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November,
2004
Interesting bit from my regular Wednesday
e-mail delivery of The Weekly
Spin:
The Center for Media and Democracy's
John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton write, "Republican
successes have not come quickly or easily. For more than
four decades, conservatives have worked to build a network
of grassroots organizations and think tanks that formulate
and promote their ideas. They are now enjoying the fruits
of this long-term investment." The right
wing "has simply done a better job than
anyone else of organizing from the grassroots up. This
isn't because their ideas are more popular or palatable
- they aren't - but because the right has been serious
and strategic in its commitment to winning and wielding
power."
That's already underway in a fashion
with John Podesta's fledgling Center
For American Progress think tank. But it's early days
in this four-decade catch up.
The message, I suppose, is that our
republic needs a constancy of nourishment from all points
of view and responds not at all to a frantic realization
of what we have come to be as a nation. There are many
messages here, from how the civil rights movement died
of starvation after King's assassination to the emergence
of the radical religious right as a political power.
Time to stop agonizing and get back
to the business of democracy---time to get
down to the work---the necessary work---it's
catch-up time.
Get out of the Archives and read what Jim's writing
today |