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Month: March 2006

Tweety

by digby

If you feel like punishing yourself, tune into Tweety today if only to see Tony Blankley’s vomitous shirt and tie combo.

Tweety said that Frist had called Feingold’s (alleged) bluff and that Harry reid looks nervous about this censure motion. Blankley replied smugly that Reid looks nervous about a lot of things these days. Tweety nodded sagely. He’s still high from the wingnut kool-aid he spent the weekend swilling down in Memphis.

Meanwhile, back on planet earth 2006, Bush is down to 36% in the latest Gallup Poll and Democrats are ahead by 16% in the generic poll.

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Start The Hum

by digby

I wrote a post a while back that made a lot of people mad, called “learning to lose well.” It is a difficult argument to make and I failed at making it. I’m going to try again.

We are a minority party with almost no institutional power and a majority that sees no margin in bipartisanship, even as their president is failing quite dramatically. The port deal controversy was pretty much solely a Republican deal (although Shumer and some others were fairly high profile.) The intelligence commmittee, which was formed out of the atrocities uncovered by the Church investigation as a rare bi-partisan entity, has been taken over by an irresponsible partisan shill (who should be remembered by his fellow Kansans as the man who sold his balls and the constitution to that callow little man, George W. Bush.) This modern Republican party consciously governs by scant 51% majority by design, in order to ensure that no compromises with the opposition are required. (See Off Center by Hacker and Pierson.) Bipartisanship has been dead for almost a decade. Democrats failed to accept this and that failure left them floundering for a strategy.

It’s not impossible for an opposition party to function in that environment; it means that their only choice is accept that they are irrelevant to actual governance. That’s the simple reality in this quasi-parliamentary system the Republicans have rigged up. What that means is that you have to take every opportunity to make your argument clearly and concisely over and over again. You use whatever institutional levers you have at your disposal to put the other side off balance, expose their real agenda and get them on the record doing unpopular things. Everything is about setting up sharp distinctions and preparing the ground for the next election.

I’ll lay a little Sun Tzu on you for emphasis:

On hemmed-in ground, resort to stratagem. On desperate ground, fight.
-Sun Tzu

The Dems have been hemmed in since 2002. And at times they have been desperate. But since they failed to understand that they were in a partisan political war instead of a deliberative democratic body, they did not take advantage of their opportunities. The good news is that this system also made it impossible for the Democrats to impede Republican hubris (not that Joe Lieberman isn’t trying.)

To be fair, 9/11 was a traumatic experience and many people lost their heads. The Democrats, afraid of being tarred once again as soft on national security — and perhaps just afraid — failed to raise the kind of arguments early on that might have ripened before the 2004 election. In fact, they didn’t make them in time for them to have ripened even now, which was a mistake. We have seen such terrible foolishness as the Gang of 14 and the lackluster political skills of the intelligence committee. But it isn’t too late. The Republicans are in free fall, but the Democrats need to step into the breach. Russ Feingold is doing that today.

Now, I think we all know that the Republican Senate is not going to censure their president. In fact, they are probably going to rise up like wounded animals and roar like mad. Here’s Bill Frist from yesterday:

George, what was interesting in listening to my good friend, Russ, is that he mentioned protecting the American people only one time, and although you went to politics a little bit later, I think it’s a crazy political move and I think it in part is a political move because here we are, the Republican Party, the leadership in the Congress, supporting the President of the United States as Commander in Chief, who is out there fighting al Qaeda and the Taliban and Osama bin Laden and the people who have sworn, have sworn to destroy Western civilization and all the families listening to us. And they’re out now attacking, at least today, through this proposed censure vote, out attacking our Commander in Chief. Doesn’t make sense.

Expect more of this hysteria. It might even bring their base back into the fold. (Which is an inevitability in any case.) But take a look at the poll numbers. Revitalizing the GOP base will only stop the bleeding from the jugular vein. From the Democracy Corps memo (pdf) called “Cracks In The Two Americas”

The most important shifts are taking place among the world of Republican loyalists, which will have big strategic consequences. It is reflected in the most recent Democracy Corps poll where defection of 2004 Bush voters to the Democrats is twice the level of defection of Kerry voters to the Republicans. Only 31 percent of voters in blue counties (those carried by Kerry) are voting Republican for Congress, but 41 percent of red county voters are supporting the Democratic candidate. The combined data set shows major shifts in the Deep South and rural areas (even before the most recent controversies), blue-collar white men, and the best educated married men with high incomes….

But this problem is where the action is:

The other big shifts are taking place across the contested groups that form the swing blocs in the electorate. That is bringing big Democratic gains among older (over 50) non-college voters, the vulnerable women, practicing Catholics and the best-educated men. It is as if the entire center of the electorate shifted. This is why independents are breaking so heavily for the Democrats in each of our polls.

