THE HOMO WITHDRAWETH

The unassuming, now-celibate gay Anglican bishop has withdrawn his acceptance of his position, avoiding a looming schism in the Church of England. It’s hard to know how to interpret this. Both the Anglicans and the Catholics,in the next few years, will have to deal with how many Western Christians feel about the dignity of gay people, while seeing their ranks boom among intermittently polygamous but rampantly homophobic Africans. It’s an irresolvable conflict. My prediction: eventual Anglican schism.

NEW IRANIAN CURRENCY? An intriguing possibility.

“BRING THEM ON”

No, I don’t think it’s merely rhetoric. One of the many layers of the arguments for invading Iraq focused on the difficulties of waging a serious war on terror from a distant remove. Being based in Iraq helpsus notonly because of actual bases; but because the American presence there diverts terrorist attention away from elsewhere. By confronting them directly in Iraq, we get to engage them in a military setting that plays to our strengths rather than to theirs’. Continued conflict in Iraq, in other words, needn’t always be bad news. It may be a sign that we are drawing the terrorists out of the woodwork and tackling them in the open.

THE BBC AND IRAQ: A new and comprehensive summary of fantastic media bias.

CONCEDING DEFEAT: “You’re absolutely right; many in the press have all but conceded defeat. Having spent a year (1967-68) in the Mekong Delta, and having made three other deployments to the Tonkin Gulf in the 1960’s, I am appalled by suggestions that there are parallels between the two conflicts. Just for perspective: We were in Vietnam for over a decade; we have been in Iraq for less than four months. There was no clear national interest at stake in Vietnam; in Iraq we either make this thing work — and create a chance for a peaceful and stable Middle East — or we will have failed catastrophically. It seems that few remember that at the peak of the fighting in Vietnam, and for a sustained period of time, we were losing about 500 killed — not killed and wounded, 500 killed — per week. In Iraq we have lost 22 dead to hostile fire in the two months since “major combat” was declared over. And yet the hand-wringing has bedome quite frantic.” – more feedback on the Letters Page.

COULTER DISSECTED

A devastating little piece by Brendan Nyhan. Part of me likes Coulter’s iconoclasm, panache, smarts. But you still have to draw the line somewhere; and, in my view, she damages conservatism as much as Michael Moore damages liberalism. It’s one thing in spirited debates to lose civility at times; it’s another thing to make a lack of civility your fundamental modus operandi.

THE TORIES ON GAY MARRIAGE

The British Conservative Party will allow its deputies a free vote on gay marriage in Britain. One Tory MP writes the following today in an op-ed in the Daily Telegraph:

A carefully drafted civil registration scheme could command support from people of all political affiliations and of none. By instinct, Tories are, rightly, wary of change – especially change based on abstract egalitarian theorising. But we accept changes that remove justified grievances, that tackle particular problems affecting people in their daily lives. So I appeal to my fellow Conservatives, inside and outside Parliament, to see the case for civil partnership. Changing the law, in this case, is not about political correctness. It is about personal decency. A law that effectively pretends gay couples don’t exist is indefensible. As we do at our best, let us accept the need for change and concentrate on the detail of a Bill to improve the lot of a sizeable minority of our fellow citizens.

That strikes me as a genuinely conservative statement. The Brits, with their usual pragmatism, will avoid the stark moral arguments of Americans – pro and con – and go about fixing an obvious legal anomaly. It seems inevitable that Britain will have gay marriage in effect by the fall. Meanwhile, Wal-Mart makes the same pragmatic step. Are we reaching a “tipping point”?

DISPLACED VIETNAM

The inevitable outbreaks of violence and dissension in Iraq are obviously worth covering and important news. But there’s an under-current of complete gloom in news reports that seems to me to be more fueled by ideological fervor than sober analysis. Given the magnitude and complexity of the task of rebuilding post-Saddam Iraq, it seems to me we’re making slow but decent progress. The lack of a complete social implosion or exploding civil war is itself a huge achievement. And no one said the post-war reconstruction was going to be easy. So what’s behind this drumbeat of apocalypse? I think it’s a good rule among boomer journalists that every story they ever edit or write or film about warfare will at some point be squeezed into a Vietnam prism. The modern military has denied these people the chance to be vindicated during actual combat; so they will try and present the occupation in exactly the same light. Yes, there is probably considerable discontent in Iraq right now; yes, every death is awful; but no, this isn’t even close to being combat; let alone Vietnam. Of course, I won’t be completely certain about this until Johnny Apple writes a front-page NYT news analysis piece laying out the new consensus. Tick, tock. Or is he too busy touring Devon?

