Brownwashing (Coalition For American Jobs Edition)

(First in an anticipated series of posts examining examples of Brownwashing, which – similar to Greenwashing – is “the unjustified appropriation of [political] virtue by . . . a politician . . .  to create a pro-[voter] image, sell a [candidate] or a policy, or to try and rehabilitate their standing with the public and decision makers after being embroiled in controversy.”)

Exhibit A:

This TV spot from the Coalition for American Jobs (site apparently not updated since last August).

 

Transcript:

Here in Massachusetts we have a long history of thinking independently. And Sen. Scott Brown is an independent voice in Washington. Calling for common-sense solutions to grow our economy. Reduce the deficit. Cut government red tape. Keep energy affordable. Support small business and new technology. Scott Brown: Keeping America competitive. Creating good jobs. Call and tell Sen. Brown: Keep fighting for Massachusetts jobs and a better future for our families.

That’s more eyewash in 30 seconds than Bausch & Lomb produces in a year.

Not surprisingly, Brownwashing has its counterpart: Brownbashing.

From RethinkBrown (as noted by the hardworking staff last week):

 

More, Wethink, to come.

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Let The $4 Billion Rumpus Begin! (Mitt v. Mitt Edition)

The Democratic National Committee has loosened the pursestrings to run a six-state TV spot targeting Split Romney:

Via the  Associated Press:

DNC ad targets Romney over flip-flops

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats are using humor to try to undermine Republican Mitt Romney, pushing a movie trailer-style ad that portrays his candidacy as “the story of two men trapped in one body.”

The new ad released Monday is part of effort by Democrats to call attention to Romney’s inconsistencies on a number of issues important to conservative voters as he seeks to challenge President Barack Obama next year. Democrats are trying to slow the former Massachusetts governor’s progress with six weeks remaining before Republican primary voters begin picking their nominee.

Obama and Romney are waging a nifty pre-general election battle right now, blithely ignoring that pesky GOP presidential primary. Except Romney can’t totally blow off the nomination battle, since he’s consistently been the quarter-horse of the race.

So he’ll likely start competing on both fronts soon.

In other words, let Mitt v. Mitt.

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Let The $4 Billion Rumpus Begin! (Deplorable Mudslinging Edition)

The NYT-industrial complex was in high dudgeon on Sunday, with hall monitor Page One pieces in both the New York Times and the Boston Globe on the sad state of political advertising.

From the Times:

TV Attack Ads Aim at Obama Early and Often

Inside the debate halls, the clash may be Republican versus Republican. But offstage, conservatives are mounting a unified and expensive air assault on the candidates’ common opponent: President Obama.

Nearly a year before Election Day, Republican presidential candidates and conservative action groups are already spending heavily on television advertising aimed at casting Mr. Obama as a failure.

Their tactics, the aggressive and sometimes misleading kind not typically used until much further along in a campaign season, have led to a spat with Democrats in what is shaping up to be the most costly election advertising war yet.

Numerous examples ensue.

From the Globe:

Deceptive campaign ads hint at year of mudslinging

Perry, Romney spots take Obama out of context; ‘low bar’ is set, critics say

With nearly a year until the election, evidence is mounting that the presidential race is going to feature a rough, negative, and confusing advertising onslaught.

Rick Perry and Mitt Romney have each aired ads that take President Obama’s words out of context, drawing howls of protest from Democrats but no apologies from the Republicans’ campaigns.

Romney aides even said they were proud of the reaction and suggested that the ad was deliberately misleading to garner attention.

Voter beware: This could be just a taste of things to come.

Reader beware: This is just a taste of things to come from the NYT-industrial complex.

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Rick Perry & Thrust (PAC Man Edition)

While most restrictions on independent advocacy groups have been stripped away by the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision, one has remained: that PACs, Super PACs, 501(c)4 organizations and etc. (primer here) cannot coordinate their advertising with a candidate’s ad campaign.

Except, perhaps, when they do.

From Ben Smith’s excellent Politics and Media blog for Politico:

Perry ad features SuperPAC footage

The last shred of regulation preventing unlimited money from flowing into presidential campaigns is the requirement that campaigns not “coordinate” their communications with Super PACs and the other independent groups pouring money into that race.

Rick Perry’s campaign for president appears to be testing the limits of that regulation: In its Thanksgiving video, the campaign uses two clips from an slickly produced advertisement aired on Perry’s behalf by Make Us Great Again, a SuperPAC run by a longtime Perry associate, Mike Toomey.

Smith then delivers a sharp compare-and-contrast-in-clear-idiomatic-English of the two.

Make Us Great Again TV spot:

 

Perry Thanksgiving video:

See Smith’s analysis for the details.

