nojo

Silent Creative Partner doesn’t follow politics and pays little attention to news, which makes him a far more typical American than we’ll ever hope to be. He’s solidly liberal in outlook — something we used to think was typically American — although we doubt he would label himself as such, because he doesn’t see himself in those terms.

(Not that we care for labels either — if forced to declare, we’d sign up for the Cannibal Anarchist Party — but obviously we travel with progressives, even if we don’t wear the uniform.)

Living in Southern California, the economy hasn’t really touched him, and while you can find teabaggers if you go looking for them, they’re not part of our daily landscape. Even government itself, which here as elsewhere permeates and underwrites our existence, isn’t quite visible — yes, we have cops and streets and garbage collection and an airport and even a military base up the road, but you can go very long stretches without quite being aware of what enables your bliss.

Which is, really, the Genius of America — at least for us Left Coast white males who benefit from it. Like Steve Jobs says, it just works.

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“Country star Dolly Parton has personally apologized to a lesbian couple that was stopped at the entrance to her Dollywood theme park because one of the women wore a T-shirt that read, ‘marriage is so gay.'” [NY Daily News]

“Stocks around the world fell sharply Thursday on intensifying investor fears about a slowdown in global economic growth and worries about Europe’s ongoing debt crisis, which is centered now on Italy and Spain… A fear haunting markets is that the United States economy may be heading for a double-dip recession.” [NYT]

Our guest columnist is Michelle Obama.

Every day, I see Barack make choices he knows will affect every American family. That’s no small task for anyone — and more proof that he’s earning every last one of those gray hairs.

This has been a busy week in Washington, but today happens to be Barack’s 50th birthday. I’m writing to you because this year, the girls and I would like to do something a little different.

I’m asking friends and supporters of this campaign to wish him a happy birthday by signing his card, and sharing why you’re on this journey with us.

Your names and notes will become part of a book that tells the story of this campaign — who’s building it, why we’re in this thing, and what he means to us. We’ll deliver a copy to Barack and send one to our campaign offices across the country.

Sign the card for Barack [Campaign email]

There are, by our count, three competing explanations for Barack Obama’s negotiating strategy.

The first, what we’ll call the Cave Analogy, posits that Obama tends to give away the store even before the customer walks in. We’ve been partial to that thesis.

The second, offered by Practical Realists, claims that Obama is a victim of circumstance: The Republicans really were going to shoot the hostages, which tends to limit your options.

And the third, promoted very strongly by Glenn Greenwald, suggests that Obama always gets what he wants — only what he wants is very different from what we think he wants. After all, he was offering social-service cuts that even the Republicans feared to demand. And he never really cared for the Public Option a few crises ago.

We’re not going to render a verdict, although Greenwald’s winning on points by our score. Rather, we’re curious about the Circumstantial Presidency. Obama’s (remaining) supporters like to undermine the Cave Analogy by mentioning his decisive action on things like killing Bin Laden, killing the Somali pirates, and killing Libyans.

No, wait. Nobody’s mentioned Libya. But that’s the telling comparison.

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“He and his wife, Karen, have some fruit trees back home. Their family harvested about 600 early peaches and then he and their kids peeled them and made them into jam at their house. They ended up transporting about 40 jars of peach preserves to Iowa.” [Des Moines Register, via TPM/JWMcSame]

“President Barack Obama tapped Sen. Mike Lee’s legal counsel to be the next U.S. attorney for Utah, a move that infuriated Democrats from the state and ended a lengthy political drama over who would claim the high-profile position.” [Salt Lake Tribune, via ThinkProgress]