Pubdate: Mon, 14 Aug 2000 Source: Weekly Standard, The (US) Copyright: 2000 The Weekly Standard Contact: 1150 17th Street, N.W., Suite 505, Washington, DC 20036-4617 Website: http://www.weeklystandard.com/ Author: Matt Labash Spend Enough Time With Arianna, Granny D., And Al Franken, And You, Too, Will Favor Legalizing Drugs Philadelphia - To survive the Shadow Convention, there is but one physical prerequisite - a strong back. I am barely through the door of the Annenberg Center before my accordion folder is bursting with handouts from every flared-nostril revolutionary and bleeding-ulcer moderate in possession of a Kinko's card and busfare to Philadelphia. Though the activists represent disparate causes - from campaign finance reform to stopping "crack kingpin" George W. Bush - they speak the same strange language. They all "mobilize" and "dialogue." They rail against anything bearing the prefix "trans" (as in transnational corporation) or the label "industrial" (as in prison-industrial complex). They have hair in unpredictable places. They have assembled at the behest of "recovering Republican" Arianna Huffington, the media's favorite salon keeper. Huffington's charm does much to compensate for her political schizophrenia, so we journalists do our best to keep a straight face. It is Arianna's hope, as well as that of co-sponsors like Common Cause and financial backer George Soros (the pro-pot billionaire), that this event will be the antidote to the conventional conventionsa - that is, more engaging and less scripted. Arianna is not afraid to set the bar low. The Shadow Convention is intended to address The Issues That Voters Really Care About - or would care about were they not so apathetic, a problem the Shadow Convention intends to address. Hence, we dialogue about moneyed influence-peddlers. We mobilize against the failed war on drugs. We try to snore discreetly as the disenfranchised have their day. The problem, of course, with making a big to-do about giving voice to the voiceless is that when they start talking, you're expected to listen. So it is small surprise when during the first day of the five-day confab, trouble brews outside the convention. There, several young women whose calves have never known a razor's burn are passing out fliers saying "Hey Cowboy John McCain, How Many Indians You Gonna Kill Today?" They are angry that McCain, who will be speaking shortly, sponsored the Navajo-Hopi Relocation Act. They are angry about "capitalism and indigenous repression." They are just plain angry. Next to the press credentialing table, a gaggle of activists forms, emitting an olfactory smorgasbord of patchouli resin, unwashed cargo shorts, and the funky secretions that result from life on the barricades. As I interview one of them wearing a Ralph Nader pin, her friend sneaks up behind me, spies my notebook, and reports that I am only recording sartorial details. "Can I see your press pass?" she inquires, as if I would be interviewing her compatriot for fun. The group is led by Andrew Rose, a San Francisco math teacher who has been arrested 11 times to date. His forearm bears a Bic-inscribed phone number: "Our jail-support line," he explains. As I butt into the group's strategy huddle, I am kindly asked to leave. "Why don't you just admit you're a cop?" says one protester. But Andrew brings me along into the auditorium with his noserings resembling small doorknockers. Inside is a strong contingent of McCainiacs. They clutch his book. They wave "McCain for President" signs. And those are just the journalists. As McCain's family files into the orchestra pit, brother Joe gabs with reporters, sometimes taking all of two minutes before mentioning the Arizona senator's Hanoi Hilton stint. Joe is still sporting a "McCain 2000" pin, which he says he wears as if it were a yellow ribbon from "when John was in Vietnam." Joe seems unaware that it's been five months since his brother lost the primary, though he's hardly alone. John seems to have only recently received the news himself. As Arianna takes to the stage to introduce the senator, she highlights the need to "drive our political leaders into dollar detox." Andrew Rose, who's sitting next to me, hisses: "She was married to a millionaire senator!" "We are part of building a movement," intones Huffington. "She's one of us," Rose says mockingly, elbowing Rookie and Sharkey, "there's room in our movement for Arianna." When McCain takes the podium to deliver his campaign finance reform sermon and extol the virtues of his recent bete noire, Bush, Rose and company, who have dispersed throughout the auditorium, heckle him mercilessly. They repeatedly catcall "Hypocrite!" and "Indian killer!" and bang the pole of a phony delegate stanchion (there are lots of these at the shadow convention, bearing the names not of states, but of states of mind, like "Disillusioned" and "Downsized"). McCain becomes so rattled that he offers to quit his speechifying. The scene degenerates into Showtime at the Apollo for white people - except instead of getting hooted off the stage, McCain is expected to stay and swallow his medicine. Beating a retreat immediately afterwards, McCain pauses for a clipped exchange with reporters outside the building. "It was fun," his lips say, while his torqued grimace indicates it was an ordeal. As Sharkey walks past the scrum, he admits the "action" wasn't his comrades' best work. None of the media has any idea what their chants meant. But the harassment is at least effective enough to get McCain to skip the advertised Q&A in favor of tending to important business ("He's getting a cheesesteak," says aide John Weaver). Such dramatics do indeed call for sustenance, but there doesn't seem to be a concession at the convention (though Ben & Jerry's was supposed to provide ice cream). So I crash the green room with National Review's Jonah Goldberg. There, scribbling notes, is author and professional scold Jonathan Kozol, sitting next to a plate of sickly melon wedges. After downing a Nantucket Nectar, Goldberg says we need to get back to see the comedy stylings of Al Franken, who introduced his Stuart Smalley character on Saturday Night Live many years ago, and who hasn't stopped inflicting it on us since. "I'm writing a piece about why Al Franken isn't funny," says Goldberg. Onstage, Franken says that Arianna is doing everything for this convention: "For instance, for