This is an election about throwing the bums out and Democrats need to make a clear statement of fundamental values, not policy differences. Some strategists insist that Democrats must adopt the religious code words that Republicans use to signal character and values to evangelical voters. I would suggest that all Americans, religious and secular alike, share a language that is full of words that describe character and values. How about we start using some plain English words like unethical, dishonest, unfair, untrustworthy, dishonorable and lies. I think everybody can understand what those mean.

E. J Dionne wrote the other day:

The stories about the Democrats are by no means flatly false — Democrats don’t yet have a fully worked-out alternative program — but they are based on a false premise, and they underestimate what I’ll call the positive power of negative thinking.

The false premise is that oppositions win midterm elections by offering a clear program, such as the Republicans’ 1994 Contract With America. I’ve been testing this idea with such architects of the 1994 “Republican revolution” as former representative Vin Weber and Tony Blankley, who was Newt Gingrich’s top communications adviser and now edits the Washington Times editorial page.

Both said the main contribution of the contract was to give inexperienced Republican candidates something to say once the political tide started moving the GOP’s way. But both insisted that it was disaffection with Bill Clinton, not the contract, that created the Republicans’ opportunity — something Bob Dole said at the time.

The Republicans worked very, very hard to stoke that disaffection with Bill Clinton. The consequence was that, except for a brief demoralizing period between 2001 and 2002, the Republicans have controlled both houses of congress for 12 years. They won because the tide was with them, Clinton had only won by a plurality, and the economy had not yet picked up steam. And they won mostly because from the moment he came into the White House the Republicans had relentlessly and mercilessly attacked his character.

It is past time for elected Democrats to begin laying out the case that the leader of the Republican party, the man to whom the congress has blindly followed at every turn for the past five years, is dishonorable. They must begin to create a low hum that reverberates throughout the body politic that says “the Republican party is unethical, untrustworthy, inept and dishonorable.” Make people hear it in their heads before they go to sleep each night.

Russ Feingold has just taken the first step to doing this. His censure motion will not pass, of course. But he’s started the hum. The press is listening. They are shocked, it can’t be, how can he say that? But Feingold is saying outloud, for the whole nation to hear, that the president defied the law and broke his oath to defend the constition.

As the magnificent helmeted Cokie Roberts once said, “it doesn’t matter if it’s true or not, it’s out there.” In this case, it’s true. And now it’s out there. Take a moment and hum this tune in your senators ears today. It’s time they get used to hearing it.

Go over to Firedoglake, where Jane and ReddHedd and the whole Firedog Brigade have all the information you need to make a couple of calls. Remember, we will lose it —- but we will “lose it well.” All that means is that sometimes losing a skirmish is in service to winning the longer war.

Update: CNN just reported that Bush’s numbers are down to 36% in the Gallup poll. Dems now have a 16 point lead in the generic ballot.

Update II: Ed Henry just reported that Frist is trying to move this vote up to tonight because he thinks he has around 85 Senators to vote against it. They still don’t get it. Bush just hit a new low in the Gallup Poll, they are 16 points ahead in the generic — it’s time to take a fucking risk. Voting for this motion will not hurt them in the fall but it changes the stakes. 15 Democrats is not good enough.

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The Ineluctable Consistency Of George W. Bush

by tristero

There will be some who surely will accuse Lonsesome Cowboy Bush of flip-flopping now that he has apparently been converted to the joys of multi-lateralism. But they are quite wrong. There is no flip flop, and there will be no change in the behavior of the Bush administration.

Early indicators make it clear that Bush will be as thoroughly incompetent at multi-lateralism as he has been at everything else.

Interview With Barbara Forrest

by tristero

Recently, I had a chance to meet Barbara Forrest, one of the most important witnesses in the so-called Scopes 2 trial. (Ultimately, I think history may judge the Dover trial far more important a defense of scientific inquiry. For one thing, the good guys won this time). Her book, co-authored with Paul Gross, called Creationism’s Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design is a compellingly written history of the “intelligent design” creationism movement and I cannot reccommend it more highly. I wrote a detailed review of it here which led to a correspondence with Dr. Forrest and our delightful discussions about Darwin and music over a fine Italian meal. She is interviewed here about the Dover trial and it is well worth reading. Barbara is a Louisiana native, through and through, born and raised there. She is also a card-carrying member of ACLU, a member of American United for Separation of Church and State and most importantly, as one would expect from someone with such credits, she is wickedly smart and articulate. If you have a chance to hear her speak, go.

