Five Years Around the Watercooler

Jeff Alworth

On July 17, 2004, when BlueOregon had its official launch, Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 was debuting half a world away at Cannes in France.  At the screening, Hollywood agent Ari Emmanuel led the crowd in a 20-minute standing ovation--one of the longest in festival history.  Yet back home, blogger Andrew Sullivan retorted: "At some point, the loony left is going to have decide between its demons: are the Jews and neocons the evil ones or are the Saudis?"

It was an extremely dark time in American history.  In April, the New Yorker released photographs of torture at Abu Ghraib.  That was the spring Bob Woodward revealed that George Tenet described the case that Iraq possessed WMD a "slam dunk."  Cheney was still actively arguing that there was a connection between Iraq and Al Qaida. Meanwhile, Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge was suggesting that the November election might have to be canceled due to fears of terrorist attacks.

Liberals in America were near our lowest point five years ago (the absolute lowest hit on November 3, 2004), and not just because we were getting our asses handed to us in elections.  The worst part was it was the sense of losing the battle over reality.  I see our reactions--Fahrenheit 9/11 and BlueOregon were just two of thousands--as fundamentally an effort to restore sanity and reclaim reality. 

Blogs were springing up all over the place (I had two), and they were an important way for liberals to find their voice.  Because the mainstream press, cowed by 9/11 and two wars, was doing a terrible job of reporting unsavory facts about our leadership, it fell to bloggers. By July of 2004, we were starting to see that their real power was as a chorus, not a solo. In the run-up to the Iraq war and its aftermath, the bloggers served as a kind of alternative press.  By the time we were plotting out BlueOregon, this battle over reality was getting very ugly.

What Jesse, Kari, and I hit on was the idea of a collective blog, a community where liberals could come to discuss Oregon politics.  It seemed like the best antidote to the poison of the time was not another official voice with official positions, but a safe place where people could bat around ideas.  It's part of the Oregonian ethos to flatten hierarchies and democratize things, and it's actually a pretty radical, progressive idea to turn over the reigns to the people.  We wanted to create a blog where the credibility came from the din of many voices.

It's shocking how much has changed when you consider the five years since BlueO launched.  Andrew Sullivan has reformed his ways (but he still hates Michael Moore!), Ari's brother is now President Obama's Chief of Staff, and most of the Bush administration's efforts to create a lasting, fictive reality are now discredited (along with that lasting Republican majority Karl Rove tried to create).  In Oregon, we have become more deeply blue, too: both the Oregon House and Senate have been wrested from Republican hands and Jeff Merkley has replaced Gordon Smith. (Not that every progressive who reads, posts, or comments on BlueOregon is a Democrat.) Our insight about involving more people was hardly unique, and it was used to spectacular effect last year by Rahm's boss. Whatever happens from here on out, we can at least look at the past five years as the (eventual) triumph of reality.

It's been a fun ride, folks.  No one can say what the next five years holds, but I hope to see you around here debating it.

  • GWeiss (unverified)
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    Nice post. Good retrospective and perspective. Although, I'm not sure the "loony left" has yet decided whether the evil ones are Jews or Saudi rulers--but at least neocons are on on history's ash heap, at least for a while. (May every spark and ember be extinguished . . .)

  • Bill McDonald (unverified)
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    This is no time to get complacent. The forces of darkness so evident 5 years ago have never stopped plotting and scheming. If I had a wish for Blue Oregon it would be to take on these national challenges as they come even though they can be so tedious and obnoxious.

     A few years ago Sean Hannity said that he foresaw the Bush era leading to a generation of Republican Rule. I took note of that. Fortunately he turned out to be wrong. But that doesn't mean the pendulum can't swing back if we're not careful.
    
      The best comment for me that captured the Bush years and the near ascension of John McCain and Sarah Palin to the White House was made by a cashier at Zupan's. She said it was good Obama won but it shouldn't have been as close as it was. A joke like Sarah Palin never should have gotten that far. Imagine how doomed we'd be if the Republicans could screw up that badly for 8 years, and still retain power.
    
