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A chronicle of the absurd, in politics and life
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Monday, January 26, 2004 Well, looky here. According to the New York Times,
They are referring to the austere home of the Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani. And they're a bit late covering the story -- people who have been reading Juan Cole's blog have known of the Ayatollah Sistani, the most prominent "Object of Emulation" for Iraq's Shiites, as a critical figure in the governance of Iraq for months. But because he has wanted to deal with the CPA by quiet negotiation and, where possible, accomodation (at least until the recent mass demonstrations which appeared and then vanished at his word), there has (up till those demonstrations) been no concrete demonstration that he has actual power -- and so the American press, in ignoring him, seems to have been simply pretending that he doesn't. And, to some extent, they still are -- this story in today's paper seems to imply that Sistani's demands for elections (which he's been making for months) only became an issue when he gained adherents on the IGC. One hopes that the CPA itself hasn't been making the same mistake. But it seems, at long last, as if the CPA, or at least some
factions within it, want to be a little flexible. Indeed, in
discussions with the UN, US representatives have said only one thing is
nonnegotiable -- we must be out by June 30th. And so Dubya's crew
continues to show the same rock-ribbed devotion to principle and
judicious sense of priorities which have marked all their dealings in
Iraq, and in fact their conduct of
the whole "war on terror"...
Friday, January 23, 2004 Don't you hate it when good-for-nothing social parasites sponge off the welfare state? Stefanie Murray does. Though she has a different idea of who those people are than some of the other folks who usually make that kind of argument:
Point:
But of course, that isn't depriving the Iraqis, or Kuwaitis, of anything. Since Halliburton's activities are funded by cost-plus contracts from the US government, they're ripping off us.
Thursday, January 22, 2004 Bob Novak, in 2001:
Bob Novak, this week, when asked whether Senate Republicans had been feeding him confidential memos electronically pilfered from the Democrats:
Some people look at this juxtaposition, and see only naked partisanship. But I discern adherence to a single, consistent principle. The consistent principle is this: Novak will never burn a source, no matter how criminal or egregious the conduct of that source, not even if (as in the Valerie Plame case) tipping off Novak was itself a transparently criminal act -- so long as that source stays in a position to feed him more illicit dirt down the line... The point, of course, has also been made elsewhere... After a long hiatus, Isabella is blogging again, featuring among her new entries a meditation on solo flying at dusk, and a reminisce on how hard it can be to tell which goodbye is really the last. She's so far more coy about her day-to-day situation than she's been in the past -- which, given the family situation she describes, would surely be all to the good. ("Things are different now and so I must act differently"). But no matter how much of her writing you choose to believe, she certainly does it well. It's very good to have her back. Wednesday, January 21, 2004 I find I have nothing at all to say about the State of the Union address which isn't already being said better elsewhere. (Well, not quite -- what was a quarterback with a game to prepare for doing there, exactly? And is he to blame for that bit about steroids? -- but nothing interesting). So here, instead, are a couple of quotes instead that I've been meaning to cite for a while now. Here's one:
And here's another:
By and large, I support the State of Israel. But, as someone recently said on another topic entirely, if this isn't over the line, then there is no line. Tuesday, January 20, 2004 So, the surprise winner in Iowa is Diana's fave rave, my junior Senator. Which makes this as good a time as any to say once again why (well, beyond what Patrick said) Kerry won't be getting my primary vote. First off, unlike Clark, he actually has waffled on the Iraq war. In fact, his confusion goes back before the war, when he "explained" his vote for giving Dubya unconditional authority for use of force by trying to pretend there were conditions attached. This is no small thing. Beyond that, he is, unquestionably, an East Coast Establishment Washington Insider, of precisely the type that Karl Rove loves to run against. You can point out all you like that he has taken courageous stands in the Senate during Reagan years, and before that in Vietnam Veterans Against the War (which makes his latter-day wishy-washiness all that much more of a disappointment), but none of that changes the facts that he is from the East Coast Establishment, nor that he is a Washington Insider. Bill Belichick's Patriots don't win football games by playing into the other team's strengths... Late edit: Added the word "primary" in the first graf. Any of the
Democrats running would be a better President than Bush at this point, once
we get to the general election... Monday, January 19, 2004 Speaking of modern labor standards (as we were)... One of the tragedies that made American labor unions respectable was the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, in which 146 women died because factory management had locked them into their factory to reduce pilferage, and they were unable to force the locks when the building caught fire. Well, it looks like someone at WalMart likes the idea of going back to the good old days. There have already been several incidents where workers locked into buildings on the night shift have had to wait for hours to get out because no one around had a key. In response, not so much to an outcry from the employees as to the bad publicity which it has engendered, the company now says it is instituting a policy that when workers are locked in, there should always be a manger on site with a key. I guess they had formerly thought that making managers work the night shift would be inhumane... And for more back-to-the-future stuff, check out Jeanne D'Arc
on how Dubya honored Martin Luther King's birthday.... Friday, January 16, 2004 A few days ago, Nick Kristof posted a column in the Times arguing once again, as he has in the past, the evils of
