Another Gasbag Disaster

Brookings Institution, April 5th, 2004

Iraq is Ted Kennedy’s Vietnam, warmed over for 2005. Stuck in the decade-long quagmire of minority status in the US Senate, Kennedy’s "solutions" will offer more years of backbenching for Democrats. His ideas for Iraq today are the same as they were for Vietnam thirty two years ago: Cut and run. In June 1973, he voted to cut off all funding to the South Vietnamese government, practically ensuring a communist takeover by the North Vietnamese, the ramifications of which were the killing fields of Cambodia and a bruised and shaken USA for years to come. Kennedy’s answer then is not too different from his answer today, which is to abandon our mission in Iraq and send our troops home, denying our soldiers the chance to see those objectives to fruition.

Building on his January 12th speech, which urged Democrats to be more liberal, not to mention the Mayflower Gasbag Disaster of 2004, Senator Kennedy is continuing the Jurassic politics of a bygone era. Last Thursday, he was at it again:

In the name of a misguided cause, we continued the war too long. We failed to comprehend the events around us. We did not understand that our very presence was creating new enemies and defeating the very goals we set out to achieve. We cannot allow that history to repeat itself in Iraq.

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Thrice-annual Brain Dump.

I actually typed this in this morning, but the laptop ate my post.  That probably sounds a lot more interesting and fun than it actually was, though.  So, attempting to recreate: I was using my new laptop in the kitchen this morning while doing some planning with the new PDA, and musing how although one … Read more

I’m sorry, Jim

…. but pointing out that certain newspapers will spin the coming Iraq elections one way doesn’t mean that spinning it the other is any better: However the election goes will be one thing; how it’s reported is another. The thing to watch is the position of the Damning But, the old DB. The DB will … Read more

The Pro-Toture Right.

LGF’s commentators aim low — and hit!  Sully’s the latest target, for having the gumption to suggest that torture is wrong.  Charles responds by proving he’s not really all that clear on such nuanced things as "dictionary definitions," "the issues," and "the kind of website he chooses to run."  So it goes.  If you want … Read more

Full disclosure. Maybe.

This is funny (via Glenn Reynolds).  Still, it’s kinda strange that the blogosphere is focused on the coming crypto-pundit invasion, but has wholly missed the enemy already within.  The blogosphere is utterly overrun by lawyers, including yours truly, who are virtual double agents — and bound as fiduciaries to represent their clients’ interests.  (Incidentally, we … Read more

The Right Question II

Today’s entry is inspired by Mark Kleiman.  Persuading eight-year-olds to demand unhealthy food and expensive athletic shoes, thus making those items staples of second-grade culture, is a nasty trick to play on the parents of those eight-year-olds. Indeed, it is nothing less than a commercial assault on the natural hierarchy of the family, where the … Read more

What the Military Thinks

Sean at Blackfive.net has done a sort of ad-hoc poll of fellow military (mostly former service-mates) on a few issues.  This is not to be taken as The Voice Of The Military, but it’s interesting nonetheless: 1.  The Duration Plus Six Concept – All believe that, at the start of the war, the entire force … Read more

Waiter, There’s Some Mouse In My Stem Cells …

From the LA Times: “All human embryonic stem cell lines approved for use in federally funded research are contaminated with a foreign molecule from mice that may make them risky for use in medical therapies, according to a study released Sunday. Researchers at UC San Diego and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La … Read more

Torture Redux

Mr. Donald writes further to my post on torture — and the place for government torturers (if any): Your answer suggests that you, like myself, would in that given case promptly set to work torturing the suicide bomber, and would be right to do so. The government’s special privilege to commit violence is already dangerously … Read more

Anti-Muslim Americans: Please Note!

Really, make an effort to pay attention this time (from Sully): The chief Imam of the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Sheikh Abdulrahman Al-Sudais, gives an annual sermon decrying extremism and terror. Money quote: "Islam is the religion of moderation. There is no room for extremism in Islam," he said. He called on Muslims to "protect … Read more

Nuts.

This article, linked by Professor Bainbridge, argues that companies should provide "[p]ayment in-kind (perks), deferred compensation (corporate loans)," and encourage "conspicuous consumption" among top employees in order to ensure that they remain loyal to the firm.  If the abstract to the article accurately reflects its argument, however, the authors have lept off the crazy branch … Read more

Why the NYT Pisses Me Off

Some days you are just going along fairly well and then something really sets you off.  I was having a good day until Powerlineblog directed my attention to this NYT article on IraqTheModel.  IraqTheModel is a generally, though not reflexively pro-American weblog run by three Iraqis.  Last month, as the authors met with the President, … Read more

Your Tax Dollars At Work

From the New York Times, via everywhere:

“Over the objections of many of its own employees, the Social Security Administration is gearing up for a major effort to publicize the financial problems of Social Security and to convince the public that private accounts are needed as part of any solution.

The agency’s plans are set forth in internal documents, including a “tactical plan” for communications and marketing of the idea that Social Security faces dire financial problems requiring immediate action.

Social Security officials say the agency is carrying out its mission to educate the public, including more than 47 million beneficiaries, and to support President Bush’s agenda.

“The system is broken, and promises are being made that Social Security cannot keep,” Mr. Bush said in his Saturday radio address. He is expected to address the issue in his Inaugural Address.

But agency employees have complained to Social Security officials that they are being conscripted into a political battle over the future of the program. They question the accuracy of recent statements by the agency, and they say that money from the Social Security trust fund should not be used for such advocacy.

“Trust fund dollars should not be used to promote a political agenda,” said Dana C. Duggins, a vice president of the Social Security Council of the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents more than 50,000 of the agency’s 64,000 workers and has opposed private accounts.

Deborah C. Fredericksen of Minneapolis, who has worked for the Social Security Administration for 31 years, said, “Many employees believe that the president and this agency are using scare tactics to promote private accounts.”

This is our money, which is meant to be spent on legitimate government functions. If the President wants to get out his political message, he can continue to use the ample supply of free media at his disposal. Alternately, he can use his prodigious fundraising abilities. There is no reason to drag our tax dollars into it.

This is not the first time the Bush administration has used our tax dollars to promote his political agenda. They paid Armstrong Williams to promote No Child Left Behind. Under this administration, both the Department of Health and Human Services and the Office of National Drug Control Policy released videos that the GAO found (pdf, via Ignatz) to be in violation of the Congressional ban on using funds for propaganda not specifically authorized by Congress.

Let me say that again, just so it’s clear: it is against the law to use taxpayer money for propaganda. The HHS and ONDCP cases have already been found to have broken the law. The Armstrong Williams case fairly clearly does so as well*. Whether or not this particular episode counts as propaganda is less clear to me, but it surely violates the spirit of the law. And besides, it’s just plain wrong.

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Famous Quotes From Clint Eastwood

"I have strong feelings about gun control. If there’s a gun around, I want to be controlling it."Pink Cadillac "I know what you’re thinking. Did he fire six shots or only five? Well to tell you the truth in all this excitement I’ve kinda lost track myself. But being this is a .44 Magnum – … Read more

CBS Scandal

The coalescing opinion on the more liberal side of the blogosphere (among the few willing to talk about it at least) seems to be that the CBS problem in appropriately dealing with almost certainly fraudulant documents while reporting was caused mostly by a competitive rush to publish a sensational story instead of political bias.  See … Read more

This just in!

Whaaaaaa???? WEDNESDAY, Jan. 12 (HealthDayNews) — Americans need to consume fewer calories and exercise more to maintain a healthy weight, according to new dietary guidelines released Wednesday by the federal government. Damn.  Well, if "the federal government" says you can lose weight by consuming fewer calories and exercising more, I guess it must be true. … Read more

On Anti-Semitism

A quick thought on Vox Day’s "The Merits of Anti-Semitism," which set off a wave of let’s-point-at-the-bad-man in the usual quarters.  (As well as a witty and insightful post from the Young Yglesias.) 

I’m not going to leap on Vox with the rest.  Vox is merely doing what he sometimes does, which is to find the most offensive and silly way to argue a point that, in other’s hands, could be made easily defensible.*  His comment was foolish, but I don’t read it as anti-Semitic (or, at least, not intentionally so).

Update ———–

A lot of commentators view the foregoing as a defense of Vox, and want to prove that Vox is, indeed, anti-semitic.  In fact, it’s not a defense of Vox (re-read it if you don’t get why) and I’m wholly disinterested in defending Vox’s statements (again, re-read it if you don’t get why).  For more regarding why I’m not defending Vox, see CMDicely’s and my comments on the Yglesias post noted above.

