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'Haircutgate' and Other Silly-Season Nonsense: We're in for a Long Year of Right-Wing Smears

By Paul Rogat Loeb, TomPaine.com. Posted May 25, 2007.


Brace yourself as the Right continues its legacy of dumbing down American political discourse for the next 20 months.

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The John Edwards haircut keeps getting resurrected, like a creature from a bad horror movie. The Republicans unearthed it most recently in their second debate, when former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, in a quote that the national wire service story called "the most memorable sound bite of the night," said: "We've had a Congress that's spent money like John Edwards at a beauty shop."

Republicans have been focusing on symbolic character attacks since Nixon branded George McGovern, who'd flown 35 B-24 bomber missions in World War II, "the candidate of acid, amnesty and abortion." They've been branding their opponents as limousine liberals of questionable masculinity since Nixon's vice president, Spiro Agnew, called anti-war critics "an effete corps of impudent snobs." If the attacks aren't adequately answered, too often they work.

Think about John Kerry's refusal to answer the Swift Boaters until far too late. Together with Kerry's more general distancing himself from his Vietnam-era protests (and endless mixed messages on the Iraqi war) it made a key difference in the election. The Edwards haircut is trivial but needs to be dealt with because it speaks to a long-cultivated narrative that anyone with money who tries to make this country more equitable must ultimately be a hypocrite. (Those without money are dismissed as marginal whiners.) "I can't trust anyone who gets a $400 haircut and then says they're for ordinary Americans," a fellow commercial fisherman told my oldest friend last week, shutting off any discussion before it began.

I heard John Edwards in person a couple weeks after the haircut story broke. It was a Seattle labor rally, and though the audience was presumably most interested in economic issues, Edwards led with the need for the Senate to force a prompt Iraqi withdrawal. He spoke eloquently about poverty and global warming, healthcare, disappearing pensions and how to build a more just economy. Then he spent an hour carefully listening and responding to questioners from the floor. Over the past few years, none of the major candidates have taken stronger or more passionate stands. I'd already donated to his campaign but went home and donated some more.

It's going to take strong stands like those of Edwards to overcome the manufactured distractions and distortions--and the media's propensity to make them their lead stories. You can't do it with mealy-mouthed platitudes. But so long as Republicans and a compliant media keep bringing up the haircut, Edwards also needs to do more to neutralize the incident's power as a symbol to be used against him. And he and other Democrats need to be ready for future irrelevant attacks.

As Edwards explained in a North Carolina Town Hall meeting, the haircut was scheduled by staff, squeezed in between the nonstop timetables of campaigning. "When you are a presidential candidate going all over the country you do what you have to do where you have to do it--you don't have any choice. And they get people, because you don't have any time. They get people to come to you -- they don't give you the bill, they send the bill, so I didn't know it would be that much. I knew it would be expensive, now; I don't want to mislead. When a haircut guy comes to your hotel to do your hair, it's not going to be cheap, so I knew that, but I did not know it was this expensive … nobody should be paying $400 for a haircut."


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Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, winner of the 2005 Nautilus Award for the best book on social change.

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Post-Modern Conservativism
Posted by: Lector on May 25, 2007 12:35 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As we knew all along, the extreme Right-Wing of America has cultivated a separate shadow Washington; this contains Right-Wing media outlets, think-tanks and activist groups which have been slowly growing over the last thirty years while the Left slept. This is the “right wing conspiracy" that actually exists and now has about a half dozen of it's top members in the Bush Administration. While they arrogantly betray the ideals of individual freedom and free markets they criticize an opponent’s haircut. And some buy into it.

Robert Lightfoot

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Femaleness as a slur
Posted by: Markson on May 25, 2007 2:24 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What I hate about this is the deafening silence about how the right gets away w/ attacking rivals by slurring them as, essentially, girly. John Edwards was attacked w/ a gay slur (code word for not being a real man, which is defined as being anti-woman) and a "Beck girl" for being handsome. Mind you these are the same people who worshiped Bush's bulge during his Top Gun moment.

