Jan. 28th, 2006

ebonlock: (zod)
Jane at Firedoglake quotes this rather absurd blurb in the WaPo:

"The bloggers and online donors represent an important resource for the party, but they are not representative of the majority you need to win elections," said Steve Elmendorf, a Democratic lobbyist who advised Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign. "The trick will be to harness their energy and their money without looking like you are a captive of the activist left."


To which one of her commentors replies:

If your name is accompanied by the words "Democratic lobbyist who advised Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign," then you deserve a warm glass of shut-the-hell-up.

It's like quoting Axl Rose for tips on keeping the band together.


Hells yes.

And on the filibuster:

And from Sean-Paul Kelly:

Just got off the phone with someone highly placed in the filibuster fight: this is doable. It is an uphill battle, no doubt, but that person's words were: the momentum is shifting and has shifted perceptibly since Thursday. Senators are responding to the fact that this is the right thing to do, for the good of the country. This stuff is real. But they are also responding to Atrios' storyline:

"The Democrats shocked Washington today by holding together, dropping a mighty turd in the punchbowl of the Bush administration, dealing a deadly blow to his nomination of Alito. The president won't be too happy tonight as he gives the 2006 state of the union speech."


And Mcjoan over at KOS has more directly from Kennedy:

Senator Kennedy just had a conference call with a number of bloggers to update us on his and Senator Kerry's filibuster effort, and to encourage the netroots and the grassroots to keep up our efforts. He's very excited by what he's seeing here and throughout the blogosphere, and gave a great pep talk.

He is encouraging you to contact your Democratic Senators, regardless of what they might have said so far, but specifically mentioned Senators Pryor, Lincoln, Cantwell, Murray, Baucus, Harkin, Levin, Bayh, Lautenberg, Menendez, and Lieberman. In addition, he said to keep the pressure on Republican Senators Snowe, Collins, Chaffee, and Stevens.

Senator Kennedy talked in particular about one thing that I think is critical to keep in mind as we approach our Senators, and for them to keep in mind as they are considering this vote. We need to overcome the media noise machine by letting our Senators know that in voting their conscience, and making it clear that they are voting on principle, on conscience, they will overcome the media noise machine calling them obstructionists. We can help them realize this by letting them know that we've got their backs. That they are voting our conscience as well, and that we will not forget their courage.
[...]
This is, as Senator Kennedy reminded us, a generational battle. Samuel Alito on the Supreme Court could turn back a generation's worth of progress in civil rights, in worker protections, in equality for women, in environmental protection, in the fight of the little guy against the corporation. And Samuel Alito on the Supreme Court will affect the generations to come. We cannot afford to refight the battles of the past 40 years during the next 40 years.

This is an uphill battle, but one in which we can at the very least achieve a moral victory. Approached with principle, with passion, and with vigor, a moral victory is not a hollow victory. As Senator Kennedy told us, "You don't ever lose fighting for principle, for what is decent and right. You don't ever lose when you have the power, the force of being correct."
ebonlock: (Colbert Report)
This is bloody brilliant:

To respond to Rove's "pre-9/11" and "post-9/11" language, we should speak of "pre-7/4" and "post-7/4" mentalities. The fact that I even need to explain this concept is a subject most fascinating to me.
[...]
My desire is to make "7/4" more popular and ubiquitous in our language than "9/11", because it is a better and fundamentally more important concept. Gentle reader, I would enlist your help in this endeavor. It would behoove us all to challenge our families, friends and neighbors to figure out what "7/4" could possibly mean. Once the realization finally comes, the blinders that Rove has fitted upon us, constraining our vision to a world of terror, fall away and a world of truth and beauty appear once again.

Now I'll do you the kindness of spelling it out, in case you haven't yet shed the blinders.

"7/4" refers to July 4, of course. Specifically, July 4, 1776. Bush and Rove have a pre-7/4 mentality, which means they believe in the divine right of kings. The divine right of kings is the specific concept placed on the ash heap of history by the Declaration of Independence, signed on July 4, 1776. It's a concept that Bush and Rove are slowly but successfully reviving through fearful and intimidating propoganda, such as their "pre-9/11 mentality" smear.

The administration's critics, including their foes among the ranks of the Democratic Party, have a post-7/4 mentality, a paradigm that includes such notions as the consent of the governed, inalienable rights and all the other revolutionary ideas advanced by America's founding fathers and enshrined in our founding documents.

This is a plea to all Americans to restore their once proud and courageous post-7/4 mentality and disenthrall themselves from Rove's cowardly post-9/11 mentality. Spread the word. "7/4" is the antidote for "9/11".

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