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CPAC: We Will Never Forget the Passion, the Energy, or the Open Bar



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Today on NRO

ELIANA JOHNSON: Glenn Beck is moving from politics to culture. The New Glenn Beck.

RAMESH PONNURU: Religious freedom vs. anti-discrimination law. Cross Purposes.

BOBBY JINDAL: Obama should learn from history and consider Russian ambition at Yalta 69 years ago. Provocative Weakness.

JOHN FUND: Obama should ignore the green lobby and expedite exports to Europe. Counter Putin with Natural-Gas Exports.

QUIN HILLYER: Isolationism and military cuts are dangerous. America Must Engage.

SLIDESHOW: Crimean War Photos.

Morning Jolt
. . . with Jim Geraghty

March 10, 2014

CPAC: We Will Never Forget the Passion, the Energy, or the Open Bar

In case you missed them, here are the interviews I and other NR staffers conducted at CPAC with…

Texas governor Rick Perry
Pennsylvania senator Pat Toomey
Representative Tom Price
Ambassador John Bolton
Neurosurgeon Ben Carson
Former senator and actor Fred Thompson
Former RNC chairman and senate candidate Ed Gillespie
Former presidential candidate and Senator Rick Santorum
Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers
Former representative Allen West
European Parliament member Daniel Hannan
Faith and Freedom Coalition chairman Ralph Reed
Former Hewlett-Packard CEO and former California Senate candidate Carly Fiorina
Former governor of Maryland Bob Ehrlich
Mackinac Center for Public Policy director of labor policy Vinnie Vernuccio
ISI President Chris Long
Concerned Veterans for America CEO and Army Captain Pete Hegseth
Medal of Honor Recipient Dakota Meyer
Young Americans for Liberty executive director Jeff Frazee
Concerned Veterans of America policy analyst and activists Amber Barno and Jane Horton
Americans for Tax Reform's Grover Norquist
AEI economic policy analyst Abby McCloskey
Tennessee Senate candidate Brenda Lenard
Investors Business Daily columnist Andrew Malcolm
AEI education research fellow Mike McShane
Former NR Publisher Ed Capano
ACU Chairman Al Cardenas

In addition, there was constant coverage in the Corner from Andrew Johnson,
Eliana Johnson, Patrick Brennan, Betsy Woodruff, Katherine Connell, Tim Cavanaugh, and Kathryn Lopez. As you can imagine, keeping all of these people coming and going at the right times in a crowded convention hall was a bit like being an air-traffic controller at O'Hare or Hartsfield, and our Amy Mitchell managed to avoid any midair collisions. These people rock. There are many fine institutions out there, and a lot of them offered good coverage of CPAC, but you'll understand my biased assessment that we covered the conference better than anyone.

(Betsy's leaving us to join the Washington Examiner, and we wish her well. I wish all of our recent departures from NR well, although I could do without the predictable tone in the coverage of those departures from other publications:

"Man, National Review doesn't have anybody left in Washington anymore, do they?"

Ahem.

"I mean, the NR cupboard is just bare in terms of talent!"

Ahem.

"A shame, that place was once so good, and now they don't even have anybody who can string two sentences together!"

"I'm standing right here!")

Rand Paul won the straw poll, for whatever that's worth -- not quite a shock, and a small feather in his cap but not one that will have much impact when the 2016 race gets rolling in earnest. (Pop quiz: Who won last year? Turns out… it was Rand Paul.) His "Stand with Rand" fans were the most visible and well-organized of the conference, but again, this sample is hardly representative of the GOP presidential primary electorate as a whole, and most of the other expected or possible contenders -- Christie, Rubio, Cruz, Perry, Jindal, Jeb Bush, Scott Walker – didn't seem to have much of an organized presence working attendees to build up the vote in the straw poll.

This was the scene off-camera when I interviewed Rick Perry -- he was like the Pied Piper, leading a small army of staff, security guys, fans, autograph-seekers, groupies and gawkers:

We know there's more to Rick Perry than a momentary brain fart upon a debate stage, and I wonder if a significant number of conservatives feel like he deserves a second chance. Texas's economy continues to rock and roll, and whatever you think of Perry personally, the Texas approach to taxation, regulation, and economic development is more or less what conservatives yearn to see enacted nationally.

Ace:

Perry Version 2014 seems to be fighting the ghost of Perry Version 2012. He's much more energetic in this speech than he was in any of the debates. (But of course people tend to be more energetic before friendly crowds.) One can speculate about his reasons for the nerd-cool choice in spectacles.