End Update ———–

Now, stretching things a bit:  the jump-on-Vox moment reminded me of a point that I meant to make a little while ago but, due to work and other constraints, never got around to.

We (meaning "people," myself included) can have a very childish view of racism, anti-Semitism, and the like.  We always like to reduce things to bad words and unutterable thoughts — rather than look at context or intent.  Worse, there a dangerous tendency to game charges of racism or sexism or anti-Semitism for maximum political effect.  After all, a person with a childish concept of bigotry has a limited concept of bigotry, and it’s easy to whip such folks up into a frenzy because they don’t want to accidentally fall into the wrong camp.   

I’m not merely talking about race-baiting, and I’m not doing a very untimely riff on the O.J. Simpson trial.  I’m also not saying that it’s all intentional — childish notions can be both abused and self-abused.  [That’s an unfortunate turn of phrase …]  Nor am I suggesting that the left or liberals bear the most of the blame (as one might wrongly assume).  Indeed, the most recent examples of gaming bigotry seem have occurred with folks who are to the right, or, at the least, among those who identify as non-lefties. 

For instance, take the charge by some that the term "neoconservative" is crypto-code for "Jew," and that railing against neoconservatives in the Bush Administration is thinly disguised anti-Semitism.   Clearly, some on the far Left seem to hate both neoconservatives and Jews.  But this is hardly an excuse to conflate neoconservatism with Judaism — which, so far as I know, don’t share a theology.  No, the excuse to conflate neoconservatism with Judaism is to shut up administration critics with counter-charges of anti-Semitism.

Now, sometimes the Bush Administration needs to be defended.  And some terms deserve to be criticized.  For instance, David Bernstein eventually made a good point as to why "Likudnik" is an unhelpful term (Bernstein’s first shotgun post on "Likudnik" committed the sin of which I here complain).  We should take care to confront hidden bigotries and evils. 

Still, a clear charge of bigotry should be reserved for a response to a clear expression of bigotry.  Giving the benefit of the doubt should still most tongues.  It’s the only way to keep the system honest — and make sure that our power is not diluted when actual evil comes calling.

Indeed, all this huffing and puffing by people eager to be at the front of the condemning line reminds me of, well, myself.  Back in the days when my white ass was growing up in Indiana without Black people.  (A gross overstatement, but you get my point.)  When I felt that I had to impart to every person of color than I that I did, indeed, feel their pain and was on their side.  Do you have any idea how much it demeans the Civil Rights movement to feel that I shouldn’t ask that no black beans be put on my burrito because it might be taken as some racist slur?   Do you have any idea how much of an annoying, unaware f_ck I was?

Don’t be that f_ck.

(This may help to explain, incidentally, why I know the lyrics to virtually every Public Enemy song published prior to 1989.)

(For the record, I eventually came to love black beans.)

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Holy Smokes

Just yesterday, the death toll was 153,000.  Today it’s 272,000: An official document posted here says that nearly 210,000 people in Indonesia are dead or missing from the Dec. 26 tsunami, a death toll that appears to be far higher than officials have reported publicly. Rescue workers think even that number may be low. The … Read more

Just a note ….

… That ObWi’s posters run the gamut along the political scale, and just because you’re seeing a demeaning and evil post from the Latter-Day Fascist Enemy does not mean that you won’t soon see a friendlier post from Those Who Defend The Pure (In Birkenstocks).  Or vice versa.  And, on that note, best not to … Read more

Billionaires’ Cabal

Otherwise titled If At First You Don’t Succeed, Fail Fail Again or Soros Reloaded, the sequel to the 2004 ballot box flop Soros Revolutions.  Last month, three billionaires conspired in San Francisco, deciding how to best influence the Democratic Party and left-wing politics.

A group of billionaire philanthropists are to donate tens of millions more dollars to develop progressive political ideas in the US in an effort to counter the conservative ascendancy.

George Soros, who made his fortune in the hedge fund industry; Herb and Marion Sandler, the California couple who own a multi-billion-dollar savings and loan business; and Peter Lewis, the chairman of an Ohio insurance company, donated more than $63m (£34m) in the 2004 election cycle to organisations seeking to defeat George W. Bush.

At a meeting in San Francisco last month, the left-leaning billionaires agreed to commit an even larger sum over a longer period to building institutions to foster progressive ideas and people.

Also taking part was Steven Bing, who is a few sheckels short of a billion but no slouch in his own right.  How much will they give to the progressive cause?