What the hell is wrong w/ us that we think being born a girl is an offense? Anger results from a sense of victimization and no one displays that more feverishly than angry (white) men on both the left and the right. When people lash out at femaleness, they show that they feel persecuted by the mere existence of a gender that is non-male. That not only screams hyper-sensitivity but sheer madness!

In case you need a clue: the female gender is not only natural to the species, as they are human themselves, but also, in fact, necessary for our survival.

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» prejudice arises from insecurity Posted by: orwellwasn'tdreaming
» RE: Femaleness as a slur Posted by: Bozwell
» RE: Femaleness as a slur Posted by: famouspipeliner
mr.ed
Posted by: mr.ed on May 25, 2007 3:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Edwards must have been temporarily impressed with Trent Lott's toupee. No contest. It never needs cutting, though it might have cost more than $400.

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Cost of the Right-wing slime gang
Posted by: Democritus on May 25, 2007 4:11 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Someone should find out how much the purveyors of right-wing slime get paid for their scurrilous gossip. I'm betting they get paid more than $400 to invent new ways to besmirch someone's character with a clever lie or some backbiting innuendo. These political leeches gravitate to candidates with deep pockets and nothing positive to offer, so they spend their miserable lives attacking more substantial candidates all for the filthy lucre.

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Edwards deserves to be ridiculed.
Posted by: HughScott on May 25, 2007 4:18 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was a John Edwards supporter until I heard about his $400 haircut. That's more than many Americans earn in a week.

Edwards’ official website calls for a “national goal of eliminating poverty within 30 years, with policies rooted in the core American values of opportunity for everyone and responsibility from everyone.”

A notable objective, certainly. And how does candidate Edwards propose to attain it?

Proclaims his website, “By creating and rewarding work, strengthening families, helping workers save and get ahead, transforming our schools, expanding access to college, breaking up areas of concentrated poverty, reaching overlooked rural areas, and expecting people to help themselves by working whenever they are able.”

Those are nothing but platitudes by a rich politician who has no clue about what poverty in America is really like. Otherwise, he would’ve been more sensitive about how working poor people would feel after learning he spent 400 bucks on a haircut. Apparently that's not what Edwards meant by "responsibility from everyone.”

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» RE: dwards deserves to be ridiculed. Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
» Not his own money Posted by: graylegend
» Not quite so fast.. Posted by: l_m_n
» it's called The American Dream Posted by: wefearwhatwedontunderstand
» "Just" almost 9% of his income? Posted by: Joshua Holland
We must retaliate in kind - how much does RUDY pay
Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma on May 25, 2007 5:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
for a haircut? If it's more than 6 bucks, he's getting ripped off.

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Real problem is he association with hedge funds, treasure hunters, and shysters.
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on May 25, 2007 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While he admits that he joined "FortressInvestmentGroup" so that 'he could learn about poverty' the simple fact that he made so many millions in one year working for an exploitative firm is insane. Fortress is involved with "subprime" loan exploitation, the company that alledgely found "treasure ship" in the Atlantic and won't tell historians where it is but are taking the gold, and other exploitative activities typical of these large private financial entities. As if he hadn't made enough off of his usurious lawyer percentage from his malpractice lawsuits (lawyers typically get 2/3 of the awards from their trials. The damaged victim gets 1/3.)
more on this:
linked text

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THIS is why I'm no longer a Republican
Posted by: David V on May 25, 2007 6:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I voted for Bob Dole in 1996 and for George W. Bush in 2000. Now I realize that they are the party of no ideas and feel-good politics. The GOP exists today simply because they've harnessed the easily-led to engage in an ongoing campaign of slander, name-calling and ad-hominem attacks against anyone unlucky enough to be identified as a dreaded "liberal". Just like a playground mob scene where scores of young boys will jump in and began throwing insults, mud, stones and fists simply because they see everyone doing so, the Republican Party has harnessed this same mentality to attain political gain in this nation.

According to Republican spokespersons Ann Coulter, Michael Savage and Sean Hannity, we're faggots, we hate America, we're mentally-diseased, we're traitors and we're on par with terrorists because of what we believe. This isn't accidental folks - this is a directed campaign of propaganda by GOP strategists, very similar to those used by 1930's Nazi Germany to rally the German population against European Jews.