After Judge Jones’s decision in the Dover trial, it is hard to imagine that “intelligent design” creationism will ever legally recover. True, they can change the name again, but Jones’s decision made it pretty clear that the courts were not going to tolerate such underhanded tactics to sneak a cheap, cult theology into science classes (or any other kind of theology). But as Barbara makes clear in the interview, these people are not going away. The fight to undermine science will continue as it is part of even a larger war. As hard as it may be to believe, “intelligent design” creationism is, in fact, the wedge – the opening tactic – of an elaborate strategy to establish an American theocracy. It is well-funded by some of the wealthiest names on the extreme right.

The overarching objectives behind ID and its influences are still little-understood by the larger public, or even by those of us who are involved in mainstream politics. Hopefully, in the next few days I’ll be able to post some of the results of some recent research I’ve been doing.

A Bit More On Knee Jerking

by tristero

[UPDATE: pastordan in comments supplied the following links to those interested in a progressive religious response to the religious right. I’ve only glanced at them, but they look like they might have something of interest:

United Church of Christ

Talk To Action

Street Prophets ]

Digby’s spot on here to object to Amy Sullivan’s aside about the “knee jerk left’s” utterly mythical objection to devoutly religious candidates. For a long time, Sullivan has been a strong advocate of increasing the amount of God Talk among candidates for high political office. This is a terrible idea, primarily because it is irrelevant and will solve nothing. The real issue is quite clear and it’s not a religious one at all, but simply a strategic one.

God is not a card-carrying Republican.

Republicans have been claiming a God monopoly for well over 30 years, and national Democrats as well as liberals have let them get away with it. That is very, very stupid. If a cheap scumbag like Santorum keeps saying, as he has, that John Kennedy wasn’t really a Catholic president, then Catholic Democrats should wrap that canard around Santorum’s slimy little neck. But that’s not all. And then they should chase Santorum back into his church and refuse to concede that his perverted political philosophy has anything to do with the real practice, let alone the pressing concerns, of true American Catholics.

And then you let Santorum hang himself explaining why his “Catholic faith” comes before his Americanism.

It might seem that by calling for Democrats to confront Republicans on religion, I’m somehow agreeing with Amy Sullivan. Not so. I’m not suggesting Democrats out-God Republicans. They already have, people! Since when did Christ call for tax cuts on the rich or abandoning the poor to the flood waters? No, what I’m suggesting is that Democrats and liberals make it impossible for Republicans to cynically work the God angle without a serious fight.

Politicians that advocate the legal murder or mutilation of poor women should be ashamed, not proud, to tout such immoral “beliefs” in public. It is outrageous to claim that death by coathanger is God’s Will. Making this point (or a similar one in more politically attuned rhetoric) doesn’t mean shilling for a particular religious practice. But it does mean that you have to be quite comfortable with politcal arguments over religion, and quite confident that Bible thumpers can be confronted on their multiple hypocrisies, and lose.

They’re Killing Me

by digby

I just watched Press The Meat on Tivo. Oh my god.

George Allen is like one of those frighteningly stupid right wing callers on C-Span. Is the Republican Party really going to insult our intelligence once again and foist another dimwitted blockhead on this country?

SEN. ALLEN: It’s going tough. Some progress, but obviously when they used the burning-of-the-Reichstag tactic of hitting that mosque in Samarra and trying to create this religious violence back and forth, that was, that was a setback. But things seem to be calming down.

Is he accusing the Shiite political leaders of engineering this bombing to disable democracy and give themselves the power to issue laws by decree? If so, it’s quite a bombshell, particularly since he then goes on to say approximately 178 times that the Iraqis need to form a unity government.

Or, like those idiot C-Span callers did he just hear something like this in passing from an equally stupid person at a cocktail party and parrot it on the air?

The point of the matter is, is we need to pressure and try to get others in that region, as well as other countries outside of the region, to really tell them what the stakes are. And I think they recognize what the stakes are, but, but action needs to be taken. There’s going to need to be concessions from various points. And then ultimately, this government – they can get a unity government, but there’s going to need to be some credibility, particularly in the security forces, the secretary, so to speak, of the interior, to make sure that law enforcement and military actions are, are fair and just and not based upon any sort of religion or, or ethnic biases.

Huh?

And then there’s this:

MR. RUSSERT: Something else happened this week, Senator Allen, in South Dakota. And this is how The New York Times reported it: “Governor Michael Rounds, the Republican Governor of South Dakota, signed into law the nation’s most sweeping state abortion ban. … The law makes it a felony to perform any abortion except in a case of a pregnant woman’s life being in jeopardy.” No exceptions for rape, incest, health of the mother. Would you like to see that law, the law of the United States of America?

SEN. ALLEN: Well, first of all I respect and support the right of the people in the states to pass laws that reflect their values and their desires. For the country, I think each state ought to make those decisions. Personally, I think that there should be exceptions for rape and incest because I look at the person. There is a victim of a crime, and if they so choose they ought to have that option.

MR. RUSSERT: But you would outlaw all abortion except in cases of rape, incest?

