Monday, October 13, 2008

Team Maverick turns on Kristol

Heh:

Kristol's latest column:
It’s time for John McCain to fire his campaign.
He has nothing to lose. His campaign is totally overmatched by Obama’s. The Obama team is well organized, flush with resources, and the candidate and the campaign are in sync. The McCain campaign, once merely problematic, is now close to being out-and-out dysfunctional. Its combination of strategic incoherence and operational incompetence has become toxic. If the race continues over the next three weeks to be a conventional one, McCain is doomed.
Actually, I think the main problem in the McCain campaign is . . . John McCain. He's always happiest when he's bashing fellow Republicans and has neither the instincts nor the appetite to campaign as a conservative Republican against a liberal Democrat.

The best campaign staff in the world can't save a bad candidate and I think it has become plainly evident that John McCain is a bad candidate.

Daniel Larison on the Obama era

A variety of predictions, but I think Larison doesn't adequately consider the impact of (a) independent events beyond the control of the political class, and (b) realignment of partisan coalitions.

As an example of (a), obviously 9/11 was an event that had a tremendous political impact so that one might say that the most influential figure in American politics in the 21st century to date has been Mohammed Atta.

As an example of (b) one might cite the profound southward and westward shift of the Republican Party's center of gravity in the 1990s. This was a trend that had first developed in the 1964 election and slowly built, but it was in the '90s that the South and West established their dominance within the GOP coalition.

Events will beyond Obama's control will have an impact in the next four years, and it is quite possible that some socio-economic segments now firmly Democratic will shift to the GOP and vice-versa. So Larison's forecast of "ritual flagellation from mainstream conservatives, who will be decrying the alleged role of xenophobia and nativism in the ‘08 election" is premature, at least. The clear task of the GOP will be to organize opposition. Much will depend on how Obama and the Democratic Congress pursue their agenda.

Mugger on Thomas Frank

Going after the faux populist sage:
Frank, in his zeal to trash John McCain and Sarah Palin -- for the common good, naturally -- is selective in his facts. His Sept. 24 Journal column brought up the Arizona senator's well-documented association with Charles Keating, the face of the savings and loans scandal in the late 1980s. Frank says that, "Keating fought back by recruiting a handful of legislators, including Mr. McCain, to pressure S&L regulators to leave his S&L alone." He omits that McCain's fellow "Keating Five" enablers -- Sens. John Glenn, Alan Cranston, Dennis DeConcini and Donald Riegle -- were all incumbent Democrats.
What's interesting to me is how conservative pundits are routinely dismissed as GOP shills, yet partisan hackery by liberals is not recognized as such. Their "progressive" agenda begins and ends with "Elect More Democrats." Whether the Democrats actually do anything to uplift the downtrodden is irrelevant.

Obama's genocidal cousin

Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga:
Raila Odinga is a Marxist He graduated from East Germany's Magdeburg University in 1970 on a scholarship provided by the East German government. He named his oldest son after Fidel Castro. . . .
Initially, Mr. Odinga was not the favored opposition candidate to stand in the 2007 election against President Mwai Kibaki, who was seeking his second term. However, he received a tremendous boost when Sen. Barack Obama arrived in Kenya in August 2006 to campaign on his behalf. Mr. Obama denies that supporting Mr. Odinga was the intention of his trip, but his actions and local media reports tell otherwise.
Mr. Odinga and Mr. Obama were nearly inseparable throughout Mr. Obama's six-day stay. The two traveled together throughout Kenya and Mr. Obama spoke on behalf of Mr. Odinga at numerous rallies. In contrast, Mr. Obama had only criticism for Kibaki. He lashed out against the Kenyan government shortly after meeting with the president on Aug. 25. "The [Kenyan] people have to suffer over corruption perpetrated by government officials," Mr. Obama announced.
"Kenyans are now yearning for change," he declared. The intent of Mr. Obama's remarks and actions was transparent to Kenyans - he was firmly behind Mr. Odinga.
Mr. Odinga and Mr. Obama had met several times before the 2006 trip. Reports indicate Mr. Odinga visited Mr. Obama during trips to the U.S. in 2004, 2005 and 2006. Mr. Obama sent his foreign policy adviser Mark Lippert to Kenya in early 2006 to coordinate his summer visit. Mr. Obama's August trip coincided with strategizing by Orange Democratic Movement leaders to defeat Mr. Kibaki in the upcoming elections. Mr. Odinga represented the ODM ticket in the presidential race. . . .
Mr. Odinga told a stunned BBC Radio interviewer the reason why he and Mr. Obama were staying in near daily telephone contact was because they were cousins. In a Jan. 8, 2008, interview, Mr. Odinga said Mr. Obama had called him twice the day before while campaigning in the New Hampshire primary before adding, "Barack Obama's father is my maternal uncle."
Read the whole thing. Frankly, I find this much more interesting than the rumors that Obama had an affair with Vera Baker. Adulterous politicians are a dime a dozen, but campaigning for a genocidal Marxist who went to college in East Germany -- that's news!