the Shadow Cabaret, she's making the baklava." I ask Goldberg if he'd mind lending me his premise. The Shadow Cabaret is the Shadow Convention's way of leavening the self-righteous histrionics of its daily harangues on campaign finance reform, the failed war on drugs, and childhood povertya - issues that the shadow conveners say the major conventions aren't addressing (though, in fairness, the major conventions aren't addressing any issues). After hours watching panel discussions in which leading lights of the media bemoan the media's chronic obsession with the conventions (which they're all covering) at the expense of covering Real Issues (which they would be covering if they weren't so busy discussing media failures at media panel discussions), conventioneers are treated at night to comedians, singers, and spoken-word artists like the barefoot Michael Franti: I'm the trunk that holds the branches / The leaves that do the dances / My flowers / Romantic / My love / Gigantic. His poetry/ Bad. The Shadow Convention, however, is not all substandard entertainment and "Free Mumia" chants. On the second day, the shadow people get down to the serious business of campaign finance reform. Very serious, in fact. So serious that nobody seems actually to want to show up, so the shadow conveners cordon off the back two-thirds of the auditorium's seating with duct tape, forcing people to sit up front so as not to spoil the photo-op. I run into Arianna in the hall and we exchange air-kisses, her customary media greeting. I invite her to join me and a large coterie of colleagues who will be crashing late-night open-bar parties subsidized by lobbyists. "Can you bring them here first?" she asks, looking at the half-empty auditorium. Attendance is down because of McCain's absence, which is not to say the proceedings are devoid of celebrity. There is Granny D., the straw-hatted 90-year-old woman who spent 14 months walking across the country to emphasize the need for campaign finance reform. As Granny D. enters the auditorium in her fluorescent crossing-guard jacket (perhaps unaware that she's no longer in danger of getting mowed down by oncoming traffic), she suspiciously eyes the stairs that descend to the stage. An event staffer instructs her to grab my hand. Though the woman walked 3,200 miles with a 25 lb pack on her back, she seems unable to get to her seat without assistance. Once I deposit her there, catastrophe strikes. She discovers that both the text of her speech and her hearing aid battery are missing from her bag. When a staffer determines that I have led her to the wrong seat, he tries to tell her to relocate, to no avail. She cannot hear him. "YOU NEED TO MOVE!" he shouts, alarming bystanders, who are about to request that a panel discussion on Senior Citizen Abuse be added to the docket. Granny D. finally recovers her speech and gives a rousing performance in a Katharine-Hepburnish, New Hampshire accent (Granny's "future" is pronounced "fyoo-chah"). She basks in chants of "Go Granny Go!" It is unclear if the crowd is enthusiastic about cleaning up money in politics or simply relieved that Granny has successfully exited the stage without breaking her hip. The next day sees a significant attendance spike, as its subject is everyone's favorite: ending the war on drugs. Though the program is ostensibly not supposed to be dedicated to advocating the legalization of drugs, but rather increasing awareness of "harm reduction" - whatever that is - scores of young people show up, many of them smelling as if they've just bathed in their own bong water. We are treated to the fulminations of Republican governor Gary Johnson of New Mexico, who advocates legalizing drugs, and who will likely not be long for the political world, with his declarations that "the biggest issue in this country is drugs" and that "there's no positive drug message" directed at children. (Indeed, it's never too early to teach kids to shoot dope with clean needles.) Likewise, Jesse Jackson ignites the crowd, though the Jackson aficionados among us are disappointed that he can't find a word to rhyme with "recidivism" (he manages however to decry druggies who go to "jail sicker and come out slicker and return quicker"). From there, he is off to the races with his boilerplate call-and-response closers, "Futures Over Funerals! . .. Schools Over Jails! . . . Down With Dope, Up With Hope!" Oops, wrong rally. But the shadow performers who most readily inspire audience affection are the Children's Choir from Minnesota, billed as being "composed of children whose parents are incarcerated for drug-related offenses." Though I'm not susceptible to great displays of emotion, I am darn near moved to tears as the dozen or so little dears murder Curtis Mayfield's "People Get Ready," then read their homegrown poetry detailing the motherless existences inflicted on them by law enforcement. I go backstage to hear their stories and catch up with five choir members, along with their adult tour director, Mattie Thomas, whose business card says she is CEO of the Sisters of the Million Woman March. The only problem is, of the five girls, only three say their parents are in jail at all - and none of them for drug offenses. One 12-year-old says she has an uncle on drugs (he's been in rehab twice, but never in prison). Another 12-year-old says she hasa second cousin in jail - for murder. And a 14-year-old girl says her father is in jail - also for murder. A defender of the choir's bona fides, however, she adds he was probably on drugs when he became a killer (shooting a hole in the shadow conventioneers' patter about non-violent drug offenders). Mattie Thomas herself at least seems to be leading by example: She admits to having done a four-and-a-half year stint for drug distribution ("I was set up," she says) and is now on supervised release. Thomas seems almost disappointed when asked about the discrepancy between the choir's advertised, and its true, composition. "No, nobody's actually in jail," she says, "at this point." Despite the Shadow Convention's inanity and devotion to propaganda at the cost of intellectual honesty, it has still been a modest success. A seed was planted, a dialogue started. Never mind if it's a dialogue many of us gave up on long ago - when we left our dorm rooms, bad weed, and jug wine behind. (R) - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens