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Sirotablog

David Sirota is a political journalist, bestselling author and nationally syndicated newspaper columnist. He has appeared on CNN, MSNBC and The Colbert Report (video clips here). His blog is syndicated at Working for Change. Email: lists [at] davidsirota.com. RSS feed, Sirota's MySpace site and Facebook page. Download Sirota's Al Franken Show theme song.

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Writings

Articles by David Sirota:

The Huey Longs of Iowa
(Creators Syndicate)

Halloween & The Lead Monster
(Creators Syndicate)

The Captive-Industry Populism
(Creators Syndicate)

The Invisible Culture of Corruption
(Creators Syndicate)

Immoral, Not Inept
(Creators Syndicate)

Tyranny of the Tiny Minority
(Creators Syndicate)

Over the Dead Bodies...Again
(Creators Syndicate)

The Lesson of the DMV
(Creators Syndicate)

Get Busy Living, Or Get Busy Dying
(The Nation)

New Ways of Thinking On Election Reform
(The Oregonian)

When the Class War Goes Local
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Welcome to the Republican Asylum
(Radar Magazine)

Obama Struggles to Find His Line
(Radar Magazine)

Chicken Soup for the Outsourced Soul
(Radar Magazine)

Windows Into Populism's Rise
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Protesting & Legislating to End the War
(Baltimore Sun)

Pro-Union Hillary Harbors Labor Foes
(Radar Magazine)

The Marriage of Hypocrisy & Corruption
(Denver Post)

Democracy Haters
(In These Times)

Fast Track Hurts Montana Farmers, Workers
(Billings Gazette)

'Good Cop, Bad Cop' Needed
(San Francisco Chronicle)

What They Said, And When They Said It
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Flattening the Great Education Myth
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Embracing Populism
(In These Times)

A Majority Leader, Not a Follower
(Baltimore Sun)

Pinstriped Populist
(New York Times)

Learning from Lamont
(In These Times)

The War on Workers
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Big Money vs. Grassroots
(Washington Spectator)

Where Economics Meets Religious Fundamentalism
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Addressing America's Health Care Taboo
(Washington Examiner)

Who Must Really Answer for 9/11?
(Washington Examiner)

Legislating Under the Influence
(In These Times)

Who's Lieberman Represent? Not You.
(Hartford Courant)

Trivializing Corruption
(PBS Now)

Find Your True Center
(Washington Post)

Mr. Obama Goes to Washington
(The Nation)

Money Plus Secrecy Equals Trouble
(Baltimore Sun)

The Hostile Takeover of American Democracy
(Chicago Sun-Times)

Rick Santorum's Hostile Takeover
(Philadelphia Daily News)

Fighting the Hostile Takeover
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Supply-and-Demand Solutions
(San Francisco Chronicle)

The Seinfeld Strategy
(In These Times)

A Primary Concern
(In These Times)

Undermining the Ownership Society
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Workers On the Slag Heap of History
(Philadelphia Daily News)

The New Battle for States' Rights
(Tom Paine)

Fusion's Third-Party Path to the Center
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Free-Trading Away America's Security
(San Francisco Chronicle)

The Battle for the States
(In These Times)

It's Time for a Windfall Profits Tax
(Costco Connection)

Newt's New Con
(The Nation)

The Corruption Eruption Continues
(Washington Spectator)

A Health Care Solution
(Baltimore Sun)

Don't Ask, Don't Tell - Just Do It
(Washington Spectator)

On the Verge of Political Reform
(San Francisco Chronicle)

Why Not Get Warrants?
(Memphis Flyer)

Will the Dems Step Up In the New Year?
(In These Times)

This Is The Race
(In These Times)

Partisan War Syndrome
(In These Times)

Divvying Up Ohio
(American Prospect)

Hurricanes Rain on Bush's Tax Cut Parade
(In These Times)

The Deafening & Dangerous Silence on Taxes
(San Francisco Chronicle)

The Resurgence of Movement Politics
(The Nation)

Watergate's Lost Legacy
(American Prospect)

Fear, Loathing & the GOP
(In These Times)

Sending a Message on Trade
(Alternet)

Conversions on the Road to Reality
(Knight Ridder Newspapers)

Edwards' Own Trade Spotlight
(Charlotte Observer)

Debunking Centrism
(The Nation)

Green + Red = Blue
(In These Times)

The Democrats' Da Vinci Code
(American Prospect)

Top Billings
(Washington Monthly)

Vote for Bush or Die
(The Nation)

You Call This a Democracy?
(In These Times)

Debate School
(American Prospect)

The Greed Factor
(American Prospect)

Tricky Dick
(American Prospect)

Late, Great Middle Class
(Los Angeles Times)

