Nothing more than a baby step

Alfred Doblin in The Record reminds us that the civil union legislation that was adopted by the state and went into effect at midnight remains, at best, a work in progress. Plenty of gay couples will be able to “unionize” (and I don’t mean join the Teamsters), but they will remain outside the mainstream because they cannot be married like the rest of us.

Discriminatory legislation codifies discrimination. Civil unions that give all the rights of marriage without using the word “marriage” do not give all the rights of marriage. It’s that simple.

On a side note, Doblin makes mincemeat of one of the great canards in this debate — that civil unions and gay marriages will increase health care costs.

(Bogota Mayor Steve) Lonegan says if a municipal employee were to become civil unionized, that could increase his local budget because of the partner’s benefits. If a municipal employee gets married it has the same effect. What’s the alternative? Hiring only celibate, single people? That sounds like the Roman Catholic Church. And they’ve had a few problems with that employment policy of late.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
The Cranbury Press Blog

E-mail me by clicking here.

Fire district preview: A snafu

I received an e-mail this morning questioning why we didn’t write a preview of the fire district elections in Monroe. The answer? We were unable to track down the budgets and commissioners until after our deadline on Thursday. (We intended to get something up on the Web late Friday, but that fell through the cracks.)

I offer this not as an excuse. The information is public so we had a responsibility to get it.

I offer this as another example of the problems with New Jersey’s governmental structure. There is something inherently wrong with having a government entity — in this case, one that levies taxes — that is as inaccessible as most fire commissions. Our reporters attend occasional meetings, but getting information at other times is nearly impossible — this goes not only for Monroe, but for South Brunswick, Jamesburg, Plainsboro, West Windsor, nearly every fire district that I’ve had the misfortune to have to cover in my 17 years as a reporter and editor.

Monroe is supposed to be reviewing whether to consolidate its districts, maintain the status quo or abolish them altogether. I vote for abolition. At the very least, the independent fire commissions should be required to file all budget information with their municipal clerk’s office, which would make it more accessible for voters to peruse — and reporters to track down.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
The Cranbury Press Blog

Wilco is coming, the new Wilco is coming

I can’t wait for this. Really, I can’t wait for this — new Wilco in three months! (Photo of Jeff Tweedy is from WilcoWorld.) Here is the projected song list:

  1. Either Way
  2. You Are My Face
  3. Impossible Germany
  4. Sky Blue Sky
  5. Side with the Seeds
  6. Shake it Off
  7. Please Be Patient With Me
  8. Hate it Here
  9. Leave Me (Like You Found Me)
  10. Walken
  11. What Light
  12. On and On and On

The disc is to be called Sky Blue Sky, and you can bet I’ll be pre-ordering it when the time comes.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
The Cranbury Press Blog

The ever-changing blogosphere

Salon today has a piece by Joan Walsh that looks at the tension in the blogosphere between the bloggers who see themselves as independent journalists (like yours truly) and those who view themselves as activists or political operatives.

The piece is tied to blog-generated controversies connected to stories run by Salon on Barack Obama and John Edwards.

The short version is this: Salon must be backing Hillary Clinton in the presidential race because of its recent coverage of Barack Obama and John Edwards.

Salon ran three pieces on Obama recently, tough pieces that looked at different elements of Obama’s past and raise questions that are now part of the mainstream debate about Obama (about an early Congressional race and what it says about him, and two that touched on issues of race and identity). Obama’s supporters in the blogosphere saw the pieces as hit jobs and have been responding in what they think is a like manner.

As for the Edwards story — his hiring, then firing, then rehiring a pair of feminist bloggers who have said some controversial things (bloggers say controversial things? Really?) — it was pretty straightforward.

The problem, however, is that the liberal blogosphere, as Walsh calls it, closed ranks.

We weren’t the only people who had solid information that Amanda Marcotte and Melissa McEwan had been told they were leaving the Edwards campaign. But if any bloggers knew, they didn’t report it. The bloggers closed ranks around the Edwards campaign, some even claiming that Salon had gotten the story wrong. There were suggestions, in Salon letter threads as well as in blogger-to-blogger whispers — it was loud; we could hear you! — that we’d peddled misinformation, or perhaps been peddled it, to help Hillary Clinton.

