A scorching, thought provoking, wide-ranging, could be offensive to many (especially more then a couple ladies out there), but in my humble opinion, on target, review of A-list punditry at Rittenhouse Review.
Category Archives: Public Service, Civics, Government, Activism
As homelessness grows, even havens toughen up
…cities like Santa Monica, long known for strong social consciousness, are trimming their largess – and often getting more aggressive in cracking down on homelessness.
Read the rest at the CSMonitor.
i am not a number. i am a free man.
Garret links to a perfect pic from The Prisoner. One of the greatest TV shows ever. In a creepy way – all too relevant.
Some links:
Here goes a good Prisoner site.
An S.U.V.? Oh, That’s So Over!
NYTimes: An S.U.V.? Oh, That’s So Over!
“My car is the anti-S.U.V.,” said Gen Kanai, 29, of New York, who works in the business development division of Sony and drives an Impreza WRX. “I carry bulky computer boxes, my mountain bike, my snowboard. The sports rack is on it all the time.”
I test drove a Mazda Protege5 and loved it. Boy did they nail my demographic.
More on the election and some on Philly
The Rittenhouse Review says it’s time for Democrats to take Republicans seriously. He lays a good smack down on certain misguided Libertarians as well. Check out his collection of perspectives on the election while you’re at it.
Glenn Frazier says that running on the economy was the wrong platform. I repectfully disagree with my fellow Philly blogger. Did you honestly hear any ideas for fixing the economy? There was finger pointing. I think we agree on this – It’s the ideas that count. Not political bickering. If there were ideas, they didn’t get thru. Contrast with Rendell who put something on the table.
Eric Raymond says the Dems have been victims of their own postmodern politics. I disagree with a lot here, but he makes some thought provoking points.
Garret says the Dems need some new blood. I agree.
I know how you feel Bill 🙂
Three Philly bloggers and two ex-Jersey guys. Not bad at all.
The Inquirer reports that Rendell won by Republicans voting for him in key districts. A politician that appeals across party lines. Imagine that! The Inquirer explains how. The also posted Rendell’s first post election interview.
The Urban Warrior makes a call to arms to sell our city.
Republicans Control Senate And House, Lessons For Dems In Rendell Win
And the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. What does that mean since it is but the slightest of majorities? According to the NYTimes:
…in symbolic terms, controlling the White House and both houses of Congress would count for a lot. And even if pushing some major legislation through remains beyond the President’s capacity, he will no doubt take yesterday’s voting pattern as a mandate to pursue his goal of ousting President Saddam Hussein of Iraq, by force if need be. Control of the Senate would also give Mr. Bush a better shot at winning confirmation for any conservative nominees he may choose in the event of Supreme Court vacancies.
Two years from now, yesterday’s contests for governor may seem to have been more important than those for Congress. Excluded for years from the governor’s mansions in many of the states with large blocks of electoral votes, the Democrats regained several of them, which should greatly assist their 2004 presidential campaign. Democrats swept back into power in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Illinois, the kind of Mid-Atlantic and Midwest states that have formed the engine-room of American politics for generations.
Andrew Sullivan calls it Bush’s Triumph. Mickey Kaus says this points to the fallacy of the 50-50 nation.
Closer to how I feel, William Saletan says the big story is that the Democrats have no story and John Marshall agrees.
Along the same lines is Oliver Willis who always takes the words right out of my mouth – put away the thoughts of “mandate” you Righties. It was way, way too close. What’s to blame is weak national Democratic leadership. Very weak, wishy-washy, what-do-they-care-about national leadership.
By the way… one kick ass Democrat did win for governor here in PA
…You may not remember this, but I do: When the year began, the near-unanimous consensus was that Philadelphia’s former mayor would not be the state’s next governor. Bob Casey? Probably. Mike Fisher? Perhaps. Ed Rendell? Not likely.
The man was too brash and too urban, too liberal on social issues, too daring in his policies, too closely identified with the big city, a place still held in contempt by the conservative, gun-loving hinterlands.
He wouldn’t win. Check that. He couldn’t win. He might run a respectable race. But he’d never make it over the top. His flaws were fundamental.
Or so it seemed to politicians, journalists – myself included, and even to some of Rendell’s own closest advisers.
So what happened? How did the man wind up turning conventional wisdom on its head?
I’ve worked and lived in the ‘burbs just outside Philly. Hatred for the city loomed large in many conversations. It was always dangerous exposing my roots. Yesterday much bad blood was overcome.
According to the Daily News, you don’t need to worry about any favoring of Philly going forward. It’s just common sense. Fisher tried hard to use that as a scare tactic. Didn’t work. It might have if the Democrats tried to push some lessor candidate though.
According to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: voters at the center of both parties tended to side with Rendell. Think you national Democrats!
The Daily News has some fun explaining the Ed Rendell style. He’s down to earth. A real guy.
After doing some surfing at Google News I found this perfect quote from The Oregonian:
Senate Majority Leader (at least as of Tuesday morning) Tom Daschle, and House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt campaigned through the country for their candidates, but had little to say where they arrived. In a Daschle visit to Oregon in August, the majority leader listened to Oregon Senate candidate Bill Bradbury attack Bush’s economic policy, nodded — and said nothing.
When you say nothing, sometimes people hear you.
…Most candidates for governor — such as Ed Rendell in Pennsylvania — have to actually say something about what they plan to do. When they say it strongly, voters often respond.
Democratic leaders not only need to think about something to do next. They need to think of something to say.
They should get some help from their governors, from people like Rendell, who not only spoke out firmly this year, but spent the 2000 campaign, when he was the Democratic national chairman, warning that Gore wasn’t saying anything and was going to pay for it.
It turned out he’s been right twice.
Most important, as the Inquirer concludes:
…now a Philadelphian has won, big, by calling for robust action. Pigs have flown; the conventional wisdom is scrambled. Maybe, just maybe, lawmakers will find that speaking up for genuine solutions is less risky in the long run than sticking to the old, sniping ways.
Do it…
Vote!
Or shut up your whining.
Philadelphia Polling Places for Tomorrow
The Committe of Seventie has a nice clickable map (note the corrected url).
Be there.
And Now This One Man Is Gone
The Rittenhouse Review reflects on Senator Wellstone.
Bill answers a Wal-Mart question for me
This post concluded that Wal-Mart’s growth did not displace work in other sectors of the economy based upon Andrew Cassel’s article. During that time the state suffered a loss 100,000 manufacturing jobs due to other reasons. That led me to ask a new question.
“…if Wal-Mart hasn’t filled those jobs – what has?”
Bill says it’s technology. My gut tells me he’s right.