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In this section, Demorama presents all sorts of interesting stuff that might make you go: Hmmm. And our current piece is:
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Empty
victory for a hollow man
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Norm Coleman won Minnesota because he was well-financed and well-packaged. Norm is a slick retail campaigner, the grabbiest and touchingest and feelingest politician in Minnesota history, a hugger and baby-kisser, and he's a genuine boomer candidate who reinvents himself at will. The guy is a Brooklyn boy who became a left-wing student radical at Hofstra University with hair down to his shoulders, organized antiwar marches, said vile things about Richard Nixon, etc. Then he came west, went to law school, changed his look, went to work in the attorney general's office in Minnesota. Was elected mayor of St. Paul as a moderate Democrat, then swung comfortably over to the Republican side. There was no dazzling light on the road to Damascus, no soul-searching: Norm switched parties as you'd change sport coats.
Norm is glib. I once organized a
dinner at the Minnesota Club to celebrate
F. Scott Fitzgerald's birthday and Norm came, at
the suggestion of his office, and spoke,
at some length and with quite some fervor, about how much
Fitzgerald means to all of us in St. Paul, and
it was soon clear to anyone who
has ever graded 9th grade book reports that the mayor had never
read Fitzgerald. Nonetheless, he spoke at great
length, with great feeling. Last month,
when Bush came to sprinkle water on his campaign, Norm
introduced him by
saying, "God bless America is a prayer, and I believe that this
man is God's
answer to that prayer." Same guy. |
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