Another thing he's doing is projecting optimism, hope, and buoyancy, which is of course the advice given to practically any candidate. He also takes time to praise his fellow Republican governors, including, notably, Scott Walker and Bobby Jindal, both of whom are considering a run for the nomination themselves. So he gets some Nice Guy/Good Guy points. (Notably absent from his list of successful Republican governors: Chris Christie.)

As most readers know, I jumped on the Perry train big-time in 2012, seeing him -- on paper -- as not only the best candidate among the crowded (and uninspiring) 2012 field, but just a good candidate in any cycle. His economic portfolio was/is solid -- Barack Obama hasn't presided over the creation of many jobs in America, but Rick Perry can account for nearly half (48%) of those jobs that Obama wishes to take credit for. (Oh, and Perry's jobs were actually created, not "saved or created or funded" or which "positively impacted" people.)


Plus, you know, he's pretty enthusiastic about hanging around with a cardboard cutout of William F. Buckley:

Meet 'Vox' -- Well, One of Them, Anyway

Sunday night, the Twitterverse was abuzz, after catching its first glimpse of Vox:

Wait, no, that's not it. That's Vox vodka. No, we got our first glimpse of Vox.

No, no, that's the dirty book that Monica Lewinsky gave to Bill Clinton as a gift. I said, "Vox."

 Nope that's a Vox guitar amplifier. No, different Vox.

No. That's Sarah McLaughlin's debut single. I said the new Vox.

No, that's from a Bioshock video game.

Ezra Klein unveils "Vox Media." Which is quite different from, but destined to be mixed up with, Fox News.

Klein begins:

"I remember, beginning to follow the news, I remember the feeling of anxiety around opening a new article and knowing I was about to feel stupid, I was about to feel like I was outside the club. This is a real problem!"

Is it? Do you find yourself feeling like that a lot? Do you feel anxiety about opening a new news article?

Mollie Hemingway: "Not only have I never experienced anxiety upon reading articles, didn't occur to me that anyone else would either. Am I missing something?"

Sonny Bunch: "Well, I was going to read this thing but then I felt like it might make me feel bad about myself so I chose not to."

Matt Yglesias -- remember him? -- is the executive editor of this little endeavor, and he helpfully explains what will make this assembly of the Juicebox Mafia different from all the previous versions:

"Digital articles, at least in principle, last forever as web archives. That's something that some people are taking advantage of today, but we don't think that people are really writing articles with that in mind."

[long silence]

Did you get that?

So everything is going to be literary nonfiction? Everything that will appear on the site is meant to be useful and worthy of reading five to ten to twenty years from now? You're going to cover current events and breaking news in a way that will make every article a timeless classic, worthy of being bound in leather books and kept in the library?

On my bookshelf you'll find collections of columns of Michael Kelly, Daniel Pearl, George Will, Charles Krauthammer, William F. Buckley, and a few others. If you'll permit me to be the skunk at the garden party… not every column by even the greatest writers stands the tests of time. Sometimes it's only of interest as a snapshot of the moment, or a perspective of how an issue appeared at that time. Remember Buckley and Ronald Reagan vehemently, but respectfully, disagreeing about the Panama Canal Treaty? While it's easy to understand why the fate of the Panama Canal would be considered a top-tier foreign-policy debate at that moment; in retrospect, it turned out to be one of the less consequential issues in foreign policy going on in the late 1970s. Certainly the Iranian Revolution and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan presented more pressing, and lingering crises within a year or two.

Yglesias goes on,

"Success, in somewhat grandiose terms, is that we want to create the single greatest resource available for people to understand the issues that are in the news."

That's his somewhat grandiose definition of success for the site. The fully grandiose definition of success is that Vox Media becomes the basis of a new worldwide religion that unites humanity under its teachings.

Yeah, good luck with that.

Melissa Bell adds, "I can't wait to see if what we think people need is actually what they actually need. If it's not, we'll change it."

Wow, can you believe Amazon/Washington Post CEO Jeff Bezos passed on a pitch like that?

She concludes, "We want to move fast."

And yet somehow make every article a piece that can stand the test of time for forever!

Anybody getting a Talk magazine vibe from this? Or Brill's Content? Or even George magazine?

ADDENDUM: The trailer for the new 12-episode mini-season of 24: You're welcome.


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CPAC: We Will Never Forget the Passion, the Energy, or the Open Bar CPAC: We Will Never Forget the Passion, the Energy, or the Open Bar Reviewed by Diogenes on March 10, 2014 Rating: 5

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