The South and Federalism

A reader gently corrects:

Defending federalism, you said of Alabama accepting homosexual marriage, "I feel sure they will one day, just as they eventually dropped slavery." Ahem. Alabama did not "drop" slavery. They fought one of the world’s bloodiest wars, with the purpose of enshrining slavery and extending its reach, and they gave up that practice only when they were denied it by an occupying army. There are many arguments for federalism. But slavery is the argument against it. The old south didn’t just come around on the issue of slavery, or later on the issue of civil rights. The south might very well still have slaves today, and if not slaves, an apartheid government, had federal soldiers and federal courts not told it otherwise, first after the Civil War, and a second time, a hundred years later, after the early civil rights decisions.

The Drunk Frog

A reader writes:

That’s no mere drunk frog … that’s the great Serge Gainsbourg, THE drunk frog. An incomparable songwriter, master of suave wit and understatement in performance (excluding his destroyed final days, witnessed in the clip you posted), agent provocateur and shatterer of sexual taboos. I defy anyone to show me another modern musical artist who wove such elegant and original magic out of sleaze and perversity. Okay, fine. Isaac Hayes, in his prime… the black-American, anglophone answer to Gainsbourg’s French, Jewish classy-creep persona.

Quote for the Day

"I do think my judgment is superior to [Cole’s] when it comes to the big picture. So, I have an idea: Since he doesn’t want to debate anything except his own brilliance, let’s make a bet. I predict that Iraq won’t have a civil war, that it will have a viable constitution, and that a majority of Iraqis and Americans will, in two years time, agree that the war was worth it. I’ll bet $1,000 (which I can hardly spare right now). This way neither of us can hide behind clever word play or CV reading. If there’s another reasonable wager Cole wants to offer which would measure our judgment, I’m all ears. Money where your mouth is, doc," – Jonah Goldberg, February 8, 2005.

I apologize for missing this a couple of days ago. Jonah wrote last Wednesday that the issue is moot because Cole declined to take the bet. But the underlying issue isn’t moot, is it? Goldberg made the bet to prove that his judgment was superior to Cole’s. As a simple empirical matter, it wasn’t. And the salient fact is not that Jonah got something wrong – we’re all human – but that he isn’t man enough to admit it, and make an accounting.

Update: I missed this accounting. Here it is, for the record. My bad.

Cheney’s Lies

Here’s a YouTube of Senate hearings on June 26, 2006, about the impact and importance of Doug Feith’s outfit in rigging the intelligence to mislead the American public about the war against Iraq. The Congress was misled as well. Who is ultimately responsible for this profound betrayal of trust? As Larry Wilkerson says: three words. The Vice President. Here’s a thought: is there any precedent for impeaching the vice-president?

The New Party of Lincoln?

As the Republicans base themselves in the heartland of Dixie, and exploit the current enclaves of cynical division and ugly bigotry, Obama coopts the greatest Republican president:

"The life of a tall, gangly, self-made Springfield lawyer tells us that a different future is possible. He tells us that there is power in words. He tells us that there is power in conviction. That beneath all the differences of race and region, faith and station, we are one people. He tells us that there is power in hope."

Yes there is. And, yes, Obama is helping.