Okay. As soon as the man they call Kleinheider went up with this, I knew it was trouble. And I should know better than to do a post on a topic as clearly raw and sensitive as race and race relations, especially when it’s drawn from something written by someone as capable of getting people to say stupid things as Kleinheider. But the reaction to his headline has so far surpassed the relative early calm (maybe 6 comments in the first half hour) that I can’t refrain from comment because I find that it reveals how important that context is.

Let’s start with some disclosure: I know all three of the parties involved (Kleinheider, Powell, and Turner), and, complicating matters further, I also live in the 58th state house district. Further, until recently, I was an employee of SouthComm.

Now, the Internet is trouble to begin with. The call/response model of email, forums, and comment sections are passive-aggressive by nature, and the anonymity offered in a variety of forums, including Post Politics, adds more noise than signal. So we’ve got that working against us.

Fortunately, there are some case studies we can examine. There are three imperfect analogies, here, and two of them happen to be local. The first is actually one in which Kleinheider took heat for his coverage, and that was the Sherri Goforth affair. The next is one that involved a blogger dispatched by a local university (and subsequently resulting in active promotion of an unholy marriage between hateful wingnuts and Baker-style Republicans across Tennessee). And the last is a fellow by the name of Don Imus.

In the case of Ms. Goforth, she was caught distributing an image that specifically and intentionally disrespected the nation’s first black president. In the case of Hobbs, a stupid cartoon resulted in his short-term departure from a job and medium-term leveraging his cartoonish attitudes about life and politics into an entire wedge of a statewide political movement. In the case of Don Imus, he specifically used a racial epithet to describe in general terms a women’s basketball team. In two of the three cases, the offender was fired and in the other, the offender was reprimanded.

Here’s the difference, though, between someone like Bill Hobbs and A.C. Kleinheider: Bill Hobbs promotes a specific, partisan political agenda that relies for success on people who respond to cynical race-baiting that can be subtle and implicit enough that Hobbs can easily play the reverse race card. A.C. Kleinheider promotes no discernible political agenda other than preying on the dearly held political dogmas of ideologues of all stripes at their most fragile and sensitive points, and as he would probably tell you, in his agenda, there is no success.

I spent a lot of time yesterday examining the headline and the context trying to figure out if Kleinheider was intentionally maligning either Powell or Turner in a manner similar to Goforth or Imus. At the end of the day, I don’t think he was. I can understand why Jason Powell and Steven Turner would take extraordinary personal offense because being singled out is never comfortable, and being singled out under the umbrella of insensitive language of any type is rightly infuriating.

But imagine if yesterday’s post hadn’t happened the way it did. Imagine if Kleinheider had gone up with just his post of atonement from today, explicitly elaborating on his personal perspective. There is no way that clear, lucid thinking on race in politics would’ve exposed how raw all our nerves are about this discussion. I’ve got a list of “black friend” credentials at least as long as Robin Smith and Chris Ferrell, but part of my response to this whole episode is not being compelled to enumerate it here in order merely to recognize that there are important, interesting, and too often unspoken issues involving race in general but particularly in politics, which is nominally about representation.

Do we benefit from jumping all over someone like Kleinheider, who might suffer the same sort of essential racism most of us who exist in largely self-selecting isolated communities with little diversity suffer, when he chooses to use a word we all know is wrong in a context likely to offend multiple parties? He clearly was intentionally making a comment about race. Does it help to scream “That’s racist!” at a scenario where commentary about race was so clear? Or is it more helpful to isolate the conditions in which race as a form of hate-based discrimination and even crime as socially unacceptable, especially since it’s quite apparent that Kleinheider’s commentary is socially unacceptable? I mean, is there really a risk that Kleinheider’s headline indicates that “blackface” is making some kind of genuine (i.e., non-satirical) comeback in common usage or activity?

