THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION

“I am a longtime subscriber to Vanity Fair, and have defended it to those who believe it is merely a glossy mag dedicated to celebrities. I know that it has wonderful reporting on a variety of issues, ranging from the truly fluffy to the truly serious. Since Carter has gone off his rocker, I skip his little diatribes and move straight into the articles. I’ve found that Carter’s venom has filtered into the content of the magazine. In the middle of an article on teen stars, there was a snide aside about these teens ruling the country, or whatever country there is left after the current administration is done with it. It was quite jarring. I’ve debated canceling my subscription. Does Carter know that not all his readers tear off the plastic, dying to see what Carter’s little mind has come up with this month? Is he worried that his readers find that reading his magazine has become tiresome because of all the anti-Bush harangues? I’m guessing that it’s a big, fat no.” – more reader feedback and opinioin on the Letters Page.

CATHOLICISM, PROTESTANTISM, ISLAM

Here’s a highly stimulating essay that argues the following:

[I]f the problem with Islam is that it seems constantly to give rise to sects violently hostile to secular institutions, to reason, and to cultured sentiment; that the countries in which it predominates have a chronic tendency toward theocratic despotism; and that as a religion it exhibits no institutional structure that might finally impose some discipline on the chaotic and lawless spiritual impulses that it generates – if all that is the problem (which it surely is), then it is absurd to hold that the solution is for Islam to find its Martin Luther. It has already had its Luther, not to mention its Calvin and its Henry VIII, all rolled into one: his name was Muhammad. What Islam needs is a Pope.

On first reading, I’m not entirely what to make of this argument – except that it deserves a second reading. (Memo to the Washington Monthly: if Tech Central Station is just a tool of corporate power, what is it doing publishing serious, philosophical essays like this?)

ON REAGAN AND AIDS

“I hate to be a pill, to piss on smoldering embers, no matter how warming, but the facts are these: it was neither Larry Kramer’s hysterics, the courageous reporting of the New York Native, Everett Koop’s blinding-hot moral flash or anything else that turned the tide of AIDS recognition in America and of AIDS research funding by the American government. It was nothing less or other than Ronald Reagan’s sentimental – goddamnit – feelings for a fellow guy he just happened to like a whole hell of a lot from their Hollywood days, a guy called Rock Hudson who came down with the goddamn thing. And if you don’t think them’s the facts, go look them up. As our story winds down to a close, darlings, in the year 1985, rather than cut AIDS funding by ten million, Ronald Reagan – or more probably Nancy, as Ronnie was already, courtesy of Alzheimer’s, more and more lunching out, though not in public – was upped to one hundred million, and, get this right please, a 270 percent increase in AIDS funding. You see, darlings, all that heaven allows written on the wind by tarnished angels is an imitation of life.” – dialogue from James McCourt’s “Queer Street: Rise and Fall of an American Culture, 1947 – 1985.”

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“When my eyes fell upon the rare copy of this dangerous book, I decided immediately to place it next to the Torah. Although it is not a monotheistic holy book, it has become one of the sacred [tenets] of the Jews, next to their first constitution, their religious law, [and] their way of life. In other words, it is not merely an ideological or theoretical book. Perhaps this book of the ‘Protocols of the Elders of Zion’ is more important to the Zionist Jews of the world than the Torah, because they conduct Zionist life according to it… It is only natural to place the book in the framework of an exhibit of Torah [scrolls].” – Dr. Yousef Ziedan, museum director of the new Alexandria Library, on why the anti-Semitic forgery is now prominently displayed next to the Torah in the manuscript museum. UNESCO funds helped build it.

THIS IS A RELIGIOUS WAR

Here’s a refreshingly candid take on exactly what we’re up against in fundamentalist Islam. It’s from an interview with Syed Munawar Hasan, the leader of Pakistan’s largest Islamist political party in Asia Times Online:

ATO: “You reckon that there are so many contradictions between the West and the Muslim world, is there any chance of reconciliation and dialogue between the two civilizations?”
Munawar: “There is none. The basic concepts of both civilizations are in total contrast with each other. When I say this I do not address Western civilization as Christianity. I speak of a man-made system completely devoid of divine guidance. Our concepts of God, human beings, the universe, are totally in contrast with the concepts of the Western world. We cannot segregate human lives into private and public, our lives are ruled by divine guidance, not by man-made rules based on his own prejudices and specific mindset characterized by its own dilemmas and shortcomings. Our concept of the universe is not materialistic, and the result of an ‘accident’. Instead, it was a very well thought out process envisaged by the creator of the universe with a plan. So these basic concepts have made the difference between ours and Western approaches.”

At some point, people in the West will actually listen to what the Islamists are saying. Their problem is not Christianity as such. It is constitutional liberalism. Pity so many liberals (and some religious conservatives) cannot see this.

