Posted on 09/09/2004 1:32:03 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
If President Bush is re-elected, he needs to make Glenn Reynolds his new attorney general. He is a distinguished law professor at UT, the respected author of numerous books and law review articles, and an expert on hot-button issues like nanotechnology. Unlike John Ashcroft, his particular interests are individual liberty in an age of advanced technology. That alone makes him my candidate.
But Reynolds also hosts a web log called Instapundit thats been called The New York Times of the blogosphere. In addition to original reporting and commentary, Instapundit is also the traffic cop for hundreds of sites that plug into a worldwide network people that operate blogs. In the old days, the Times would decide news and other news organizations would fall in line. Still true, though the Times influence has waned. Reynolds, the professor who never sleeps, is very influential in setting the topic of the day in the blogosphere. It may be something hes interested in writing about, or something he has picked up on out there on the web and has linked to it.
A great newspaper has a large staff of reporters to fan out and gather information and funnel it back to the desk for presentation to its readers. It is not an exaggeration to say that Reynolds has a staff bigger than any newspaper in America. These days a supercomputer is not a room-sized machine doing computations. It is a room full of servers, interconnected and doing computations continuously, all linked together. The news and commentary web logs are similar in operation. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts: individual computations (reporting, commentary) flow into a thread that produces a bigger picture. Instapundit is the often the nexus.
For the last several weeks Topic A has been the Swift Boat Veterans charges and Sen. John Kerrys record in Vietnam. The searching analysis and the piling of bits on top of bits created an overall picture that has been incredibly damaging to Kerry. Long before the traditional media decided to cover the issue, the story had been advanced day after day for weeks on the web logs. The flat-footed responses from the Kerry campaign were mercilessly picked apart for inconsistencies. The traditional media could no longer ignore an argument on thousands of computers across the county. Editors read blogs as well.
In the run up to the 2000 election, I wrote that the Republicans in Tennessee were fired up and Vice-president Al Gores alleged home state was in play. Bush did indeed carry Tennessee. A couple of weeks ago I was prepared to write that the state that rejected home boy Gore seemed likely to vote for a liberal senator from Massachusetts. The Democrats in Tennessee are certainly fired up and enthusiastic, and conservatives have a lot of reasons to stay home rather than vote for Bush. (I have even foolishly bet a dinner on Kerry winning Tennessee.)
But the Vietnam issue has hurt Kerry badly, in the Volunteer state and elsewhere, and not necessarily by the substance of the accusations themselves. His campaign is distracted. The issue is inside his head. Any day the campaign is about things that happened 35 years ago rather than the economy, the deficit or the war in Iraq, it is a bad day for Kerry. The issue has energized the Republican base. With Kerry stalled, the Republican convention gave Bush a bump. Only the debates can save Kerry now.
A few months ago I expressed the hope that we would finally set Vietnam aside as an issue. Kerry seems to have forgotten the draft-dodger who beat a decorated World War II veteran in 1992 and another one in 1996. The National Guardsman beat the Vietnam veteran in 2000. But Kerry tried to use service in Vietnam to inoculate himself against Republican charges that Democrats are weak on defense. Making it an issue has dredged up all the old passions.
The vast majority of our generation did not serve in Vietnam. And those of us who did have mixed feelings that make it impossible to predict how it plays out in this presidential race. I agree with McCain that the attacks on Kerrys service in Vietnam are beyond the pale. But Kerrys inconsistent explanations and his failure to deal with the issue quickly made it fair game for the blogs. The blogs have defined him to much of America; it is almost too late to respond.
I think its terrible that an election that should be about the economy, fighting terrorism and the war in Iraq is now all about what happened in Vietnam 35 years ago. Vietnam was a hellhole then; its a hellhole now. Kerry should have known that. Dear God, when will we ever let it go?
Frank Cagle is a political analyst and the host of Sound Off on WIVK FM107.7, WNOX AM990, FM99.1 and FM99.3 each Sunday 8-9:30 a.m.
When our shared narrative about the war and the truth more nearly converge.
The lies we've told ourselves, and been told by the likes of Kerry and Hollywood, have been festering all these years. About time we thrashed it out again. We get closer to the truth every time.
Bump!
Reynolds is a great guy, I hear. He's the faculty sponser for a number of UT campus conservative organizations, IIRC.
Thanks for the info!
I love the "beyond the pale" comment, without any explanation as to why, if true, the allegations would be beyond the pale. True kool aid drinker. (Also the rally on the 12th is not a swift boat event.)
I should have said, the Vietnam Veterans for the Truth rally on the Mall.
Thank you for the correction.
The day Kerry is defeated, the abused, spat upon and maligned Veterans of Vietnam will be able to say they've been welcomed home as heroes.
I don't begrudge any fame that spills Instapundit's way. But I give credit first to the Swiftties themselves. Then, there were several groups, including FR that helped them. There is enough credit for everyone. And congratulations to Instapundit for it's part.
Here's to success. Are you going , then, CW? Take care.
ping
I was hoping to MP but circumstances will prevent it.
But my heart and my thanks are with them.
Bump!
The day Kerry is defeated, the abused, spat upon and maligned Veterans of Vietnam will be able to say they've been welcomed home as heroes.
Rodger that!!
When people like you stop defining what happened in Vietnam to suit the needs of the moment. How come all of a sudden no one but a few extreme marxists will admit they protested the war using some of the most vicious anti-American, anti-veteran rhetoric imaginable. Now suddenly "it was just a disagreement, and we really were patriots, and it wasn't me who spit on veterans, it was that guy over there behind the tree." Now that veterans are getting vocal about what the peace movement was about you all just want to "let it go." Well guess what, we veterans are tired, we're pissed, and it's payback time. We'll let you know when it's time to "let it go." Maybe November 5th if things go as planned.
God works in mysterious ways.
Ask the Cambodians, the Viet Namese and the people of Laos what it was all about.
Reynolds got a HUGE assist from Hugh Hewitt on the Cambodia issue. A blog alone wouold not have been enough to get this story out. I believe Hewitt was the first to air the Carl Cameron story, and he played it over and over and over. He kept up the drumbeat for days, way before Rush or hannity had the nerve to touch it.
I think I actually took a class taught by Prof. Reynolds when he was a visiting professor at UVA Law.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.