THAT GLOBAL SPLIT

We were all told that fighting the Iraq war would destroy global alliances, wreck our ability to work with allies and generally render the U.S. a pariah. So how are France and the U.S. cooperating so easily in Haiti? Hmmm.

DON’T BLAME BUSH: For the dismal job situation. It’s far more complicated than Kerry would have you believe. Noam Scheiber is on the case.

44,000 POUNDS: That’s how much mustard gas Libya had accumulated.

THANK GOD FOR KRAUTHAMMER: Charles Krauthammer has never written a dumb column, to my knowledge. Even on emotional subjects such as civil marriage, he brings to the debate a calm reasoning that wins the respect of his opponents as well as his supporters. And that is also why his searing criticism of Mel Gibson’s inflammatory and idiosyncratic version of the Passion is so helpful. I’m tired of people believing that Gibson is representing Catholicism. He isn’t. He is a rebel against Catholicism, specifically the reformed, open, repentant Catholicism of the Second Vatican Council. Gibson doesn’t recognize the authority of the current Pope; he doesn’t recognize the current mass – the central ritual of Catholics across the world. People are mistaken in believing that he merely prefers the Latin mass; he doesn’t. He favors the Tridentine mass, a relic. He believes that all non-Catholics are going to hell, another heresy. He is clearly and palpably anti-Semitic. His movie is an act of aggression against Jews, and, as such, is an act of aggression against Catholicism and the current Pope’s heroic efforts to confront the shameful history of the Church with regard to the Jewish people. Charles notes how Satan walks and lives and breathes among the Jews in the movie. He doesn’t mention that young Jewish children actually turn into demons at one point in the movie, a device that only students of medieval anti-Semitism would notice. In fact, one reason that today’s viewers do not notice the hatred of Jews in the movie is because, mercifuly, they are not familiar with the medieval tropes that signal evil and that Gibson trafficks in. Gibson knows. And he knows how his movie will play in those parts of the world where anti-Semitic tropes are still recognized. Notice I am not accusing people of good faith who have found inspiration in the story portraayed in this movie of being anti-Semitic. I’m sure that many if not almost all of that devition is genuine and not motivated by anything but spiritual hope and reflection. But that cannot disguise the malice that lies beneath. And that Gibson would use the message of Christ to advance it is what makes it doubly unforgivable.

THE YOUNGEST METROSEXUALS: Capitalism strikes again.

THE RUSSIAN CONNECTION

Suddenly, the real reason for Moscow’s resistance to toppling Saddam Hussein seems clearer. And the Bush administration’s coddling of Putin more baffling. I guess the damage Putin can still do is greater than the damage Russia has already done. Like Pakistan.

“MICRO-AGGRESSION”: It’s a new term to me, but my conversations with college students this past couple of days have convinced me it’s real. What’s a micro-aggression? It’s when you offend somebody for the usual p.c. reasons. You need not mean to offend someone; you may even be trying to flatter them; but if they feel they’re offended or hurt in any way, it’s a “micro-aggression.” An accumulation of “micro-aggressions” can lead to actual aggression. I accidentally committed a “micro-aggression” two days ago when I used the term “Islamo-fascist” to refer to terrorists or unelected despots who use Islam as a cloak for their violence or tyranny. One poor young student was reduced to tears because I used this term. She said she felt attacked because she is a Muslim. I pointed out that the entire point of the term is to distinguish these theocratic thugs from genuine, mainstream Muslims. And she acknowledged that. Nevertheless, I had committed a micro-aggression. If I were on a campus today, I might be subject to discipline. What you have here, perhaps, is a post-modern, post-Christian attempt to resurrect different levels of sin. I committed what Catholics call a “venial sin,” a small-bore, not-too-important, micro-sin. But unlike Catholic teaching, which insists that for something to be a sin, it must be consciously intended, with “micro-aggressions,” your motives are irrelevant. In pomo heaven, the individual, after all, has no real autonomy, no independent soul, no personal conscience. He’s just reflecting the interplay of power-structures. So in the pursuit of progress, we have resurrected the imperatives of Catholic moral teaching and removed moral responsibility at the same time. They call this a step forward. It’s the opposite. One recalls Foucault’s classic book, “Discipline and Punish.” It’s all that’s left of his philosophy on American campuses.