SEN. ALLEN: Oh, I don’t think the federal government ought to be making such laws. I think the laws ought to be determined by the people in the states. If South Dakota wants a law like that, they can have that. If South Carolina wants a different law, that’s up to South Carolina or Virginia or California.

MR. RUSSERT: And if a state said unlimited abortion on demand, you would abide by that?

SEN. ALLEN: Well, I don’t agree with that approach.

MR. RUSSERT: But you said states should determine…

SEN. ALLEN: But the, but the — if a state did that — I can’t imagine too many states or any state having one that allows abortion for all nine months for any reason or no reason at all. But that would be the right of the people of the states. And for those — but if a state like South Dakota wants a law like that, even though it’s not exactly what I would think is appropriate, that does reflect the will of the people. This is a representative democracy and I think that’s appropriate approach.

MR. RUSSERT: It would means that Roe vs. Wade would have to be overturned, which you would support?

SEN. ALLEN: I think Roe vs. Wade has been interpreted in such a way that it precludes the rights of the people to decide their laws. When I was governor, we passed the law on parental notification. I think parents ought to be involved if a girl who’s 16, 17 years old…

MR. RUSSERT: So you say overturn Roe. You hope Roe is overturned.

SEN. ALLEN: Well, Roe — if you need parental notification for ear piercing or a tattoo, they certainly ought to be involved with it. And so I think Roe vs. Wade has been interpreted in such a way as to restrict the will of people. Moreover, that decision was from the early 1970s and medical science has advanced a great deal. We know a lot more and of course, unborn children have an earlier stage of development.[???]

MR. RUSSERT: So overturn?

SEN. ALLEN: The point is, rather than arguing on a legal term, the point of the matter is the people in the states ought to be making these decisions. And if that’s contrary to the dictates of Roe vs. Wade, so be it. Because the way that Roe vs. Wade has been interpreted is taking away the rights of the people in the states to make these decisions.

We haven’t heard that argument put quite that way since around 1860.

He clearly doesn’t know what he is saying because this is a killer with the neanderthals: “I can’t imagine too many states or any state having one that allows abortion for all nine months for any reason or no reason at all. But that would be the right of the people of the states”

Ooops. Wrong answer George. Mistress Dobson has some remedial work ahead of him. And so does the anti-forced childbirth movement — we need to get the press to start asking the right questions. This bozo is incoherent getting soft balls about “overturning Roe.” He got visibly uncomfortable when confronted with the idea that a state might legislate “abortion on demand” and he blew his dismount. Imagine his eyes rolling back in his head when someone asks if he thinks the states ought to have the right to institute the death penalty for teenage girls who get illegal abortions. Or why he thinks it’s wrong to kill innocent babies unless they were conceived in the course of a crime. (I have a feeling he’ll be fine with it as long as the parents are notified, which seems to be a thing with him.)

He’s so stupid that he even brought this up:

… Again, let’s recognize how difficult that is. In this country, if we had to get two thirds of the Congress to agree who our president would be, for example, we, we’d still be fussing through the 2000 election.

Don’t go there…

The really scary thing about Allen is that while he was talking he looked and sounded like he thought he was making sense. He is quite fluently dumb. But it’s like a little girl making mud pies. She’s imitating all the moves of a baker — her mother or dad or Emeril or whomever. From a certain angle she looks just like them. But her “pies” aren’t really pies at all. They are piles — of mud. Much like George Allen’s answers.

I’m begging you, Republicans. Beg-ging you. Give the world a break. Whatever you do, don’t nominate another fuckwit meathead just because your base likes a leader who is just as thick as they are. I realize that you probably want to elect him just because it will drive me insane. But please, think of the children.

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Vote!

by digby

I just realized that the Koufax awards are closing tomorrow. Go over and vote for your favorite blogs (click on the logo in the left column to go to the whole list) but also use the opportunity to check out all the blogs that you’ve been missing. There is gold in every category. The contest is fun, of course, and it’s great to be nominated, but the real benefit is that it keeps the community vital by making sure people get a chance at least once a year to check out new sites and celebrating superior blogging.

Also, send a couple of bucks Wampum’s way if you can spare it. It costs them a lot of money and time to do this for the liberal blogosphere every year.

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Knee Jerk God Baiting

by digby

Amy Sullivan writes:

…Brownback is about as extreme as they come in the Christian Right world. Finally, a religious candidate who actually deserves the scorn of the knee-jerk left.

I wonder who all the religious candidates we’ve unfairly scorned in the past would be? Jimmy Carter? Bill Clinton? (and no, having affairs does not mean you are not religious, just a sinner.) Al Gore? John Kerry? They all go to church and profess to be believers. Are they just not religious enough? Now, it’s true that the knee-jerk left doesn’t much care for Joe Lieberman but that’s not because he’s a religious man. It’s because he is disloyal and enables the right wing. (We knee-jerk left wingers do tend to be dismissive of right wingers, that’s true.)