I have to admit: I’m frequently uncomfortable engaging in discussions regarding race. I’m uncomfortable that people who contacted me personally in the wake of Kleinheider’s post will misinterpret my writing on the topic. I’m concerned about choosing each word and each phrase precisely in an attempt to express my meaning. I’m concerned that I will inadvertently say something offensive. And I’m interested in the different dynamics exposed by the contrast among black/white race dynamics, black/Latino race dynamics, and white/Latino race dynamics, among all the other dynamics that exist in the American, Southern, Tennessean, and Nashvillian experiences. Finally, I’m concerned about the things that will be left unspoken regarding race dynamics, particularly in Nashville, even after the hubbub over this lone blog post has blown over.

And that’s all as it should be. The entire point of political correctness as I take it is not to enable a generation of people to cry out, “That’s racist!” at every utterance of something off-color. It is, ideally, an opportunity for each individual to come to terms with the fact that if one is not comfortable saying things in public, it’s worth considering what any level of comfort saying them in private might reveal. Just as the ultimate goal of endorsing diversity shouldn’t be to fulfill quotas; it should be to reveal to people of all walks of life that their life experiences are likely quite different from those of people with whom they don’t often have occasion to spend much time with.

Also, I think that though we pretend that the internet never forgets, this isn’t the first time that Kleinheider has even used the word. In a headline, no less. Not as much controversy erupted over, “Bush in Blackface?” Wonder why? Plenty of room for a discussion on that topic alone.

So what now? I don’t expect my post to have much impact. I’m no self-described expert on race relations. I’m just a guy. But my life experiences indicate we’ve got a long way to go, and my hope is that when it’s revealed through an ugly process just how far, that by continuing to discuss things in a mature, open, authentic (i.e., not anonymous) manner, maybe we make just a little bit of progress. And though he catalyzed this post in a way I personally would never have felt comfortable doing, I’m actually comfortable giving Kleinheider a little bit of credit for whatever progress we make in this moment.

Just as I’m comfortable giving both Jason Powell and Steven Turner a lot of credit for having the courage to take on an entrenched incumbent in whose district I now live. At the end of the day, after all, this is still about politics. On different occasions regarding Rep. Pruitt, I have thanked her, I have made requests of her, and not once have I ever heard from her. So I’m watching the race closely. Now I’m even wondering if this episode has raised Turner’s profile.

Finally, there’s the question of editorial propriety and publisher accountability. I’m terrible at being an absolutist, which both gives me a lot of outs and probably weakens perceived integrity. Generally speaking, though, I value editorial freedom above conservative business interests as expressed through editorial policies. The success of the institution of Kleinheider exists in part because he is largely allowed to be Kleinheider. If Post Politics resembled Google News, what fun would that be? Kleinheider both covers and creates controversy, and he walks the line before the paint has dried, leaving a mess when he crosses it in either direction.

All that said, I think that the most appropriate action for SouthComm to take would be to host a beer summit featuring Kleinheider, Jason Powell, Steve Turner, and Mark Mays.

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I feel pretty. Oh so pretty.

I feel pretty. Oh so pretty.

I suggested before that if you liked the dated views of the Tennessee Republican Party and their spokesantediluvian, Bill Hobbs, then you shoulda put a corset on it.

Turns out I was wrong. It’s the 19th, not the 20th, century that Hobbs idealizes:

Incidentally, home schooling was widespread in the United States until the 1870s, when compulsory school attendance laws and the development of professional educators created the institutionalized form of education we think of today as “school.” Among the historical figures who were home-schooled: Presidents George Washington, John Quincy Adams, Abraham Lincoln, and Franklin Roosevelt, plus Thomas Edison, General Robert E. Lee, Booker T. Washington, and Mark Twain.

As if the above mentioned legends had a choice.

Although Thomas Jefferson advocated for an “elaborate, publicly supported systems of mass education” that would ensure an educated populace, it wasn’t until the mid-1800’s that the general public and not just the very wealthy had access to any kind of “school” at all. And widespread public education did not become a reality until the beginning of the 20th century.

So according to Hobbs, “school” is not just for the elite anymore – but he sure does wish it was!

(H/T: Pith in the Wind)

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Baroo?

Baroo?

Chairwoman of the Tennessee Republican Party Robin Smith faced a (Hobbsian) dilemma yesterday – how to “court Mexicans” by exploiting their Cinco de Mayo holiday. But it finally came to her – she celebrated by spicing up the truth:

Today, we reaffirm the commitment of our Republican Party to the policies that work to provide jobs, educational opportunity, access to health care, the ownership of private property and all others that emphasize personal achievement, not government interference or entitlement.

