As the communications director for Joe Lieberman’s 2006 Senate campaign, Dan Gerstein developed a relationship with the broader blogging community. It wasn’t a good relationship — I think I’d call it “tense,” and maybe “acrimonious” — but the two sides got to know each other fairly well. By November, Gerstein’s contempt for the netroots was palpable, and most liberal blogs felt largely the same about him, but the campaign was over and the pugilists went to their respective corners.
Today, Gerstein decided to kick the sleeping dog. Hard.
If the liberal blogs want to understand why so few people outside their narrow echo chamber take them seriously, and what it will take to gain the broader credibility they crave, they should look no further than their handling of the recent flap over John Edwards’ foul-mouthed blogger hires.
This ugly morality tale – which mercifully concluded Tuesday with the second of the two offending online staffers resigning from the Edwards campaign – revealed the Kossacks in all their angry adolescent glory: impudent, impotent, unreflective and unaccountable. […]
[T]he liberal blogosphere…decided that the best way to fight the “right-wing smear machine” that they so despise is to create an even more venomous, boundary-less, and destructive counterpart and fight ire with more ire.
Don’t hold back, Dan; tell us how you really feel.
Gerstein’s harangue was inspired by the controversy surrounding John Edwards’ former bloggers, and the netroots’ reaction to the story, but Gerstein seems to have made this very personal. He’s not just bothered by one hullabaloo about some intemperate blog posts; he seems outraged at everything about the way liberal blogs operate.
And he wants the blogs “punished.”
[I]t wouldn’t hurt if the party’s top leaders step in and provide some adult supervision. If the bloggers are going to behave like spoiled children, then maybe it’s time to punish them accordingly.
Shut the line-crossers out of press briefings. Deny them jobs that confer party approval. And for god’s sake, please quit kissing Kos’s ring at his convention until he and his acolytes grow out of their high-tech tantrum tactics.
First, Gerstein’s anger at the blogs seems misplaced. The netroots are “spoiled children,” apparently, because some use profanity. Worse, many more criticize right-wing blowhards like Bill Donohue. As a result, Democratic leaders, anxious to get their message to netroots activists, should stop talking to bloggers and their readers? This may make sense in Joe Lieberman’s office, but I’m having a hard time grasping the logic.
What’s more Gerstein fails to appreciate the broader dynamic. As Chris Bowers put it:
Stupid, ignorant ass. Selfish, confused, dishonest President. Hypocrite liar. Stubborn, irresponsible jerk.
These are just some of the words the American people used to describe Bush in the latest Pew survey. Considering the harsh language used by the American people to describe Bush, as far as I am concerned, the American people should be shut out of all press briefings and denied any jobs within “our” party until they learn to mind their manners.
Gerstein’s message probably won’t change many minds within the party. Call it a hunch.