I recall scorning both Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon and neither one of them were particularly religious. Bobby Kennedy was a youthful hero and he was as catholic as they come. In fact, I’m having a hard time coming up with any consistent views on either side toward religious politicians at all. It would seem to me that this entire argument is nothing but a political football used to shut down criticism and advance a particular agenda without having to debate the issues on their own merits.

I hesitate to call this kind of lazy observation “religious correctness” because that gives the impression of an objection to rude derisive language about religion. This is something else. It’s “God-baiting” designed to put any critic on the defensive if the person they are criticizing is religious. (The right, interestingly enough, is using this and its close cousin, race-baiting, very effectively these days. Nice to see people on “our side” helping them out — again.)

Every secular “knee jerk liberal” has voted for religious candidates their whole lives. Indeed, it is impossible not to. You cannot get elected in this country if you do not profess religious belief. We have enthusiastically backed candidates who are from every religious tradition and from every region. Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton were both born again, southern evangelicals. We do not scorn religious candidates, period.

Many of us knee-jerk leftists are hostile to those who want to use the state to dictate the proper social attitudes of its citizens and interfere in their most personal, private decisions, that’s true. I would scorn Pat Robertson and Sam Brownback’s ideas no less if they were secular. It’s the lack of respect for the division of influence between the private and public sphere’s that is causing the problem.

And as for hostility, let’s not forget that it was back in 1988 that a future president of the United States said this:

President George H. W. Bush: I don’t know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God.

Who scorns who again? Perhaps some of these religious politicans could speak to the flock about giving some respect to the non-faithful. It’s the Christian thing to do.

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GUEST POST

DEADBEAT-HIPSTER-JOURNO-MASTER BILL CARDOSO, DEAD AT 68

By Lucian Truscott IV

Bill Cardoso died last weekend in Kelseyville, CA, of heart disease. He was a deadbeat-hipster-journo-master and friend to many of the ink-stained-ilk, and as writer and editor he had a surprising amount of influence in the early days of so-called “new journalism” for someone who wasn’t terribly well known and whose work wasn’t widely distributed.

His work was published in Rolling Stone, Harper’s Weekly, CITY Magazine, New Times, Ramparts, and other more obscure publications, and it should be noted that much of his best work appeared in numerous and lengthy letters to his friends, many of which were so crazed and hilarious, they ended up being copied and passed around hand-to-hand, samizdat-style. In 1984, Athenaeum published “The Maltese Sangweech and Other Heroes,” a collection of his pieces that is sadly now out of print.

Bill will be memorialized this week as guy who coined “gonzo” to describe a 1968 article he had assigned Hunter Thompson to write for him at the Boston Globe Sunday Magazine on Nixon’s primary campaign in New Hampshire, but I remember him for other reasons, beginning with the way he left us.

Thompson shot himself in his kitchen with his wife on the phone, but Bill had the grace to take a cab, as he always said he would. (“Take a cab” is old hipster slang for dying with your boots on … with a final measure of self-respect and class.)

I will never forget the story he wrote on the Ali-Foreman “Rumble in the Jungle” in Zaire, which New Times refused to print. I think I can remember the lede, because I was the one who typed it in a room on the backside of the Chelsea Hotel when a tooth fell out of Bill’s mouth and he collapsed, taking to his bed complaining of having had a spell put on him in Kinshasa by someone he referred to darkly as an “Ndoke.” I think it went something like:

“From my window here in room 236 in the Membling Hotel in downtown Kinshasa, Zaire — the only hotel I have ever stayed in where your room is number may be 236, but your phone number is 628 — I can see the broad, green leaves of the Giant Hyacinth floating in the brown waters of the River Zaire, nee Congo, as it flows slowly, inexorably toward the sea. The International Press is here in force, of course, but they do not know what I know: every single Hyacinth leaf conceals a crocodile, lying in wait….”

He took the view of the river from his hotel room and turned it into the most hilarious, yet ominous image of deep, dark Africa you’ve ever read in your life. And the piece got darker and weirder and funnier from there.

One of my fondest memories of Bill was when I would pick him up at the Burbank airport back in the early-mid 70’s, when I was on a magazine assignment in LA. He was always down on his luck and “short,” as he said, so I would buy his ticket at the airport (about $25 in those days from SF) and just sit down and wait for a couple of hours and he would show up on the shuttle. We were usually not even out the door of the airport — Burbank was and still is a small airport, so it wasn’t very far to the door — when Bill would whisper out of the side of his mouth: Slip me 50. The first time he did it, I thought I didn’t hear him right, so I asked him what he said. Slip me 50, will ya? A man can’t walk around without something in his kick.