Most of the presidential hopefuls have a back-PAC: Perry’s is Make Us Great Again, Mitt Romney has Free & Strong America, Jon Huntsman has his Dad-funded Our Destiny PAC, and etc.

On their own, they’re dangerous enough.

Coordinating with the candidate – that’s deadly.

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NYT NYM Wars

Spurred on by the New York Times, the Sneak ADtackniks have been on the nym wars lately like Brown on Williamson (see here and here).

Now come the Times Sunday Review review of the topic:

Sunday Dialogue: Anonymity and Incivility on the Internet

Readers debate the benefits and drawbacks of requiring real names in online postings.

The Letter

To the Editor:

Facebook has 800 million users who are required to use their real names (“Naming Names: Rushdie Wins Facebook Fight,” front page, Nov. 15), and, as a result, are identified with and accountable for what they post. It is time to consider Facebook’s real-name policy as an Internet norm because online identification demonstrably leads to accountability and promotes civility.

People who are able to post anonymously (or pseudonymously) are far more likely to say awful things, sometimes with awful consequences, such as the suicides of cyberbullied young people. The abuse extends to hate-filled and inflammatory comments appended to the online versions of newspaper articles — comments that hijack legitimate discussions of current events and discourage people from participating.

Anonymity also facilitates the posting of anti-Semitic, racist and homophobic content across the Web.

To be sure, there is value in someone being able to use the Internet without being identified. Online privacy is a major issue today. And in the United States, we have had a great tradition of anonymous political speech. Elsewhere, dissidents in oppressive regimes have felt free to speak up precisely because they believe (perhaps erroneously) that they cannot be identified.

This is not a matter for government, given the strictures of the First Amendment. But it is time for Internet intermediaries voluntarily to consider requiring either the use of real names (or registration with the online service) in circumstances, such as the comments section for news articles, where the benefits of anonymous posting are outweighed by the need for greater online civility.

There is no bright-line test, but Internet sites permitting user-generated postings can make a judgment that in some instances the use of real names benefits society.

CHRISTOPHER WOLF
Washington, Nov. 20, 2011

The writer is an Internet and privacy attorney and leads the Internet Task Force of the Anti-Defamation League.

Check out the reader reaction.

Excellent debate.

Originally posted on the New! Improved! Sneak ADtack!

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Private Oy: Facebook And The Super Snoopers (Part Two)

Last week the Sneak ADtackniks posted a trifecta of online-privacy cautionary tales, including concerns about thenym wars – the argument over pseudonyms on the Internet – and a panel discussion conducted by the Wall Street Journal.

In the course of the latter, Public Parts author Jeff (I Hate Newspapers) Jarvis said this:

If we over-regulate privacy, managing only to the worst case, we could lose sight of the benefits of publicness, the value of sharing.

Our new sharing industry—led by Facebook, Twitter, Google+, YouTube, Foursquare, blogs and new services launched every day—is premised on an innate human desire to connect. These aren’t privacy services. They are social services.

(Check out The New Republic’s knee-capping of Jarvis here.)

Other panelists, not surprisingly, disagreed. From Christopher Soghoian, a fellow at the Open Society Institute, who created the first browser software—called TACO—that blocked online tracking.

Although consumers knowingly share information via Facebook, the privacy issues associated with that company are not related to the way consumers use it, but rather the other things the company does. These include the tricks the company has pulled to expose users’ private data to third-party app developers, the changing privacy defaults for profile data, as well as Facebook’s covert surveillance of your browsing activities on non-Facebook websites, as long as a “Like” button is present (even if you don’t click on it).

The dirty secret of the Web is that the “free” content and services that consumers enjoy come with a hidden price: their own private data. Many of the major online advertising companies are not interested in the data that we knowingly and willingly share. Instead, these parasitic firms covertly track our web-browsing activities, search behavior and geolocation information. Once collected, this mountain of data is analyzed to build digital dossiers on millions of consumers, in some cases identifying us by name, gender, age as well as the medical conditions and political issues we have researched online.

It’s worth reading the entire Journal piece, especially in light of this email from Consumer Reports (via The Missus):

Dear [The Missus]:

Someone is following you around. At least, online they are.

When you go online, you unwittingly give companies lots of information about yourself based on the sites you visit, the searches you run, the movies you watch and more.

Trackers say that online tracking is good because it helps deliver ads that will interest you. That’s fine, if that’s what you choose. But right now, you can’t say “No.”

Tracking software has become so sophisticated that you sometimes can’t even delete the tracking code using the tools built into your browser. Meanwhile, the tools that let you surf the net privately are often hard to use and ineffective.

It’s time to stop the unwanted tracking once and for all!

Although polls show that most of us would prefer more privacy and less tracking, companies that rely on advertising have no incentive to give us the tools we need. And even if they did, no law requires them to abide by our wishes.

