Monthly Archives: July 2009

What the hell is it about the South?

h/t Washington Monthly

Update: Andrew Sullivan, back in Sept of last year, noted a contemporary polling result…

A new poll released Thursday (Sept. 11) finds that nearly six in 10 white Southern evangelicals believe torture is justified, but their views can shift when they consider the Christian principle of the golden rule.
The poll, commissioned by Faith in Public Life and Mercer University, found that 57 percent of respondents said torture can be often or sometimes justified to gain important information from suspected terrorists. Thirty-eight percent said it was never or rarely justified.

Christ’s message of empathy is clearly no longer operational. Get the revelation here

Update 2:  Matt Yglesias makes a wonderful observation on the graph above and on Mike Weigel’s further breakdown showing that this southern phenomenon is due almost entirely to white folks…

“I think Republicans have basically given up on the battle of trying to win more Hispanics over to their side. Which leaves them with the medium-term objective of trying to get non-southern whites to act more like southern whites.”

Dick Armey

Armey, Texas Republican and former House Majority Leader is now a big-time and very wealthy lobbyist at the hire of large corporate interests such as Exxon Mobile and he heads up the conservative activist Freedom Works front group (fronting those same corporate interests and the RNC).  He’s a rather nasty piece of business.  As the linked Think Progress piece notes, in recent testimony on Capitol Hill, Armey said the following:

Let me say I take it as an article of faith if the lord God almighty made the heavens and the Earth, and he made them to his satisfaction and it is quite pretentious of we little weaklings here on earth to think that, that we are going to destroy God’s creation.

He might believe this idiotic formulation but there’s no reason at all to suspect he does.  Lying is not at all unusual for the fellow.  We’ll note that he doesn’t explain here how this omnipotent and good-intentioned God missed halting a few other unpleasant events like the murder of six million jews.

Watch the dork here

Michael Massing on the internets and bloggers

As we’ve come to expect from Massing, this is an excellent piece on the internet and bloggers.

Update: And then we bump into a response from Glenn Greenwald (I haven’t read it yet).  Will comment in a bit when time permits… 

http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/

For Coen Brothers fans

Quote of the day – “‘Umble. We Heeps are a very ‘umble family” category

As “Cabaret” gives us a necessary peak into the sordid corners of 1930s Berlin, the National Review is a necessary complement to our understanding of the more vulgar aspects of modern American political culture.

Let’s take today’s contribution there from Andrew McCarthy.  We’ll start with this wonderful bit mid-way through the piece…

The mission of National Review has always included keeping the Right honest…

We ought to be thankful, no?  Then, let’s head back up to the very first sentence of the piece…

Throughout the 2008 campaign, Barack Hussein Obama claimed it was a “smear” to refer to him as “Barack Hussein Obama.”

Links/citations to this multitude of instances unfortunately aren’t provided by McCarthy.  A possible reason they aren’t is because he’s lying.

Leonard Cohen to perform in Tel Aviv

Reading Ha’aretz this morning, I noted this news item. I’ve been a fan of the fellow since high school (before he made the music scene with Suzanne) and have seen him perform twice, the most recent time three months ago in Vancouver (yes, it was incredibly wonderful).

But I’d never considered how he might be received by an Israeli audience, given the plethora of Christian allusions throughout his work.  Will he play this audience differently?  I’d love to be there and see.

(a little ps here…I also noticed that Scientology is advertising in Ha’aretz.  That’s ambitious.)

We’ve come a long way, baby

Hostility to the concept [of same sex marriage] was widespread and blatant. In 1971, when Michael Wetherbee of the Minnesota ACLU argued that a gay couple had the right to marry under that state’s constitution, one judge on the Minnesota Supreme Court actually turned his chair around and refused to face Wetherbee as he delivered his argument. Not a single judge asked a question. The court’s unanimous decision denying the claim cited the book of Genesis to support its conclusion that marriage is properly limited to the union of a man and a woman.

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/22791

Bill Kristol, lying, and Straussian neoconservatism

Glenn Greenwald has written a typically exceptional piece this morning.  As he notes up top, what he’s written here was motivated by comments from Bill Kristol, comments of a deeply dishonest (very purposefully dishonest) nature.  What follows is an excellent precis on neoconservativism, Leo Strauss, the Staussian father/son duo of Irving and Bill with nods to others (like Shadia Drury) who have written extensively on Strauss and on neoconservatism.  If you’d like to better understand this whole subject better, I couldn’t point to a better example than Greenwald’s piece.  I’m going to paste it in full here.