AN ENGLISH “PASSION”

Here’s an article you would never read in America, but it does capture something about some people’s response to Mel Gibson’s movie:

[A] group of us went to see the first showing of The Passion of the Christ. I am afraid to say that I was late, and, as I entered the foyer of the Odeon West End, a man with an earring broke off from his mobile phone call and said: “It’s all right, Mr Johnson, you’re in time for the Crucifixion.”

Yes, I intend to rent “The Life of Brian” soon. In today’s fetid culture wars, it may help me stay sane. One always has to look on the bright side of life, doesn’t one?

THE CASE AGAINST BUSH: I have to say I haven’t read a more persuasive one than Will Saletan’s.

EMAIL OF THE DAY: “There’s been a lot of speculation in the news media the past few weeks about a possible Kerry/Edwards ticket, but the Dems need to put all this foolishness aside, get real, and run Kerry/Satan this year. Despite all the GOP’s pandering to the Christian right, the satanic vote has actually been trending Republican in recent years (they’re very laissez faire on economic issues you know), and putting Satan on the ticket could really help shore up this important demographic. And if the logic of picking a vp is that you choose someone with what you lack, Satan is the perfect foil for Kerry : charming, charismatic, telegenic, etc. I couldn’t imagine a better choice.” More feedback on the Letters Page.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“My days here are numbered because I dared to speak out against the Bush administration and say that the religious agenda of George W. Bush concerning stem cell research and gay marriage is wrong. And that what he is doing with the FCC is pushing this religious agenda. And also the fact that the guy takes more vacation than any President ever. It’s time for him to leave. Having said that pushed me off the air in six markets.” – Howard Stern, venting. I have no idea whether Stern is being paranoid or not. Since I don’t really function before 10 am, I don’t have much exposure to him. But I like his spirit; and I do think that Howard Stern and Howard Stern listeners are not people the president needs to alienate in an election year. And it says something about the fragility of the Republican coalition that he feels he has to. Bush is doing his damnedest to make it hard for anyone who isn’t a paid-up evangelical to support him this year. Why?

P.C. EDIT WATCH: A lovely politically correct editing slip marred an opera review in the Los Angeles Times recently. The original sentence read that Richard Strauss’ operatic epic, “Die Frau Ohne Schatten,” was “an incomparably glorious and goofy pro-life paean…” Fair enough. But you can’t have the epithet “pro-life” in the Los Angeles Times. So the sentence was changed to “an incomparably glorious and goofy anti-abortion paean…” There is no reference to abortion in the opera. The paper was therefore forced to run not one but two corrections on February 25. The writer rightly insisted that the paper exonerate him personally from the idiocy. It reminds me of the occasion when a newspaper decided to remove all usage of the word “black” from its copy, when referring to African-Americans. it was deemed too offensive a term. Everything was fine until some tired copy-editor lazily edited an economics column. Suddenly, the federal budget moved from red ink “into the African-American.” Hey, but no one was offended.

ON THE ROAD

Small insight into what the issue of civil marriage for gays is finally achieving. I’ve been speaking on this subject for years and years, but this time, the crowds are enormous. At a small college last night, over 400 showed up, cramming the biggest auditorium available, to listen to the speech and ask questions. Yes, it’s a campus. Yes, it’s the younger generation. But for me at least, it’s thrilling to see the interest and overwhelming support. And the best part of it is that it was organized and sponsored by the College Republicans. It’s a new world.

EMAIL OF THE DAY

“My Islamic History class spent 45 minutes discussing Iraq and the atrocities tonight (my course ends with Napoleon in 1798, but this is one class where I let the kids talk – what they learn impacts directly on current events.)
Here is something no one has noted, but my kids did. Commentators keep seeing a link between Shia states (Iran) and wider Islamists movements such as Al-Queda.”. There is no way that the bombers in Iraq could justify what they did without defining the Shia as “kaffir” (unbelievers). For the past two decades a kind of “ecumenical” Muslim movement has tried to get beyond this. This is now shattered.
I am not sure how this will play out. For a Catholic like me, Shi’ite Islam is much more emotionally similar to Catholicism than Sunni Islam. Shi’ism also has the potentiality to be more progressive. Defining the Shia as a sort of “Muslim extreme” has been as major mistake in the West.
What happened yesterday would be comparable to the Ulster Volunteer Force (or whatever) exploding a bomb at Lourdes. The emotional impact on the Shia is almost unimaginable. I repeat: this is a massive massive event.” – more feedback on the Letters Page.