So it boils down to this: Is the party that feels it is appropriate to bully, lambaste and cajole half of the population of the United States really fit to LEAD that population?

My answer is a resounding 'No!' - which is why I am no longer a registered Republican.

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Rich, yes. But he speaks for me.
Posted by: dustinblythe on May 25, 2007 7:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was upset when I heard the $400 haircut story. To me it was like Clinton's "haircut on the tarmac"; fodder for the right wing. Edwards was going to have a tough enough time getting his ideas across to people as it was without handing the right wing a sword to use against him. I am sorry to see some Alternet readers have subscribed to their point of view. I would respectfully say that anyone who "was going to vote for Edwards" but is not now because of this haircut fiasco was not that great an Edwards supporter to begin with. Why have I, and thousands of others, stuck with John Edwards? Because no matter how much he spends on a haircut (and I would bet that he never spends that much again) he is speaking up about issues that matter to me.

How many millionaires are talking about eliminating poverty, setting up a universal health care plan and restoring America's image in the world? How many people worth $100,000? Or $10,000? If you back a Democratic Presidential candidate, you know these type of attacks are going to come sooner or later. Sad but true. If not on Edwards on someone else. But Edwards worries the right because he is talking about leveling the playing field. A recent check of the official Republican Party website showed three out of four stories on their front page were about John Edwards. Is that the way you treat someone who is "out of touch" or a "hypocrite"? Or is it the way you try to discredit a threat to the system?

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They got the reaction they wanted
Posted by: willymack on May 25, 2007 7:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When are the demos and the public at large going to stop with their childish knee-jerk reactions to accusations and insinuations not related to the pressing issues facing us? So, Edwards squandered $400 on a haircut? So what? It's his money, and let's face it, we've ALL thrown away that much (and more) on silly whims. It seems the neothugs are AFRAID of anyone with brains, and Edwards is brilliant and highly qualified to be President, unlike the incompetent numbskulls posing as our leaders.

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THE ONLY STRATEGY AVAILBABLE TO THEM
Posted by: VZEQICVA on May 25, 2007 7:34 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After 6 years the administration has NOTHING to brag about, not one thing. All they can do is trash everyone else. But it can't be ignored. Ask John Kerry. Seems like a waste of time to bicker about a haircut. They're not likely to accomplish anything before the '08 election. And so they will run a daily 'nit pickin' campaign and drive us all crazy. Maybe big bad Edwards should insult Bohner and make him cry. Thanks, ANNA

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Girly Men
Posted by: charemor on May 25, 2007 7:45 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember REAL men play sports while GIRLY men are cheerleaders. Our beloved president was a cheerleader.

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» Bush's hair servant Posted by: Sushi
» RE: Bush's hair servant Posted by: animalleaderisgreat
» RE: Girly Men Posted by: famouspipeliner
"Bubba"rella should talk!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: Gravitas on May 25, 2007 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We have the Cinderella myth, just find prince charming and everything will be o.k. A more modern twist for women is thinderella, just lose weight and you too can become a princess! But the scariest twist has got to be Bubbarella, and how good old boy Mike Huckabee is getting more attention than he deserves simply because he is lost weight and is exploiting the anti obesity hysteria for his own purpose. Huckabee is a simpleton who forced Arkansas schools to put weights on report cards creating untold numbers of future eating disorders. He is also a right wing homophobe who cow- tows to the NRA. He thinks his diet is like a concentration camp. Yet, he has been given the spotlight simply because he has diminished himself into swelte like the star of a day housewife in a cheap women's magazine. How ironic that huckster Huckabee would have the never to call attention to someone elses fluff!!!!!!!

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Fight back hard
Posted by: RobNLA on May 25, 2007 8:04 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think Edwards is probably the best candidate out there. But he has to get his campaign to kill this haircut thing right now.

