On this weekend, I thank HBO for this early Festivus present:Nice plug for the personal being political. Told you Game of Thrones was all about feminist theory...
On this weekend, I thank HBO for this early Festivus present:Nice plug for the personal being political. Told you Game of Thrones was all about feminist theory...
...with thunderous applause?There seems to have been a coup in Thailand.The BBC reports that:A faction of the Thai military led by the army chief says it has overthrown Prime Minister Thaksin...
Another day, another charge of "liberal hypocrisy." This time, Bill Thornton points out the odious double-standards of those who sought to get ABC to alter or pull "The Path to 9/11".Start with the...
Rajiv Chandrasekaran's report on how the Bush administration staffed the CPA raises an interesting counterfactual: What if the Bush administration had, in fact, bothered to develop a post-war plan...
Riggsveda is horrified by the commentary at Jane Galt:Friday, September 02, 2005Do These People Live On My Planet? From the weblog of the objectivistly-named Jane Galt, here is the worst of American reaction to the New Orleans disaster in a nutshell. Below find samplings of statements that reveal a seemingly bottomless capacity for churlish, selfish, callous, racist cruelty by self-congratulatory blog barnacles who coolly watch the NOLA tragedy play out from the comforts of their dry, food-filled, proudly right-wing homes. I believe many of them may fancy themselves a tad intellectual, and...
From John DiIulio's famous memo: [the] remarkably slapdash character of the Office of Homeland Security, with the nine months of arguing that no department was needed, with the sudden, politically timed reversal in June, and with the fact that not even that issue, the most significant reorganization of the federal government since the creation of the Department of Defense, has received more than talking-points-caliber deliberation. This was, in a sense, the administration’s problem in miniature: Ridge was the decent fellow at the top, but nobody spent the time to understand that an EOP...
Having been dumped by Uzbekistan, is the United States looking to Turkmenistan for a rebound? Curzon and Nathan Hamm interpret recent events differently.Curzon says: "There are precious few totalitarian regimes left in Eurasia, but Turkmenistan is one of them. Eurasianet says the US may be exploring a base deal with Turkmenistan. I really, really hope not."So do I. Is the US really so stupid as to squander whatever gains it got by getting tough with Karimov? If Turkmenistan is the alternative, we should've just stayed in Uzbekistan.Nathan, for his part, doesn't think the US is likely...
AFP: Merkel attacks defensive Schroeder in head-to-head German debateReuters (UK): Schroeder edges Merkel on TV, but no knock-out blowPostwar German reconstruction was clearly a success: the Germans still favor defense over offense.
Nice post at the Glittering Eye. A small snippet:The disaster that has occurred in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast is enormously larger and will, undoubtedly, be significantly more costly than any of the disasters above. The size of the area affected is hundreds of square miles. We don’t yet know how many people were killed.There are several key factors that were present in all of the disasters reviewed above:Civil order was maintained immediately (sometimes ruthlessly) even while the disaster was in progress.Reconstruction efforts began immediately and were completely under local (and mostly...
Dan's absolutely right about progressivism, which among other things led us to the situation that we had for much of the twentieth century in which the role of the government involved providing services for citizens in need. The nature of the social contract was altered by such initiatives as Social Security, income taxes, and the Federal Reserve system: government became a way to coordinate resources so as to roughly equalize social opportunities and provide people with a "new deal."Welcome back to the 19th century, folks. If we doubted it before, it should be entirely apparent now: we now...
I haven't posted much, in part because I've been at APSA. But I also have trouble bringing myself to write anything more about Katrina. We lived in New York on September 11th, 2001; for all the horror of that day, the slow unfolding of the disaster in New Orleans, the gross incompetence of our government and our elected officials, and the bestial situation people faced in the refugee pens (what else are we supposed to call the Superdome, Convention Center, and a strip of I-10?) feels worse right now.We have met the enemy, and in so many different ways, it is us.After the hurricane, I wrote...
If you want to read a followup dispatch from New Orleans by Dr. Greg Henderson, I've found one and posted in on my blog. It's a holiday weekend, so I don't know how many people will be reading or searching. However, "Greg Henderson pathologist" has become a very popular search term for those finding my space in blogtopia. Filed as: Greg Henderson