So I would slip him 50 and that would last him until I put him back on a plane to SF, sometimes days later, after we had “holed up,” as he put it, in a somewhat less than luxurious suite at the Sunset Marquis in West Hollywood, which at that time cost exactly $23.00 a night. I have a clear memory of one time I arranged our flights so Bill and I met at the airport when I flew in from NY or somewhere else. I rented a car and we drove over the hill to the Marquis and checked in. We had barely closed the door of our “suite” when there came a loud knock at the door. Bill was already in the bathroom, staking his territory by laying out the contents of his Dopp Kit on the sink and checking his “coif” (that’s what he always called his curly Portuguese locks…his “coif”), so I opened the door. A skinny, wiry guy with hooded, darting eyes, dressed all in black, rushed into the room right past me. “Bob Neuwirth,” he rasped. “Truscott, right?” I nodded. I had heard of him. He was Dylan’s road manager on his early tours, and he had achieved something of a reputation as a songwriter and musician. I had seen him from across the room at clubs and a couple of parties in New York. He was wired into every scene you could think of and a few he’s probably forgotten by now.

Neuwirth sat down on a sofa that had seen better days and picked up the phone. “You on assignment?” I nodded. “Who for?” I think I said Penthouse. “Great! They pay good expenses!” He dialed the phone and started barking out a lengthy liquor order: “Two quarts of Jack Daniels, three cases of Bud, a quart of Beefeaters…” He paused, turning to me. “You drink vodka?” I nodded. “Two bottles of Smirnoff…uh…make that four cases of Bud.” Just then Cardoso appeared in the door of the bathroom. “Two quarts of Dewars,” he called loudly. Neuwirth spun around and spying Cardoso, practically dropped the phone in shock. Recovering quickly, he finished the order. “Two quarts of Dewars. Yeah. Room 217. Right.” He hung up.

Tapping a cigarette out of his pack of Picayunes (I have an entire sub-section of stories on the lengths we sometimes went to in order to find Picayunes in places like Twin Falls, Idaho) Cardoso slid across the room to Neuwirth and stuck the Pic in his mouth. “Got a light, Bobby?” Neuwirth fumbled for a pack of matches. He looked like he was in the presence of a ghost. Cardoso lit the Pic and sat down on the aging “modern” sofa and crossed his legs. Grinning at me he said, “The last time I saw Bobby was in the alley behind the Club 57. Hemway and I and the drummer for the loneliest plunk (that’s what he always called Thelonius Monk) were huddled together smoking a joint and Bobby was jumping up and down around us in a little circle yelling, lemme have a toke, Bill! Al! Al! Lemme have a toke! Please! Please? Cardoso took a drag on his Pic and gave Neuwirth a quick appraisal. “Nice threads, Bobby. Looks like life’s treatin’ you good. Why don’t you let us in on the scam on the phone.”

It turned out that Neuwirth was the de facto Mayor of the Marquis, had the whole place wired. Somebody at the desk must have informed him anytime a likely suspect checked in. He would make for the suspect’s room, and after checking on whether a record label was picking up the room tab, or there were travel expenses being picked up by Rolling Stone or some other magazine, he would place a generous order with Turner’s Liquor’s, a notorious outlet just up the street on Sunset Boulevard. “This is the Sunset Marquis, man,” Neuwirth explained in his speedy rasp. “At the Sunset Marquis, you dial 411 and you get information. You dial 114 and you get Turner’s Liquors and the tab goes on your room bill.” When I asked about the rather large size of the order, Neuwirth shot me a what-planet-are-you-on look and said, “There’s a lot of people stayin’ here, man. Stuff’s gonna be happenin’ tonight, tomorrow night…you don’t want us to run out, do you, man?” At the time, the logic of his question seemed inescapable.

It seems that Neuwirth studied the concept and practice of hip at the feet of Bill Cardoso and friends like Al Hemway and Larry Novick and other bohemians who were around the Boston jazz club scene in the early 60’s. It occurred to me that some years later, Neuwirth may have passed along to Bob Dylan some of the bohemian wisdom he had picked up from Cardoso and Hemway, but I was never able to confirm that. When I once broached the subject with Bobby, he gave me an indulgent look, like if you don’t know the answer before you ask questions like that, you shouldn’t ask them. Bobby always treated Bill with a rare kind of respect you don’t see much any more, and Bill, in his way, reciprocated. It wasn’t like Bobby ever said anything; nor did Bill acknowledge it. Both of them having received wisdom from unsung Bohemian masters like Al Hemway, they were way too cool for that. But it was there. I remember later one night when at Neuwirth’s invite, we showed up at Ben Keith’s “suite.” (Ben Keith is a famous steel guitar player who has played with Neil Young and most of the Nashville stars you’ve ever heard on the radio.) Donny Everly, Neuwirth, Geoff Muldaur and several other musicians were sitting around strumming and laughing and singing. When Cardoso entered, Neuwirth wordlessly signaled somebody to move so Bill had a place to sit. Nobody stopped strumming or singing or laughing. As was his wont, Bill took his sweet time sliding across the room to take his seat, giving Ben Keith a nod as he passed. Bill bent at the waist and examined the chair carefully, sweeping an imaginary crumb from the seat before he did a slow pivot and sat down. I think Ben Keith was wearing a cowboy hat, and when there was a pause in the music, Bill nodded to Keith and said, “Nice sky.” He motioned with with his fingers around his head, as if he were aligning the brim of a hat. “I should get one of those.” He grinned widely, his fingers frozen on the imaginary hat brim. “What do you think?” His words and the elegant little ballet of his fingers were so perfect, it was like you could see a cowboy hat perched ridiculously atop his the black curls of his “coif.” Everyone laughed. Bill Cardoso was in the house.

