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Activism vs. Punditry

In a number of posts yesterday and today, I have been highly critical of Chris Bowers. On some points, I was over the top, and I think I owe Chris an apology. I should not have mentioned his past connections to the Sestak campaign. Chris is a sincere person who acts in ways he thinks is best. I accept that his support for Sestak had nothing to do with the position he took.

That said, I strongly feel that Chris' actions are indefensible for an activist. This is an old argument for me. I had it with Chris' old blogging partner Matt Stoller - when you take on the mantle of activist, you can not wear the hat of pundit. To me, Chris has changed his hat from activist to pundit regarding the health care bill. In my view, it is a hat change that can not work.

Of course, I also disagree with with Chris' punditry. But my larger point here is about understanding the role of the activist, the blogger activist, in this case. It is to help shore up the Left Flank of the Party. I am no activist. And I am hardly Left. I do not whip people to call their Congresspersons or frankly, to do anything. I am in the peanut gallery. What activists do matters. What I do does not. Yet, I care very much that the effective activists, like Chris, not lose sight of their mission and not compromise it in order to engage in meaningless punditry. There are enough of us out here wanking. Stick to the important work.

Speaking for me only

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    Private Insurers Exempted from Mandate in Bill (none / 0) (#1)
    by azhealer on Thu Dec 03, 2009 at 11:06:19 AM EST
    Sec 1555 (page 367) of Senate bill says no fine or penalty for private insurers if they choose to not be in exchange or participate in federal programs.

    This is the ultimate outrage --- the little people have a mandate that has fines and (though remote) jail time, but private insurers can give the system 'the finger' and Democrats have said 'sure, great, no problem--- hey, have you donated money to me yet for my reelection"

    this bill is unredeemable even with a PO.

    this post (none / 0) (#2)
    by The Last Whimzy on Thu Dec 03, 2009 at 09:42:13 PM EST
    qualifies as activism as the author is shoring up the left flank by encouraging others to do a better job of shoring up the left flank.

    a point that would devolve into well, the usual, is that there is, of course, a certain whatever you want to call it about you know activism only being something that could happen from left flank positioning.

    i do know centrists hate crowds, activists love crowds.  

    so it's a question of temprament and style.

    not position.

    if you ever walked outside your house and found 20,000 thousand people marching down the street shouting "what do we want?"  "Competence." "When do we want it?"  "Now!"  then you might have found your centrist activist.

    but just because they lack the temprament, infected with an aversion to crowds does not mean the centrist isn't just as every bit invested in their own ways in the political process.