Quite simply, the best cultural review in the world
The MediaAs I walked down the street near my home in suburban Virginia recently, I saw a decrepit Volvo sporting a bumper-sticker palimpsest. The barely legible original layer must have been as ancient as the vehicle itself, and by now there was no bumper space left, fore or aft, uncovered by this automotive wallpaper. What could be read of it consisted of the names of mostly forgotten Democratic candidates, national, state, and local, from the last twenty years or so and fragments of slogans that had once cost several Volvos’ worth of focus groups to come up with. That’s really the problem with bumper stickers, isn’t it? However great your enthusiasm for a candidate or his pithy surrogate wisdom, people probably don’t want to be reminded of it twenty years later. For most of us, the urge to identify ourselves with a particular candidate seldom survives more than a year or two in office unless we are the kind of party hack for whom an unb ... This article is available to subscribers and for individual purchaseSubscribe to TNC (Print and Online editions) Subscribe to TNC (Online only) This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 26 May 2008, on page 72 Copyright © 2008 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com http://www.newcriterion.com/articles.cfm/Smear-tactics-3846
rate this article for your user profile
E-mail to friend
|
Subscriber login
Subscribe today
Print & Online packages Available
Already a print subscriber? click for online access view more >New from The New Criterion: ‘Free speech in
EventsOctober 22 2008 GALA EVENT: The New Criterion Benefit Art Auction January 25 2009 TRAVEL EVENT: The New Criterion Cruise Webcasts
Encounter Books at 10, an interview with Roger Simon
'The Face of Libel Tourism,' OPENING REMARKS AND PANEL ONE from Free Speech in an Age of Jihad:
'Suppressing Discussion of Islam,' PANEL TWO from Free Speech in an Age of Jihad: |
add a comment
you must be a new criterion subscriber to post a comment. {subscribe now}