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Monday, July 17, 2006
Mary Katharine Ham :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Left Blogs Close the Door on the Big Tent
by Mary Katharine Ham
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


I disagree with Glenn Reynolds. Not on everything, but on some things.

Support for the war in Iraq as an important battleground in the War on Terror? Ditto, Glenn. Unequivocal backing of the notion that Americans should have the right to pack heat? I’m with you. A general respect for the free market and the innovations, efficiency, and gifts it visits upon us? Yep, there again.

On the stem-cell debate and other social issues, I can’t say the same. And, the “I had an abortion” T-shirt is not a fashion choice I would have made.

But here’s the thing. If you were to ask me if he’s with me or against me-- if you were to say, politically speaking, “is he on your team?”-- I’d say yes. Yes, the politically hybrid, libertarianish law professor who threatens to vote Democrat if they’d only give him something to work with on national security is on my team.

I feel the same way about a long list of other libertarianish political hybrids who vocally disagree with me on social issues—folks like Ann Althouse and Jeff Goldstein, both of whose blogs I consider favorites. And, I think most of the Right blogosphere feels the same way, even though many right bloggers are more conservative than these three writers. Their traffic numbers certainly reflect acceptance and popularity among righty blog-readers.

It occurred to me, after reading about the now-infamous Deborah Frisch’s comments to blogger Jeff Goldstein of Protein Wisdom—well, more like bolted down from Heaven and hit everyone within a thousand-mile radius of an Internet connection between the eyes than “occurred”—that the Left blogosphere does not feel the same way about political hybrids.

For instance, I imagine that socially conservative bloggers disagree with Goldstein on just as many issues as the good Prof. Frisch does, and yet they regularly read his site, debate with him civilly, and manage to hang out in his comments section without threatening toddlers.

On the contrary, instead of seeing folks like Goldstein or Reynolds as possible allies on certain issues, the Left blogosphere doesn’t just avoid engaging or wooing these guys—it actively attacks them.

In the run-up to the ’04 election and in the time since, many of these politically hybrid bloggers—who I can only assume speak for and speak to an audience of many, many more similarly-minded folks, also known by the term “swing voter”—have positively advertised the fact that they are up for grabs when it comes to party affiliation.

Give us a Democrat who’s serious about national security and I’ll go there, they say. Give us a Democrat who doesn’t race-bait and play identity politics, and I’d come on over. I’m with you guys on social issues, so work on some of these other important issues and win me over, they write…in public…on blogs…for everyone to see.

The Left reads these messages and sends them Deborah Frisch and DOS attacks. The Right reads these messages and sends them links and invites to appear on conservative talk radio shows.

Ann Althouse has noticed:

I'm just saying that I'm struck by the way the right perceives me as a potential ally and uses positive reinforcement and the left doesn't see me as anything but an opponent -- doesn't even try to engage me with reasoned argument. Maybe the left feels beleaguered these days, but how do they expect to make any progress if they don't see the ways they can include the people in the middle? If you look around and only see opponents and curl up with your little group of insiders, you are putting your efforts into insuring that you remain a political minority.

Left blogger Crooked Timber attributes such treatment of Althouse to the fact that she’s perceived, not as a political moderate, but as a moderate conservative. That may be, but I tried to imagine myself perceiving folks like Armed Liberal of Winds of Change, or Jeralyn Merritt of TalkLeft, both of whom can probably be rightly considered moderate liberals, as out-and-out political enemies to be only attacked, never embraced. Instead, I serve with those two on a Blogger Board of Contributors for the Examiner, and all of us were recruited for the board by a conservative blogger.

I can’t help but think that, as blogs continue to become a bigger part of electoral politics and the parties inevitably become more practiced at working with them, this difference in approach doesn’t bode well for Democrats. As much as the Left blogosphere likes to accuse the whole center-right of existing only to parrot the command-and-control messages of Chimpy McBushitler, it is the Left blogosphere that has seemed so intent on alienating itself and the Democratic Party from political hybrids and moderate Democrats of late, and doing so in dramatic, nasty fashion.

Jeff Goldstein gets vile sexual comments about his toddler and Joe Lieberman gets a new nickname—“Rape Gurney Joe.”

Once again, I wondered whether the Right does go after its moderates in a similar fashion, so I looked up the Right’s harshest critic of the Right’s least-loved moderate—Hugh Hewitt on Lincoln Chafee.

Hewitt has called Chafee an “alleged GOP Senator,” “shortsighted,” and knocked him repeatedly for not voting for Bush, and for various obstructions in the Senate, but it hasn’t gotten much nastier than that. I imagine Lieberman would smile to get such courteous treatment on a big liberal blog these days.

I don’t suggest that there isn’t nastiness on both sides of the blogosphere. There is. Nor do I suggest that each side of the blogosphere must take responsibility for every wacky commenter on its side (although avoiding abetting them with DOS attacks would help immensely).

What I do say is there is a difference in tone and approach to moderates, and moderates are noticing it.

The political blogosphere is growing in reach and power. Readers are turning to them on both ends of the political spectrum because they trust the folks who write them. Blogs will continue to inform and affect the behavior of voters, but how will each side use that knowledge?