Follow the Money
(Washington Monthly)

The Big Squeeze
(American Prospect)

They Knew
(In These Times)

When Left is Right
(In These Times)

These Dogs Don't Hunt
(American Prospect)

When Ignorance Isn't Bliss
(In These Times)

The $700 Million Question
(American Prospect)

Being Dick Cheney
(In These Times)

It's the Stupidity, Stupid
(In These Times)

The Fox of War
(Salon.com)

Clarke's Vindication
(Salon.com)

Bad Rerun, Worse Consequences
(Popmatters)

On Second Thought
(Ft. Worth Weekly)

Married Gay Martians on Steroids
(Popmatters)

The Failure of Populism?
(TomPaine.com)

G. Walker Bush, Texas Ranger
(Popmatters)

Will America Follow?
(Popmatters)

Bring On the Truth
(Popmatters)

The Motives of Intimigate
(Popmatters)

Profit America
(Popmatters)

The CEO-In-Chief
(Popmatters)

No Question, the Media Is Right
(Popmatters)

Use Trade as a Tool
(Baltimore Sun)


Writings

September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004
September 2004
August 2004
July 2004
June 2004
May 2004
April 2004
March 2004


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Rock the boat,
David

Peter Beinart Has No Clothes

No matter how many times Establishment pundits and politicians contradict themselves and push policy prescriptions that then fall flat on their face, the sheer audacity of these people to continue puffing out their chests as “experts” never ceases to amaze. It’s positively incredible, really - only in politics (and perhaps economics) can someone embrace brazen hypocrisy, make high-profile predictions that end up being wildly off the mark and then not only keep their job, but continue to be billed - and to bill themselves - as a guru.

The most high-profile example of this these days is Peter Beinart of the New Republic. He is running around promoting himself as the Democratic Party’s visionary leader on foreign policy - sententiously berating the Democratic Party for not telling America “what their vision is” on foreign policy.

Beinart, you may recall, is one of the Washington pundits who most loudly echoed the Bush administration’s push for war in Iraq. “If the Democratic Party becomes the anti-war-with-Iraq party…we really will no longer have a 50-50 nation, we’ll have a 60-40 Republican nation,” Beinart declared on Fox News in 2002. “The Democrats will be in a kind of McGovernite wilderness for a generation.” He was, of course, about as far off the mark as one can get. Today, polls consistently show that Iraq has been a major factor in the decimation of President Bush’s approval ratings. And it is no secret that one of the major reasons Democrats haven’t done a better job of capitalizing on those poor numbers is because they have refused to support getting us out of Iraq.

But bad predictions are nothing when Beinart’s subsequent attacks came. The Washington Post wrote the month before the invasion in 2003 that “Beinart is a full-fledged, talon-baring hawk on Iraq, a stance that has led him to assail, among others, Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.).” Beinart specifically “chided Kerry for making anti-war noises after voting to support action against Saddam Hussein, saying Kerry’s presidential candidacy ‘is doomed to fail if Kerry keeps speaking so dishonestly about Iraq.’” In the New Republic, Beinart attacked Kerry for “think[ing] he can have it both ways on the war.”

Beinart, of course, was certainly right that Kerry’s equivocation on the war hurt him in 2004. And in that same New Republic piece, he rightly said that Democrats need “clarity and direction” on foreign policy - with us expected to believe that Beinart provides that.

Yet, as Beinart now uses his new book to champion himself as a voice of clarity on foreign policy, we are expected to forget that the media voice that has most aggressively tried to “have it both ways” on the war and who has peddled the most poisonous duplicity when it comes to foreign policy is none other than Peter Beinart.

Here’s what the Atlantic Monthly now reports, essentially stripping Beinart naked and proclaiming “The Emperor has no clothes”:

“Like many Democrats of his ilk, Beinart initially supported the intervention in Iraq, believing that bringing down a WMD-wielding, genocidal dictator was in the tradition of liberal interventionism. He has since changed his mind, however.”

Let’s review this one more time just to understand what kind of chutzpah is really at work here - a chutzpah so laughable in its egotism that it’s almost hard to fathom. The very same pundit who is running around with a new book promoting himself as a model if intellectual integrity/courage and demanding Democrats reflexively embrace neoconservative hawkisness in the name of having a “vision” is the same guy who led the charge for war in Iraq, berated Democrats who criticized the war, yet now has quietly decided to change his mind on the whole affair, joining in criticizing the Bush administration for the war in Iraq that he himself originally promoted. I would say this is as ridiculous as a kleptomaniac telling people not to steal - but that would be an insult to criminals, as the brazenness of Beinart’s behavior is even more disgusting.