In reference to any other personage on the planet, this story would be four inch high letters on every production of the Fourth Estate in the nation. For now, we have to settle with the fourth page somewhere.
The Obama-Odinga connection is fascinating, even if you're an Obama supporter who doesn't think Marxism is a bad thing (do I repeat myself? ) but is somehow not newsworthy for most of the media.

Standards

The New York Times has standards -- two of them! They devote a 1,556-page front-page story to Andy Martin, an anti-Obama kook nobody's ever heard of, but as Tom Maguire notes, they can't be bothered to report basic facts about Bill Ayers.

Live long enough . . .

. . . and you'll see everything:
The American economist Paul R. Krugman won the Nobel economics prize on Monday for his analysis of trade patterns and location of economic activity.
Amazing.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

RNC Ayers video

Video: Allen West debates Ron Klein

Florida District 22:



Michael Steele, Fred Thompson and Duncan Hunter came to the district to raise money for West last week. Klein voted for the bailout:
Freshman U.S. Rep. Ron Klein, D-Boca Raton, has received $789,238 in 2008 campaign contributions from finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) interests, according to an analysis by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. Only seven House members have received more.
Considering all that campaign cash, Klein's support for the $700 billion financial industry bailout "kind of looks like a conflict of interest to me," said Klein's Republican challenger, Allen West, who opposed the bailout. Klein spokeswoman Melissa Silverman called it "outrageous to suggest Congressman Klein had the interests of anyone other than South Florida families in mind."
Outrageous even to suggest it!

Muslim Day parade in NYC

Pam at Atlas Shrugs has lots of pictures.

Muslims Against Sharia observes:
Their website gives away who they really are. CAIR, Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA), Muslim Students Association (MSA) and the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA). All of these groups have direct links to the Muslim Brotherhood, and several are unindicted co-conspirators in the ongoing Holy Land terror trial.
Tolerance! Or else they'll behead you!

Health care as a 'right'

Health care consists of goods (medicine, bandages, etc.) and services (the labor of doctors, nurses, etc.). To say that health care is a "right," as liberals do, is to say that everyone has a "right" to those goods and services.

In other words, liberals assert that you have a "right" to the property and labor of others, so long as that property and labor are related to medical care. If you own a clothing store, people don't have a "right" to your clothes, but if you own a hospital or a pharmaceutical company, people have a "right" to your products and services.

This just goes to show how liberalism corrupts language, so that opponents of liberal policies can be accused of opposing people's"rights," and the adherents of liberalism are taught to believe that the expropriation of other people's labor and property is an exercise of their "rights."

The Rumor

Ace deleted a post about a rumored Obama girlfriend because a commenter kept posting the (alleged) girlfriend's name. Is it the same 33-year-old woman discussed in this Daily Mail story? (H/T: JWF.)

A quick search reveals that speculation seems to have fixed on a woman named Vera Baker. I don't know why Ace was upset about people posting her name. All the Daily Mail story says is that Michelle Obama became jealous of this campaign staffer and banished her. But maybe Mrs. Obama's suspicions were groundless, and maybe the whole story is nothing but specious rumor.

Even if the story were all true, and next week the National Enquirer front-paged it, I don't think it would stop Obama from being elected. Didn't we learn 10 years ago that Democrats can get away with this stuff? Everybody pretty much assumes that they're all slimeballs anyway. Remember all the paeans to Ted Kennedy in Denver? If drowning a campaign aide doesn't discredit a Democrat, I don't know what could.

