An Alaskan Dossier
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Posts from — March 2008

Chaos in Lhasa

I am so confused. People just went crazy, even monks start kicking in glass, there’s that constant eerie howling noise, things just randomly getting set on fire. It’s almost as bad as the Post-OSU/Michigan riots in Columbus six years ago.

March 20, 2008   No Comments

Whereas…

Originally written: February 24, 2008. Revised: March 12, 2008.

I’m confused, aren’t you?

It seems as though by 2008, we as a human race should have figured things out. Yet, it seems as though what was expected of this era, isn’t so.

Instead, humans have become insane. Insanity, being that we do the same tired things over and over again, only to expect different results.

We seem to have lost sight of what makes us who we are; stopped attributing value to those things that are most tangible to us. Instead, as humans, we seem to have given our identity to someone else to assess; making something that was once tangible to us, intangible to someone who has no proximity.

We as Bozemanites, Americans, and humans are experiencing something of a cultural identity crisis.

As a possible prescription for this ailment, I offer my Manifesto Confundum (in five points).
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March 12, 2008   No Comments

Rove speaks the truth?

“A long Democratic battle doesn’t automatically help the Republicans. In fact, it hurts the Republicans in certain ways. Mr McCain becomes less interesting to the media. Stories about him move off page one and grow smaller. TV coverage becomes spotty and short. There are not yet big and deep and unbridgeable differences between the two Democrats and there is plenty of time to heal most wounds (except, perhaps among the young if Mrs Clinton were to win). Continuing to build a profile and lay the predicate for the short fall campaign against either Democrat becomes the challenge for Mr McCain while the Democrats battle it out.” — Karl Rove

Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama know this. Which is why most of the debates focus on the minutia (e.g. campaign strategies, traditional vs. non-traditional experience), and exaggerating how the Republicans have damaged this nation.

The fact that the DNC finally has a solid and agreed upon platform before going into primaries says a lot. And you see it in the coverage. Television news networks who play this as a “America’s Next Top President” enjoy the gridlock, because it provides all the tension, drama, and glitz of reality TV that they’ve wanted.

I saw this on Tuesday at our watch party. MSNBC and CNN both had a majority of clips that were not Huckabee/McCain, but rather Clinton/Obama. The networks aren’t going to desert something that has mobilized so many people to vote; it has already become a story they don’t have to sell.

What this means in terms of the “storyline” of the nomination bids, is McCain might engender more desperate tactics to attract news attention. However, Rove is right when he says that the young Dems will feel extremely wounded if Clinton secures the nomination. On an apathetic, semi-rural college campus of 12,000+, I’ve seen more people interested in elections than in the past. I’ve also heard from a lot of people who felt betrayed by the 2004 election, that if Clinton secures the DNC bid, they’re jumping ship to McCain.

Karl Rove’s resumé suggests that he knows what he’s talking about, and is more right than progressives would like to admit.

March 6, 2008   No Comments

Knee-jerk vs. Prudence

March 4, 2008   No Comments