Author Archive

Is It Spring Yet?

Posted April 19, 2007 By Dave Thomer

A couple of hours ago I felt my throat starting to get scratchy. This would be my third cold in about six weeks. There’s nothing like relentless damp weather, swinging temperatures, and a five year old to batter the ol’ immune system. It’s not doing a whole lot to brighten my mood, either, not that the news is doing anything to help.

I’ve gotten word from several of the schools I teach at that there’s an effort to encourage people to wear orange and maroon, Virginia Tech’s colors, on Friday. The maroon won’t be much of a problem, but I’m gonna have to see if I can track down some orange tomorrow.

Playing the Ostrich

Posted April 17, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I just do not have the mental energy to even look at the news to comment. But it occurs to me that at 10:30 yesterday, my students and I were discussing whether moral theory can tell us anything about the idea of self-sacrifice, or why we feel that it is a praiseworthy act when someone risks or gives up his or her life in order to preserve the lives of others. I dearly wish that these had been merely theoretical questions for the students and teachers at Virginia Tech. Some lessons do not need to be put into practice.

Good Eats in the Classroom

Posted April 16, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Are you pondering what I’m pondering?

Probably not, unless you’re pondering the best example of Alton Brown’s Good Eats series to show in a philosophy class tomorrow. But I think I need something to visualize the pragmatist idea of education being connected to life, and while we’re at it, maybe we’ll learn something about ice cream.

And hey, the show earned a Peabody Award. So there has to be some value to it, right?

If this seems like a frivolous post, my apologies. My neck is killing me – I think this storm waged an indirect attack on my spine along with the direct assault on the windows.

Take My Turnpike – Please

Posted April 15, 2007 By Dave Thomer

We’re back home after a weekend trip that involved a lot of time on the Pennsylvania Turnpike – some of it driving. And it occurred to me that Pennsylvania, like several other states, is considering leasing its toll roads to for-profit companies, and then using the proceeds to pay for major initiatives (in Pennsylvania’s case, new highway construction and mass transit funding). As I understand it, the logic is that the for-profit company would be willing to pay the lease fee because it could make a profit by increasing tolls and employing other techniques to increase use of the roads and revenue. So maybe it’s a stupid question, but – why can’t the state just do that? Is there such an internal resistance to the government maximizing its revenue that the only way it can derive the full benefit of the resources it provides is to let someone else do it? Something about the logic just isn’t clicking with me.

Problems with Plurals

Posted April 13, 2007 By Dave Thomer

When I was in high school DC Comics published a title called The Ray, about a teenaged hero who lived in Philadelphia. I bought a few issues but quickly lost interest. If I remember correctly, one of my major disappointments was that the colorist was making what should have been a bright, dazzling book too muted. But I also wasn’t crazy about the writing. The writer, some of whose books I had enjoyed in the past, was using a lot of slang and jargon in the dialogue, and my reaction as a Philadelphia teenager was that “people don’t talk like that – the guy’s trying too hard.� Well, a few years later I wound up in a Usenet conversation with the writer, who mentioned that he had lived in Philadelphia around the time he wrote the book and based the dialogue patterns on things he had heard around him.

That conversation has been rattling around for the last few days, as current media events and my own democracy research have converged on the idea of pluralism, the notion that rather than looking to form one single society that assimilates everyone who comes into it, a democracy should strive to promote and support the different small groups that have their own culture, thought processes, and ways of communicating and interacting with the world. Part of the aim is to get away from the notion that everyone needs to conform to a single dominant culture. Of course, all these pluralist groups are supposed to be able to relate to one another in a respectful fashion in order to keep the larger society flourishing. And my reaction to The Ray highlights the problem here, I think.

When you have groups that look at the world in different ways, and then express that worldview in different ways, there are going to be problems of interpretation. Those problems of interpretation can cause well-meaning groups to talk past one another, or interpret a differing viewpoint as a lack of respect. If communication and dialogue are going to be key to a democratic theory, there needs to be some kind of common framework that pluralist groups can work from, and I do not think that this can be merely a procedural consensus. There has to be a shared understanding of dialogue, democracy, respect, understanding, deliberation, and many other concepts. Not only are these required for communication attempts to be successful, they are required for communication attempts to begin. There are points of view that argue that deliberation is an elitist structure, one that puts a premium on rules of reasoning and conventions of dialogue that certain historically-advantaged groups are comfortable with and one that favors a slower approach to social change. These points of view argue that excluded groups shouldn’t be concerned about respect and deliberation – they should take action to make other people uncomfortable, to confront them with the problems and force immediate action. For a deliberative, democratic pluralism to work, a society needs to create a culture of deliberation, one that unifies the smaller cultural groups.