So any conservatives who think this rumor will derail Obama are probably mistaken.

UPDATE: No Quarter has background on Vera Baker, who is partners in a DC-based fundraising firm. NQ also suggests that Ms. Baker's British lawyers threatened the Daily Mail with a libel suit. British libel law heavily favors plaintiffs, whereas U.S. libel law favors defendants. I certainly can't be accused of malice against Ms. Baker, whom I've never met, and all I've done is to repeat what others have written which, as I say, may be nothing but specious rumor. And I'm not doing the Sully thing of demanding that somebody disprove the rumor.

Paul Mirengoff on the 'rout'

Ten days ago, when I saw an admission of defeat in John McCain's decision to pull out of Michigan, that was decidedly an unpopular view among conservatives. (See the angry responses to my Oct. 7 American Spectator column, "How John McCain Lost.")

Now, the brutal reality is starting to overcome denial, and Powerline's Paul Mirengoff writes:
[T]he McCain brand has been damaged, with the assistance of the MSM, by Obama’s relentless attacks. In addition, Obama has done a pretty good job of conning voters into believing that he is, precisely, a generic Democrat.
Accordingly, the possibility that Obama will win by 10 points or more cannot be ruled out.
Not discounting the effectiveness of Obama's attacks or the MSM's role, I think Paul understates the degree to which McCain's defeat has been self-inflicted. To reiterate:The man is amazingly consistent in some ways.

No. 1 in your heart . . .

. . . but No. 27 on the list of Favorite Blogs of 2008 at RightWingNews. Last month, I explained why I don't do lists like that, but if it's still nice to be listed.

Andrew Cuomo 'higher risks'

In 1998, Clinton administration HUD Secretary Andrew Cuomo explained that the administration's policies involved a "greater risk" of default, because of "affirmative action" that encouraged loans to those who would not have qualified otherwise. "I’m sure there will be a higher default rate on those mortgages than on the rest of the portfolio," Cuomo says:

Via Hot Air, where Ed Morrissey gives background:
Clinton HUD Secretary Andrew Cuomo announced a settlement of a lending discrimination complaint with Accubanc, a Texas lender whose prerequisites for mortgages came under attack from "community organizers" at the Fort Worth Human Relations Commission and the city of Dallas.
Remember when John McCain tried to blame SEC Chairman Chris Cox for the mortgage meltdown? And remember that McCain wanted to replace Cox with . . . Andrew Cuomo?

That's not the kind of change I can believe in!

'The sewers of right-wing extremism'

Thus I'm dubbed by one left-wing blogger, who says that Sarah Palin has "been second-guessing campaign decisions -- like pulling resources out of Michigan -- and she has been publicly complaining that the campaign isn't using enough of the good old fashioned GOP smear and fear, let alone too much of it."

"Smear and fear." Heh.

Clintons for Kanjorski

At an Obama rally in Scranton, Pa., today, both Bill and Hillary Clinton spoke out for Democratic Rep. Paul Kanjorski, who's being challenged by Lou Barletta, the mayor of Hazelton, Pa., whose crackdown on illegal aliens had made him a hero of amnesty opponents. Bill Clinton:
Folks, Paul Kanjorski's got a tough race. He's got a tough race because some people in his district believe that illegal immigration is a bigger cause of their economic problems than President Bush's economic policies. I got news for them and I've got news for you - you need to help him get re-elected.
Hillary Clinton:
I just want to reiterate what Bill said. We need as many Democrats in the Congress as we can get and we need to send Paul Kanjorski back to the House of Representatives.
I'm going to go out on a limb here and predict that Barletta will get a higher percentage of the vote than John McCain does in Pennsylvania's 11th District.

Conservatism in the Obama age

My recent discussion of the "intellectual" snobbery of David Brooks elicits comment from Daniel McCarthy:
Despite his invocation of Russell Kirk and Richard Weaver, Brooks is not a traditional conservative in their mold, as Robert Stacy McCain points out. Among other things, the traditionalism of Kirk and Weaver (and also Robert Nisbet) was generally anti-militarist. Yet militarism and its Philistine cousin, Christian Zionism, supply neoconservatives like Brooks the only rhetoric they have that resonates with right-wing voters. . . . Brooks is not enough of an economic conservative or populist to make a right-wing appeal in that field -- as Brooks's rhapsody for the Paulson plan demonstrated, he cannot connect with either the antigovernment Right or the populist Right, both of which opposed the bailout.
McCarthy's criticism of "militarism and . . . Christian Zionism" is obviously a reflection of the post-9/11 -- indeed, post-Cold War -- foreign-policy split in conservative ranks. One is reminded of the furious controversy after Kirk mocked neoconservatives as mistaking Tel Aviv for the capital of the United States.