In 2004, the Bush campaign, according to most political observers, overtook the Dem ground game by delegating the spreading of the President’s message, not to impersonal canvassers, but to neighbors and friends and family.

Many voters were more likely to listen to arguments for the President from a mom from three houses down—someone they liked and trusted—than a shipped-in volunteer and stranger.

If politically hybrid bloggers can be seen as the swing voters of the blogosphere—if a Jeff Goldstein is a guy who could conceivably be convinced to vote the other way if the Dems would assuage his doubts on certain issues—who do you think is more convincing showing up on his virtual doorstep?

Deborah Frisch, the liberal who threatens his child, or Right-Wing Sparkle, the conservative who has read his site for years and comes to his defense upon Frisch’s attack?

When you’re knocking on doors at election time, burning dog poo has never been known to get out the vote.

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About The Author

Mary Katharine Ham is a contributor to Townhall Magazine.

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blocked on townhall?
Animal girl...If you want us to beleive you were blocked here on TownHall then reproduce your comments here and let us see what happens. It's easy to just say you were cut off, but I have never been and I get a mite riled & verbose at times...

animalgirlisback
Yeah, I was cut off from HuffPo last week for the same reason. I was never vulgar or disrespectful; I’m just not a moonbat. I made a comment somewhere on this site then, about how censorship is the tactic used by liberals because their arguments can't hold up to scrutiny. I'm sorry to see the same thing happening here if you were cut off simply for a different opinion.

I have tried to find adult liberal blogs
and I can't. I am looking for thoughts that challenge me and my basic beliefs, thoughts that get me to rethink my positions. I have tried Huffpo and Kos and many of the articles are kinda of silly and emotional but some are well represented. It is the replies that scare you.
Childish vulgarity without a scintills of fact--just rants. The occasional conservative writer either proves that there are some silly conservatives or these posts are done by shills to make conservatives look bad. When you post a reasoned response it is ignored. I picture these Kos and Huffpo bloggers as highschool kids ( or those who are out of high school but not grown up) sitting and writing filth because it makes them feel important. All liberals want to appear cool--thus their infatuation with Hollywood celebrity--but these bloggers come across as just silly and unimportant. And a 500 post thread only has a couple of dozen talking to each other. I am not worried about the future of us because eventually the adults will take charge in the Democratic party and be a worthy opponent again.

We got your big tent
Question for "animalgirlsback" Which is greater, the number of "pro-choice" Republicans that have spoken at the Republican National Conventions since 1980, or the number of pro-life Democrats that have spoken at the Democrat National Conventions since 1980?

Sorry for the typo!
I meant "bloggers", of course, not "bloogers".

Or maybe I've stumbled on a new term. Blooger--the drops on the screen when you sneeze while sitting at the keyboard.

Leftist bloogers and the big tent
I'm not surprised that people on the left are intolerant of any views that do not synch completely with theirs. They betry their politcal pedigree by responding as they do. Remember that they are the latest generation imbued with the political philosophy of the great totalitarian ideologies, Marxism and Fascism. Neither the Communists nor the Nazis could accept anyone who did not march in lockstep, and the spectrum of their responses began with vile propaganda directed at opponents on the same side of the aisle. Our American Leftists carry that in their blood.

And to animalgirlsback, are you sure you were censored because of political content, or for other content (such as use of profanity, ad hominem attacks, or raciat slurs)? I haven't seen the postings in question, so I cannot say for sure. But I have seen a lot of outrageous statements made in the comment postings and blogs here at Townhall, and it seems that they are allowed to stand or fall on their own merits.

this was predictable
David Horowitz once wrote; (this is probably not a direct quote but I know I have the gist.)

“A liberal is an American who has a specific set of values that they live by”
“A Leftist is an anti-American with an agenda that they will subordinate anything and everything to.”

I do believe that when the leftists joined the liberals in the early ‘60s the liberals didn’t realize what they had in their midst. As the years have progressed, the leftists have worked to expand their power and influence in the party and have begun to believe that they are, in fact, the source of the party’s strength.

What we see now is that the “cocooning” if you will of those on the left is now taking its toll upon the hard left, which sees itself as the true believers of the battle for “social justice” and the (new man) American way.

We also se the dichotomy that results from the Right more often than not saying – “The glass is half full” While the left is continually saying “What glass?”

jd


Identity
"In 2004, the Bush campaign, according to most political observers, overtook the Dem ground game by delegating the spreading of the President’s message, not to impersonal canvassers, but to neighbors and friends and family.

Many voters were more likely to listen to arguments for the President from a mom from three houses down—someone they liked and trusted—than a shipped-in volunteer and stranger."

A critically important observation!

Many of the left's political claims favor distributing wealth to individuals and groups holding the asset of a particular identity, such as poor, black, hispanic, low-skilled worker, union member, academic, actor/actress, drug addict, etc. But suchlike have little in common with respectable suburbanites, among whom most Americans number. So it's no wonder Democrats can't connect with mainstream America unless they avoid darkening its doorstep.
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