Comment on the State of the Union — and then watch C-SPAN!!

Feel free to comment on President Bush’s State of the Union address here. Oh, and CNN’s Michael Coren reports breaking news — bloggers will apparently be providing some real-time commentary on the speech!! Yours truly will not be live-blogging the SOTU — but loyal readers will be able to hear my thoughts on the speech ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

Feel free to comment on President Bush's State of the Union address here. Oh, and CNN's Michael Coren reports breaking news -- bloggers will apparently be providing some real-time commentary on the speech!! Yours truly will not be live-blogging the SOTU -- but loyal readers will be able to hear my thoughts on the speech (and the Democratic response) if you tune into C-SPAN for the post-speech coverage. I'm batting second in their reaction line-up -- Ramesh Ponnuru leads off and Brad DeLong will come third. As These two have clashed in the past, think of me as providing a temporal de-militarized zone of pundity! UPDATE: Well that was painless -- except for my near-total lack of coherence on the final question. Quick take:

Feel free to comment on President Bush’s State of the Union address here. Oh, and CNN’s Michael Coren reports breaking news — bloggers will apparently be providing some real-time commentary on the speech!! Yours truly will not be live-blogging the SOTU — but loyal readers will be able to hear my thoughts on the speech (and the Democratic response) if you tune into C-SPAN for the post-speech coverage. I’m batting second in their reaction line-up — Ramesh Ponnuru leads off and Brad DeLong will come third. As These two have clashed in the past, think of me as providing a temporal de-militarized zone of pundity! UPDATE: Well that was painless — except for my near-total lack of coherence on the final question. Quick take:

1) The foreign policy section was stronger than the domestic section; 2) That hug between Safia Taleb al-Suhail and Janet Norwood was the high moment of the evening for me [Yeah, but they got their sleeves tangled up–ed. Yes, but even that small moment of awkwardness was endearing.] 3) I find it depressing that the word “trade” wasn’t in the SOTU, and yet Senator Reid brought it up as a negative (“Jobs going to India and China!” but Reid still wants better relations with other countries) within the first five minutes of his response; 4) I’m a bit worried about the mental health of C-SPAN’s callers.

Otherwise, Jeff Jarvis pretty much captured my take.

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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