Friday, October 12, 2007

S-CHIP and the wingnuts

Paul Krugman's NY Times op-ed today hits so close to home, literally and figuratively, I have to share it.

Krugman writes about the outright assault the nutty right wing has lauched to personally and vehemently attack 12-year old Graeme Frost, whom the Democrats had chosen to respond to the president's Saturday radio address. This was the broadcast in which W. outlined his reasons for vetoing the S-SCHIP bill, which was exapnding medical coverage for children on a national level.

I hope to write about this topic in some detail in the near future. But Krugman's column will serve as as good a jumping off point for anyone who is interested in what I believe to be the number one economic and social topic (ahead of the Iraqi war, even!) we in America must address. Now.

Monday, October 8, 2007

Politics v. Religiosity

Jon Meacham, Newsweek editor and author of “American Gospel” and “Franklin and Winston,” has a timely op-ed in yesterday's NY Times.

Provocatively titled, "A Nation of Christians Is Not a Christian Nation," Meachem tackles a contentious issue that is once again playing itself out, front and center, in the current exhaustive presidential campaign.

In an interview with Beliefnet.com last weekend, Sen. John McCain repeated what is an article of faith among many American evangelicals: “the Constitution established the United States of America as a Christian nation.”

I cringe every time I see such words or hear such thought. And while I am far from being a constitutional scholar, even I can recognize the error and danger of such thinking. I think the op-ed should get as much distribution as is possible. Money quote:
The founders were not anti-religion. Many of them were faithful in their personal lives, and in their public language they evoked God. They grounded the founding principle of the nation — that all men are created equal — in the divine. But they wanted faith to be one thread in the country’s tapestry, not the whole tapestry.
Thank you, Mr. Meachem, for pointing out some of the historical realities surrounding the myth of a Christian America.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Jon Stewart calls Matthews' new book 'A recipe for sadness'

Jon Stewart had Chris Matthews, host of MSNBC's Hardball, on The Daily Show last night to talk about Matthews' new book "Life's a Campaign." It is one of the funniest book discussions I have ever seen. Why? Because Stewart was absolutely honest with Matthews regarding his view that the book's values are misplaced and wrong.

At one point, Matthews invites Jon to come on Hardball, to which Stewart responds, "Can I say this? I don't troll." Matthews ends up calling the encounter: "...the worst interview I have ever had in my life."

I have enjoyed watching Matthews and his fellow NBC pundit Tim Russert over the years. I find them to be, on the average, fair, fairly impartial and knowledgeable. Lately, however, I have learned to watch and mentally notate the nuance that they introduce into their interviews that they don't even know they are adding... things like physically characterizing political candidates versus actually weighing their words and the substance of their message.

On the face, since these pundits work from a visual medium [TV], it is understandable. But I hope for so much more. Matthews and Russert et al. are supposed to be journalists, right? Everyone knows politics is a popularity contest first and foremost (don't they?). But it doesn't have to be, and it most definitely should not be. The questions we face today are too serious to leave to the most photogenic candidates. We need substance.

Perhaps that is why Stewart's Daily Show has gained such popularity. Yes, it is a comedy show first and always. But time and again, he has a way of showing how serious topics are being mishandled by traditional media. I applaud his honesty.