Now the $64,000 is how to make that happen.

Good People

Posted April 12, 2007 By Dave Thomer

One of the web comics I check out regularly is Dork Tower. John Kovalic usually has a good sense of humor about the fannish, geekish things I enjoy. His latest blog post also demonstrates that he’s one hell of a good guy. So go give the site a look-see. I’m gonna go give my family a hug.

Nano, Nano

Posted April 11, 2007 By Dave Thomer

So I finally got my 2nd-generation 8 GB black iPod Nano the other day. As is true of so many other areas of my life, I am ridiculously spoiled. I remember my first MP3 player, and how deliriously happy I was to have 32 MB of memory to carry an hour’s worth of songs with me on the bus. Now I have over 1100 tracks in a device that’s slightly smaller. And let me tell you, I’m gonna let Shuffle Play work through all of those tracks if it kills me.

In the meantime, now that I am an Apple hardware owner, I have begun to peruse sites like www.cultofmac.com in order to learn what other wonders Apple will have in store for us in the future. Then again, Fake Steve Jobs’ blog is probably more fun.

Speaking of Substance

Posted April 10, 2007 By Dave Thomer

Turns out that while I was writing yesterday’s essay about substance in the presidential campaign, John Baer was publishing a commentary in the Daily News wondering why the two candidates he considers to have the most substantial policy experience – Michael Nutter and Dwight Evans – are currently trailing in the polls. The answers he cites are the kind of personality-based rationales that show that winning an election doesn’t necessarily entail support for the winner’s policy agenda.

Maybe the Tone Is the Substance

Posted April 9, 2007 By Dave Thomer

There’s been a recurring criticism against Barack Obama within the presidential primary discussions at MyDD and Daily Kos, and it seems to follow along the lines of a criticism floating through the overall landscape of the presidential primary. The criticism is that Obama is campaigning primarily on his personality and his let’s-work-together rhetoric, and is not offering either a bold vision of the future or bold plans for what he would do once in office. Neil Sinhababu articulates the criticism from his point of view as an Edwards supporter; Matt Stoller has a post up today arguing that Obama is losing what he calls “the bar fight primary.”

I am not going to say that there is nothing to this criticism. Reports out of a health care forum held recently suggest that Obama does not have nearly as much detail at his disposal on the issue right now as John Edwards or Hillary Clinton do. (Edwards has a seven-page PDF overview of his proposed plan on his website, which is far more than Obama has on his.) There is a segment of the electorate that prizes grasp of issues, and right now I would say Obama is not their candidate. I kinda hope he might be as the campaign goes on, but I can’t say that for sure. And I can understand why some other early adopters might look elsewhere and find what they’re looking for. What I would like to argue is that there is an important substantial point wrapped within Obama’s rhetoric, and it’s one that might make it worth waiting to see if those details arrive.

The major point that Obama is making in his rhetoric is that this has to be “your campaign.” He’s touting the huge number of people who contributed to his campaign in the first quarter and the number of house parties that his supporters organized at the end of March. If Obama can keep mobilizing people like this, I think it has the potential to be a substantive shift in and of itself, because it might help close the gaps between what a candidate says when he is campaigning and what he does once he has to govern.

Let me take a step outside the presidential campaign for a moment. In 2002, Ed Rendell ran for governor and managed to upset Bob Casey for the Democratic nomination on his way to a convincing general election victory. One of the centerpieces of his campaign was a proposal to allow slots gambling at horse racing tracks and a small number of additional facilities in order to finance a more equitable system of education funding in the state. Five years later we have the slots gambling but not the school funding overhaul. Rendell had a huge amount of trouble getting his proposals through the state legislature despite his overwhelming victory – in part because the voters that elected him also elected a Republican legislature, and in part because that bloc of issue-oriented voters I mentioned is not a majority bloc by any means. So there was no major public outcry when Rendell’s proposals did not go through. (And Pennsylvania’s voters are capable of raising an outcry – just look at what happened when the legislature put through a really ridiculous pay hike.) Right now I’m watching Philadelphia mayoral candidates put out policy proposals galore, and the big question is whether they’ll be able to make any of these things happen, in part because they require approval by City Council or – even more daunting – cooperation from the state and federal governments.

So the gap between campaign promise and execution is a key one. Neil writes:

I know perfectly well what Edwards would do — he’d pass an amazing health care plan, take major steps to reduce our dependence on oil, and make an unprecedented effort to fight global poverty. He’s made major policy commitments on all these issues.