The underlying fault lines here go back to the Old Right's isolationist stance against U.S. involvement in the World Wars and to the influx of Scoop Jackson Democrats into the the GOP in the 1970s and '80s. United against the Soviet Union, this coalition was powerful; since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the objects of U.S. foreign policy have become a subject of bitter dispute.

Being pro-Israel myself (although I doubt I fit McCarthy's definition of a "Christian Zionist"), I've sometimes thought of writing an essay with the title "Paleo, Neo, Me-o" in an effort to untangle and examine separately the grounds of this conflict within conservatism.

Looking backward
My own grievances with the neocons are purely domestic in origin, and go back more than a dozen years, when Linda Chavez and others connived in the downfall of the late Sam Francis. Whatever Sam's errors, his service to the conservative cause deserved better than banishment into outer darkness.

Since 9/11, I have more than once recalled Sam's seminal 1981 study, The Soviet Strategy of Terror, which exposed the Kremlin's role in fomenting violence by the PLO and other Arab extremists. Mohammed Atta was in some sense a belated fruit of that Soviet seed. Yet Francis, the man who first delineated this connection 20 years earlier, was excluded from the post-9/11 debatee.

Francis was fired from the Washington Times in 1995 for insubordination, and the history (although not, perhaps, the full history) of that dispute has been told elsewhere. It all happened two years before I came to DC and before I met Sam. But you have to look at the context of that dispute to understand what it was really all about.

The GOP had just taken control of Congress, and the contenders for the 1996 Republican presidential nomination were beginning to jockey for position. Sam was an ally of Pat Buchanan, whose 1992 populist challenge to the first President Bush was blamed by some Republicans for helping elect Bill Clinton. Torpedoing Sam Francis in '95 ensured that Buchananism would be deprived of its most prominent platform in the nation's capital during the upcoming campaign.

To say this is not to endorse the widespread misconception of Sam as a martyr to political correctness. (He was an active agent in his own career.) However, I believe it is clear that (a) those Republicans who were gunning for Sam had motives unrelated to his heterodox views on race relations, and (b) those same Republicans were on the Dole-Kemp bandwagon that went down to such disastrous defeat in 1996.

Brooksian provincialism
What does any of this have to do with David Brooks? Nothing directly, except that Brooks uses "intellectual" as a term of art. Sarah Palin is no intellectual, but neither is Rudy Giuliani, for whom Brooks has often expressed his admiration.

Both Palin and Giuliani are in some sense "populist," a word that Brooks always uses as an epithet. Palin's populism, however, is rural Red State provincialism, whereas Giuliani's is urban Manhattan provincialism. And there can be no doubt which provincialism would have been endorsed by Sam Francis, who was far more an intellectual than David Brooks will ever be.

What Brooks wants is a "conservatism" that will be popular among sophisticated New Yorkers and other upscale urbanites. Brooks makes this clear in his recent column:
In 1976, in a close election, Gerald Ford won the entire West Coast along with northeastern states like New Jersey, Connecticut, Vermont and Maine. In 1984, Reagan won every state but Minnesota.
But over the past few decades, the Republican Party has driven away people who live in cities, in highly educated regions and on the coasts. This expulsion has had many causes. But the big one is this: Republican political tacticians decided to mobilize their coalition with a form of social class warfare. Democrats kept nominating coastal pointy-heads like Michael Dukakis so Republicans attacked coastal pointy-heads. . . .
The political effects of this trend have been obvious. Republicans have alienated the highly educated regions -- Silicon Valley, northern Virginia, the suburbs outside of New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and Raleigh-Durham. The West Coast and the Northeast are mostly gone.
What is it about the post-1988 Republican Party that has "alienated" these regions? Most conservatives would proudly say that they haven't shifted ground at all in past 20 years, and they certainly haven't changed their principles.

What happened, I would suggest, is that in the 1990s the Democratic Party seized on issues -- gay rights, gun control, multiculturalism -- that had an especial appeal to upscale urbanites, offering these elites an opportunity to make invidious distinctions between themselves and those hicks in the sticks, the Ordinary Americans.

Two majorities
It would be a waste of time to contrast David Brooks and Sam Francis in terms of ideas and issues, except to say they are pretty much polar opposites. It is far more useful to delineate their different approaches to a fundamental question: How can a conservative majority be organized?

The question, for Sam, began with James Burnham's conception of modern liberalism as the self-interested ideology of the managerial elite. Burnham, an erstwhile Marxist, retained the Marxian notion that a dominant ideology or worldview must in some sense serve the interests of a dominant class. In the Burnhamite view, mid-20th-century liberalism was to the American managerial elite (think: Robert McNamara) what Prussian militarism was to the Junkers.

The task of the Burnhamite opponent of liberalism, therefore, is to identify that majority whose interests are most directly harmed by liberal policies, inform them and organize them as a coherent political movement.

Sam Francis used the term "Middle American Radicals" (MARs) to describe his idea of this potentially decisive conservative majority. In recent months, I have begun using the phrase "Ordinary Americans," which I think more aptly describes the non-elite majority in several ways. Among other things, the Ordinary American's political desires are quite ordinary -- peace, prosperity, a stable community that is not constantly whipsawed by political controversy and ideological crusades.

The Ordinary American is not radical, but anti-radical. But, as Sam's MARs concept suggests, a successful political movement requires a fighting credo and, in identifying liberalism as the radical enemy of Middle America, one necessarily conjures up a counter-radicalism. Yet I essentially agree with Francis in his Burnhamite belief that the task of conservatism is to organize a majority that already exists -- those whose interests are harmed by the liberal policies of the elite.

How does Brooks propose to organize a conservative majority? What are the issues where Brooks believes a majority opposes liberal policies? What arguments does he offer that differentiate policies on these issues between conservatism and liberalism?

McCarthy accurately notes that Brooks eschews "economic conservatism," which is to say a free-market view that government ought not intervene in the private pursuit of business. If profits are private, then losses are private, too. Attempts to artificially prop up unprofitable enterprises are (or ought to be) as obnoxious to conservatives as class-warfare raids on corporate profits. I've called this view "libertarian populism."

In economics as in everything else, however, Brooks consistently disdains opposition to elite interests. His only attempt to describe a conservatism consistent with elite interests was "national greatness," a project thoroughly discredited both by the eight years of the Bush administration and the now moribund John McCain campaign.

Quite naturally, Brooks has sought to distance himself from both these disasters, but it cannot be denied that the unpopularity of the Republican Party is due in large measure to the administration's policies on Iraq and immigration, both of which were and are heartily endorsed by Brooks. Rather than admit the failures of his own ideas, Brooks lashes out at "populists," but is never asked to explain how anti-populist policy prescriptions might lead a conservative GOP to majority status.

The coming irrelevance of Brooks
Perhaps the most heartening development of recent years was the electorate's overwhelming opposition to the attempts of John McCain to push through the amnesty/guest-work immigration "reform" bills in 2006 and '07. As one leading opponent of amnesty told me in 2006, this is an issue where there are exactly two sides: The elite and everybody else.

My paleoconservative friends, obsessed with battling neoconservatives over Iraq, apparently failed to notice that a substantial share of Iraq hawks parted ways with the Bush administration on immigration. Michelle Malkin, Rush Limbaugh, Laura Ingraham, Mark Levin -- this just begins the list of those broke ranks over the Bush/McCain open-borders policy.

With Bush gone, McCain defeated, and President Obama inheriting the Commander-in-Chief role, foreign-policy disagreements among conservatives will fade in significance after this election. In seeking a path back to a Republican majority, domestic issues will dominate the debate, and immigration will almost certainly be one of the most important. (For instance, Obama and his allies are likely to insist on a national health-care policy covering illegals.) Open-borders Republicans like Brooks will therefore be increasingly isolated from the GOP mainstream during the Obama administration.