Bill Kristol condemns lying for political ends: Seriously

(updated below – Update II)

On Fox News yesterday, NPR’s Juan Williams — who, just by the way, dutifully spouts GOP talking points more reliably than any Fox commentator other than Karl Rove — condemned President Obama for telling ”lies” about the Gates controversy.  That prompted this observation from Bill Kristol, in which he head-pattingly quoted Williams:

Amid all the blather about “teachable moments,” I don’t recall anyone else making this simple but profound observation: “You can’t have a teachable moment if it’s based on a lie.” Another way of putting it might be to say that it’s not a “moment” that’s teachable, it’s the truth that’s teachable.

So a moment in which everyone colludes to obscure the truth (which seems characteristic of most “teachable moments” in contemporary America) is not a moment of teaching; it’s a moment of deception, of misdirection, of obfuscation. Call it an obfuscatable moment.

It’s hard to remember a statement in American politics as deceitful and obfuscating as this one from Bill Kristol, pretending to condemn politically-motivated lies.  It’s not hyperbole to say that the central political tactic of neoconservatism is the “noble lie” — exactly what Kristol self-righteously condemns here.  The political philosopher most revered by neoconservatives, Leo Strauss, explicitly advocated such lies, as Philosophy and Political Science Professor Shadia Drury documented:

[Strauss] therefore taught that those in power must invent noble lies and pious frauds to keep the people in the stupor for which they are supremely fit. . . . Like the Grand Inquisitor, he thought that it was better for human beings to be victims of this noble delusion than to “wallow” in the “sordid” truth. And like the Grand Inquisitor, Strauss thought that the superior few should shoulder the burden of truth and in so doing, protect humanity from the “terror and hopelessness of life.

Though that may be a bit of an oversimplification of Strauss’ views, Kristol’s dad, Irving, the so-called Godfather of Neoconservatism,was a devout follower of what he understood to be Strauss’ beliefthat feeding lies to citizens is necessary for good political ends:

Kristol has acknowledged his intellectual debt to Strauss in a recent autobiographical essay. “What made him so controversial within the academic community was his disbelief in the Enlightenment dogma that ‘the truth will make men free.’” Kristol adds that “Strauss was an intellectual aristocrat who thought that the truth could make some [emphasis Kristol's] minds free, but he was convinced that there was an inherent conflict between philosophic truth and political order, and that the popularization and vulgarization of these truths might import unease, turmoil and the release of popular passions hitherto held in check by tradition and religion with utterly unpredictable, but mostly negative, consequences.”

Based on that understanding, Irving Kristol explicitly advocated that ordinary citizens be lied to for their own good and the good of society:

There are different kinds of truths for different kinds of people. There are truths appropriate for children; truths that are appropriate for students; truths that are appropriate for educated adults; and truths that are appropriate for highly educated adults, and the notion that there should be one set of truths available to everyone is a modern democratic fallacy. It doesn’t work.

As Professor Drury notes based on Bill Kristol’s writings on such topic, Kristol himself, just like his dad whose life he followed, is a “Straussian clone.”  That’s why Bill Kristol’s public career is filled with too many lies to count.  Lying is a justifiable tactic to them, which is what explains typical Kristol statements like this:

What the Bush administration did say–and what so many reporters seem to have trouble understanding–is that Iraq and al Qaeda had a relationship that, by its very existence, posed a potential threat to the United States.

Another by-product of Kristol’s fervent belief in political lies was when he pretended to support evangelical Christians in the Terri Schiavo travesty (Straussian neoconservatives love to manipulate and inflame mass religious beliefs, especially Christianity, feigning sympathy with it, as the ultimate form of control) and said this:

After all, we are a “maturing society,” as the Supreme Court has told us. Perhaps it is time, in mature reaction to this latest installment of what Hugh Hewitt has called a “robed charade,” to rise up against our robed masters, and choose to govern ourselves. Call it Terri’s revolution.