Examples, please (and spelling counts), because while Tennessee’s unemployment hovers around 10% (in the high 20’s in some counties), the actions of your legislators say what you really have is a commitment to punishing the less fortunate, endangering America’s favorite pastime, screwing with free and fair elections, killing old people cheap, and interfering in local governments.

Go ahead…we’ll have a margarita or two while we wait.

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Ouch.

Ouch.

That’s right, I said a corset. Because while the rest of us move into the 21st Century, Bill Hobbs, press flack for the Tennessee Republican Party is still living in 1909.

What else could explain his lambasting of “Earth Hour” as “the latest environmental wacko campaign?”

Bill says:

On average, life expectancy from birth for the average American has increased 120 days every single year since 1870. The American life expectancy has skyrocketed from 47 years in 1900 to 78.1 years in 2006. One of the contributors to rising life expectancy: refrigeration, made possible by electricity. Energy usage also makes possible better housing, better healthcare, safer transportation, etc.

As author Indur M. Goklany noted in his book, The Improving State of the World: Why We’re Living Longer, Healthier, More Comfortable Lives on a Cleaner Planet (Amazon: $15.56), our increase in life expectancy in the 20th Century was very much related to America’s rising prosperity, which itself was fueled in large part by coal and fossil fuel consumption, including burning coal to generate electricity.

Typically conservative mindset – what was good for us in the early 1900s must be good for us now. Stop! Don’t change a thing! Because you must admit, child labor does keep the kiddies off the street. And women, you’re so over your voting rights anyway, right? Not to mention your career and your ability to own property. Jim Crow got it right, building codes and food safety laws are a bunch of hooey, and hey, who needs that radio you people are so fond of?

Bill thinks that it’s a sad irony that “liberals of the early 1900s pushed such programs as rural electrification and the creation of the Tennessee Valley Authority to improve the lives and economc prospects of millions of Americans…but today’s liberals are urging people to turn off the lights and turn their back on prosperity.”

The real sadness lies in Bill’s backwards thinking. As much as conservatives would relish the chance to revisit 1909, we can’t go back. The world is in a constant state of change and the decisions we make to address these changes should be based on current scientific information and what’s best for us now, not on what was best for us 100 years ago.

So we joyfully move ahead with tomorrow’s “Earth Hour,” because its very existence defines what we do: advocate for better conditions for everyone – not just a select few.

UPDATE: Bill is not alone in his arrested development. Hiya, Krummy!

UPDATE II: Who’s the most anti-environmental state legislator? A member of the TNGOP, of course!

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We didn’t get the latest stuntbumper sticker issued by the TN GOP, but rather than try and explain it, that sweet Bill Hobbs over at the Tennessee Republican Party simply created what he said was a “special version of the HONK sticker” just for us.

Thanks so much for making the effort, Bill. We had really been racking our brains about where we could go to learn more about nuance. Now can you please explain who’s paying whose mortgage?. We’re still trying to figure that one out.

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Can we throw the Tennessee Republican Party off the boat with the tea? Because this “protest” they’re organizing tomorrow is simply laughable. Not a peep out of these people about White House economic policy for the last eight years and now they find their voices?

“This is not about political parties or partisanship,” said TN GOP spokesperson Bill Hobbs, winner of the 2008 Liberadio(!) Jive Turkey Award. Not about partisanship? Really? So where was your organized protest when:

  • President George W. Bush was spending like a drunken sailor?
  • When our government’s discretionary spending – fueled by President Bush’s refusal to veto a spending bill, any spending bill – was increasing in 2001-2007 at an average annual rate of 5.3 percent?
  • When President Bush lied about his nasty little discretionary spending habits?
  • When a Republican-controlled congress enacted, and George Bush signed, a 2002 farm bill that caused agriculture spending to double its 1990s levels
  • When the same congress and president rammed through a $295 billion “porkulus” 2005 highway bill?
  • When Peggy Noonan wrote, “George W Bush is a big spender. He has never vetoed a spending bill. When Congress serves up a big slab of fat, crackling pork, Mr Bush responds with one big question: Got any barbecue sauce?”
  • When we found out about the pallets of cash?
  • When we found we were about to cross that “bridge to nowhere?”
  • When it became clear that Governor Bush’s campaign promise that income tax cuts would be “especially focused on low and moderate income families,” actually played out like this: the wealthiest Americans received an average tax cut of $123,000, the bottom one-fifth of households received an average tax cut of $27, the one-fifth of households received an average tax cut of $647.
  • When President Bush said he was “pleased with” the $170 billion economic stimulus package that he signed into law on February of 2008.
  • When we realized that George Bush’s “war, wealth, and oil” spending was, at its core, a crony capitalist’s redistribution of wealth?

So the question to Hobbs, Robin Smith, and the TNGOP is, wasn’t it “our money” from 2001-2008, too? Didn’t the government have their “hands in our pockets” when George W. Bush was president?

Excuse me, dude, but your partisan hackery is showing.

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Wah. How dare John Tanner – Congressman from Tennessee and president of NATO’s Parliamentary Assembly – do his job. Instead of engaging with the global community to ensure the security of the American people, he should just stay holed up in his Washington DC office obstructing any kind of meaningful legislation and then take credit for it when it passes, like these guys.

That’s what Bill Hobbs and the TN GOP think anyway. In their twisted world view, Congressman Tanner is taking advantage of the American people by leading a congressional delegation on a fact-finding mission to some *gasp* fancy-pants European cities when he should be just sitting in his Washington office waiting for his marching orders from Rush Limbaugh:

The estimated average tax cut that middle class Americans will receive for the last six months of the year as part of the bloated ‘economic stimulus’ package that John Tanner and the Democrats passed in Congress today is $13 a week…At $13 a week, it would take the average American several years to save up enough money to take their sweetie to Paris for Valentine’s Day, but John Tanner and Bart Gordon aren’t average American…They are Democrat congressmen who claim to be fiscal conservatives but are right now jetting off to Europe at taxpayers’ expense instead of coming back to Tennessee to explain why they voted for billions of dollars in pork projects and payoffs to special interest groups but only $13 a week for the average middle class taxpayer.

You want to talk about the average middle class taxpayer? OK, let’s talk about the average middle class taxpayer. The last attempt at tax relief for them from one of your guys was a one time only $600 tax rebate in 2001. How’s that $1.44 per week working out for you, dude? More importantly, how’s that that tax rebate working out for the U.S. economy? By one economist’s calculations, that rebate “cost four times as much as it put back into the economy because so much of that money was saved or used to pay off old debts.” In other words, the last time a Republican tried his hand at driving the economy we got the largest 13-month job loss since 1939 (3.6 million since December of 2007 bringing the total number of unemployed Americans to 11.6 million), a plunging stock market, and the near-total collapse of the banking industry.

I also don’t think Hobbs noticed that he’s in the minority when it comes to thinking that Tanner did the wrong thing by voting for the “pork projects and payoffs to special interest groups” – or what we in the reality-based community like to call a “long-term plan to turn around the economy.” Public support for President Obama’s stimulus package increased to 59% in a recent USA Today/Gallup poll – up from 52% in January.

Hobbs also conveniently leaves out a couple of other simple facts, 1) Tanner’s delegation is bi-partisan – joining tanner are Republican Reps. John Boozman (Ark.); Jo Ann Emerson (Mo.) and Jeff Miller (Fla.) – and 2) traveling to these places – no matter how fabulous – is what these particular lawmakers do to, you know, keep up with political, economic and security challenges that face the United States. At least that’s what the Defense News – which is part of the Army Times Publishing Company, the leading military and government news periodical publisher in the world – says.

Congressman Tanner has a full schedule on this trip and if he and the Mrs. are lucky they might be able to fit in a nice meal.

H/T: Jeff Woods at the Scene’s Pith in the Wind

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Let’s face it, Tennessee Republicans, you got the political shaft. You had the 106th session of the General Assembly in your proverbial back pocket and then *poof* all your plans went up in a puff of back room shenanigans smoke.

Now you’re playing the victim – lamenting on how you’ve been betrayed by a RINO. And we’re not surprised because it’s what you guys do. I call it Trickle Down Victimization and conservatives in power do it better than anyone or anything else (especially governing). From President George Bush to the whatever conservative local talk radio host you listen to, you’re all about blaming others and presenting every issue in Us vs. Them terms. In other words, yours is the “Party of personal responsibility,” my patootie.

So no one should be surprised that after her Party got the political shellacking of her career, the messages sent by TN GOP Chair person Robin Smith, victim, who needs to be in total control and does not like to lose, went from the magnanimous post-election

“I think the Republican Party now is at a point in its life in maturity where we’re going to have to have regional messages…The party should not compromise its core ‘DNA’ of small government and lower taxes…but ought to allow for some deviation where politically necessary. We can’t just hang our hat on one social message”

to this week’s hostile

“Action will begin immediately to address the actions of Rep. Kent Williams…His commitment today was not to Republican Principles, but to the blind and shameless pursuit of personal power. He cast his vote for a Pro-Tax, Pro-Gay, Pro-Abortion, Anti-Gun Liberal Democrat to preside in leadership against all 49 of his Republican colleagues.”

We also shouldn’t be surprised by Rep. Kelsey’s call for Speaker Williams to resign while positioning the people of Carter County as victims. Or Rep. Campfield’s call for him to stay out of his angry and deceived face.

Because as the rest of the country moves on to a less divisive brand of politics and policy-making, you, my good Tennessee Republicans, still have that divide and conquer attitude of 1994. While we’ve gone to a place where governing, public policy, and compromise have become a priority, you’re still with the take no prisoners, win at all costs, my way or the highway mentality.

While some of your rank and file have come to terms with their anger (victim: Rep. Hawk’s sleeping patterns), even today, after you have had a few days to stew and simmer, you remain hostile and bitter. Maybe it will take a few more days until you are ready to capitalize on what is a rare opportunity and take Scott Dismuke’s advice to release the following statement:

While we are dissapointed [sic] with the results of today’s leadership elections, we are still committed to working to create opportunities for all Tennesseans at this critical time in our state.

We will work with Speaker Williams to make sure that all Tennesseans are proud of their elected officials, but more importantly, tackle the very tough issues facing our state.

At a time when Tennesseans are struggling to pay their electric bills, pay their mortgage, keep their jobs and put food on the table, we firmly believe that it is time to put people before politics.

There will be a time and place for the events of today to be dealt with, but right now, it is time to put politics to the side and start working together to ensure our government effectively works for all Tennesseans.

In other words, get over yourselves, check your egos at the Capitol door, and reconsider kicking Rep. Williams our of the your Republican club. Because if you don’t, you’ll force him further into the Democratic Party camp and the tenuous hold you have on the majority will slowly and painfully (for you) dissipate.

Be careful what you do in the name of revenge and while you’re still stinging from what has to be one of the more stunning political coups in Tennessee history.

Deep breaths, my friends. Deep breaths.

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In a statement released this afternoon, Bill Frist opened the floodgates for Republican gubernatorial hopefuls and kept the door closed for his own presidential ambitions by confirming that he will not run for governor in Tennessee in 2010.

Who will be the Republican hopefuls?

  • Zach Wamp: The congressman from the fighting 3rd has basically been telling Frist to shit or get off the pot for weeks. I’m sure I’m not the only Tennessean who has noticed his self-promoting mug on billboards prominently placed along I-40 the farther East one gets in Tennessee. His shrewd pre-emptive waste management of his nose candy problem was almost Obama-esque, but is he too zealous?
  • Bill Haslam: Haslam has a head-down reputation for competent governance of Tennessee’s pre-Appalachian outpost, and he’s less of a lightning rod than former Knoxville mayor Victor Ashe.
  • Bill Gibbons: I’ll confess to knowing least about Gibbons other than that he has confessed interest in the race as a Republican.
  • Marsha Blackburn: The only female congressman in Tennessee, the newly feminist and ever-ambitious ex-stylist Marsha Marsha Marsha has her work cut out for her in accessing the same base Wamp is likely to court, especially after a healthy challenge from her right by Tom Leatherwood in 2008’s Republican primary. Word in the mythical backrooms is that the Baker boys aren’t fond of her. Her ambition more than conventional wisdom leave her on the list. Rep. Beth Harwell’s recent deferral to Mumpower keeps her off for now.

The real wildcard here will be whether this is a replay of the 2006 U.S. Senate Republican primary, where two conservatives (Bryant, Hilleary) pave the way for a moderate (Corker), or whether two moderates pave the way for a conservative. Will Gibbons enter the fray as a moderate or a conservative (particularly of the social variety)? I’m expecting Haslam to lean moderate, although he could (unpleasantly) surprise me.

Haslam stands to out-Bresdesen Bredesen by campaigning as a pragmatic fiscally responsible executive able to build alliances with rather than alienate core members of his party but able to be a sincere bipartisan operator at the same time.

The other big winner from today’s news is Democratic state senator Andy Berke. Having recently been the best promoter of Democratic ideas in the state, he stands well poised to emerge from what will probably be a small field of legitimate Democratic contenders if the U.S. Senate primary is any gauge of Democratic interest in statewide office.

Honestly, I don’t know if there will be any other serious contenders than former state representative (and first woman Majority Leader) Kim McMillan, and I’ll be interested to see how she makes the case, other than explicitly, that someone who previously supported a state income tax can win statewide office in Tennessee. Is it possible that a pro-income-tax progressive consensus could emerge that could push her past Berke’s redefinition of Democrats? I see that as almost as unlikely as her using her past support as an asset rather than a liability in the first place.

I suppose I should mention Lincoln Davis, as he has done some preliminary positioning. His name being in the hat would certainly increase tensions about the direction of the party. Having treated Obama in the Republican-lite mode, his was not an uncommon approach to Democratic presidential punditry in Tennessee, and that mode hasn’t served the party well at the ballot box since we’re in a state flush with real live Republicans who are certainly not fat-free.

And it almost pains me to mention Harold Ford, Jr. because I haven’t seen any indication that he’s serious about governance, although his name has come up in conversations about the race. I’m hopeful that Frist’s bowing out doesn’t increase the prospects that HaFo enters the race.

As much as I’d like to see the Democratic primary campaign generate broader statewide interest, I suspect that, should Haslam demonstrate grade-A gangsterism in the Republican primary, the race will be his to lose. The post-Kurita TNDP is unlikely to find a revolutionary in either Charles Robert Bone or Chip Forrester that truly speaks to Lamar!’s grand divisions broadly, so the rebuilding of the state party is likely to take more than a single election cycle, especially after the presidential, U.S. Senate, and General Assembly races we witnessed in 2008. And with Andy Berke one of few people in Tennessee Democratic politics willing to play the game on someone other than Bill Hobbs’s turf, the number of skilled messengers is likely to remain too few to allow him a realistic shot at the governor’s mansion. Regardless, I’d like to see a spirited contest between him and McMillan, as I think they might be able to point the way for the next iteration of the TNDP, especially since each will be based outside of Nashville.

SEE ALSO: Kleinheider

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Defending Your Turkey

Tennessee Republican Party Chief of Staff Mark Winslow responds to a congratulatory email from an FOL* on the selection of TNGOP Communications Director Bill Hobbs as the winner of our First Annual Thanksgiving Jive Turkey Award:

Yes we are always thrilled to get awards form local kook liberal radio hosts. Enjoy your new GOP state majority.

Thanks, Mark! We’ll deal with it…while it lasts.

In the meantime, the kooks at Liberadio(!) hope that Mr. Winslow enjoys his stay in the ‘Culture First!’ backwoods, where economic development, infrastructure development, educational development, and development of anything other than policies governing the U.S./Mexico border or the womb go to die.

Meanwhile, the kooks will continue their lives as public citizens working for the rights of all Americans via Tennessee Citizen Action and in various appointed roles recognizing longstanding commitment to actual policy ideas and outcomes.

Happy Thanksgiving!

*Friend of Liberadio(!)

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