A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP: Here’s a tiny but inspiring example of what I hope will be a long and durable relationship between the people of Iraq and the people of the U.S. The Iraqi boxing team is now preparing for the Olympics. Instead of threats of torture from Uday Hussein, they are getting salaries and new equipment from the Americans. Hearts and minds … and left hooks.

REAGAN AND AIDS

We’re in the middle of a propaganda blitz designed to persuade people that Ronald Reagan deliberately foisted HIV onto the population of the United States, by a mixture of negligence and malevolence. The publicity surrounding Tony Kushner’s “Angels in America,” will center on depicting closeted McCarthyite Roy Cohn as the true soul of modern conservatism. (I wonder why they don’t cite uncloseted McCarthyite Bobby Kennedy, but never mind.) Meanwhile, the myth that there was somehow a magic wand in the early 1980s to cure AIDS – a wand that Reagan deliberately refused to wave – is now almost conventional wisdom. Into this blizzard of misinformation, Deroy Murdock provides some truly important evidence. Reagan could have done more. He shouldn’t be left off the hook. But he shouldn’t be subjected to disinformation either. Meanwhile, as Natalie Solent points out, the real threat to containing and treating HIV has come from widespread efforts from the left to persecute the pharmaceutical companies. Her money quote:

Why the decline [in HIV research]? Because the drugs companies no longer believe that they are going to get rich out of AIDS research. In fact they begin to doubt they will get any compensation at all. They read the newspapers, they study the speeches of politicians, and they sense that the popular wind is blowing against them. They think, probably rightly, that governments will either force them to sell at a loss drugs that were developed at huge expense or will bypass them and the law entirely by buying generic copies of patent drugs. Governments, after all, are the ones who can change the law when it is inconvenient. One minute the authorities will come down like a ton of bricks on pirate music or pirate videos. The next minute they will say that it is ‘unacceptable greed’ for companies to actually want to profit from patents on medical discoveries. I accept that there are subtleties and genuine conflicts of principle in the field of intellectual property – but the bottom line is that if pharma companies get nothing but abuse for the work they put in they bloody well won’t put in much more of it. Just as for the slaves, it’s no surprise that if people are forced to work for nothing then they don’t bust a gut.

Tuesday night, at Colgate University, the one point I made that truly shocked the audience was a defense of the drug companies. It has been imprinted on an entire generation that Big Pharma is the source of all evil. But the only reason I’m writing this blog at all is because of Big Pharma. They’re not angels in America. They’re capitalists. But the profit motive has been the most progressive force in pioneering specific medical breakthroughs that we have yet found. Why cannot the left see this? Why are they – more than Ronald Reagan – pursuing policies that will consign many people with HIV to earlier deaths? And why do so few people call them on it?

IN DEFENSE OF BOOZE

On the 70th anniversary of the end of prohibition, Radley Balko worries about the new war on social drinking.

POSEUR ALERT: “One of the reasons I live here is that I really feel like New York needs me right now. New York is not the center for American culture and art that it once was because of the forces of conservatism. Giuliani, capitalism – and then there was 9/11. I really believe that if I leave, it will suffer! Maybe that’s why I love it here, because I feel wanted.” – singer Rufus Wainwright, The Observer, October 12. I love Wainwright’s music. Pity he can say idiotic things like this.

BLOGS AND TRENT LOTT: On almost the one-year anniversary of Lott’s Senatorial leadership demise, a scholarly study of the role of blogs.

HMMMM: Here’s an interesting question. This is a quote from John Le Carre’s new novel, in which the United States assumes the role of the old Soviet Union as a menace in world affairs:

“Tell the new zealots of Washington that in the making of Israel a monstrous human crime was committed and they will call you an anti-Semite.”

You know what? Calling the creation of Israel a “monstrous human crime” and leaving it at that is, to my mind, the statement of an anti-Semite. Opposing Israel’s existence is one thing. Criticizing it is one thing. But calling this attempt to find a refuge for a people just murdered in the millions “a monstrous human crime” is simply so extreme that I have to wonder where the sentiment is coming from.

THE REAL GAFFE

I’m on the road so forgive me for not elaborating further on Dean’s “Soviet Union” gaffe. No, it’s not the end of the world. But it’s hard to come down hard on the president’s linguistic difficulties while ignoring Dean’s. But what is serious is that Dean seems to think that we can prevent proliferation by buying the stuff from North Korea, Russia, or whoever. But what’s to stop rogue nuke states selling to Iran and to us? Is Dean that naive? And isn’t it true that the real source of Iran’s nuclear material has recently been Pakistan anyway? My bottom line: I don’t care if a presidential candidate commits a gaffe in foreign policy. I do care that his instinct is to buy off enemies, rather than confront them; and that he’s not on the ball about where the real threats are coming from. Dean is making me more nervous about his foreign policy ideas, not less. Hillary is far smarter (if predictably slimy).