Video: "Obama and McCain's Best Debate Moments"

TheNewRepublic.com
September 26, 2008

Alright, game's on tonight. And to get you prepped, we've collected a video of Obama and McCain's best moments from past debates. In the videos below, the candidates take on everyone from Hillary Clinton to George W. Bush; and Alan Keyes succumbs to both. Enjoy.









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Graphic: "What Washington Doesn't Understand About the Financial Crisis"

TheNewRepublic.com
September 23, 2008




Created for front page to accompany article "The Wrong Emergency: What Washington Doesn't Understand About the Financial Crisis."

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Graphic: "The Surrender of Free-Market Capitalism"

TheNewRepublic.com
September 22, 2008



Created for front page to accompany article "Put Your Invisible Hands Up: The Surrender of Free-Market Capitalism."

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Graphic: "Sarah Quaylin"

TheNewRepublic.com
September 19, 2008




Created for front page to accompany "Sarah Quaylin: We've put our faith in a quick study before."

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Graphic: The political fight over economic regulation

TheNewRepublic.com

September 18, 2008



For the article "Stopping The Next Crisis: The U.S. needs to update its regulations. Obama gets it. McCain doesn't."

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Graphic: "Joe Biden, Feminist"

TheNewRepublic.com
September 17, 2008


Created for front page to accompany "Ladies' Man: The backslapping, bloviating hero of women's rights."

"Your Dada Political Advice For The Day"


TheNewRepublic.com
September 16, 2008

Last week, we asked a number of people for advice on what Obama should do in the face of sagging polls, waning enthusiasm, and a new foe. Though things don't look as dire this week, Obama still has a lot of work to do. Here is Alec Baldwin's advice for how Obama should proceed:

I hate these kind of handy phrases like "tipping point," but I do believe that we have reached this tipping point where you don't know how much you should attack and how much you should try to rise above and be more ideas-centered and policies-centered. Now, the American public itself almost demands there be a kind of gladiatorial element. They want Obama to go in there and gut McCain. ... They want to believe that their president is someone who, as a preview of what he can do in world affairs, they want to see him smite his opponent in the election with a real muscularity. They don't want this kind of Ivy League debate society. They want him to crush McCain. If he's not capable of crushing McCain rhetorically, they're not going to vote for him. I think a little less soaring 60s civil rights-era rhetoric, a little more of Ronald Reagan, who is the granddaddy of this in the modern world, with phrases like "there you go again." You've got to trip the other guy, and you can trip him in plain sight. ... I think you'll see with this election that the public expects it now, they expect you to get tough. They don't want Obama to win by a decision, they want Obama to knock out McCain. Or vice versa....

Well I think one thing that you could do is start to make a dent in this idea of McCain's wartime heroics. Bump everything else. ... If time in a military prison camp is everything, then there's something terribly wrong with this country. I don't take anything away from McCain about what he went through, but that alone, does that make him a better candidate than Obama? Is that right?

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"Reading David Foster Wallace"


TheNewRepublic.com
September 15, 2008

Following the news of the tragic, untimely death of writer David Foster Wallace on Friday, I reacted in the best way I knew how: I read him. Not all of his work is on the Internet of course, but here are the links I was able to find. They include some of his finest pieces and offer a glimpse into what made him such a distinctive and powerful voice, one that will be sorely missed:

(Update: Harper's has opened its archives of Wallace's writings. Links added below.)

Reportage:
"Host" The Atlantic Monthly, April, 2005
"Consider The Lobster" Gourmet, August, 2004
"The Weasel, Twelve Monkeys, And The Shrub: Seven Days In The Life Of The Late, Great John McCain" Rolling Stone, April 13, 2000*
Video of Wallace reading from the article "Getting Away from Already Being Pretty Much Away from It All" (1994, originally printed as "Ticket To The Fair") and "A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again," (1996, originally printed as "Shipping Out") both from Harper's.
"David Lynch Keeps His Head" Premiere, September, 1996

Essays:

"Laughing With Kafka" Harper's, July, 1998
"Federer as Religious Experience" New York Times Play Magazine, August 20, 2006
Transcript of commencement address for Kenyon College, Spring, 2005
"'Borges': Writer On The Couch" New York Times Book Review, November 7, 2004
"Tense Present: Democracy, Usage And The War Over Usage" Harper's, April, 2001
"John Updike, Champion Literary Phallocrat, Drops One; Is This Finally The End For Magnificent Narcissists?" New York Observer, October 13, 1997
"Tennis, Trigonometry, Tornadoes: A Midwestern Boyhood" Harper's, December, 1991
Fiction:
"The Compliance Branch" Harper's, February, 2008 (excerpt "from a work in progress")
"Good People" The New Yorker, February 5, 2007
"Incarnations Of Burned Children" Esquire, November 1, 2000
"Brief Interviews With Hideous Men" Harper's, October, 1998
"The Depressed Person" Harper's, January, 1998
"Nothing Happened" Open City, No. 5, 1997
"The Awakening Of My Interest In Annular Systems" Harper's, September, 1993
"Rabbit Resurrected" Harper's, August, 1992
"Everything Is Green" Harper's, September, 1989

See also this video of Wallace's Charlie Rose interview from 1997.

*- Wallace was never satisfied with Rolling Stone's heavy editing of his article. The full version can be read in Consider The Lobster or the standalone McCain's Promise.

