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NO MIRTH IN THE BALANCE

"Al Gore distills in his single person the disrepair of liberalism in America today, and almost every unalluring feature of the Democratic Party. He did not attain this distinction by accident but by sedulous study from the cradle forward." Thus unambiguously do Nation columnist Alexander Cockburn and frequent collaborator Jeffrey St. Clair stake out the terrain in opening their brief against the Vice President. Political handbook rather than full-blown biography, it effectively paints Gore as a walking sandwich board for Democratic Leadership Council values, tapped for higher office because Bill and Hillary saw in him "a kindred soul in political philosophy, hewing to the pro-corporate, anti-union positions...which together they had founded and nurtured." From his family connections to Occidental Petroleum to his education partly under Martin Peretz (from Peretz's pulpit at Harvard, not The New Republic), Gore's background is shown with no mirth in the balance but his "propensity to boast excessively" demonstrated at every turn. The authors, wearing their hearts on their pens, chronicle Gore's role in fighting against graphic rock lyrics but for NAFTA, his boardroom brand of environmentalism, his evolution from "centrist realism" to (stretcher alert) "pragmatic progressivism." He's "never been a political Boy Scout," they write. On their honor.

The Editors

October 26, 2000

NO MIRTH IN THE BALANCE

“Al Gore distills in his single person the disrepair of liberalism in America today, and almost every unalluring feature of the Democratic Party. He did not attain this distinction by accident but by sedulous study from the cradle forward.” Thus unambiguously do Nation columnist Alexander Cockburn and frequent collaborator Jeffrey St. Clair stake out the terrain in opening their brief against the Vice President. Political handbook rather than full-blown biography, it effectively paints Gore as a walking sandwich board for Democratic Leadership Council values, tapped for higher office because Bill and Hillary saw in him “a kindred soul in political philosophy, hewing to the pro-corporate, anti-union positions…which together they had founded and nurtured.” From his family connections to Occidental Petroleum to his education partly under Martin Peretz (from Peretz’s pulpit at Harvard, not The New Republic), Gore’s background is shown with no mirth in the balance but his “propensity to boast excessively” demonstrated at every turn. The authors, wearing their hearts on their pens, chronicle Gore’s role in fighting against graphic rock lyrics but for NAFTA, his boardroom brand of environmentalism, his evolution from “centrist realism” to (stretcher alert) “pragmatic progressivism.” He’s “never been a political Boy Scout,” they write. On their honor.

The Editors


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