AL QAEDA AND THE SHI’A

I’ve been thinking and reading some more about the Sunni/al Qaeda massacres at Shiite mosques in Iraq. It’s undoubtedly true that these mass murders are designed to bring civil war and chaos to Iraq. But they are thereby also designed to thwart Shiite majority rule in a future democratic Iraq. Such a democratic experiment could obviously lead to potential Shiite uprisings all over the Arab world, as this persecuted sect seeks their long-lost right to self-government. What we could be seeing, in fact, is the beginning of a broader Shiite uprising, that would, in part, be a result of American intervention and would pit the Shi’a against al Qaeda. What would be the future ramifications of that? For policy toward Shiite Iran, for example? And for policy toward Saudi Arabia, a Wahhabist dictatorship with a large Shi’a population? For al Qaeda’s ability to focus on the West as a target? Just asking.

LETTING ZARQAWI GO: I’m at a loss to understand how the Bush administration failed to act decisively to take out Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi when it had several opportunities to do so. This report is deeply disturbing. I wonder how killing Zarqawi could have conceivably impeded our bid to topple Saddam; and why the White House aborted the military operations. Money quote:

In June 2002, U.S. officials say intelligence had revealed that Zarqawi and members of al-Qaida had set up a weapons lab at Kirma, in northern Iraq, producing deadly ricin and cyanide. The Pentagon quickly drafted plans to attack the camp with cruise missiles and airstrikes and sent it to the White House, where, according to U.S. government sources, the plan was debated to death in the National Security Council.

The administration flubbed several subsequent opportunities subsequently – and hundreds are now dead as a result. Maybe there is some explanation here that I don’t yet know. But it seems to me that if we blame Clinton for not getting Osama when he could have (and we should), then the blame on the Bush team for letting Zarqawi through the net should be just as intense. What exactly is the real excuse?

THE RULE OF LAW

I am moved beyond words by the sight of gay couples taking their lives and rights into their own hands and getting civil marriage licenses. I believe they will be vindicated in the light of history. But I also believe in the rule of law. That law will protect civil marriage for gays as it does now for straights; and disrespecting it undermines it for all of us, now and in the future. Where such civil marriages can legitimately take place under the law (as appears to be the case in Oregon), there’s no problem. Where they are being used to dramatize current oppression, they are justifiable only so long as the officials responsible are prepared to face all the legal consequences (as in New Paltz, with the remarkable young mayor). That is called legitimate civil disobedience: violating the law in order to be arrested. And if they are a means to challenge discrimination and are performed with the full intent of abiding by the final legal and constitutional judgment, then that too seems to me to be legitimate, (as in San Francisco). It is how change happens. If a state decides to recognize civil marriages for gays performed in another state, then that too is perfectly within the law (as yesterday’s momentous ruling by Eliot Spitzer revealed.) But it is vital in our struggle for legal equality that we do not, as gay people, show contempt for the rule of law itself. It is our only recourse and our only respite. Legitimate civil disobedience is one thing. Blatant disrespect for the law is another. We are on the verge of a real and solid victory for equality in Massachusetts. It has been achieved through years of legal and political argument and civil demonstrations. We need patience now as well as anger, calm as well as determination. Above all, we must respect the law itself. It is the fabric of our democracy. If we trivialize or violate its importance, civil rights are meaningless. For gay people and for everyone.

THE BIOETHICS COUNCIL FLAP, ETC: The best wrap-up is, as so often, at Glenn’s. Don’t miss his post on the flagging “war-base” for Bush either. My own disillusionment with the president is not, despite appearances, all to do with marriage. I first worried with the aircraft carrier stunt, the post-war mess in Iraq, then the fiscal insouciance, and the more general bossiness that this unlibertarian president was exhibiting. The message chaos of the least few months, capped by that dreadful Meet the Press interview, was unnerving, to say the least. The solution? We need to hear what our future strategy is in the war: who we’re targeting next. We need to see more clarity on Iraq, more commitment on al Qaeda, more explanation of what we’re doing and where we’re going. I’m tired with hearing recitations of the president’s past conduct and want to hear more about the future. Churchill didn’t spend 1943 reminding people of what a great leader he had been in 1940. In contrast, the first Bush campaign ads are all retrospective, nostalgic even. If they’re the campaign, he’ll lose.