But I don’t think Neil can actually know that Edwards would pass an amazing plan, or take major steps. He can probably know that Edwards would propose these things. Once proposed, they would face filibuster threats, lobbying efforts, and tinkering from congressional Democrats. So how do we know that Edwards would be able to get his proposals enacted after running through that obstacle course? You might say, Well, if Edwards gets elected, that must be a mandate for his legislative agenda. But that large group of voters who don’t care or even know about issues dilutes an elected official’s ability to claim such a mandate. Look at Rendell. Look at George W. Bush and Social Security privatization.

So Obama’s legislative record in the state and federal Senate comes back into play as a consideration. He’s built a reputation for being able to get people together and forge coalitions to enact legislation. I think those are useful job skills for a president to have. But Neil is right – legislative skills alone won’t be enough to deal with a high-visibility issue like health care. It would help a lot of if there were clear public pressure on legislators to support a particular plan – it might solidify Democratic support and peel off a few key Republicans. And I believe that Obama’s campaign approach is geared toward shifting our political culture so that such public pressure is easier to mobilize. The Portsmouth Herald wrote the following in its coverage of a health care forum that Obama held recently:

All the views and ideas expressed Tuesday in Portsmouth and at the Iowa meeting will be put on the Obama campaign’s Web site, www.barackobama.com, with an invitation for further public comment. In a few weeks, Obama said he and his policy group would synthesize all the comments and put a draft health care proposal up on the Web site for further comment.

What comes out of that will be announced as Obama campaign’s health care policy, but he said it will really be a template for what he wants to accomplish as president. He said he will remain open to new and better ideas.

Look at that procedure. If Obama really goes through that request-for-comments stage, and then puts out a proposal that takes the feedback seriously, he’ll have given ownership of that proposal to all the people who submitted comments. He’ll also give ownership to other people involved in the campaign, because it won’t just be Obama’s strategy. It’ll be their strategy. And all of a sudden early Obama’s lack of specifics becomes an advantage rather than a liability, because it brings people into the process and amplifies the prospects for change.
Is this a pie in the sky reading? It could be. But it would also track with the things I’ve read Obama say, and with his experience as a community organizer that he cites on the campaign trail. I go back to his first book, Dreams from My Father, because I believe it gives readers an honest glimpse at who Obama is, written long before he was a national figure. There’s a passage where Obama discusses a bus trip to the Chicago Housing Authority with some residents, where the residents were able to arrange some media exposure and get the CHA to listen to their concerns. It so vividly captured what I think of as the promise of democracy that I included it in my dissertation:

I changed as a result of that bus trip, in a fundamental way. It was the sort of change that’s important not because it alters your concrete circumstances in some way (wealth, security, fame) but because it hints at what might be possible and therefore spurs you on, beyond the immediate exhilaration, beyond any subsequent disappointments, to retrieve that thing that you once, ever so briefly, held in your hand. . . .

I began to see something wonderful happening. The parents began talking about ideas for future campaigns. New parents got involved. . . . It was as though Sadie’s small, honest step had broken into a reservoir of hope, allowing people in Altgeld to reclaim a power they had had all along.

I truly believe that Obama cares about unleashing that power. Even in The Audacity of Hope, which is far more obviously a campaign document, I see this commitment. He puts forward an idea of democracy that fits within the theoretical framework described as deliberative democracy – even in his essay on the role of faith in politics, he stresses the idea that as citizens, we owe it to one another to justify our desired political results to one another using reasons that are publicly available. If Obama is really successful at implementing that vision of civic discourse, his campaign will most certainly have a powerful substance at its core.

I Gotta Vote for These Guys

Posted April 8, 2007 By Dave Thomer

I find it interesting that fairly important people in Philadelphia politics find it worthwhile to engage in discussion over at Young Philly Politics. I’ve been looking at one thread that’s gotten pretty heated, that focuses on a Daily News report that “outsider” candidate Tom Knox was approached by some top figures in the Democratic Party back in 1999. A Knox spokesperson and a city councilman are just two of the folks in the back-and-forth. It’s kind of funny – a lot of blog communities complain when elected officials just do “drive-by” posts and don’t engage in the comments. So I guess it’s progress when some officials get into a flame war. I can’t help but be a little discouraged.

There’s a recurring theme in the YPP discussion about Knox buying support thanks to the campaign finance loopholes. But I think it also says something about the way the voters feel right now that decades of political service are not seen as an asset. I really hope that one way or the other this serves as a wake up call to the Philadelphia Democratic Party. But we shall see.