Michael has started up a new blog, WonkNOT!, to collaborate on learning how to express the big, positive social ideas that support progressive beliefs, and define our own terms for political and social debate in America. WonkNOT means: not wonking out on the granular details of policy when asked to say what we believe in.
I posted my first screed there today: The Great Republican Giveaway.

I thought this color-coded panic orchestration left the scene with Tom Ridge. Seen yesterday at the Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina airport, where I had an hour's layover on my way back from Austin. Now I know that I'm still supposed to be scared yellow.
Alex, in Austin, mentioned how uneasy he gets now going through security at airports, because when you step into that line, you could just disappear into the extra-judicial gray zone of Transportation Safety Administration authority.
I had to admit--to myself, it didn't seem worth saying aloud, which must be why it seems UTTERLY VITAL to blog it now--that what with being white, fair-skinned, and female, I've gone through airport security with just about as little personal concern as ever since 9/11, perhaps with a crispy-baked thought or two on how all this fuss with the computers and the shoes was unlikely to result in the foiling of any plot to blow up my plane.
Stories I've heard from friends and families with olive complexions since 9/11, about tense moments at airports, conveniently leave my mind at these moments.
Alex's comments came back to me yesterday at the Austin airport, where one of the TSA guards looked about 12 years old. In fact, I thought he was the grandson of the older couple in front of me, until they moved forward and he asked me for my ID and ticket.
It was thoroughly unsettling to hand them over, and watch this man, who looked more like my friend's young teenage son than a grown-up federal employee with the authority to send me to a back room for interrogation, scrutinize my New York State driver's license, and then scrawl on one boarding pass illegibly in pencil and send me--and my carefully stoic face--on through the metal detectors.
And taking that photograph in Raleigh-Durham, with my ever-stealthy Palm Zire 71 camera, getting very busy with the stylus like I was checking my date book when I thought a guard from over by the security station had noticed what I was doing.
I wonder if this is a shade of what it feels like to drive up to some checkpoint in Columbia and hand over your credentials and passport to a teenage guerrilla with a machine gun, not quite knowing what will happen next as you let the papers leave your hand.