because, he says, if Cambodians can't get jobs in sweatshops, they wind up trying to make a living picking trash out of garbage dumps, under conditions which are even worse. As a defense of the economic system which gives rise to those sweatshops, this has always struck me as uncomfortably close to the arguments of ante-bellum Southerners who defended their own peculiar instutition by pointing out that slaves were better off than some tribesmen you could find in diseased conditions in Africa. The salient question, to me, about the sweatshops isn't whether the Cambodians could do worse, but rather, whether we could do better -- and given that Nike was, not too long ago, paying more money per shoe for endorsement deals than for the labor in the shoe itself, it seems likely that we can. But if you'd like to read someone taking on the argument on its own terms, you could do worse than peruse Daniel Davies take on the column in Crooked Timber, which among other things, dings Kristof for predicting new hardship for Cambodians if Cambodia were forced to honor labor standards which it already meets. In this post, Davies also inaugurates a new scoring scheme for this sort of pro-WTO propaganda. Eight Globollocks points! Note as well Kristof's weird assertion that discussion of "labor, environmental and human rights standards" in the context of any trade arrangement whatever is somehow "anti-trade" -- that is, opposed to international trade per se. I gather that there are circles in which this is conventional wisdom -- a recent public appearance here by Robert Rubin featured similar comments, for which Rubin gave no evidence whatever. But to me, at least, this seems an odd enough proposition to deserve some kind of a supporting argument... Thursday, January 15, 2004 ]: A bit of fan appreciation from Ad Frank on stage at T.T.'s yesterday:
Review of the set here, for those who have an interest in the Boston music
scene... Some blog entries are quick. This one wasn't; I've been chewing it over for nearly a week now. But that said, it's as topical now as it was when I started, so what the heck. I had the opportunity to hear a talk by Kanan Makiya at MIT last week. Makiya, as you may know, is the former Iraqi dissident who wrote Republic of Fear, a moving account of Saddam's atrocities, and is involved with current events there both as an advisor to the constitutional committee of the IGC, and as the organizer of the Iraq Memory Foundation, an organization dedicated to preserving the memory of Saddam Hussein's atrocities. It was a talk that featured, to me, a lot of weird contrasts. In fact, it started off with one -- Makiya described the mistrust of interim constitutions in many Iraqi circles, due to the use of interim constitutions by several military regimes, and ultimately, the Baath party under Saddam Hussein. For those reasons, he stressed the importance of proceeding directly to a stable, final constitution. He then explained that due in part to exigent external pressures which he didn't describe in detail (presumably from Washington), there was going to be an interim constitution. To some, this might suggest an unwarranted haste -- one of several mistakes in the occupation which Makiya acknowledged. For instance, he also cited the failure of the CPA to find Iraqi allies and collaborate effectively with them (including the Arabic-speaking archivists he has recruited for his own foundation, who are not being allowed to assist the US in the perusal of the archives for their own purposes), and how the use of American forces to maintain security was a situation fraught with peril, which he said that many in advance had advised them to avoid. And yet, rather than blame, he had high praise for the officials in the American administration, and more precisely the neoconservative faction within it. (The alliance seems to spill over into personal connections; for what it's worth, he is in the stable of experts maintained by Benador Associates, which also includes Richard Perle, Laurie Mylroie, and the particularly bloody-minded Michael Ledeen). When I pointed out in Q&A that all this had made some of us doubt the depth and sincerity of the administration's commitment to democracy in Iraq, his response was in part to cite the old cliché that it's better to be inside the tent pissing out, than outside pissing in. And while it's not clear what this means to people who will never be inside Dubya's tent, or Dick Cheney's, no matter what we do, he suggested that it would be good for those on the American left to demand that the administration hold true to its small-d democratic rhetoric -- even though the administration has shown no inclination to accomodate big-D Democratic demands of any kind whatever. And in fact, there's something to his logic, at least as it applies to him. In politics, you can't always choose who you work with, and demanding that your allies agree with you in every particular leads you into the sins of Saint Ralph (viz. the comments here). In fact, it's not entirely out of the question that Makiya has private doubts about the quality of the administration which he is reluctant to air in any public or semipublic forum, for obvious reasons -- but nevertheless feels that by staying part of the process, he may be able to keep them away from errors they would otherwise slide into. (Though he certainly wouldn't, and didn't, hint at any such reservations to the likes of me). But there is also a danger. The logic that "it would be worse without me" can justify collaboration with people a lot worse than Bill Clinton, or George Bush. Indeed, without equating those guys with the likes of Saddam, we can still suggest that at least a few of the people who collaborated with and enabled the Baath regime were following the same sort of reasoning. Conversely, a protest against the CPA's hamhandedness, its failure to find and engage with Iraqi allies on the ground, and so forth, would have a lot more impact from Kanan Makiya, than from the likes of me. So, I imagine, for someone in Makiya's position, there must be indignities and reverses which must be endured to get anything done. You have to decide how much good you are actually doing by staying in volved in the process -- and how much toleration of hasty interim constitutions, corruption, pandering to theocrats, armed raids against civilians based on unsubstantiated rumors from informants (much as under the old regime), and so forth is worth that good. But on the other hand, from the American history even in this region in the past, it seems to me, there would have to be indignities and reverses which are too deep to be ignored. One might think, for instance, of the United States's unquestioned betrayal of the Shiite rebellion after Gulf War I, or Kissinger's earlier stab in the back of the Kurds -- both preceded by solemn promises and invocations of high ideals from American politicians who, when pushed, did not live up to them. So the awful part is that when you're dealing with these people directly, you can't always know what they are up to, and how firmly they are committed to it. There are no sharp lines between firm commitment and looking for the quick fix, or between looking for the quick fix and betraying democratic ideals entirely. And so, at any point, you just have to guess how close you are to the line -- and whether you're doing more good by sticking with your current collaborators, flawed though they be, or by publicly holding them personally to account for their flaws, knowing (from their record) that the doors to the closed chambers will be forever sealed to you after that. But the road Makiya is traveling is unmarked. No sign, no border post, marks that line. For now, Makiya doesn't seem to think he's anywhere close to the line. But for that, he has nothing to go on but his own judgment. I don't envy him one bit. Note: some light copy-editing to this post done late...
