get beat up, he shouldn’t run for
office. If a football player doesn’t want to get tackled or want
the risk of an occasional clip he shouldn’t put the pads on." -
Bill Clinton. He then criticized his wife for crying in New
Hampshire and complaining about being "piled on" in the debates,
and asked her to leave the race. (Also, did Clinton encourage Jerry
Brown to keep on running in 1992 even after it was clear Clinton
would lock up the nomination? Seriously, what a cur.)
The Week in Brief
- John McCain released his first,
entertainingly subliminal, general election ad. It includes
both the stunning revelation that he was a POW in Vietnam (why have
we never been told this?) and more mentions of the word "America"
than a Lee Greenwood b-sides compilation.
- Hillary Clinton botched her Jack Bauer-ish anecdote about
visiting Bosnia in 1996.
- Barack Obama appeared to
pick up momentum again, especially in North Carolina and
national polls.
- Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey
endorsed Obama—his first break in the state for a while,
and
- All three candidates spoke on the economy and mortgages: McCain preached
self-reliance, the other guys less so.
Below the Fold
- News flash: People don't actually
think the Obama girl videos are funny. There are two things men
like about them, though.
- John Judis
speaks some truth about NAFTA. I doubt the candidates will
listen.
- Jonathan Kaufman and Kay Hymowitz
examine the new epidemic of sexism that has(n't) followed the
Hillary Clinton campaign.
- James Carville
tries hard to be less likeable.
- James Kirchick makes
the gay voter's case for John McCain.
- Scott Rasmussen and his army of robots actually
asks Democrats whether they'd support Al Gore if he
entered the race to "save them." Forty-two percent support Obama,
26 percent support Clinton, and only 23 percent back Gore.
- Ralph Nader
begs Hillary Clinton to stay in the race: "I know something
about this." Proof that the current Nader run is less Eugene Debs
and more Dave Barry.
Frank Zappa, can you handle this week's Politics 'n' Prog?
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