Email of the Day

A reader writes:

I couldn’t agree more with Caitlin Flanagan’s assessment of the Democratic Party, and even more so with her take on the pundits of the far left (Barbara Ehrenrich drives me ’round the bend). I am firm in my faith and go to church every Sunday with my family (at an Episcopal church where our priest is gay and has a partner.)  My husband works and pays the bills. (Math is not my thing. I mow the lawn and make repairs around the house.) I left a career that I loved to stay at home with our daughter and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it (even the school volunteering part, a little). I’ve never voted Republican and probably never will. And sometimes it feels as though neither party claims the likes of us.

Moussaoui

A vile human being. I oppose the death penalty, but if I had to make an exception, it would be him. That said, I wasn’t on the jury, didn’t hear all the evidence, and the system gives them the power to decide such a sentence. The silver lining is that we do not make this monster a martyr. The rule of law was followed; our society allows even this murderous religious fanatic due process. In that sense, Moussaoui got this wrong as he has gotten everything else wrong. He lost. America won. And the fight against him and his allies continues.

What Did Ahmadinejad Mean?

Ahmad_1

Thanks for your emails on the Cole-Hitchens fight. The deeper argument is whether we should take Ahmadinejad’s threats in any way seriously. Last month, Ahmadinejad said the following:

"Like it or not, the Zionist regime is heading toward annihilation. The Zionist regime is a rotten, dried tree that will be eliminated by one storm." … He did not say how this would be achieved, but insisted to the audience of at least 900 people: "Believe that Palestine will be freed soon."

We are told that Ahmadinejad has no power. What about the organizer of Iran’s latest war-game, Mohammad Ebrahim Dehghani, a top commander in Iran’s Revolutionary Guards? How about Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, the runner-up to Ahmadinejad in the rigged Iranian elections of 2005? He was Iran’s president from 1989 – 1997. According to Wiki, he

is currently the Chairman of the Expediency Discernment Council, that resolves legislative issues between the Parliament and the Council of Guardians and advises the supreme leader on matters of national policy.

In 2001, at the height of his powers, Rafsanjani made the following remarks in a speech to fellow Islamists:

"If a day comes when the world of Islam is duly equipped with the arms Israel has in possession, the strategy of colonialism would face a stalemate because application of an atomic bomb would not leave any thing in Israel but the same thing would just produce damages in the Muslim world."

We are told not to take any of this seriously. And the Tehran theocrats may well be bluffing about their current and future capacity. I don’t think we should take the bait they are currently offering us, and react excessively to their provocations. I certainly don’t favor pre-emptive military action at this point. But that the mullahs would nuke Israel if they could seems to me well within the bounds of possibility. How many genocidal dictators in history do we need to ignore or explain away before we take them at their word?

(Photo: Irna/AFP/Getty Images).

Thomas More and Torture

A reader writes:

Your point [about the rule of law] is well taken, and I would imagine a Sir Thomas More of modern sensibilities would likely agree with you. But I am not sure he is the shining example of opposition to torture via abuse of executive authority. I have great respect for the man (and the movie), and have affection for him due in no small part due to his vicious enforcement of law, but certainly there is someone less famous for brutal torture techniques that you could invoke to oppose brutal torture techniques.

Quote for the Day II

"The Democrats made a huge tactical error a few decades ago. In the middle of doing the great work of the ’60s – civil rights, women’s liberation, gay inclusion – we decided to stigmatize the white male. The union dues – paying, churchgoing, beer-drinking family man got nothing but ridicule and venom from us. So he dumped us. And he took the wife and kids with him.
And now here we are, living in a country with a political and economic agenda we deplore, losing election after election and wondering why.
It’s the contempt, stupid," – the wonderful Caitlin Flanagan, Time.

Dean’s Revenge

Last week, a long time Democratic activist, Paul Yandura, criticized the pusillanimous way in which the Democratic party takes gay money and then fails to exercize even minimal courage in standing up and defending gay equality and dignity. According to the Washington Blade, Howard Dean responded by firing Yandura’s domestic partner, Donald Hitchcock, from his position as DNC gay outreach adviser. Paul and Donald are friends of mine, for the record. And Dean denies any connection between the two events. But I don’t buy it. I don’t trust Dean for a second. He’s an angry, petty man, whose support for gay people has always been transparently opportunistic. Yandura’s criticism of the Democrats is dead-on, especially with respect to the Clintons. He deserves support from gay Dems and Republicans in our shared struggle for civil equality and simple moral courage.

Osama on the Ropes

Fareed Zakaria believes the murderous religious fanatic is getting desperate. I agree. The Iraq war, for all its manifest failures in execution, and perhaps because of them, has had an unintended consequence. By revealing how al Qaeda and its surrogates have no qualms about killing far more Muslims than Americans or Jews, it has helped wean ordinary Muslims and Arabs off the Wahhabist kool-aid. Zarqawi may prove to be his own worst enemy. Here’s hoping.

“Widespread Torture” by the U.S.

Abugrahib4_gallery__470x3750_2

That’s Amnesty International’s conclusion. The full report is here. Read it, if you still doubt the reality. The evidence, I am ashamed and saddened to say, is overwhelming. Whatever else this administration has done, whatever other mistakes it has made, this abandonment of long-standing American honor and decency in the military is an unforgivable offense. It is an attack on the meaning of America by its own president. It must be forever attached to his name and to that of his vice-president. The stain is deep. And it has stained us all.