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About Michael Chertoff

I know very little about Michael Chertoff, President Bush’s new nominee for Secretary of Homeland Security. According to all the accounts I’ve read, he’s smart and hardworking, and he will surely be a huge improvement over Bernard Kerik. That said, however, I have one major reservation about him: he seems to be the person behind … Read more

Torts Get a Raspberry

I haven’t read much from Sebastian Mallaby but he writes a cogent piece in the Washington Post on the costs of our current tort system:

In 2003, according to Tillinghast, the tort system cost $246 billion — meaning that the average American paid $845 for it via more expensive goods and services. But the really shocking thing is where the billions went. Injured plaintiffs — the fabled little guys for whom the system is supposedly designed — got less than half the money.

According to Tillinghast’s 2002 data, plaintiffs’ lawyers swallowed 19 percent of the $233 billion. Defense lawyers pocketed an additional 14 percent, and other administrative costs, mainly at insurance firms, accounted for a further 21 percent. The legal-administrative complex thus guzzled fully 54 percent of the money in the tort system, or $126 billion. That’s 43 times as much as the federal government has budgeted this year to combat the global AIDS pandemic.

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Sociological Tangent

Warning, I would be completely unsurprised if many of you who come here for political griping find this completely uninteresting.  Matthew Yglesias has an interesting post going about masculinity, femininity and what people want in a mate.  This reminded me of something I had been thinking about a while back regarding gay culture and socialization.  … Read more

Gov. of California

I was hopeful about Schwarzenegger when he was elected mostly because I didn’t think you could do worse than what we already had in California.  He has actually done quite well, but if he pulls off the stuff in this speech I’ll be totally sold.  This isn’t going to make friends, but it is a … Read more

My Take on Talk Radio: Part I

I have a job that puts me in the car several times a week. The radio is usually on and it’s frequently tuned in to talk radio. How did I get started? Back in the late 1980s, after several hours out in the field and getting bored with music stations, I switched over to the AM band and heard Rush Limbaugh for the first time. Quite frankly, I was hooked because outside the Wall Street Journal and a few low-circulation magazines, there was no real outlet that represented and articulated my conservative views. The alternative was to fume at the obvious bias of CNN and network news coverage. Judging by the growth of Rush’s listenership and the number of subsequent offshoots, I wasn’t the only one was frustrated with TV news.  So began my journey as a talk radio listener.

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Posting Rules Reprise

I haven’t talked to my co-bloggers about this, but I’m taking this opportunity to repost the posting rules.  If I say something out of line, I’m sure they will set me straight.  In other words, to quote the Vigilantes of Love, "I could be wrong, I could be wrong, but I really don’t think so." 

We have had about four examples of threads which have degenerated into hellish examples of ugliness while us regular posters have been on vacation. 

Quit it.

I will be the very first to admit that I have, on occasion, responded inappropriately to people.  I’m not as good at setting the tone as Moe was.  But people… please try to respond to ideas.  Please try to explain ideas.  Please try to come up with ideas.  Please try to think things through.  Please respond to people who disagree with you without becoming monsters.  I think we have an excellent site here, and it is one of the few places where people have been able to come from different sides to talk about lots of different things.  The blogosphere doesn’t need dKos III, FreeRepublic IV, LGF V, or heaven help us WashingtonMonthly II. 

So I’m reposting the posting rules.  But as we know from the discussion of law around here, the letter of the law doesn’t always cut it.  Fortunately we are all adults here, (or if you aren’t we are going to give you the courtesy of treating you as one) so think about the spirit of the rules–pointed discusssion without vilification.  So without further discussion, the posting rules…

Be reasonably civil.

No profanity. For the record, ‘hell’, ‘damn’ and ‘pissed’ are not considered ‘profanity’ for the purposes of this rule; also for the record, the more offensive racial slurs and epithets will be deemed to ‘profanity’ for the purposes of this rule

Don’t disrupt or destroy meaningful conversation for its own sake.

Do not consistently abuse or vilify other posters for its own sake.

Like Tac, we don’t ban for ideological reasons (unless you’re a Nazi or something equally vile) and/or simple disagreements (never mind that it’s not the easiest thing in the world to find someone who can manage to disagree with Katherine, von and me on the same topic). We’re all adults here, so I’m sure that this should be sufficient – with one caveat: there are a couple of notable trolls out there who will be banned the moment that they show up. As of 1:18 PM EST, Sunday, November 30, 2003, they haven’t, so if you’ve made a post here before then I’m not talking about you.

