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In the Shadows of the Shadow Convention: Stuck Inside A Green Room
With A Giant Frog Again
August,
2000
Inside "the green room" at the Shadow Convention in downtown L.A.
a large green frog blocked the view of devotees straining to connect
with all-around cosmic guy Ram Dass --author of 60's consciousness
bible "Be Here Now" and pioneer of the deep meaningful Stare Of Enlightenment--who
was slouching in a wheelchair, right leg shaking, no doubt from a
recent stroke, though perhaps also from childlike glee as he sat absorbed
in licking a Ben and Jerry's "totally nuts" ice cream cone, while
jovial Ben Cohen, the bearded co-founder of Ben and Jerry's, was being
pestered to kiss the giant frog.
The frog's web site would then donate money to
the Shadow Convention for every kiss the frog received (better than
the dreaded "PAC money" was the assumption). Meanwhile, net guru,
Esther Dyson--the least relaxed, least approachable, and certainly
least understood of all the liberal superstars in attendance--was
exiting for the downstairs barbecue and no doubt safer pastures away
from the maddening crowds of hairy sandalistas, Sol Alinsky acolytes,
and Internet startups seeking advice in lieu of the recent web content
bloodbath, the swooning NASDAQ, and all the hype and anxiety she's
unwittingly enabled by her presence on practically every dotcom board
of directors from Santa Monica to Budapest.
Tall, coifed Brentwood goddess Arianna Stassinopoulos
Huffington had just entered the green room and coaxed Dr. Gail
Gross, "a friend of 20 years" from George Dubbya's Texas, outfitted
in big black hair and smart black dress--who looked like she'd do
anything Arianna commanded though she probably preferred shopping
on Rodeo Drive--to escort the prim and schoolmarmish Ms. Dyson to
the rib and chicken chow down below in the Patriotic Hall cafeteria.
I quietly introduced myself to Ms. Huffington, who knew me from an
interview I did with her for Monk (www.Monk.com) and from a fabulous
book party she threw at her Brentwood home for a faux upper crust,
yet oddly entertaining author named Sugar Rautbord.
But here at the Shadow Convention, at her latest and greatest photo-op
on her determined rise up the American ladder o' fame, charming Ms.
Huffington had no time for chit-chat. The polite but dismissive look
said it all: "you are not currently anyone I need to know." I knew
that already, since I hadn't been invited back to Arianna's Brentwood
"place," no doubt because I'd pushed a copy of "The Mad Monks' Guide
to NY CD-ROM" onto an agreeable Larry King and his tall, blonde, 7th
wife at the Rautbord fete--an unthinkable act of brazen chutzpah at
another author's book signing, though I have to admit to taking cues
from the doyenne of unabashed self-promotion, Ms. Huffington herself,
a ubiquitous talk show pundit who really knows how to attract, or,
in the eyes of some, "poach" big time publicity and backers (read:
former husband, Texas oil man turned sweater queen Michael Huffington).
Strangely, it is "big money" that the wealthy mother of two has made
public enemy number one (just don't ask how she got hers).
Though reporters were repeatedly upbraided for skirting the "real
issues," inside the Patriotic Hall auditorium one couldn't help but
notice the audience having fun with Arianna's heavily accented lilt.
This was oh so serious politics, but wasn't it a kick that Zsa Zsa
Gabor was up there leading the charge. Los Angeles was Arianna turf--a
town ruled by entertainment that loves a big star wannabe. And Arianna
filled the vacuum at the Shadow Convention with stature, poise, and
a campy noblesse oblige, drawing a reflected glow to herself from
the cadre of intellectual, political, and, in Ben Cohen's case, literal
heavyweights, that graced the Patriotic Hall stage.
