What Markos has is passion and a vison. While he has been hugely successful in implementing his vision through Daily Kos, trust me on this one, he's only just begun. His plans for the future will take progressive activism to heights not dreamed of today. The mainstream media is playing catch-up and Markos is way beyond them. In short, anyone who discounts Markos does so at their peril.
The latest brouhaha in big media by the Times' David Brooks, in Newsweek and by Jason Zengerle on a blog at the New Republic, a publication that seems to be in the throes of an identity crisis, is just that -- a brouhaha. And it is one that will fade quickly.
First off, David Brooks' article is behind the paid firewall of the New York Times. It's a blip on the radar screen.
As for Zengerle, now that he's admitted he made a factual mistake in his original reporting and acknowledged that his unnamed sources were wrong, it's even less of a story. Except for the innocent accused Steve Gilliard, who if he is the bulldog I think he is, won't let sleeping dogs lie until he receives a full vindication through the outing of the list-serv snitches, this is a non-story.
Big media has a dog in this fight. Newspapers are losing readers like a sieve to bloggers and online media. Have you noticed that every newspaper now has "blogs," most of which seem more like articles that didn't make the cut of the paper's final edition -- articles written by traditional journalists in that impersonal, reporting tone with too much prose and too few external links? It's like they don't have a clue what this blogging thing is all about.
By the time the word "blog" is understood by mainstream Americans, bloggers will have moved on. Markos and those in the netroots once again will leave big media in the dust. Politicians, if they are smart, will hang with the netroots to avoid a similar fate.
I'm not sure that I or any other solo blogger with a day job will make it to these next levels -- the medium will be far too advanced for one person, as opposed to a community like Daily Kos or Firedoglake to get there. But I think you can take one thing to the bank. Markos not only will be there, he'll be leading the charge.
Others reporting and commenting on the brouhaha: Matt Stoller, Digby, and James Wolcott.
Compounding the silliness are the attacks on Jerome Armstrong, Markos's "blogfather," former consulting partner and co-author of Crashing the Gates. First were the attacks on Jerome's long ago beef with the SEC, the settlement terms of which currently prevent him from commenting; then it was a purely speculative and false allegation that Markos endorses the candidates for whom Jerome does paid consulting; now it's that Jerome used to be into political astrology. Jerome responds here (scroll down.)
Update [2006-6-25 8:44:56 by Jerome Armstrong]: Let me just state for the record that any payola allegations or some quid pro quo deal involving Markos and myself are complete fabrications. Perhaps they are obsessed because they represent a party that has shown it's complete inability to govern in this country, and they recognize that a people-powered movement is happening in this country that is going to oust them into the bin of history. No one person is the leader of this movement, but as it grows, the fight from the opposition that resists the change that must happen in this nation will arise. Let them fight, we will still win.
Another Update [2006-6-25 14:13:39 by Jerome Armstrong]: Oh yea, on the astrological stuff. I have done the new age type things over the years--life's never boring that way. Down that line, I dabbled with planets and predictions in the most abstract manner, as one of several different predictive mathematical disciplines, when coming out of finances and into politics during my early blogging days (nobody is surprised that remembers the early 2001 days here), and since then have completely tapered out of it over time. So yea, the cons got me on this one being a little out of the ordinary... It has nothing to do with what I consult with in online political strategy. But hey, like JP Morgan once said, "millionaires don't use astrology, billionaires do!" I hope to see those wingnuts that are obsessed with every little thing I do at the next bikram yoga or vipassana meditation session in DC-- but fair warning that I believe we evolved from monkeys!
All these stories do is make the entire online media community appear petty and superficial. They are a distraction and it's time to move on.