A victim speaks.
D’Souza on Colbert
An instant classic.
The Stab-In-the Back Ploy
The Bush administration had everything it wanted for four years: both Houses of Congress, vast loans from Chinese bankers, the right to tear up habeas corpus, tap phones without court warrants, detain citizens without charges for years, authorize torture. It had hefty public support at the start and a superbly trained military … but the failure in Iraq is still somehow the fault of the treacherous media. John Cole sees the meme spread and deepen.
The Responsibility Candidate
Here’s a striking quote from Senator Clinton:
"I am cursed with the responsibility gene. I am. I admit to that. You’ve got to be very careful in how you proceed with any combat situation in which American lives are at stake."
An excuse for politicking? I wouldn’t be so tough. I’ve followed Senator Clinton’s positions on the war these past few years and since they’ve pretty closely tracked my own, I’m not going to attack her for caution and prudence. Wars are dynamic things; they can take unexpected turns, even for the better. This one keeps getting worse, but the stakes are still very high. I take the minority view therefore that Clinton’s position on the war might in the end help her (even with primary voters). And her description of her stance as the product of a "responsibility gene" is a little piece of genius.
Americans often pick a president repairing the glaring flaw in the last one. The most powerful theme of Bush’s presidency has been wanton irresponsibility: fiscal, military, diplomatic, political. The recklessness of the past has deeply alienated many small-c conservatives who regard politics as an exercize in secular caution not religious zeal and frat-boy carelessness. If Hillary frames herself as the school-marm disciplinarian, she’ll find an opening. It’s also an image more suited to her actual personality than anything resembling charisma.
(Photo: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty.)
The Idiocy of Religious Moderation
Sam Harris’s latest blog epistle to me can be read in full here. Money quote:
How does one "integrate doubt" into one’s faith? By acknowledging just how dubious many of the claims of scripture are, and thereafter reading it selectively, bowdlerizing it if need be, and allowing its assertions about reality to be continually trumped by fresh insights‚Äîscientific ("You mean the world isn‚Äôt 6000 years old? Yikes.."), mathematical ("pi doesn’t actually equal 3? All right, so what?"), and moral ("You mean, I shouldn’t beat my slaves? I can‚Äôt even keep slaves? Hmm …"). Religious moderation is the result of not taking scripture all that seriously. So why not take these books less seriously still? Why not admit that they are just books, written by fallible human beings like ourselves? They were not, as your friend the pope would have it, "written wholly and entirely, with all their parts, at the dictation of the Holy Ghost." Needless to say, I believe you have given the Supreme Pontiff far too much credit as a champion of reason. The man believes that he is in possession of a magic book, entirely free from error…
Religious moderates—by refusing to question the legitimacy of raising children to believe that they are Christians, Muslims, and Jews—tacitly support the religious divisions in our world. They also perpetuate the myth that a person must believe things on insufficient evidence in order to have an ethical and spiritual life. While religious moderates don’t fly planes into buildings, or organize their lives around apocalyptic prophecy, they refuse to deeply question the preposterous ideas of those who do. Moderates neither submit to the real demands of scripture nor draw fully honest inferences from the growing testimony of science. In attempting to find a middle ground between religious dogmatism and intellectual honesty, it seems to me that religious moderates betray faith and reason equally.
Read the rest here. Sufficiently provoked, even irritated, I’ll reply tomorrow. He has raised several big questions and I need a little time to think (and pray) about them.
(Painting: Pietro Perugino (c. 1450-1524) Scenes from the Life of Christ: The Giving of the Keys to Saint Peter.)
Why Coleman Is Voting Nay
Just check this December 19 blog entry out:
A beautiful Baghdad morning. Bright morning sun, slight chill in the air. Standing by a palace pool, surrounded by palm trees. Talking to my daughter Sarah, back home in Minnesota, where it’s just 10 pm on Monday night. The sound of mortar fire breaks the stillness of the morning air. Insurgent fire or Sadr City fire? Perhaps a gift from the Iranians to al-Sadr. I’m told the impact is close to the embassy grounds. One of the staff said it woke him up. Probably aimed at the area where workers gather to enter the Green Zone. In the far distance there is some smoke on the horizon. Car bomb I’m told by embassy staff.
Yesterday was a full day of meetings accompanied by Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL). Starting with the Iraqi National Security Advisor, Dr. Rubaie, and concluding with Deputy Prime Minister Bahram Salah. In speaking with Iraqis, the assessment we are given of the path we should take is heavily influenced by whether we are talking to Shiites, Sunnis, or Kurds.
Maliki’s National Security Advisor, Dr. Rubaie, maintains that the major challenge facing Iraq is not a sectarian conflict, but rather al-Qaeda and disgruntled Baathists seeking to regain power. Both Senator Nelson and I react with incredulity to that assessment. Rubaie cautions against more troops in Baghdad.
Coleman learned one thing in Baghdad. The Maliki government is lying through its teeth. Somehow president Bush never understood this, and still doesn’t. But then he still believes Vladimir Putin is a man of God.
Obama’s Autobiography
Does he have a James Frey problem? I like Obama, but you’ve got to worry when a campaign dismisses something as a "non-story." That almost always means it’s a real one.
“Plus Up”
A military source tells me that the latest Public Affairs Guidance issued to the various branches of the military no longer refers to the surge as a "surge." It is now officially referred to in written and verbal communications as a "plus up." "Surge" is so early January.
The View From Your Window
Are We Now In Peril?
The Bush administration claimed it could wiretap phones without a warrant because it was essential to national security. Now they think they can live with the FISA court. So are we now to believe that this seizure of executive power to spy on Americans without oversight was always optional? Are we now in grave danger? Or have we just learned – again! – not to trust a word these power-mongers say? More commentary here.