Brooks offers no politically useful critique of Obama's progressivism, and thus will become irrelevant on Nov. 5. Brooks is clearly ready to blame the coming Republican defeat on conservative "populism," an excuse that is 180 degress at odd with the facts. It is vital that the Brooksian fallacy be rejected by conservatives, and that an Obama-era conservatism not be misled by this "intellectual" elitism.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Mortgage crisis disinformation

McClatchy's Washington bureau murks the water with Obama campaign talking points about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA).

The writers engage in journalistic prestidigitation -- look over here! no, over here! -- to try to distract from the point that it was the mismanagement and subsequent collapse of Fannie/Freddie that drove the current financial crisis.

At one point, the writers claim that "rural whites" were the objects of favoritism from Fannie/Freddie! Look at this map of the areas with the highest rate of "upside down" homeowners (owing more than their homes are worth) and see if you think "rural whites" are playing any significant role in the current crisis. (Lots of "rural whites" in Miami, Phoenix and Southern California, it seems.) Allow me to reiterate:
  • On July 14, the Heritage Foundation's Conn Carroll detailed the "crony capitalism" at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, including the roles of Democrats Franklin Raines and Jamie Gorelick in the corruption at these government-sponsored firms.
  • On July 23, Wall Street Journal columnist Paul Gigot examined "The Fannie Mae Gang."
  • On Sept. 11, the Center for Responsive Politics reported that the top three recipients of Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac campaign contributions were Democrat Sens. Chris Dodd, Barack Obama and John Kerry.
  • On Sept. 15, Investors Business Daily detailed the role of Raines and the Clinton administration in the mortgage meltdown.
  • On Sept. 23, an op-ed column in the Wall Street Journal explained how Barney Frank's push for "affordable housing" and Senate Democrats blocking a 2005 reform measure contributed to the meltdown.
Also, read this 2004 article (with charts) by Ed Gramlich, and this 2000 City Journal article by Howard Husock.

BTW, this is not about scapegoating minorities. Most homeowners, whatever their race, pay their mortgages on time. Since home ownership rates are higher for whites, and whites are about 70 percent of the adult population, it is likely that whites account for the majority of current foreclosures. (Although it's oddly impossible to find such data.) This is about a policy that, in the name of promoting minority home ownership, had the net effect of increasing high-risk loans, thereby resulting in a higher overall default rate. The default rate had been rising for years, and didn't cause too much worry until the housing "bubble" burst.

¡La educación es revolución!

Andy McCarthy cites Bill Ayers' 2006 speech:
President Hugo Chavez, … invited guests, comrades. I’m honored and humbled to be here with you this morning. I bring greetings and support from your brothers and sisters throughout Northamerica [sic]! Welcome to the World Education Forum. Amamos la revolucion Bolivariana! ...
As students and teachers begin to see themselves as linked to one another, as tied to history and capable of collective action, the fundamental message of teaching shifts slightly, and becomes broader, more generous: we must change ourselves as we come together to change the world. Teaching invites transformations, it urges revolutions small and large. La educacion es revolucion!
Radical? How dare you say such a thing!

Concern trolls, cont'd.

I wrote yesterday about the "concern trolls" at Maverick HQ, and now the Times of London reports that longtime McCain adviser Mark Salter is the Troll-in-Chief:
With his electoral prospects fading by the day, Senator John McCain has fallen out with his vice-presidential running mate about the direction of his White House campaign.
McCain has become alarmed about the fury unleashed by Sarah Palin, the moose-hunting "pitbull in lipstick", against Senator Barack Obama. . . .
Mark Salter, McCain's long-serving chief of staff, is understood to have told campaign insiders that he would prefer his boss, a former Vietnam prisoner of war, to suffer an "honourable defeat" rather than conduct a campaign that would be out of character -- and likely to lose him the election. . . .
Lots more there worth reading. Allahpundit asks:
Is McCain's attempt at calming the crowd yesterday the first inkling of the Salter "strategy" being put into effect?
I think not. Who, after all, would have suggested that McCain cancel his campaign and fly to Washington to push for the bailout? Surely no one who actually wanted to win the election.

UPDATE: Ace:
I now have a theory as to why the Fannie/Freddie stuff was left on the table almost until it was too late -- and then only addressed half-heartedly -- but I'm sure there'll be plenty of time for recriminations ahead of us.
No, we need to get started on recriminations now, before "sources close to the campaign" start leaking half-truths to their MSM buddies.