Basically when any Republican or media start up on the haircut joke, pull no punches. His campaign and other Dems have to have a list of haircut and makeup related cost from other candidates. What about Major Guiliani? He wore a dress and makeup on camera as a joke...an easy target.

Seriously, the Dem side has to hit back hard on this issue to shut up the Repugs. Time to take the gloves off, seriously.

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» RE: Fight back hard Posted by: VZEQICVA
Edwards should shave his head
Posted by: bubbleburster04 on May 25, 2007 8:13 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If he REALLY wants to shut up the rightwingnuts, he ought to purchase a set of "buzzers" (buzz cut clippers), shave his head bald, then bring the buzzers and show them at the next several campaign appearances, stating "I don't want any misunderstandings about me due to my barber's fees, so I've taken the situation into my own hands - all my future haircuts during this campaign will be done by myself and free of cost. Now let's talk about things that REALLY matter folks!"

I'm pretty sure he would become an instant hero to the average joe democrat and probably win over quite a few (especially older) republicans. I suspect a bold move like that would increase his poll numbers noticably.

It also would be a nice show of solidarity with his wife, who likely will be losing her hair again shortly.

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» I second this motion Posted by: wefearwhatwedontunderstand
» Add a 4th to the motion.... Posted by: David V
» Or Posted by: famouspipeliner
Is It Worth the Energy Defending the Democrats????
Posted by: CatDad on May 25, 2007 8:16 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Two back-to-back, gigantic sellouts within one week...the Iraq War and secret "free trade" deals negotiated with the White House. If the Right Wing wants to slam Edwards for a $400 coiffure...go right ahead...I'm not going to spend any more time/energy defending/supporting these opportunistic sellouts.

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» John Edwards vehemently opposed both! Posted by: wefearwhatwedontunderstand
It would be nice for them to ask
Posted by: chaoslegs on May 25, 2007 8:35 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
John McCain about his vote for an amendment that would end the Federal minimun wage, leaving it to states.

(h) State Flexibility.--Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an employer shall not be required to pay an employee a wage that is greater than the minimum wage provided for by the law of the State in which the employee is employed and not less than the minimum wage in effect in that State on January 1, 2007.

So if your state has no minimum wage law, or they have one and it is less than the current federal, that would be your new minimum wage.

Note: candidate Brownback and potential candidate Hagel both voted for it.

Oh, wait that is substance, not freakin' BS!

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haircutgate
Posted by: wefearwhatwedontunderstand on May 25, 2007 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, this haircut thing is entirely meaningless, but it seems that these are the only issues that capture the audience's attention these days. Someone needs to find this person who charged $400 and find out who his client list is. Then find out how much the president and other politicians pay for their haircuts and wardrobe, because either our tax dollars go toward this as necessary expenses, or they all claim these on their tax forms as business expenses. It is all so vacuous - welcome to America in the 21st century.

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is the Republican Party disintegrating?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 25, 2007 9:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Looks like it - there is no issue of concern to the voting public that the Republicans have any credibility on any more. Corruption and incompetence and hypocrisy are the most obvious Republican traits, along with a cowering obesiance to the wealthiest of the wealthy and a love of Machiavellian manipulation and Goebbels-style PR.

It should be obvious to all Americans that if GW Bush and the Republican Party had gotten their way, we'd be living in a fascist state right now. Every Muslim in America would be in a concentration camp, along with political dissidents and immigrants. The war in Iraq would have expanded into Syria and Iran, and we'd probably be sending US troops into Africa as well. They would have dissolved the separation of church and state as well - they've already trampled all over the US Constitution, and would probably love to get rid of it entirely.

Sure, there are corrupt politicians of all stripes - Democrats, Greens, Republicans, populists, elitists - you name it. However, the organized march of the Republican Party toward fascism is something else. GW Bush is the worst president in US history, and the Republican Party is the slimiest institution in the country.

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CONGRATULATIONS to AlterNet for its new rating system!
Posted by: HughScott on May 25, 2007 10:16 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It’s not often that bloggers can get instant feedback about their opinions and ideas.

Being rated by fellow AlterNeters also provides the opportunity for serious introspection -- a way of improving one’s work that is completely alien to President Bush.