So late at night, we would hang-out in Marquis “suites” with the likes of Keith, Kinky Friedman, Iggy Pop, and others even less reputable. Somehow, Neuwirth’s “suite” was never the site of any of the revelry, a move Cardoso observed had been something of a rule back in Boston. “Why mess up your own crib?” Bill explained. At least once every time we met in LA for a summit conference at the Marquis, we would take a drive down to Southgate to visit his old Boston friend, Al Hemway, an aging hipster who lived with his mother in a bungalow in a neighborhood which even then you practically had to shoot your way in and out of. Cardoso introduced me to Hemway as the first guy to “import” pot from Mexico into Boston, principally by driving down there in a car and picking it up and driving it back. Hemway was far more than that, as I soon learned. Bill would describe Hemway completely deadpan to an outsider as “one of the guys I worked with when I drove for Volvo.” Long story.

Can I tell one more story? It’s the one Bill told about a night he spent carousing Kinshasa with Budd Schulberg and Harold Conrad, who were there for the Rumble in the Jungle. Conrad, for the uninitiated, was the real person the character Humphrey Bogart played in Schulberg’s classic fight film in the 50’s, “The Harder They Fall.” He was a former Brooklyn Eagle sports writer who once did “PR” for Meyer Lansky and later turned fight promoter — he promoted Ali’s first three fights, back in the days when he was called Cassius Clay, and he was the guy who introduced Ali to Norman Mailer and George Plimpton and started him on his high-flying act amongst the NY intelligentsia.

Cardoso was in Zaire for New Times Magazine, which unbeknownst to him was on its last legs, and when Foreman cut his eye in training and the fight was put off for something like 70 days, the entire international press corps went home, except Cardoso, who was stuck by New Times in Kinshasa without a promise that they would fly him back for the delayed fight if he returned to NY with everyone else. Having spent his meager “expenses,” Cardoso did what any enterprising Boston boy would do: he started dealing Zaire weed to the small American community in Kinshasa. By the time Conrad and Schulberg returned to Kinshasa some two months later, Bill had an entire chest of drawers stuffed with Zaire weed, and the night they got back to town, Bill treated them to some of his stash. When they returned to the Membling from their night of carousing in Kinshasa, the three of them got on the Membling’s aging wire-cage elevator to go up to Bill’s room so he could send them back to their digs at the Intercontinental (which Bill referred to somewhat snootily as the “Inter” in his piece) with some weed. According to Bill, as they got on the elevator, Schulberg was telling a Hollywood story, and Conrad was chiming in with his usual sideways observations and Bill was howling with laughter as the two older men fed each other lines. One story led to another and the three of them were cracking each other up. Finally there was a pause in the merriment and someone — Bill thought it was Schulberg — commented on how slow the elevator was. Bill looked through the old accordion door of the elevator at the lobby, then he checked his watch. They had been standing in the elevator on the first floor for more than 30 minutes. When he announced this fact to the others, Conrad stroked his pencil-mustache and smiled. That’s some weed you’ve got there, Bill. It felt like we were going up the whole time.

Then there’s the story about Bill stealing Francis Coppola’s CITY Magazine car (logo emblazoned on a Hondo civic or something like it) when they wouldn’t pay his expenses for covering the world series back in ’76, sometime around then. It was right when Patty Hearst had just been kidnapped. Bill wrote three or four stories on the Series for CITY, and when he returned to SF, handed in an expense bill for about $1700, and Coppola just flat refused to pay him.

Bill called me up and announced that I had been promoted from Colonel to Marshall Field of his newly-formed ZLA, the Zinger Liberation Army, named after John Peter Zenger, one of Bill’s heroes and the only newspaperman jailed for sedition. Patty Hearst had recently been kidnapped by the SLA, and the city of San Francisco was consumed by the story, so Bill named himself Marshall Field of the ZLA, promoted me from Colonel to Chief of Staff, and named his roommate, the mad-crazed VN war photographer Tim Page (who had more shrapnel in head than brains) as Minister of Information.

