Face of the Day

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French right-wing candidate for the presidency Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy talks on the set of the Canal+ tv show "Dimanche plus" (Sunday +), 11 March 2007 in a Boulogne-Billancourt studio, near Paris. Chirac announced tonight that he will not stand as a candidate in next month’s elections, after more than 40 years in politics. Speculation has centred on whether Chirac will endorse Sarkozy, a former protege who heads the ruling Union for a Popular Movement (UMP). (Photo: Dominique Faget/AFP/Getty.)

HRC’s Membership Claims

The Human Rights campaign is going to get back to me on Monday on the real numbers for their membership. Last week, they told me they had 650,000 members and supporters nationwide. But several readers have already done some simple math based on the publicly disclosed figures in the IRS 990 forms. The total of contributions last year amounted to roughly $7.3 million. If everyone paid the minimal membership due of $35, that means a maximum of around 210,000 members. But the filing also says that they received $2.25 million in large donations. So the odds are that the actual membership total for the last twelve months is somewhere in the region of, at the very most, 150,000. So is it 650,000 or 150,000? Or less? Again, the simple question is: how many people paid the minimum $35 membership fee or more to be part of HRC in the last twelve months? We’ll soon find out.

The Conservative Id?

A reader writes:

I am tempted to agree with your reader and declare you naive about what constitutes true conservatism. I have avoided yielding to that temptation, though, and your reader’s argument helps me to explain why.

First, though, I should disclose that I disagree with you on approximately half of what you write, and find many of your writings on Islam to be severely lacking in the intellectual humility that you display even when discussing subjects on which you are considerably better informed. Having said that, I disagree with your reader on the notion that you are naive when it comes to conservatism. The idea that:

All this crap you complain about now – this is the real conservatism. This is the conservative id, broken through the conservative super-ego and run rampant.

strikes me, based on my admittedly limited readings of Freud, as flawed. If we are to psychoanalyze conservatism as if it were a person, then the "real conservatism" is no more exclusive to the id than the "real" me is. Each of us is the sum (or perhaps more than the sum) of the interplay or conflict between the different aspects of our psyche: the id, the super-ego, and so on.

For all I know (and I have no way of knowing for certain), at the id-level, your feelings Tcscover_42 on Muslims, religion, and race may be no different than those of Mark Steyn, Sam Harris, and John Derbyshire, respectively. Yet even if this were to be proven as true, this would not make you the same as any of those people. We are more than our fundamentals; we are also what we make of those fundamentals. This was an important part of my interpretation of your book, with its emphasis on a conservatism rooted in tradition (contingency) but not bound by it.

The refusal to surrender conservatism to its worst elements (whether they are a majority or a minority) is not naive, no more so than is the refusal to surrender liberalism to unprincipled relativists, or Islam to violent fanatics. Being naive would be to deny the existence of those elements, which any reading of your blog would demonstrate that you do not. And of course "the strains we see in this current mess" (again, conservative, liberal, Islamist, or otherwise) can be traced back into history; where else would they come from? It is precisely because nothing can come from nothing that we cannot simply "reject it, and go on." Any attempted solutions will also have to be rooted in history and tradition. This may be a daunting task for each of us in our respective areas (political, ideological, or religious), but it would be naive to think that it can or should be avoided.

Put better than I could.

Why We Went To War

A reader reminds me that Bob Novak, the extremely well-connnected Beltway journalist, agreed with the very well-connected Republican apparatchik, Dinesh D’Souza, about the real motivation for war against Iraq among the top officials in the Bush administration. More impressively, he reported it before the invasion:

I can’t imagine that anybody would say, We’re going to war because there are 11 empty warheads, probably left over from 10 years ago. These warheads are not the nuclear weapons we’ve been warned about. They travel about 12 miles.

But this is being used as a pretext for a decision that’s already been made at high levels of the U.S. government to change the government in Iraq. It has nothing to do with, boy, we’re — we are really worried about these little chemical warheads that’s going to cause a holocaust in the Middle East.

Most disturbing thing is that Secretary of State Powell, a lot of people were relying on to keep some sanity, played the good soldier this week and said that at the end of the month, there would be more evidence. If there’s more, if there’s evidence, why not put it out now? …

the last thing that the hawks inside the administration, and their friends outside the administration, want is a coup d’etat that would replace Saddam Hussein. They want a war as a manifestation of U.S. power in the world and as a sign that the United States is capable of changing the balance of power and the political map of the Middle East.

There’s no question that the last thing they want is Saddam Hussein put on a plane and taken away …

Talking to a senior official, and he said to me, he said, Well, if we don’t hit in Iraq, where are we going to hit? And they – it’s a desire that the United States, the superpower, is going to manifest its authority to the rest of the world.

Listen, I just feel that this potential – this war, I just trust it comes off easily. But I have trepidation that it won’t be easy, and there’s going to be a terrible consequences from it.

My italics. Which "senior official" told Novak that this was the real rationale? Cheney maybe? One more piece of evidence that the key players knew the WMD evidence was weak and pushed it anyway.

Quotes for the Day

"I’m in it to win it," – Senator Hillary Clinton, announcing her candidacy in January.

"This race is not about winning, because winning isn’t enough nowadays. Winning without dignity, winning it without honor, winning without authenticity and truth is not winning at all, and we’re not in it for that," – Michelle Obama, making the case for her husband last week.

How Gay Is “300”?

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Totally gay, according to this still-tingling viewer:

I caught 300 last night and thought I’d pass on my thoughts.

It is a deeply silly and deeply beautiful film. It’s most silly when it’s trying to be a movie, and it’s most beautiful when it’s trying to be a graphic novel.  Fortunately, it mostly just tries to be a graphic novel. But, ah, the men Andrew. All those beautiful, beautiful men dancing around in briefs and capes.  It almost brought me to tears. It is perhaps the gayest movie that I’ve ever seen that wasn’t porn.

Those who try to deconstruct the movie into a statement on the current war, or who say that it is racist or (most glaringly wrong) anti-gay are utterly missing the point. Everyone (perhaps excluding the Queen) in the film is gay. You have the butch gym queens of Sparta (I mean can any chisled man run around in speedos and a cape and call himself straight?), and the pierced, shaved, and bejeweled bar queens of Persia. It’s gay-on-gay violence, pure and simple. If I were to cast this film in any way (and it really is far too silly for this sort of analysis), I’d say it was portraying the libertarian, buffed and bearded Sullivanistas taking on the effete, decadent elites of the HRC. The movie is clearly on the side of the Sullivanista/Spartans, and so am I.

Here’s to speedos, capes, and libertarian principles!

Sure, but no speedos!

(Photo: Moviegoers in Sparta, some 200 kilometres south of Athens, enter a screening of ‘300’, the new Hollywood epic chronicling the Battle of Thermopylae of 480 BCE, 07 March 2007. The Peloponnese town played host to an honourary premiere of the movie. By Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty.)