Lastly, just a reminder that Left and Right have very broad definitions and that people are going to take it personally if you inform them that of course all Xs eat babies, should they themselves be Xs (or Ys trying to keep things cool).

UPDATE (05/19/2004): As you may have noticed, we delete and ban spambots on sight. This is because comments sections are for original and/or interesting thoughts, not mass postings. Therefore, please note that if I come across a overly-long comment that is obviously a cut n’paste job, out it goes, no apologies, no regrets. Small cut n’pastes are fine; entire articles are not: when in doubt, it’s too long. Mind, if you have seen or made a comment elsewhere that would be perfect for a particular thread, you are more than welcome to link to it; just don’t give us the entire thing. We don’t have unlimited storage space.

ANOTHER UPDATE (10/24/2004): Calls for the assassination of any politician will be subject to immediate banning. An exception is made for legitimate military targets in time of war; due to the unique nature of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, members of the Palestinian Authority are to be considered ‘politicians’ for the purpose of this rule.

The above should be explicitly not read as being a prohibition on (but is not limited to) criticism, vituperation, espousal of conspiracy theories, disagreement, speculation on personal habits and/or motivations, expressions of contempt, unfavorable extrapolations of past behavior in order to guess future behavior, mild cursing or any other traditional method of expressing disapproval with a politician’s policy positions or personality, provided of course that such behavior does not violate another of the Posting Rules.

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And Now For Something Completely Different

Well, not really.  The nub of it is this.  Von and Edward asked me to contribute some writings to Obsidian Wings and I said "yes", and I extend a heartfelt thanks.  At Tacitus, I was under the moniker of "Bird Dog" and, since a new era is being ushered in over there, I thought I’d usher in some small changes as well, such as using my real name.  So what’s the point of this post?  To introduce myself, something I’ve never really done before on a weblog, so here goes.

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In Praise Of New Year’s Resolutions

About ten years ago, my sister and I were sitting in a restaurant at about this time of year, contemplating the fact that while each of us was basically very happy with our life, both of us felt that there was room for improvement. We decided to make New Year’s resolutions together, resolutions that would … Read more

A Sontag in Full.

I’ll join Judith Weiss of Kesher Talk:  "Josh Trevino [nee’ Tacitus] has written the blogosphere’s only graceful and sensible reflections on Susan Sontag."  Give it a read.

Strategy and Tactics

Reuel Gerecht, writing in the Weekly Standard, is a puzzle.  First, he offers sound advice in Iraq: [W]e are losing the "war of the roads" in Iraq. If the Sunni insurgency controls the principal arteries in and out of Baghdad and can kill with ease on major thoroughfares elsewhere, there is no way the United … Read more

Sebastian Holsclaw Fantasy Bio Contest: Part III

Voting has ended and early exit polls indicate it was not even close (OK, so actual counting indicate that it was not even close). The Winner of the Sebastian Holsclaw Fantasy Bio Contest was entry B, by our very own constant reader sidereal. (APPLAUSE! APPLAUSE!). Because sidereal’s entry didn’t follow the format Moe created of … Read more

God Knows I Shouldn’t do this ….

…. since he’s on my side and all, but Will Wilkinson is a bit over-wrought in his proclamations of coming fiscal doom.  While arguing in support of reforming Social Security, Wilkinson writes: A sustainable fiscal policy has an FI of zero. The estimated FI is about $47 trillion. That’s real money. To get the gravity … Read more

Once More, on Merry Christmas.

Jack comments on my post below, which argues that James Lileks’ oh-isn’t-that-odd-but-I-don’t-mean-anything-by-the-observations regarding the purported controversy over "Merry Christmas" are a but thin.  Jack writes: In Lileks response to Wolcott’s idiocy he illustrates the slow, steady abatement of the term ‘Merry Christmas’ in Christmas ads–and they are Christmas ads, there’s no ‘holiday’ other than Christmas … Read more

Detainee Abuse

New records released yesterday indicate widespread torture and abuse by military officials over the last three years.  Some U.S. government officials reportedly objected to the abuse, and suggested that war crime prosecutions be considered for some offenders.  Read it.  With more documents trickling out, and the Abu Ghraib RICO case continuing, there will be more.