David Roberts Profile picture
Aug 13, 2024 13 tweets 3 min read Read on X
I come out somewhere between @Sulliview and @jeffjarvis on this one. A short 🧵.

Let's distinguish between two reasons Harris might need to speak specifically with the US political press corps.

The first reason is: to inform the public what she's about.
On that I'd say two things. First, political reporters hate hearing this, but the public doesn't actually care that much about policy specifics. They want vibes. If she wants to *win*, she'll stay focused on vibes.

But second, if the goal is genuinely to *inform* ...
... then an interview w/ an MSM political reporter is one of the *worst* ways to do it. They'll ask about personal dramas & court intrigue. They'll try to get her to say something that can be spun as controversial, to get clicks. Their primary goal is not to inform!
This is what all the pompous press types just refuse to acknowledge, but it's clear to everyone else: they are operating on a set of internal incentives, writing to one another, to an insular DC scene, not to the public. Giving them content serves only them, not "the public."
If the goal is genuinely to inform -- to provide substantive answers to substantive questions -- Harris/Walz would be better off going on Howard Stern, or any number of subject-matter-expert podcasts, or holding a public town hall. All those around-the-MSM routes ...
... reach more disengaged voters & convey more information. The political press really ought to reflect on that: talking to them often produces the *least* voter-relevant information, not the most. (And it's not just online press critics who think so.)
So, in that sense, sure: Harris needs to talk to *voters*. She needs to tell them what she's about. There are a bunch of ways to do this that don't involve saying "how high" when hopped-up nepo baby AG Sulzberger says "jump."
But there's another reason Harris might want/need to do the traditional MSM interview: the MSM is now run by petty, vindictive mediocrities who jealously guard their parochial incentives & punish politicians who don't cooperate. And they still have enough power ...
... to make good on those threats. They can damage a campaign if they want to ("but her emails" is the iconic case, but there are many). They can gang up & drag a politician down. They can set the tone & tenor of coverage, which seeps down through other outlets & social media.
So when they say "give us our special exclusive content or we will punish you," unfortunately, they have to be taken seriously. They are capable of doing it. It's gross & indefensible, but there it is. Harris does, on some level, need to keep them happy.
So, all things considered, she probably needs to suck it up & sit down with one of the bigs, just to keep their absurd egos in check. But I hope the political press is noticing how thin their support is, how little *public* push there is for them to step in.
They've served the public poorly enough for long enough that they are losing their hold. They're not as important or necessary as they used to be -- they don't have a large reserve of public good will to burn. They should probably think about how to reform & do better.
Final, crucial point: Harris an/or Walz should come on Volts! That's the real answer here. </fin>

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More from @drvolts

Nov 1, 2024
This is just one way that the entire system is set up to ensure 50/50 results. It's homeostatic -- if one side starts to do well, systems (journalism, polling, PAC money) move into action to balance it.
If you get a poll leaning in one direction, it prompts polls leaning in the other direction. If one side's rich people create a substantial spending advantage, the other side's rich people ratchet up their spending.
And above all: if there's a Puerto-Rico-joke PR disaster on one side, it prompts effusive "Biden gaffe" coverage on the other side.

This homeostasis is not the result of any grand conspiracy, it's just an outcome of politics infused with money & treated like a reality show.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 31, 2024
I'm glad I don't have to write an endorsement piece, because I really wouldn't know how to go about it. Ever since 2015, when Trump descended the escalator, I have had the same feeling, which I've never quite seen articulated, so I will briefly try:
It's basically this: Trump is so obviously, manifestly repugnant -- his words, his gestures, his behavior, his history -- that it strikes me like a tsunami. It's a kind of total, perfect, seamless repugnance that I've never witnessed before in my life. Which means ...
... pointing out some particular piece of the repugnance & arguing against it feels ... surreal, I guess. "He has regularly sexually assaulted women, almost certainly raped a few, and ... I think that's bad."

Yeah. I mean, I think rape is bad. But here's the thing ...
Read 13 tweets
Oct 30, 2024
Christ, reading anything about the rise of Hitler is so unsettling these days. The key thing is that there was nothing inevitable about it -- he rose to power thanks to a few thoughtless decisions by the small, feckless men around him. Sound familiar?

nybooks.com/articles/2024/…
Goebbels, 1928: "The big joke on democracy is that it gives its mortal enemies the tools to its own destruction."
It's also chilling to read how many times the Nazis failed before they succeeded -- they were broke & unpopular in the early 1930s -- and how many times they were written off. Hitler dismissed all these press reports as a "witch hunt." Sound familiar?
Read 10 tweets
Oct 29, 2024
Bezos is just doing what the entire US elite has done for years, what many many center-left pundits still do constantly: contemplate the results of a coordinated 60-year assault on media (& other mainstream institutions) from the right & conclude a) this is our fault, and ...
... b) if we cringe more, indulge in even more self-hatred, blunt accuracy even more in the name of "balance," bend over farther backward, we can reclaim the trust of people who have said, clearly, for decades now, that they want us dead & gone, not improved.
You see the heads of institution after institution -- social media, academia, etc. -- submit to this same shit. It's difficult to tell which of them are actually dumb enough to fall for it & which of them secretly agree with the RW, but either way the result is the same.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 18, 2024
Thank you @Mike_Podhorzer for writing this so that I feel slightly less insane. The US is on the verge of real, bona fide, violent fascism of the sort we gawk at in history books and, to a first approximation, our civic leaders don't seem that worried.
weekendreading.net/p/sleepwalking…
We are, in other words, sleepwalking our way into fascism *exactly the same way previous countries have sleepwalked their way into fascism*. Exactly. All the same beats, the same dynamics, the same rhetoric. We have learned NOTHING from history. It's just fucking amazing.
Nothing makes me want to simultaneously laugh & puke these days quite like the phrase "never again." Everyone says that in the wake of every fascist atrocity, with great solemnity, and yet we do it again. And again. We're doing it again right fucking now.
Read 6 tweets
Oct 15, 2024
This quote from Trump captures the beating heart of reactionary authoritarianism better than anything I've ever seen: "I think it is a threat. I think everything is a threat. There is nothing that is not a threat."

That is not a conclusion drawn from evidence, it is ...
... reflective of deep psychological, even neurological, structures. For whatever reason -- genetics, early childhood development, whatever -- Trump has been left with hyperactive "sensitivity to threat," as they call it. Everything else issues from that.
High sensitivity to threat yields the classic authoritarian personality: averse to ambiguity or uncertainty; attracted to simplicity & clear lines between in groups & out groups; selfishness & an assumption that *everyone* is selfish & only threat of punishment maintains order.
Read 8 tweets

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