Kudos again, AlterNet. Well done.

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» I'm not so sure Posted by: xconservative
» RE: I'm not so sure Posted by: xconservative
» I Could Swear Posted by: apophenia_monkey
Speaking of introspection...
Posted by: HughScott on May 25, 2007 10:44 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because of all the support for Edwards on this thread, I'll take another look at him -- if he gets a buzz cut.

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Good cop / bad cop
Posted by: Illiteratilumen on May 25, 2007 11:50 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In all fairness John Edwards DID pay $400 for a haircut! His grooming budget is, of course, no business of mine but it is just sloppy campaigning to even let something like that slip.

It doesn't really bother me to see Democrats and Republicans slinging mud at each other. I have long ceased to expect any sort of enlightened exchanges between these two parties and the Republicans are not the only group dragging the discourse into the sewer. My observations has been that these two parties do not differ that much in what I like to term The Very Important Issues. Monetary policy, foreign policy and Constitutional rights are just three of The Very Important Issues that truly define the American spirit. None of the major figures in American politics are making any real effort to address these issues and they seem to be totally absent from the public discussions on government and politics.

To me it almost seems like I'm a suspect in some action movie, lets call it "Fight for Battle II: Fists of Pain", and I'm getting interrogated by the cops. The first cop, a real ugly and crazy looking sonofabitch, comes in and slaps me across the face a few times, tells me that I can't see my lawyer and then blows some cigarette smoke in in my face before he kicks me in the balls. Then another cop, lets just pretend its a very sexy woman, comes in and tells me that my lawyer is on the way, calms me down and puts some ice on my swollen face. For awhile the good cop has me thinking that everything will be all right because I'm innocent and my lawyer will be able to defend me. Then it turns out they both work for the same boss and I get shackled up and flown out to Gitmo! The good cop never wanted to help at all!

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The problem is not just the right-wing
Posted by: steves@twistonline.com on May 25, 2007 1:59 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not just the right-wing that is the problem here - it's the whole MSM. If the main-stream political reporters and writers would actually do their jobs and fact-check potentially damaging allegations, maybe we could have some meaningful political dialog happening instead of this sound-bite playground name-calling kind of discourse that is masquerading as political discussion.

Also, what most people seem to be overlooking in this particular instance is that the $400 in question is an amount that was billed by the unscrupulous barber to the campaign at some time after the haircut in question. Do folks really think that Edwards woke up one morning and thought, "I'm gonna get me a really expensive haircut today - the heck with those poor people?" Come on, get real!

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Look at Gov. Hukabee's record in Arkansas....
Posted by: eosrk on May 25, 2007 4:48 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....and you see he dosen't have room to talk, for he was ran out by of all people an Democrat!

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I'm not surprised...
Posted by: opeluboy on May 25, 2007 5:18 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... that Loeb supports Edwards, but I am disappointed. Loeb has been very outspoken on Middle East issues, and has been a vocal critic of Israeli policies (an example here: http://www.yesmagazine.org/article.asp?ID=1500).

Edwards (like most Dems), on the other hand, just can't find a single bad word to say about anything Israel does. Which is why, Republican smear machine or not, I won't vote for this blow-dried fraud, even if he cuts his own fucking hair.

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Haircuts north
Posted by: famouspipeliner on May 25, 2007 5:52 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe it's the case that in Canada, parliamentarians receive free haircuts provided at taxpayers expense.

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Ignore it
Posted by: Jeanne on May 25, 2007 6:51 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Haircutgate" etc, etc should be ignored. It is as valuable as monitoring Britney Spears, or American Idol, or . . . . If the media spent less time on this crap and focused, I mean really focused, on the actual crap -- political firings of US attorneys, and lying about it; subverting national security by revealing covert operatives and lying about it; discussing national security issues in an unsecured location in front of the wife of the attorney general and lying about it. Oh, and not knowing the difference between what is legal and what isn't . . . and lying about it. Come on. Push on these things. Forget the haircuts (and I bet plenty of Republicans spend that much, and more on haircuts and other "personal" care services.)

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