THE CASE AGAINST LAWRENCE

Jeffrey Rosen provides the most effective critique so far. I’m mulling a response.

THE GATHERING STORM: The Mullahs shut down Tehran’s universities for the week around July 9. More signs of how worried they are. We also know how viciously they have tried to stop the student revolution in recent weeks:

The government itself now admits to having arrested 4,000 demonstrators, of whom some 800 were students. The student movement says the numbers were even higher, and the actual number could well be upwards of 6-7,000. Many were killed.

Michael Ledeen, as usual, has the goods. (Via Jeff Jarvis.)

SALAM PAX IN BASRA

An interesting report that suggests the Americans could learn a little from the more laid-back British approach to colonial transitions. (But, hey, the Brits have a little more experience in these matters, don’t they?) I was impressed by the following story. In a firefight, two innocent Iraqis were killed by British soldiers. The Brits were worried about tribal retribution:

So the next day two British officers, two Iraqi lawyers and a translator go to the hospital and ask how the locals deal with this sort of thing. The concept of “Fasil” or blood money is explained to them. A couple of days later, the word spreads that the British have paid 15 million Iraqi dinars in blood money to the families of the two Iraqi men. Further bloodshed was stopped. Perfect.
I am not discussing the moral correctness of blood money. This is the way things are done here and if this money will stop any sort of revenge killings then it is worth it. No, I only have one comment: being foreigners, they paid too much. Habibi, everything is bargainable here, and paying 15 million in blood money will ruin the blood money market – it is way too much. You should improve your tribal connections and get someone to bargain for you.

I cracked a smile at that one. But what a perfect example of British pragmatism.

LILEKS ON UNIONS: Captures their essence beautifully:

What does it say about my industry that the worst paper in the English language is our official newspaper, the Guild Reporter? It manages to sum up everything about unions that gripes me- the joylessness, the complaining, the looming doom, the whining about how the world is set up entirely for the wishes of small cartoon men in striped pants and top hats who own everything from Baltic Avenue to Boardwalk. It always has the flavor of the smart but unfashionable kids with no social skills sitting around the high school cafeteria bitching about the jocks, with one exception: top union management would be the only subculture that could become hipper by getting into Dungeons and Dragons. At least it would give them a new set of descriptive terms for their foes. I’d love to pick up the union paper and read “Management takes cue from Mordor, hires scab-Orks” – it would suggest they have a sense of humor.

Perfect. The aesthetic case against organized labor is, I think, irrefutable.

BRITAIN’S NYT SCANDAL

The fall-out from the BBC’s continuing campaign against the Iraq war is now spreading. Janet Daly has a splendid op-ed in today’s Daily Telegraph, making weirdly similar noises to those of us who wrung our hands over the Howell Raines’ abuse of power at the New York Times. Money quote:

[T]here is a question that needs an urgent answer: should the BBC, which has a virtual monopoly on serious news and current affairs coverage, the budget of a small country and enormous influence on the democratic process, be setting the parameters of reasonable political opinion in such a pre-determined and partial way?

Of course not. Meanwhile, a former BBC journalist and now member of the Blair government, Ben Bradshaw, has launched yet another attack on the BBC’s reporting techniques. The critical mass of criticism could soon prompt a Raines-like denouement. Stay posted.

GOOD NEWS ON AIDS: More drops in HIV infection rates and gonorrhea incidence among men who have sex with men in San Francisco. The “sub-Saharan” epidemic predicted in the New York Times only two years ago (and questioned in this space) still hasn’t happened.

SANCTIFYING RACHEL CORRIE: The young American woman killed by an Israeli bulldozer has now become an icon of some sorts. Oliver Kamm, an excellent new blogger based in London, has the goods on the factual distortions required.