Quote for the Day I

"As long as the War Crimes Act hangs over their heads, they [interrogators] will not take the steps necessary to protect [Americans]," – president Bush at an on-the-record briefing with Kate O’Beirne and Rich Lowry (tough crowd).

Well, one way to get the war crimes act from over their heads is to instruct them not to commit war-crimes. But that doesn’t seem to have occurred to the president.

Marty’s Blog

My old boss and friend, Marty Peretz, was almost designed for blogging. TNR’s new editor, Frank Foer, has had the sense to give him one. I guess Mickey can now accuse me of complete unctuousness. But Marty knows I mean it; and I don’t have a major reputation for sucking up. In five years of editing his magazine, I had my fair share of Marty quarrels (and plenty of agreement). Marty gets razzed a lot (yes, Jack, I’m talking about you) – for his passionate defense of Israel, his passionate quarrels with fellow Democrats, his passionate guidance of The New Republic. But there are many worse things than passion. Along with a spine, Marty also has a great heart. He has done more to nurse young talent and to stand up to smelly orthodoxies than most people I know. Now the blogosphere will have to deal with him. Good luck, blogosphere.

Cheney’s Weirdest Moment

Jason Zengerle rightly cringes:

VICE PRES. CHENEY: You’ve got Iraq and al-Qaeda, testimony from the director of CIA that there was indeed a relationship, Zarqawi in Baghdad, etc. Then the third…

MR. RUSSERT: The committee said that there was no relationship. In fact…

VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, I haven’t seen the report; I haven’t had a chance to read it yet, but the fact is…

It’s not denial when you deliberately close your eyes.

Quote for the Day II

"If, on the other hand, Begg’s protestations of innocence are to be believed and the U.S. government was wrong about him, this book documents an unconscionable descent into a hell of government-sanctioned physical and psychological brutality, administered without even the most rudimentary due process. Taken at face value, the stupidity and cruelty that Begg recounts are utterly shocking to anyone who cherishes the vision of America as an enlightened, law-abiding government, not to mention the leader of the free world," – Jane Mayer, on the first book-length memoir from a Gitmo detainee.

America’s Infantilization After 9/11

Mark Lilla, as always, has an incisive account of what has happened to us in the past five years:

"All sorts of strange types emerged from under their rocks to exploit September 11 – neoconservatives longing for a war that would restore "American greatness" through militarism, legal anarchists who started rewriting the constitution, evangelicals who sensed the opportunity to launch a counter-revolution against all the cultural changes of the last four decades. None of these groups represented more than a fraction of Americans, but, together, they found the ear of a transformed president and of his political advisers, who knew how to exploit them in return. The level of American political debate sank to a new low and is now fixed on symbols – "values," "strength," "family," "security," "life," "freedom" – that bear little relation to contemporary American reality or the world situation. The ’90s were a period of political maturation in United States, but, in the face of trauma, the nation has regressed to an infantile state."

The first chapter of my book is called "A Silver Age: 1989 – 2001."

Khatami At Harvard

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The former theocratic dictator of Iran defended the execution of gay people in Iran:

As an expert of Islamic sciences I tell you that capital punishment is accepted in Islam, but it has conditions that are so stringent that executions should almost never happen. If in fact they are happening in Islamic countries it is because, if it happens excessively in Islamic countries it is a problem of bringing those religious rulings into practice …

In regards to the issue of gay people as well as the issue of adultery, the conditions that are required for capital punishment are so strict that it is virtually impossible to meet … Of course this is my opinion and a lot of people don’t accept my opinion, but I was asked for my opinion so this is what I believe … In many Islamic countries homosexual relationships as well as non-consensual heterosexual relationships have been punishable … There are also others, there are others in the world that have similar views namely important sects of Christianity … So yes you are correct homosexual activity is a crime in Islam … And crimes are punishable … The fact that could crimes be punished by execution is debatable … And that we must differentiate between punishment and violence."

Just so we know who we’re dealing with. I graduated from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard. I’m appalled they would give a platform to an Islamist theocrat like Khatami.