This is what was always most striking (and revealing) about The New York Times‘ hiring Kristol as a columnist (and The Washington Post‘s immediately swooping him up after he was let go by the NYT):  Kristol is someone who not only lies constantly, but who quite obviously believes in lying as a legitimate and important political weapon.  In general, there are far too many instances of extreme hypocrisy and deceit in our political culture to bother noting them when they arise.  But reading Bill Kristol — the living, breathing embodiment of deceitful propaganda — condemn the use of lies for political ends is really too much to ignore. It would be exactly like reading Saddam Hussein condemn human rights abuses or Dick Cheney condemn torture or George Bush condemn lawbreaking or Michael Gordon condemn mindless, government-serving stenography or Cokie Roberts condemn conventional-wisdom-spouting punditry, etc.

UPDATE:  As CarolynC notes in Comments, the Straussian endorsement of “noble lies” is completely consistent with the two-tiered system of justice that dominates our political culture (the subject of today’s first post), as only some people — the elite — are permitted to tell such lies, while ordinary citizens who do so must be punished.  From Harper‘s Earl Shorris in July, 2004:

For Strauss, as for Plato, the virtue of the lie depends on who is doing the lying. If a poor woman lies on her application for welfare benefits, the lie cannot be countenanced. The woman has committed fraud and must be punished. The woman is not noble, therefore the lie cannot be noble. When the leader of the free world says that “free nations do not have weapons of mass destruction,” this is but a noble lie, a fable told by the aristocratic president of a country with enough nuclear weapons to leave the earth a desert less welcoming than the surface of the moon.

That Harper‘s article also notes that Bill Kristol, like his dad Irv, is a devoted Straussian. Indeed, when Kristol pretends to reject politically-motivated lies, that in itself is an example of a Straussian lie:   Obama should be condemned for “lying” because he’s not noble, whereas Kristol and his comrades are free to lie because they are devoted to noble ends.

UPDATE II:  I’m well aware of, and explicitly referenced, the debate over whether Kristolian neoconervatives faithfully summarize Strauss’ views or whether they distort them.  Contrary to the assertions of several commenters, that debate is hardly clear-cut.  In addition to the above-cited Drury and Harper‘s articles arguing that neocons reflect exactly what Strauss believed, here is arestrained and very well-informed condemnation of Strauss fromHarper‘s Scott Horton.  Horton notes that “even among those who love him, there seems to be a very catty rage over just who are the proper ‘Straussians’”; that “the Neoconservative movement [] properly claims roots in the writing and thinking of Leo Strauss”; and that Strauss, at least early on, “sees real appeal in fascism, Mussolini style.”  Also according to Horton:

One of the pillars of liberal democracy is the embrace of the Rule of Law, and the notion that no one, even the king or Executive, stands above the law. For Strauss this idea was foolishness. . . . Strauss applies this criticism to law; law spells weakness; law is a trick of the weak to tie down the strong. Hence, Strauss applauds the decisive leader who acts outside of the law to achieve his goals.Nevertheless, the consequences of Strauss’ dismissive attitude towards the Rule of Law can be seen today in the Neocon advocacy of jettisoning traditional norms of the law of armed conflict and in allowing the president to operate outside of clear criminal statutes (like FISA) as an aspect of his war-making powers.

And see here for some short though seemingly incriminating Strauss quotes (citation is here).

As a former philosophy major, I could find that debate interesting if I wanted to, but it has little to do with anything I’ve written here.  As a contemporary political matter, that debate over Strauss matters little.  Leo Strauss isn’t subsidized by Rupert Murdoch to spew propaganda on Fox News and at The Weekly Standard; doesn’t write columns in virtually every major American newspaper and magazine; and doesn’t exert substantial influence in our political debate.  Neoconservatives do.  What matters is how they understand and embrace Strauss, regardless of whether that interpretation is or is not faithful to Strauss himself.  As the excerpts from Irving Kristol make conclusively clear, neocons cite Strauss to support their belief that lies in pursuit of noble political ends are justifiable (indeed, Bill Kristol sits on the Advisory Board of the Leo Strauss Center at the University of Chicago, along with Harvard Professor and Machiavelli lover Harvey Mansfield, who explicitly rejects the rule of law as a constraint on Presidents, or at least on George Bush).

That’s what matters:  what neoconservatives believe.  And what they believe is the virtue of political lies when spouted by certain people (themselves) in service of certain goals (their own), and relatedly, the complete absence of any limits on what they can do in pursuit of those “noble” goals.