That’s why Congress is now considering “Do Not Track” legislation to let us all choose not to be tracked and then enforce our preferences. A bill in the Senate would require companies to abide by your Do Not Track choices, while bi-partisan legislation in the House gives parents control over the tracking of kids’ activities online.

Do-Not-Track is the simple way for you to say ‘no thanks’ to being monitored while you surf the web.

Take a moment right now to show your support for Do-Not-Track legislation in Congress.

Do you know others who may be concerned about their privacy when they go online? Please forward this e-mail to them so they can show their support too.

Sincerely,

Jim Guest
President
Consumer Reports
101 Truman Avenue
Yonkers, NY 10703-1057

Forewarned, as they say, is forearmed.

Originally posted on the New! Improved! Sneak ADtack!

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Mitt Romney: GOP Hair Apparent

Friday New York Times Page One report:

Image Expert Shapes Romney (His Hair, Anyway)

BELMONT, Mass. — Voters routinely ask about it on the campaign trail. Pundits chronicle the slightest changes in its presentation. There is a Facebook page devoted to it — not to mention an entire blog. “Has it always been this good?” read a recent online entry.

The subject of the unusually intense political speculation and debate?

Mitt Romney’s hair.

Strange interlude (via Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby’s Twitter feed):

Regardless . . .

Belmont barber to the star Leon de Magistris had this exchange with the Times:

Mr. de Magistris, who gave Mr. Romney a $70 trim three weeks ago, agreed to share some of the secrets behind his most famous client’s coiffure in between haircuts the other day.

No, he said, Mr. Romney does not color his hair. Any such artificial enhancement, Mr. de Magistris said, “is not — what do you call it? — in his DNA.”

The Times did not report that he said it with a straight face.

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The Courage Of Female War Correspondents

It’s never been easy for female war correspondents, but in the 20th century they mostly went unassailed in the course of their reporting (except for Martha Gellhorn, who actually had more to fear from Ernest Hemingway than the Spanish fascists or German Nazis).

Unassailed until now, that is.

Exhibit A:

The brutal attack in Cairo’s Tahrir Square on CBS correspondent Lara Logan, which she described on 60 Minutes last spring:

Exhibit B:

Clare Morgana Gillis’s piece in the current Atlantic magazine, What I Lost in Libya, which details her harrowing 45 days of captivity by Muammar Qaddafi’s forces in Tripoli.

Exhibit C:

Egyptian-American journalist Mona Eltahawy’s horrific abuse by Egyptian police this week, described here by Mediaite:

Eltahawy, a longtime human rights activist and journalist who had been covering the Egyptian revolution since this spring, was detained on Tuesday, she says, on the pretext that she did not have her passport. As soon as she could, she tweeted “I AM FREE,” and then described in detail (and with pictures, first of her swollen hand and, later, of her caststhe abuses she underwent.

Eltahawy later went on CNN to tell her story:

From Mediaite:

[T]he near-instant turnaround time from the attack to Eltahawy choosing to go public with her story is something completely new in the face of violent regimes. Part of this is due to the speed with which Twitter functions, but most if not all of the credit goes to Eltahawy for displaying a level of courage that is as humbling to the rest of us as it is admirable beyond words.

Amen.

UPDATE: I should have included New York Times photographer Lynsey Addario, held for six days in Lybia with three of  her colleagues.

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Black Friday: The Musical

Question #1:

How much did Kohl’s pay Rebecca Black for the rights to the worst song ever in order to produce this contender for the worst ad ever?

 

Answer: $100,000 according to celebgossip.com, not to mention Black’s appearance in the ad, which just adds insult to injury.

Question #2:

Why didn’t anyone use Steely Dan’s Black Friday?

 

Answer: Maybe because of the lyrics?

When Black Friday comes

I’ll stand down by the door

And catch the grey men when they

Dive from the fourteenth floor

Maybe.

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Occupy Wall Streetniks Settle In

Leading indicators that the Occupy Wall Street movement isn’t going away anytime soon.

• This PBS Newshour’s piece on Thursday night:

 

• This piece from The Art Newspaper:

Occupy Wall Street group looks to open arts space

NEW YORK. A group within the Occupy Wall Street movement is in discussions to find a multi-purpose, indoor arts space, which is to be used for “studio space, rehearsals, concerts, storage, performances, exhibitions, teach-ins, film screenings, art classes for children, sleeping, etc”, according to its website. The Arts and Culture committee of the New York City General Assembly, the protest group behind the movement, is planning to use shared office space on Wall Street with other Occupy groups, and is considering another offer from the arts blog Hyperallergic to borrow space in its Brooklyn offices, among other options.

File under: The art of survival.

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