I flew immediately from wherever I was to SF. Cardoso had the CITY car stashed in a garage in Daly City, and we drove over there with a recorder and taped a message from the car in the style of the dispatches issued by the SLA. First the car’s engine started, and then somebody — I think it was Bill — mimicked Patty Hearst’s voice in a first-person “communication” from the stolen car: I’m being held hostage by the ZLA and won’t be released until Francis Ford Coppola pays Bill Cardoso’s CITY Magazine expenses, etc etc. Bill released the tape to Pacifica and within a day or so it was all over Bay area radio. Warren Hinckle ran a photo of a tourist with a Pelican sitting on his head in his column, identified the loon under the Pelican as Bill and wrote this hilarious gibberish about the outrageous kidnapping of Coppola’s car and demanded that any reader who saw “this man” should immediately call the police, because he was known to be armed and dangerous.

The whole thing went on for days. Coppola had been holding fast, refusing to pay, but when the tape hit the airwaves, reporters and TV cameras staked out his Pacific Heights mansion, and he caved. I think Bill spent most of the $1700 on a week of celebration, and he was back where he was before, cadging cocktails from pals as he held forth at his local watering hole with a new stash of stories about the ZLA’s war against Coppola’s forces of darkness.

I’m rambling here, but I think there’s room for one last story about the two-plus months Bill spent in Africa, a time which haunted him for years and after which his appearances in print became fewer and fewer.

It occurred to me over the last few days that while Bill may have named gonzo journalism, he didn’t practice it. Gonzo was a kind of shorthand to describe Thompson’s twisted take on things, which included stuff he quite literally made up. The scene of Ed Muskie’s collapse in the 1972 Democratic primaries, which Thompson blamed on Muskie having been addicted to the South American drug Ibogaine, was the example of his gonzo journalism cited most frequently after Thompson’s death.

Bill’s best stuff was frantic, written like he was a man on the run. It had an edgy noir-ish paranoia — a motel clerk who looked like a biker who had just finished filing his teeth peered at him darkly through thick bullet-proof glass and gave him the wrong change on purpose when he paid for his room. He was convinced that everyone else had proper terry cloth bath mats, and the paper one placed next to his tub was there to remind him of his place in the world.

But Bill didn’t make anything up. Everything he wrote was real, and while most of it was hilarious, a lot of it was as painful for him to write as it was for us to read. I finally concluded that’s why his Zaire piece never ran in “New Times” or anywhere else. “New Times” was owned and edited by Jon Larsen, the preppy and wealthy son of one of Henry Luce’s partners in Time Magazine. Larsen simply couldn’t stomach the Zaire piece. Bill’s story about an American prize fight staged in Zaire under Mobutu Seze Seko wasn’t profane, but it had a raw and primitive feel that reflected Bill’s take on the African continent more than it informed readers about the fight. He was spooked by Africa, and although his writing was hilarious, it was also deeply disturbed.

When he first arrived in Zaire, Bill was amused by the sight of hundreds of night-watchers who were hired by home owners and businessmen to sit on their haunches outside doorways in Kinshasa where they kept oil-fires going in tin cans to ward off evil spirits. “Ndokes” were the zombie-spirits of dead relatives and enemies who came out at night to enter unprotected houses and sit at your bedside where they would watch you sleep and cast a spell if you had the misfortune to awaken and see them. A month or so later, his amusement had turned to fear. Bill swore to me that he woke up one night in his room at the Membling to find an Ndoke sitting in a chair watching him. He was spooked, and when his tooth fell out of his head on the street outside the Chelsea Hotel the day after he returned to the United States, he was convinced it was as a result of the spell that had been cast on him by the Ndoke he saw in his room at the Membling. When he wrote about it in the Zaire piece, it wasn’t gonzo, it was real.

Sadly for us today, some of best stuff Bill Cardoso wrote was never written down at all. He lived a life rich enough to fuel a half-dozen literary careers, and if I may take my liberties, Bill Cardoso was a national treasure. Hopefully, one day there will be a Great Reckoning, and someone will add up what we lost when Bill, and Conrad, and Hemway each took a cab.

Unless I miss my guess, somebody else will have to pay the fare, because none of them — not a one — would stoop so low as to dig into his own kick and pay for the privilege of going out with class.

So here’s $50, Bill. Have a nice ride. We owe you at least that much.

Earlier this week, I posted Lucian Truscott IV’s provocative insights into the Dubai port deal on this humble blog. I gave a very slight overview of his credits at the end of that post. His eulogy to Hunter S. Thompson appeared in the NY Times, here.

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