Obama speaks

I wrote this elsewhere but thought I ought to put it here.

Listening to Obama tonight, I realized that there is an aspect in which he differs not a whit from George W Bush. No difference discernible. Both of them presume, when they are speaking to other people, that those other people are exactly as smart as they are.

Who is Ralph Peters?

If you watch TV news much at all, you’ll recognize the fellow.  He’s a “military authority” who, aside from his many appearances on TV news shows, has written for various military publications and the WSJ, Weekly Standard, New York Post, Washington Monthly, USA Today, Newsweek and the Wash Post.

Last night on Fox, Peters was discussing the recently released video of American soldier Bowe Bergdahl and here’s an excerpt (full interview below)…

Now look, Julie, I want to be clear.  If, when the facts are in, we find out that through some convoluted chain of events, he really was captured by the Taliban, I’m with him.  But, if he walked away from his post and his buddies at wartime… I don’t care how hard it sounds, as far as I’m concerned, the Taliban can save us a lot of legal hassles and legal bills.

As Jonathan Turley noted, Peters seems to consider trials an inconvenience.   So, one wonders, what else might we find to help us understand the ideas of this fellow who is a regular guest on TV and in editorials, introduced as an “expert” or “military analyst”?  Here’s some more from this swell guy (thanks to wikipedia)…

There will be no peace. At any given moment for the rest of our lifetimes, there will be multiple conflicts in mutating forms around the globe. Violent conflict will dominate the headlines, but cultural and economic struggles will be steadier and ultimately more decisive. The de facto role of the US armed forces will be to keep the world safe for our economy and open to our cultural assault. To those ends, we will do a fair amount of killing.

That’s from a 1997 article.  The following is a direct quote from the wikipedia page on Peters…

In a 2009 article for The Journal of International Security Affairs titled “Wishful Thinking and Indecisive Wars” [7] Peters’ advocates the ruthless use of United States military power, declaring “If you cannot win clean, win dirty.” Peters’ also raises the controversial possibility of directing the United States military to attack journalists. Peters writes, “Although it seems unthinkable now, future wars may require censorship, news blackouts and, ultimately, military attacks on the partisan media.”

Some do not find war a horror.  They love it.  The idea of killing people excites them.

Update: Crooks and Liars provides a fuller context for that last quote from Peters (in a piece written for “Journal of International Security Affairs”)…

While the essence of warfare never changes—it will always be about killing the enemy until he acquiesces in our desires or is exterminated—its topical manifestations evolve and its dimensions expand. Today, the United States and its allies will never face a lone enemy on the battlefield. There will always be a hostile third party in the fight, but one which we not only refrain from attacking but are hesitant to annoy: the media.

While this brief essay cannot undertake to analyze the psychological dysfunctions that lead many among the most privileged Westerners to attack their own civilization and those who defend it, we can acknowledge the overwhelming evidence that, to most media practitioners, our troops are always guilty (even if proven innocent), while our barbaric enemies are innocent (even if proven guilty). The phenomenon of Western and world journalists championing the “rights” and causes of blood-drenched butchers who, given the opportunity, would torture and slaughter them, disproves the notion—were any additional proof required—that human beings are rational creatures. Indeed, the passionate belief of so much of the intelligentsia that our civilization is evil and only the savage is noble looks rather like an anemic version of the self-delusions of the terrorists themselves. And, of course, there is a penalty for the intellectual’s dismissal of religion: humans need to believe in something greater than themselves, even if they have a degree from Harvard. Rejecting the god of their fathers, the neo-pagans who dominate the media serve as lackeys at the terrorists’ bloody altar.

Of course, the media have shaped the outcome of conflicts for centuries, from the European wars of religion through Vietnam. More recently, though, the media have determined the outcomes of conflicts. While journalists and editors ultimately failed to defeat the U.S. government in Iraq, video cameras and biased reporting guaranteed that Hezbollah would survive the 2006 war with Israel and, as of this writing, they appear to have saved Hamas from destruction in Gaza.

Pretending to be impartial, the self-segregating personalities drawn to media careers overwhelmingly take a side, and that side is rarely ours. Although it seems unthinkable now, future wars may require censorship, news blackouts and, ultimately, military attacks on the partisan media.Perceiving themselves as superior beings, journalists have positioned themselves as protected-species combatants. But freedom of the press stops when its abuse kills our soldiers and strengthens our enemies. Such a view arouses disdain today, but a media establishment that has forgotten any sense of sober patriotism may find that it has become tomorrow’s conventional wisdom.