Arianna understands that celebrities, no matter how egalitarian the
gathering, still want to be treated like celebrities. One of her favorite
pets, Bill Maher, cantankerous host of "Politically Incorrect," delivered
his humorous bromide about the difference between a trivial lie ("you
know who, got a you know what, you know where") and a big lie (Shell
Oil buys votes), then, in a masterstroke for the smirky talk show
host, donned a jacket emblazoned with patches from some of his own
favorite sponsors--the implication being that politicians, like race
car drivers, should visually disclose their backers too. Other speakers
included the tall professorial grandmaster of socio-politico funk,
"Brother" Cornell West (still preaching his convoluted socialist comeuppance
for "Jim Crow Junior" and his malevolent posse of "pig-men-to-crats"),
the Falstaffian Cohen, who pushed a platform of defense reduction
using oreo cookies as visual aids, the squeaky clean Tom Campbell,
a Republican Congressman who delivered such a heartfelt message of
radical campaign finance and drug policy reform that one wondered
what made him Republican, and Paul Wellstone, a true firebrand of
the left, whose rousing call for "progressive" change resonated deeply
with an audience stacked with poor white Naderites, who had as much
in common with Arianna's Brentwood mien as Julia Butterfly does with
Weyerhaeuser.
Which brought up the interesting aspect of this trans-political shadow
convention. It was ostensibly created to call attention to issues
that crossed party boundaries ("we are not trying to build an alternative
party," writes Ms. Huffington), but the inescapable conclusion was
that a party would be needed to push through the reforms being discussed.
And invariably that party will have to draw up platforms, take stands,
forge compromises. Invariably those compromises will disappoint some
vital constituency, who will righteously denounce the party for disavowing
the party's core values, and threaten disaffection and dissolution
(see Reform Party shenanigans in Long Beach for blueprint). While
Ms. Huffington is on paper a "recovering," and one might add guilt-ridden,
"Republican," this gathering was largely comprised of left-wing Democrats
and Socialists, who got a continual rise out of the packed Patriotic
Hall audience by uttering worn catch phrases like "social inequality,"
"social justice," "redistribution," "coalition building," "economic
racism," and "fat cats"--never mind that liberal fat cats like George
Soros were helping underwrite the event--along with new rallying cries
like "dialing for dollars," and, my favorite, "PAC crack."
The convention's purportive unifying theme of an end to big money
in politics (from right to left wing, big oil to big unions) got overshadowed
by lefty demands for radically more government spending to solve a
range of social ills: poor housing, poor education, drug addiction,
unemployment, and "the growing wealth gap" (which seemed pretty sizable
when contrasting Huffington in her designer duds with her blue jeans
constituency).
The frugal and fair side of my nature eventually got a little peeved
by the imbalanced rhetoric on display at Patriotic Hall. There was
no countervailing voice calling the left on its own bankrupt thinking.
The conclusion seemed to be: take money from here (defense, the war
on drugs, prisons) and place it over here (health, education and welfare).
No one calling attention to the fact that billions of dollars for
rehabilitation did not significantly decrease drug abuse or crime
in this country. Over a trillion dollars spent on public housing did
not end homelessness. Trillions of dollars spent on AFDC and food
stamps never made a significant dent in the welfare rolls.
But let's not trifle over policy specifics. In Arianna Huffington's
preposterously big tent, the focus is on castigation, on naming and
describing "the problem" in new and colorful ways, and from a whole
host of demographic and demagogic perspectives. Let's not bother with
divisive reminders that the sort of reforms postulated by the likes
of Kozol, Feingold, Hightower, Hayden, Waters, Hitchens, Vidal, and
other "progressives" at the shadow convention have all failed miserably.
And that the reason for the rise of Democratic Centrism, which is
really what has got the left's gander up, is just the sort of rhetoric
being tossed around inside Patriotic Hall on Figueroa in downtown
L.A.
No, like other sideline reformers--Jesse Ventura to Ross Perot--let's
just stay focused on "the critique." Because when it comes to critiques,
"the shadowers" make some good points: the war on drugs IS misguided,
and we spend unseemly amounts on defense. Problem is: there are going
to be battles over how that "rescued" fundage is spent. And this is
where the Arianna Huffington's shadow coalition breaks down, and the
necessary evil of a political party, and that party's concomitant
need for structure, marketing, oligarchies, and, yes, MONEY, whether
it be from goofy green frogs, seductive Brentwood beauties, or earnest
white liberals, begins.
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