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Slate Family Values
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Attentive online readers
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will notice a slight change in our design, if not by the time you read this
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then in the next few days. The purpose is to reflect the launch of Microsoft's
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new "portal site," msn.com.
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As followers of Internet fashion are aware, portal sites are the flavor of the
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moment, as various online giants--America Online, Yahoo, Netscape, and
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Microsoft--compete to be your guide through the maze of the Internet. A portal
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site is a Web page with useful features such as a Web search engine, your local
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weather, sundry links, perhaps a stock ticker, news headlines, a small button
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that says "Click here or we e-mail your boss that you've been playing Solitaire
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again," and so on. The idea is that you make it your home page, or at least
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come to it often, and that way the sponsoring company will get lots of traffic
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and make lots of money by ... by ... well, we're all still working on that.
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It's the Internet after all.
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Anyway,
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Slate
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conducted a scrupulously objective study of the major portal sites and
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concluded that msn.com was
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the one we preferred to be associated with. By special arrangement with America
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Online, however, readers who access
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Slate
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through AOL will get a
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special set of pages that shield them from any special temptation to visit
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msn.com and other Microsoft properties. Instead, they will continue to enjoy
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AOL's own self-promotions as usual. Of course AOL customers are free to check
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out msn.com, just as other
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Slate
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readers are free to visit
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aol.com. Nobody has a monopoly here, as we keep telling Janet Reno.
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We can't
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resist noting, finally, that if your primary interests are news, politics, and
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cultural commentary, our "Slate Links" page doesn't make a bad "portal site." There you'll
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find links to all the major columnists and commentators, movie and other arts
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reviewers, U.S. and foreign newspapers, and other tasty treats. Make it your
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home page--Microsoft won't mind.
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Partisanship: Slate Wobbles
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There is nothing especially
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Democratic or liberal about the behavior that has got President Clinton in hot
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water. Nor is there anything especially Republican or conservative about
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Special Prosecutor Kenneth Starr's alleged excesses. Some conservatives have
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attempted to associate Flytrap with the political and cultural values of the
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1960s--let it all hang out and so on--though they also have insisted that
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feminists are betraying feminism's roots in the same period by failing to
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condemn the male perpetrator. Surely the latter critique is closer to the mark.
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If the Clinton-Lewinsky affair smells of any past decade it is the 1950s and
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the pre-feminist workplace culture reflected in movies like The Seven Year
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Itch and The Apartment .
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But
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basically this scandal is nonideological and so are the arguments around it. So
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the strong tendency of Democrats and Republicans to see Flytrap differently is
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especially impressive. There is nothing wrong with partisanship--when it's
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about principled ideological disagreement. "The Beast stands for strong,
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mutually antagonistic governments everywhere," says the press magnate, Lord
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Copper, in Evelyn Waugh's Scoop . That is a pretty good attitude to have
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about domestic politics. If there's anything worse than partisanship, it's
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bipartisanship. This is not merely the journalist's professional preference for
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disagreement over agreement. It is a suspicion that rising above partisanship
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usually means rising above democracy. (See David Plotz's "Flytrap
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Today" dispatch on Washington's "Wise Men.") Nevertheless, it is remarkable
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that on a series of essentially apolitical issues on which reasonable people
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can differ, Democratic politicians are almost all on one side and Republicans
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are almost all on the other.
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How does it happen? Empty, principle-free
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partisanship--the bad kind--is the obvious answer. It is tempting to apply this
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analysis only to whichever side you happen to disagree with. But unthinking
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partisanship can strike anyone at any time. Consider the sad case of an online
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magazine editor. Call him "K." K was working on an article--and working himself
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up into a fine froth--on the subject of legal "hairsplitting." What is wrong
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with it? K does not go as far as those Clinton defenders who say that you have
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the right to lie under oath if the questions are ones you should never have had
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to answer. But he was strongly tempted by the notion that if you shouldn't have
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been asked the question, responding with fatuous evasions is perfectly OK.
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Starr had spent four years and $40 million not so much investigating a crime as
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arranging for one. If a bizarre definition of sex could allow Clinton to
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mislead without falling into a perjury trap, he was not merely within his
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rights but perfectly justified.
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As K was thinking this
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through, though, the line of reasoning started to seem familiar. Wasn't this
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exactly Elliott Abrams' argument? Abrams, assistant secretary of state under
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President Reagan, pleaded guilty to misleading Congress about the Iran-Contra
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affair, but was pardoned by President Bush. His defense (for which K had
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contempt at the time) was that he intended to mislead but was technically
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telling the truth. For example, he stagily denied that any foreign money was
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being used to finance the contras--although he himself had been involved in
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soliciting such money--because the check hadn't yet arrived. When the deception
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came out, Abrams sermonized that sneakiness in the defense of liberty is no
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vice, and many Republicans supported him in that.
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There are
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differences, of course. Congress' right to question an assistant secretary of
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state about U.S. foreign policy will seem clearer to many than Starr's right to
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ask the president about a sexual affair, but a few will think the opposite.
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Abrams felt he was defending liberty in Nicaragua, while others might
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characterize his deception as an effort to subvert democracy in the United
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States. So what Abrams did to prevent Congress from enforcing a policy he
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disagreed with is either much worse or much better than
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lying-through-technicalities to protect your right to privacy from an
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overzealous prosecutor. K has no trouble deciding which it is now that he needs
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a few second-order considerations to refine his argument. But K's indignant
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objection to hairsplitting a decade ago and his indignant sympathy for it now
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took no account of such nice distinctions.
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The clips from the Abrams episode are a hilarious reminder
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of how partisan indignation can survive a total reversal of position on an
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issue. The thundering Republican condemnations of the special prosecutor back
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then are just like the thundering Democratic condemnations today, down to the
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very phrase, "four years and $40 million." Republicans used to defend any
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conceivable expression of "executive privilege" over Congress and the
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courts--now Democrats do that, while Republicans take up the old cry of
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"imperial presidency." When Republican officials were in the dock, the Wall
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Street Journal editorial page used to opine about "prosecutorial
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discretion"--the apparently noble principle that you don't necessarily
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prosecute a guy just because he did something illegal--and K used to mock it
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for that. Now the conservative mantras are "perjury is perjury" and "no man is
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above the law"--and K finds himself tempted by the idea that it isn't the end
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of the world if a perjurer gets away with it.
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The strangest role reversal
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is going on right now and concerns democracy itself. In the 1980s, and as late
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as 1994, a major Republican theme was a sort of taunting, nyah-nyah populism.
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They thought the force was with them and always would be. Remember term limits?
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The notion of representative democracy took multiple hits. Politicians were
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considered inherently inferior to "the people." There was no patience for the
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good old Burkean conceit that legislators should sometimes rise above the
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wishes of their constituents. Those voters' wishes expressed in polls even
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trumped the voters' own wishes as expressed at the ballot box (since the
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essence of term limits was to limit the voters' right to vote for whom they
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wanted).
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These days, though, the polls
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show that people pretty clearly don't want President Clinton impeached. And so
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we hear a lot of talk about rising above politics and ignoring the polls and
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doing the right thing not the popular thing. There have even been some
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frustrated musings among conservative writers and pundits that the people are
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not necessarily all-wise. They can be duped. They make mistakes. This was a
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note K used to strike a lot in the 1980s, and he's glad he doesn't have to
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strike it anymore. But he's trying to avoid the opposite note--"the people
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agree with me, so I must be right." Just in case.
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--Michael Kinsley
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