Palme Doh! The greatest
crime in Michael Moores award
of the Palme dOr is that it tarnishes the reputation of a festival
European glitterati giving that narcissistic moins que rien a
standing ovation will only be surpassed when Woody Allen finally decamps
for a house in Roman Polanskis villa.
Of more immediate concern is the damage it does to the
anti-Bush (not necessarily Democratic or lefty) movement. In
trying to determine how I can best influence (increasingly hypothetical)
swing voters from not voting for Bush in November, Ive come to the
dismaying conclusion that the issue is beyond rational debate.1 If youre going to vote
for Bush, either you have identified yourself (correctly or not) with the
subset of the population that will tangibly benefit from another four
years of Bush, or you are operating from within a
different epistemology than I am. Either way, I cant help
you; this is simply not something about which reasonable people can
disagree.
The only way that Bush opponents can be effective in
creating the conditions for Bush supporters to drop their support is not
to shame the movement; dont give his supporters any reason to be
embarrassed to criticize Bush, dont confirm their prejudices, and
dont indulge in schoolyard taunting. As shameful as they are,
the scandals (Plame, Abu Ghraib, Chalabi) wont sink Bush; his
supporters rationalized them away long ago. The only to way help
our fellow Americans out of the Bush camp is to be more grown-up than
Bill OReilly and Ann Coulter. Im looking at you,
Franken. (Sun 23 May 2004, 21.42 PDT) @ #
[1] Note that, in a pluralistic democracy,
this sentiment is the secular equivalent of the Christian sin of despair; it is
an abrogation of the civil contract that binds society. Historically,
this degree of apostasy has inevitably led to crime, insurrection, and
civil war. Check back in six months.