e.g., switched link from Juan Cole's discussion of the IGC's establishment of Sharia law to Riverbend's...
Wednesday, January 14, 2004 Some folks are wondering whether Dubya's new space program is worth the money -- initially, at least, an extra $1 billion a year -- especially given the government's current financial straits. Tosh. He's simultaneously working on another "proposal, which would provide at least $1.5 billion for training to help couples develop interpersonal skills that sustain 'healthy marriages.'" His political staff have been developing this over the past several months, in collaboration with several conservative groups. And given conservatives' general opposition to meddlesome government social spending, particularly when it interferes with peoples' private lives and private choices, you know the expense has to be quite minor not to be a sore point... Tuesday, January 13, 2004 Actual headline from today's New York Times: You got it right there, folks. The basic mechanisms of low-level American democracy described as a lost, dark art... On The American Street, Mark Kleiman quotes Phil Carter on the limits of torture, as applied to Candaian Maher Arar, who the US tortured by proxy, by shipping him off to Syria (where he was also a citizen, but hadn't been for years):
Arar claims Syria went well over this line -- but forget that. Just consider that when hearing that in the jails in Baghdad at Guantanmo, in the cells full of prisoners that the US will not name, we are not using torture. And then consider allegations (like those featured on the front of
the Wall Street Journal yesterday, unfortunately not free on line)
that we too have gone over that line...
I haven't done one of these in a while, but... Ad peeve du jour: the lite beer ad that uses "freedom of choice" by Devo as its background music, but in typical fashion, clips the lyrics. Imagine how much better it would be if it ended right:
The lessons to be drawn from this for the average beer drinker are left as an exercise for the interested reader. And as long as I'm on the subject, I'm actually looking forward to the Budweiser spots featuring "Leon" the football player with the, well, interesting sense of his role in the game ("Football is the ultimate team game, so I blame my teammates...") -- but how on earth does this sell beer? A brief note: I expect to be at Arisia for at least a day or so this weekend, attired in thematically appropriate headgear... Sunday, January 11, 2004 A brief exchange on a policy initiative of recent note:
More seriously, it's interesting to note that the basic engineering
and science planning was done by noted engineer
and scientist Karl Rove, who thinks it's important enough that the
current projects of the lesser intellectual lights at NASA should
be shut down to pay for it. Gosh, it's nice to have the grownups
in charge.
A little news from New England: Last night at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, late in the fourth quarter, on a night so cold that the fountain outside one Boston art gallery was encased in a shell of ice that had frozen around it, the Tennessee Titans were driving downfield against the New England Patriots. But after the two-minute warning, the drive fizzled, as two long penalties and a pass falling through the hands of receiver Drew Bennett gave the ball to New England, on their own 42-yard line, with one minute, 38 seconds left to play. In past playoffs, this sort of thing has set the stage for late-game heroics by Patriot quarterback Tom Brady and his offense -- like the heart-stopping drive that won the Superbowl for them two years back. But this time, there was no need. The Pats were already leading, 17-14. Brady kneeled on the ball three times, and then ran a slow-developing pass play to run the last three seconds off the clock, securing victory, and advancement to next week's AFC championship game -- which will be played again in Foxborough, before many of the same hometown fans. And as he kneeled, boos rained down upon the field. In guaranteeing themselves mere victory, the Pats were making no attempt to cover the six-point Las Vegas spread. Hey, folks. Gamble much?
Friday, January 09, 2004 Some bloggers, particularly on the left, have responded to recent offerings from David Brooks and William Safire with mere casual mockery. But Andrew Northrup gives them the treatment that their status as conservative elders truly deserves... |