The Iraq Sprial

Just weeks after a national government and a major effort to pacify Baghdad, Iraq is witnessing sectarian massacres on a new and terrifying scale. 150 dead in three days. One recent massacre was by Sunni militias wearing Iraq national army uniform. The great danger of such unfathomable savagery is that, fueled by revenge killings and the lack of any credible government authority, it feeds on itself. This is why sufficient troops were such an important factor in the post-invasion plan. And why we – and thousands of murdered innocents – are now paying so brutally for Don Rumsfeld’s pride.

Quote for the Day

"What I’m trying to do with my time in the Senate during this whole debate we‚Äôre having is to remind the Senate that the rules we set up speak more about us than it does the enemy. The enemy has no rules. They don’t give people trials, they summarily execute them and they’re brutal, inhuman creatures. But when we capture one of them, what we do is about us, not about them. Do they deserve, the bad ones, all the rights that are afforded? No. But are we required to do it because of what we believe? Yes," – Lindsey Graham, Republican senator from South Carolina.

Christianism and Money

Virginia Postrel helpfully reminds us that many parts of red state America are affluent, highly educated, high-tech and completely secure in the knowledge that one day soon, the rapture will come. I think it misunderstands the nature of contemporary fundamentalism to think of it as a back-woods, rural, uneducated phenomenon. New ideologies – especially totalist ones that fuse politics, faith and culture – are often very popular among the well-off. (It doesn’t hurt that the new Christianity celebrates wealth and acquisitiveness, rather than condemning it as, er, the Gospels do.) The needs that this kind of ideology fulfills are psychological and spiritual, not economic. Mickey doesn’t seem to understand that any better than he understands how gay people in rural America in the 1960s and 1970s might have their heads kicked in.

Email of the Day

A reader writes:

Something that drove me crazy in the last election cycle and looks like it will continue to drive me crazy in this cycle are fiscal and small government conservatives voting for Republicans for no other reason than they are not Democrats. The Republicans they vote for have shown that they have completely abandoned the principles of fiscal conservatism and limited government, yet they still get their votes.

Try having a discussion with this crowd and they start making comments about how a ‘tax and spend democrat’ will never get their vote. Then, they’ll go on and rant about how the Republicans are no better. By continuing to vote for Republicans for no other reason than they are not Democrats, fiscal and small government conservatives are shooting themselves in the foot. The Republican party will never respond to the concerns of fiscal and small government conservatives because they don‚Äôt have to. No matter what they do or how they betray their values, Republicans have the votes of the majority of this group.

The only thing worse than a tax and spend liberal is a borrow and spend Republican.  At least the democrat is being upfront and honest in his intentions.

Quote for the Day II

"Let me make it clear. I would shed my last drop of blood to defend their right to hold that biblical worldview. They are absolutely entitled to believe that Anne Frank is burning in hell along with Dr. Seuss, Gandhi and Einstein. But I will not accept my government telling me who are the children of the greater God and who are the children of the lesser God. That’s the difference. I will not defend — I will fight them tooth and nail, and lay down a withering field of fire and leave sucking chest wounds — if they engage the machinery of the state, which is what they’re doing," – Mike Weinstein, member of a very military family, about the Christianist attempt to coopt the U.S. military for their fundamentalist and political version of Christianity.

Weinstein is especially upset by an organization called

the Officers’ Christian Fellowship, a private organization with 14,000 active-duty members on more than 200 U.S. military bases around the world. In its mission statement, the OCF says its goal is "a spiritually transformed military, with ambassadors for Christ in uniform, empowered by the Holy Spirit."

Vive la resistance.

Email from Beirut

A reader writes:

On your most recent posting quoting about how the USG is bankrupt, and cannot pay its "creditors". I think they have figured out one way to take care of it: charge their citizens for emergency services.

I am currently enrolled in an intensive summer arabic program at the American University in Beirut, and am holed up at the university, probably the safest place in the city right now. Basically my choices have been to make a run for the border with Syria and try to catch a flight out, or wait for the USG to carry out the evacuation plan. Because I heard reports about the dangers of the former (and based on a statement by the American embassy), I opted for the latter. They are finally getting everything together today, but they dropped a little surprise: they are going to be billing us for giving us emergency transport to Cyprus, and then basically dropping us off on our own to get commercial flights back to the US. Most other goverrnments evacuating people here are actually flying them back to their home country without cost. But not the USG. They are perfectly happy to fund the World Toilet Summit (in Ireland, if my memory is correct) to the tune of $13 million or something. But 25,000 or so Americans stranded in the middle of a (quite unexpected) war zone? They better be ready to pay up if they want out.