The Edwards tempest raises a series of questions about what blogs are and what role they will and should play as the media moves into the 21st century. Are we looking at a new media paradigm that mirrors the 19th century partisan media in which papers were house organs for candidates and political parties, with blogs shilling for candidates? Are blogs going to be independent media and political watchdogs? Can they be both?

My sense is that there is room for both approaches out there. My goal is to use the Channel Surfing blog — along with the Blog of South Brunswick and The Cranbury Press Blog — to bring more immediate commentary on local issues to readers. I have a set of generally liberal (lefty, progressive, populist — pick an adjective) beliefs, but I make it a point to remain unaligned.

Walsh thinks there is room for both, as well, but there needs to be a greater level of transparency. When is a blogger shilling and when is the same blogger acting independently? In the case of the Edwards story, it appeared as if liberal bloggers were more concerned with protecting their own, with closing ranks, as Walsh said.

This closing of ranks was a bit disturbing — and perhaps as important a story as the right wing’s attacks on the bloggers in the first place. The attacks were absurd and designed to do what right-wing attacks are always designed to do: control debate. Edwards now had to defend himself against a bogus charge of anti-Catholic bias.

Standing up to the attacks was important, but the way in which the blogosphere responded may have done as much to damage its general credibility as the sometimes wacky commentary strewn across cyberspace.

Maybe I’m the one who’s naive, but the whole episode made me wonder: What does it mean if liberal bloggers aren’t warriors for the truth, but rather for candidates? What does it mean for media, and what does it mean for politics? Why did either John Edwards or Amanda Marcotte enter their relationship so seemingly unready for what was likely to happen (assuming anyone in the Edwards camp had read Pandagon)? Either Marcotte would blunt her commentary, and lose the constituency Edwards was attempting to court, or else she’d alienate a whole lot of other people, and Edwards would spend the whole campaign defending her. That was clear to me from the start, and I’m not that smart. Why did anyone assume otherwise?

What did Edwards think he was getting? And what about Marcotte? Lefty bloggers congratulate themselves on being less compromised and corrupted than fancy MSM reporters; on creating a new independent realm of punditry and reporting. Do a lot of them really aspire to flack for a candidate, as well? Of course there are liberal bloggers who seem mainly about independent journalism — Glenn Greenwald, now with Salon, comes to mind, as does Joshua Micah Marshall’s Talking Points Memo and Firedoglake’s coverage of Plamegate — and aren’t looking to hook up with candidates. But others seem comfortable blurring the lines between independent commentary and partisan kingmaking. And while it’s true that journalists have historically gone off to work for politicians, they don’t keep their writing job when they go on the other payroll. Plus, their colleagues and competitors in other media organizations don’t see themselves as having a stake in the former journalist’s new political perch, and thus don’t tend to cheer them on, or look away from exposing problems that might emerge with their new employer.

Meanwhile, what do blog readers think they’re getting? Bloggers are all about transparency, and to be fair, Kos, Armstrong, Bowers and others at MyDD have been “transparent” about their work for candidates (and so was Salon about Peter Daou’s political ties, though when he formally joined the Clinton presidential campaign, we had to separate). But what about other bloggers who haven’t hung out a shingle; should readers assume their résumés are with Obama and Vilsack and Richardson? Are they for sale to the highest bidder? Or, to put it in a better light, to the candidate they decide is best for America?

This seems to be the danger. I am a regular contributor to BlueJersey — primarily because I am sympathetic to its generally progressive approach to politics. That said, some of its contributors align themselves too closely to the Democratic Party. I avoid those posts and only comment on policy issues and debates, staying away from local-, county- and state-level discussions of candidates (I have no qualms about discussions of national candidates). It is a difficult line to walk, but I’m comfortable for now with my approach.

My job is to use this blog and my others as an extension of the papers I edit and to share my views as openly as possible. When I find that blogging interferes with my independence as a journalist, then I’ll stop blogging.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
The Cranbury Press Blog