And yet, incredibly, Beinart’s hypocrisy doesn’t stop at the war. In his New York Times piece this weekend, Beinart says liberals must make their international policy “a struggle not merely for democracy but for economic opportunity as well, in the belief that the former required the latter to survived.” Again, he’s not wrong - but this is coming from a guy who has used his perch at the New Republic to aggressively attack progressives who have long been making this exact point.

As just one example, in 2001 Beinart used the 9/11 disaster as an excuse to attack those who were considering protesting the IMF’s wealth-stratifying policies at the IMF’s meetings in Washington. Beinart said that if folks followed through on their planned marches, they will “have joined the terrorists in a united front” (This came from the same Beinart who a few years later piously wrote that a decent person should “not accuse his opponent of assisting terrorists”). He claimed that protestors against corporate-written trade and international economic policies were anti-American, and that they should simply shut their mouths because “domestic political dissent is immoral without a prior statement of national solidarity.” Now, though, we’re simply expected to believe that Beinart is a visionary leader pushing for fairer international economic policies.

Beinart continues to be promoted by the Beltway media as a “centrist” - despite the fact that his well-documented positions have long been way outside the mainstream of public opinion. That’s not surprising - he is a creature of the out-of-touch elites whose favor he seeks and a mouthpiece for the insulated Establishment whose acceptance he craves. Put another way, he is a baby Tom Friedman - a person so full of himself, so unconcerned with actual facts, so disdainful of the public’s intellect and so personally disconnected from the bullet-torn, blood-splattered consequences of the zombie-ish hawkishness that he preaches that he has positively no problem contradicting himself and then recontradicting himself - all while demanding consistency, all while labeling himself an expert, and all while pushing clearly misguided foreign policy snake oil.

You want to know why Americans feel so disconnected from the political discourse in their country (and also why the New Republic’s circulation has dropped precipitously in recent years)? It is because the media Establishment gives people like Peter Beinart such a loud megaphone, regardless of how totally out of touch he is. Similarly, you want to know why Democrats have lost elections on foreign policy issues? It is because many high-profile Washington Democrats have ignored the hard facts, their constituents and real convictions and instead used the hypocrisy of Peter Beinart as a political roadmap rather than a laugh-out-loud punchline. And no matter how much revisionism Beinart now engages in to try to promote himself and mask his embarrasing record, the facts are clear: Peter Beinart has no clothes.

COMMENTS: Go to Sirota's Working Assets site to comment on this entry

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About David Sirota


David Sirota is a full-time political journalist, best-selling author and nationally syndicated newspaper columnist living in Denver, Colorado. He blogs for Working Assets and the Denver Post's PoliticsWest website. He is a Senior Editor at In These Times magazine, which in 2006 received the Utne Independent Press Award for political coverage. His 2006 book, Hostile Takeover, was a New York Times bestseller, and is now out in paperback. He has been a guest on, among others, CNN, MSNBC, CNBC and NPR. His writing, which draws on his extensive experience as a progressive political strategist, has appeared in, among others, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Baltimore Sun, the Nation magazine, the Washington Monthly and the American Prospect. Sirota was a twice-a-week guest on the Al Franken Show. He currently serves in a volunteer capacity as the co-chairperson of the Progressive States Network - a 501c3 nonpartisan organization.

In the years before becoming a full-time writer, Sirota worked as the press secretary for Vermont Independent Congressman Bernard Sanders, the chief spokesman for Democrats on the U.S. House Appropriations Committee, the Director of Strategic Communications for the Center for American Progress, a campaign consultant for Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer and a media strategist for Connecticut Senate candidate Ned Lamont. He also previously contributed writing to the website of the California Democratic Party. For more on Sirota, see these profiles of him in Newsweek or the Rocky Mountain News. Feel free to email him at lists [at] davidsirota.com Note: this online publication represents Sirota's personal views, and not the official views of the organizations he works with.


Video Clips

Sirota on Lou Dobbs Tonight (CNN) – 5/14/07

Sirota debates Ann Coulter (CNBC) – 8/11/06

Sirota debates John Stossel (CNBC) – 6/16/06

More Clips:

7/28/07 - Sirota on Bulls & Bears (Fox News)

6/23/07 - Sirota on Cashing In, Part 1 (Fox News)

6/23/07 - Sirota on Cashing In, Part 2 (Fox News)

4/19/07 - Sirota at PSN Gala (C-SPAN)

6/22/06 - Sirota at Atticus Books w/ Ned Lamont

6/16/06 - Sirota on PBS Now

6/14/06 - Sirota on The Colbert Report (Comedy Central)

6/11/06 - Sirota at YearlyKos (LinkTV)

5/8/06 - Sirota at American Progress (C-SPAN)

2/22/06 - Sirota on Countdown (MSNBC)

SirotaBlog