CHUTZPAH AWARD

Here’s Tom DeLay criticizing John Kerry for fiscal irresponsibility:

“He’s not even trying to be fiscally responsible,” said House Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas.
“He is either insincere about his new spending, dishonest about his new taxes, uninterested in the new deficit, or they just didn’t teach him arithmetic at the European boarding school that he went to.”

I’m not going to tackle DeLay’s criticism of Kerry as such. But one has to ask: where has DeLay been these past few years? While his party has controlled the House, Senate and White House, we have seen a faster build-up of debt, a greater spending explosion and more entitlement spending than any administration since LBJ. And this man is attacking Kerry? DeLay adds whole universes of meaning to the word “shameless.”

QUOTE OF THE DAY I: “Here’s the dirty little secret. It will never get a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress.” – Senator John McCain, on the proposed religious right amendment to the Constitution.

QUOTE OF THE DAY II: “America is the symbol of freedom. Everybody wants to go live there, or just to go there and have fun. It’s a mixture of people from different backgrounds and its ruling system is not imposed on you. And people are more accepting there than they are in Europe, where we feel like strangers.” – a young Iranian called Noushin, from a recent article in Le Monde Diplomatique.

QUOTE OF THE DAY III: “I have been a Republican and a Christian my whole life. I believe that national security is the #1 most important issue in America – it is, to be blunt, the thing that makes any other issue possible in the first place. I do not buy the loss of jobs argument, I think tax cuts work, and I think abortion is wrong, I still support the Iraq war and feel that those 500 plus brave men and women saved untolled millions from horrible death, and I even agree that activist judges should simply be arrested and dismissed from office. I believe all this and right now, I don’t know if I’m voting for Bush.
I don’t know because this political ploy is so overtly mean-spirited and opportunistic it that my own sense of fairness and decency is far more offended by the attack than whatever defense could be made of it. I can’t believe I am the only one, even the only Christian to feel this way.” – blogger Ozymandias.

CHRISTIANS AGAINST THE FMA

Here’s an astonishing result. The Christian Broadcasting Network has an unscientific online poll on the religious right amendment. The result? As of my checking in late last night, a 61 percent against amending the constitution, with 38 percent for. maybe I should stop referring to this amendment as one sponsored by the religious right. Even they don’t want it.

UGLY AND INTEMPERATE? James Taranto argues that the following passages from my blog are ugly and intemperate:

The religious fanatics of 9/11 despise the American Constitution exactly because it guarantees equality under the law, freedom of conscience and separation of church and state. The war I have supported is a war, ultimately, in defense of that Constitution. .-.-. The sanctity of the Constitution is what we are fighting for. We’re not fighting just to defend ourselves. We are fighting to defend a way of life: pluralism, freedom, equality under the law. You cannot defend the Constitution abroad while undermining it at home. .-.-.
It’s the president who has to answer to the charge that in wartime, he chose to divide this country over the most profound symbol there can be: the Constitution itself. I refuse, in short, to be put in a position where I have to pick between a vital war and fundamental civil equality. The two are inextricable. They are the same war. And this time, the president has picked the wrong side. He will live to be ashamed that he did.

One question: how? The context of these remarks is my attempt to argue against the notion that I should support the president because the war on terror is more important than the president’s support for a constitutional amendment to ban gay citizens from civil marriage. My point is that I consider the fight for civil rights indistinguishable in my eyes from the fight for freedom abroad. And I consider the way in which the president has chosen to raise the stakes over civil marriage to a national, constitutional level – where it does not and need not belong – to be recklessly divisive while we are at war. How is that ugly? Dennis Prager equated gay couples seeking civil marriage with terrorists. I simply bemoan the fact that a president I have loyally supported during a vital war should decide to endorse profound discrimination against a group of Americans. I fail to see any comparison. And I fail to see the slightest ugliness or intemperance. Except in Taranto’s ugly and intemperate remarks.