First, Brooks : ... what was most impressive was her speech’s freshness. Her words
flowed directly from her life experience, her poise and mannerisms from
her town and its conversations. She left behind most of the standard
tropes of Republican rhetoric (compare her text to the others) and
skated over abortion and the social issues. There wasn’t even any
tired, old Reagan nostalgia. Instead, her language resonated
more of supermarket aisle than the megachurch pulpit. More than the men
on the tickets, she embodies the spirit of the moment: impatient, fed
up, tough-minded, but ironical. Even in attack, she projected the
cheerfulness of someone confident about the future. Then, Noonan : Which gets me to the most important element of the
speech, and that is the startlingness of the content. It was not modern
conservatism, or split the difference Conservative-ish-ism. It was not
a conservatism that assumes the America of 2008 is very different from
the America of ...
Content suppressed by ://URLFAN, for full article visit source
More posts from rossdouthat.theatlantic.com

Aquaman IV, Here We ComeFrom: rossdouthat.theatlantic.com
Post Date: 2008-05-05 15:26:15
You can find my jaundiced take on what Iron Man’s box office bonanza means for the movie industry over at the Current. ...
more 
Heads in the SandFrom: rossdouthat.theatlantic.com
Post Date: 2008-05-05 11:20:11
In which the Atlantic and yours truly find ourselves incorporated into the promotional machinery for Matt’s book .
...
more 
The Natives Ate P.F. Chang’sFrom: rossdouthat.theatlantic.com
Post Date: 2008-05-05 10:08:27
What Ezra , Matt and Megan said about the Times’s self-consciously condescending mass review of the greater New York area’s chain restaurants. I would only add that the concept behind the feature - sending food critics to write about popular establishments that almost never get reviewed - is perfectly sound; it’s just the "let’s treat this like an anthropologist’s trip to darkest Peru" execution that’s cringe-inducing. ...
more 
Don’t Do It, BobbyFrom: rossdouthat.theatlantic.com
Post Date: 2008-05-05 08:25:03
Perhaps the most prescient piece I’ve ever written (it’s a short list) was a column for the Wall Street Journal in June of ’06, which urged Barack Obama to run for President - because, I argued, "in presidential politics, it’s usually better to run too early than to wait, and wait, for a perfect moment that may not come." Now the talk of McCain-Jindal raises the question of whether the same dictum should be applied to accepting a vice-presidential slot when y...
more