       One of the main problems we face as progressives is jumping into this financial nightmare. Enough energy has to be expended telling the real story. Right now I think the right is outworking sites like this and selling another load of crap about the financial crisis.
    
      Why aren't we talking about Henry Paulson's appearance yesterday before Congress? That was a crucial glimpse at the role of the Bush administration in the TARP nightmare. Oh well....
    
     Congratulations on 5 years of making a difference but I hope complacency doesn't set in because all could quickly be lost.
    
  • WTF-RON? (unverified)
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    Where is the post about Ron's sellout/delay???????

    Wyden is a SELLOUT!

  • Jason (unverified)
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    Life is now perfect. Democrats will lead us to the Promised Land.

    I can't wait.

  • LT (unverified)
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    Blue Oregon did in fact create an online community which does not require people to be in the same place to have a conversation.

    Some of the columns and some of the comments have been most informative.

    But from WTFRON to many others I could mention, there is a bad habit on this and other blogs--does anyone really believe that the level of insult most people would not use in person will really change any minds?

    I campaigned for Ron Wyden for Senate in Jan. 1996 expecting him to use his best judgement.

    My experience is that demanding an elected official see things from one's personal point of view at all times or be called names is no more helpful to political success than telling someone they are a bad person if you don't support a particular candidate. I cannot remember one political victory which came from that behavior. I do recall registering NAV after a primary so that no one could tell me "good Democrats have a duty to support the nominee". That was over a decade ago, and I never regretted changing my registration--kept it that way until there was a primary I really cared about voting in.

    When I saw Joe Scarborough on CSPAN telling an interviewer that maybe Bush would have had fewer problems in the end had there been a strong legislative branch led by the other party, I realized how much times have changed. Rove thought there would be Nirvanna and a realignment of FDR dimensions if only Republicans controlled everything. Guess he didn't realize how Armey, DeLay, Gingrich et al would alienate ordinary voters.

    In the end, ideological purity loses to people who want honest debate. Many support problem solvers and politicians who give responsive answers to their questions over straight line ideologues. Many people here would benefit from dialogue "offline" with people of opposing views.

    One more thing: not everyone blogs. Kari's post says "We've had 6970 posts that generated over 167,000 comments and 9.1 million pageviews."

    That would indicate folks who read but never comment.

    If someone here quotes a friend who called them or otherwise spoke to them in person but who doesn't blog, and a BO commenter who doesn't like that remark says "if your friend really existed, why didn't he write his own comment", what does that accomplish? Does it win over the person who reads but does not comment? Or the person who quoted the friend? Or was the object of such a comment just to vent, whatever the result?

    Behaving like adults will show up the juveniles who often support Republicans---or just vent but never make affirmative comments.

    Whoever one supports in the 2010 election, please keep it civil. I had an email in a previous election year from a primary candidate after I had written him about debate on this blog. The answer included how many people this candidate talked to who did not comment on Blue Oregon. Believe it or not, some voters this candidate had spoken with didn't even read BO!

  • Joe Hill (unverified)
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    Yes and on this happy occasion Ron Wyden has officially joined the "Gang of Six," erasing all doubt as to which side he is on.

    This casts a different light on the ol' watercooler and the self-congratulatory rhetoric, does it not?

  • dale (unverified)
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    Yep, now we can experience hope. Hope of big taxes, abortion and free handouts! Yipee!

  • muhabbet (unverified)
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    Blue Oregon did in fact create an online community which does not require people to be in the same place to have a conversation.

    Some of the columns and some of the comments have been most informative.

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    Hi Jeff, Yup, Blue Oregon has been a great water cooler. Thanks for your help in that; always enjoy your posts.

    <h2>As LT points out though, the pointless insults by a steady few bent on degrading the conversation and those who post here, mostly without engaging in an exchange of any ideas, is getting worse these days. I'm glad the blog continues to post detracting views--no reason just preaching to the choir--but I think the time for a heavier hand in moderating the invectives is overdue. It's getting harder to even find the serious posts between all the gratuitous "you suck" childishness.</h2>

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