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"Dee Dee Myers: What Obama Should Do Next"

TheNewRepublic.com
September 12, 2008

Barack Obama is slumping. Poll numbers are down. Enthusiasm is down. Democrats, once again, are freaking. So, we asked a few folks, from different walks of life, to offer their opinion on what Obama should do to improve his standing. Here's what former Bill Clinton press secretary Dee Dee Myers had to say:

The first thing you have to do is stop running against Sarah Palin and start running against John McCain. She's sort of bullet-proof, so the best thing to do in my opinion is to use her enormous popularity to contrast with John McCain. I mean, I think of them as Sonny and Cher. You know, what was Sonny without Cher? He was nothing, right? And once she left him, she went on to stardom and he disappeared. He was a successful entrepreneur, he's not an idiot, but he has no star-power. She's the talent, she's the excitement, she's the draw.

What Sarah Palin has done, and this is something I like about her, is that she's a women who has succeeded very much on her own terms. She talks about motherhood as a training ground for leadership; she manages and balances her family and her work in her own way. It's very hard to see where her family ends and her work begins. I think a lot of women see their lives that way. Not everyone's going to go out and shoot a moose and put their hair up in a bun and put on their sexy open-toe shoes and go to dinner. ... But does everybody have to be lock-step on every issue? Or can somebody who's outside--in Sarah Palin's case, very much outside--the traditional feminist agenda still move the ball forward for women? I think the answer is yes. When I hear Pat Buchanan on TV, decrying sexism in the media, you know? This is not all bad. ... I don't know where abortion rights are going to end up in all this, and honestly that concerns me, but I think we need to find a different language to talk about it. I think that there are more women who identify with Sarah Palin than Gloria Steinem right now. Even if they don't agree with 100 percent of her agenda, her life looks more like their lives.

Some people--it wasn't the Obama campaign, but they're suffering the consequences--came out against her so hard on such a broad range of topics, including her family, that I think the public reacted viscerally. So now everything negative that's said about her--whether it's true, as in charges about the bridge to nowhere, or not true, as in rumors about her baby--people discount it. And so, on some level, we could argue all day whether it matters or not what her qualifications are, the public has decided that that's not how they're judging this. They know she doesn't know anything about foreign policy and they don't really care.

The main thing about Sarah Palin is what she says about John McCain. He couldn't have possibly won this campaign by talking about his ideas--you know, his plans for the future, his record in Washington. That was about as attractive as day-old bread. If she's the future of the party, he's the past. ... You have to get back to Sarah Palin, what a phenom, isn't she a remarkable person, what a great story to tell, and doesn't she make John McCain the most boringest, most yesterday guy in the world? And let's remember, he is, because his policies really stink. I mean, let's use her to point out his weaknesses instead of shielding him from his weaknesses. Let's remind people why she's there, because he can't get three people into a hotel ballroom without her. No one's hearing a word he says. No one wants to hear about his policies. You've got to be a little careful because I don't remember the last time when a national campaign was decided purely on the basis of policy. But who's going to be running the show? Who's the real agent of change here? Who's the person who's talking about tomorrow?

My dad is 74 my mom is 69, they use their computer every day and so do all their friends. It's not a demographic issue; it's a state-of-mind issue. My mom's on there emailing Congress, emailing John McCain. She's like, "You stop it!" It's not that most people his age don't use computers; it's that he's not in touch with the world as it works now. If you can't send an email, if you don't even know how to Google, I mean how do you know anything? I think that's not an argument about age, it's an argument about state-of-mind. John McCain is a guy whose ideas are stuck firmly in the past.

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"Michael Dukakis: What Obama Should Do Next"

TheNewRepublic.com
September 11, 2008

Barack Obama is slumping. Poll numbers are down. Enthusiasm is down. Democrats, once again, are freaking. So, we asked a few folks, from different walks of life, to offer their opinion on what Obama should do to improve his standing. Here's what former Massachusetts Governor and 1988 Democratic presidential nominee Michael Dukakis had to say:

On campaigning:
"I think this thing is going to be won in the field, with basic grassroots organizing ... and I don't think McCain has anything out there. Obama is attempting to do that more thoroughly and better, in more states, than I think anybody I can remember, including the guy you're talking to."

On experience:
"I think this experience thing is phony as a three-dollar bill. This guy's been in elected office for twelve consecutive years. That's more than Reagan was, more the Carter was, more than George Bush was, in fact double the amount of time Bush was in elected office, the same as Clinton and Bush One, and a couple of years less than John Kennedy. Some of that was in Illinois which is hardly the minor leagues of American politics, and he represented more people in his state senate district than live in the entire state of Alaska. He was an extremely effective state legislator. He's been an extremely effective United States senator. And frankly I don't know exactly what John McCain's executive experience is, to tell you the truth."

On fighting back:
"Obama should continue to do what he has been doing for the past few days, which is to address major issues in ways that obviously make the difference for people between him and McCain. And at the same time, he has to make sure that they don't do what I did, which was to not respond to what has been a very tough attack campaign that's been going on for weeks."

On the issues:
"I think it's important that he emphasizes that McCain has never voted for the working guy in his life. It's not just minimum wage votes; it's everything: Privatizing Social Security and Medicare, he's anti-union, he hasn't lifted a finger for public education, his health plan is a joke. I mean, this guy--he doesn't really believe that working people and their families in this country ought to be guaranteed basic health insurance. So, I think you want to draw those contrasts, and I think he will do so and has already begun to do so."

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