Difference between revisions of "Will Marshall"

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[[Will Marshall]] is President of the [[Progressive Policy Institute]]:
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::In December, Mr. Marshall, who calls [[Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr|Schlesinger]] "an inspiration," hosted a quiet gathering of like-minded journalists and intellectuals at the Washington, D.C., offices of the institute. Mr. Marshall brought together Wellesley College professor [[Thomas Cushman]], [[William Galston]] of the [[Brookings Institution]], writer [[Peter Beinart]], [[Leon Wieseltier]] of the [[New Republic]], author [[Fred Siegel]], [[Michael Allen]] of the [[National Endowment for Democracy]] along with [[Gary Kent]], a Labor politician from Britain, among others, to find a way to concentrate liberals against terror.
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::Today's Web-oriented culture has made it difficult for these ideological warriors to gain traction. The force of anti-war blogs, such as the DailyKos, which targets liberals like [[Christopher Hitchens]], who take the fight against jihadis seriously, is pervasive. Mr. Marshall has hope that the excesses of a presidential primary campaign will give way to the reasoned decisions of a general election. "In the general election, the discussion will have to turn to the Jihadist threat because it's not going away," Mr. Marshall says. "Elected officials have to represent real voters not the wrathful minions of cyberspace."<ref>Come Back, Schlesinger, by Seth Gitell, The New York Sun, 6 March 2007.</ref>
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==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==
 
*[[The Policy Network]]
 
*[[The Policy Network]]
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*[[Euston Manifesto United States]]
 
*[[Euston Manifesto United States]]
 
*[[Progressive Policy Institute]]
 
*[[Progressive Policy Institute]]
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==References==
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<references/>

Revision as of 16:42, 22 June 2008

Will Marshall is President of the Progressive Policy Institute:

In December, Mr. Marshall, who calls Schlesinger "an inspiration," hosted a quiet gathering of like-minded journalists and intellectuals at the Washington, D.C., offices of the institute. Mr. Marshall brought together Wellesley College professor Thomas Cushman, William Galston of the Brookings Institution, writer Peter Beinart, Leon Wieseltier of the New Republic, author Fred Siegel, Michael Allen of the National Endowment for Democracy along with Gary Kent, a Labor politician from Britain, among others, to find a way to concentrate liberals against terror.
Today's Web-oriented culture has made it difficult for these ideological warriors to gain traction. The force of anti-war blogs, such as the DailyKos, which targets liberals like Christopher Hitchens, who take the fight against jihadis seriously, is pervasive. Mr. Marshall has hope that the excesses of a presidential primary campaign will give way to the reasoned decisions of a general election. "In the general election, the discussion will have to turn to the Jihadist threat because it's not going away," Mr. Marshall says. "Elected officials have to represent real voters not the wrathful minions of cyberspace."[1]

Affiliations

References

  1. Come Back, Schlesinger, by Seth Gitell, The New York Sun, 6 March 2007.