Today (September 1) is the official release date of the new book by Markos Moulitsas (the founder of the influential liberal blog
Daily Kos), entitled
American Taliban. Many
reviews (and
reviews of reviews) have been penned about it, and the book has spawned an
interesting debate. It is this debate which I find more interesting.

First, the book itself. I have yet to read the whole thing, though I've read excerpts of it. This is an odd admission to make in a review; though the details of the book aren't really relevant to the point I wish to make. I'll happily stipulate that it's a political hit job, an inflammatory broadside akin to Goldberg's
Liberal Facism or Levin's
Liberty and Tyranny or any number of works by Ann Coulter; albeit from the other direction. Were one interested in a rigorous analysis of the contemporary American right, or a treatise on public policy of any sort, this book would be a poor choice, just as the aformentioned right-wing polemics aren't likely to impart any useful knowledge on American liberalism. The political right wing is reduced to a caricature, subjected to a good dose of
reducito ad absurdum, and linked politically and ideologically to a faction which American conservatives publicly loathe. This is, of course, the same trick pulled by the aforementioned conservative authors, who attempt to tie modern progressivism to totalitarianism--a claim that any liberal would reject as ridiculous.
As scholarship,
American Taliban is trash. Even if there are ideological similarities between various factions of the US right and Islamofascists, these links aren't explored in any depth with any rigor. Much of the commentary is reminiscent of the old joke about Mother Teresa being akin to Hitler because both have a mustache. The book is yet another example of peeing in the pool of public discourse, and I strongly suspect Kos would agree.
But you know what?
The pool of US political discourse has long been a sewer where intelligent conversation and honest advancement of ideas doesn't stand a chance. And the color of the shit and piss in this pool--a few Michael Moore flicks nonwithstanding--is a deep bright hue of red.
And you know what else?
This peeing in the pool--
appears to be working. The Republican base is riled up, eager to vote out (at any cost) an opposition it considers fundamentally illegitimate. The Democratic base is not. Many are predicting a bloodbath for Democrats in November, and policy (other than the calculus of "its the economy, stupid"--a Democrat is in the White House, therefore the current state of the economy is the Democrats' fault; regardless of its genesis). Many claims that are utterly ridiculous (such as those concerning Obama's religious beliefs or birth citizenship) are nonetheless treated in the media as legitimate topics of public debate, whereas many leftist political themes are regarded as off-limits. The Overton Window in US politics is pegged hard to the right--a political environment which makes it hard for progressives (even "honest brokers" such as liberal columnist
Jamelle Bouie who panned Kos's book) to operate. And much of the criticism of the book seems to advance the notion that while wallowing in the mud is acceptable (and expected) behavior for conservatives, liberals ought to exhibit (and be held to) a higher standard of discourse--yet another manifestation of the current location of the Overton Window. It says here that standards of discourse ought to apply equally to all political factions and ideologies, and if one side routinely flouts them, then the other is entitled to do so as well. While many are fond of pointing out religious instructions to "turn the other cheek", such advice seems to fly in the face of modern political science and game theory.
As Bouie notes, Kos is a political operative and activist--not a journalist, scholar, or policy wonk. His book deserves analysis for its political merits, as well as its intellectual ones. Were the swimming pool clean and nicely chlorinated, complaints about the tone and tenor of American Taliban would be more on the mark--lobbing rhetorical grenades into a polite and civil discourse may well be denounced as intellectual terrorism. But the current intellectual climate is a war zone, not a city at peace; and I have a very hard time criticizing Moulitsas for deciding to come out of the foxhole and start shooting back.
One of my fondest desires is a political climate where content-free polemics and talk-radio rubbish, regardless of which side of the political spectrum, are widely denounced and ultimately ignored; and where ideologies debate on the merits of their ideas, not on their ability to hurl insults. But that is not the world we live in. In the world we live in, unfortunately, leftist bromides such as American Taliban are probably necessary, if for no other reason than to nudge the political discourse back to the the center, which is where more enlightened intellectual debate can hope to thrive.
After all, sometimes the best way to get your neighbor to stop peeing in your pool is to start peeing in his.
So, you made an off topic post ... and then disappeared. I hope all is well.
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