The Journal of International Security Affairs (founded in 2001) is published twice yearly by JINSA, the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs.   I first bumped into this acronym reading Woodward’s book “Plan of Attack” where he quotes Colin Powell, returning to his office after another unsuccessful attempt to convince Bush that an attack on Iraq was fraught with perils, “He’s been captured by the JINSA crowd” (paraphrased from memory, but that’s very close…Woodward hasn’t included a note on JINSA in the index).

Today’s notable headline – “the times they are a changin” category

From Josh Marshall

RELEASE THE HOUNDS!

Palin primises “less politically correct” tweets once she formally bails on governorship

Likely, the sarcasm here isn’t lost on most folks.  But dollars to donuts the allusion in that headline won’t be grasped by a huge majority of folks over 40 or 50 whereas younger people will recognize immediately the voice of The Simpson’s Mr. Burns.

The Republicans’ plan for a better future in a nutshell

“If we’re able to stop Obama on this it will be his Waterloo. It will break him.”

South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint

It’s not as if this “strategy” wasn’t previously known but it is seldomly made so explicit.   Bill Kristol, for example, has laid out the marketing rationale for the strategy (as he had done in 92 re the Clinton healthcare plan).

Presently, the Republican party and the conservative movement are engaged in a project which is almost entirely negative – prevent Obama from succeeding or from appearing to succceed.   They believe (it’s implicit in their strategy) that they possess neither ideas nor personalities which/who might compel voters to choose them over Dems and that their only hope electorally is to create or facilitate the failure of the present administration.

Oddly, they don’t perceive this as an enterprise which is destructive to the nation and immoral.

“Unintentionally revealing”

That’s the heading for a TPM piece that I’ll quote in full below:

Abraham Foxman, on Obama’s approach to the Israel-Palestine quagmire: “I continue to sense that the administration is putting too much weight on solving the conflict.”

Read Abe here

“Moral twilight zone” for Israeli soldiers in Gaza

Both McClatchy and the Guardian cover this story today.    The following excerpt is from McClatchy

JERUSALEM — Israeli combat soldiers have acknowledged that they forced Palestinian civilians to serve as human shields, needlessly killed unarmed Gazans and improperly used white phosphorus shells to burn down buildings as part of Israel’s three-week military offensive in the Gaza Strip last winter.

In filmed testimony and written statements released Wednesday, more than two dozen soldiers told an Israeli army veterans’ group that military commanders led the fighters into what one described as a “moral Twilight Zone” where almost every Palestinian was seen as a threat.

The disappeared

Where’s Rush Limbaugh?

He is still doing his talk radio thing, of course (and Media Matters is monitoring him daily) but his profile is now greatly diminished from what it was several months ago.  That’s without doubt not simply a matter of accident or of the media’s fickle-swarming tendencies.  The RNC and Limbaugh both clearly understood that if Limbaugh’s profile remained large and central and if he were to continue to be associated with control of Republicans that it could only damage the Republican brand because of his extremism.  Better to return to his former lower profile function of tossing meat to his activist demographic (older white people who don’t much like colored folk).

Where’s Dick Cheney?

I put this rhetorical question to Greg Sargent’s blog last week as the recent CIA/Cheney story was getting a lot of coverage.  Previously, we’d seen Cheney (and daughter) mount an aggressive propaganda campaign to defend his decisions/policies against emerging revelations and to attack the Obama administration (and Dems generally).   But, last week, not a peep from either one of the Cheneys.  So far as I can tell, Liz made only one media appearance on the weekend where previously she’d been ubiquitous across the networks on a daily basis.  So this one is odd and I don’t yet understand it.

Time being spent behind the curtain and working media coverage covertly?  The recent CNN “Cheney gets bum rap” bit would be an instance.  Likely, the broader narrative of “it was only an assassination program never implemented”   is part of this initiative as well (it’s being forwarded by Matelin, Cheney’s PR chief in the administration).  We’ll see whether further revelations show that the program(s) in question (which Panetta just found out about and ordered cancelled and which apparently made Holder “feel sick”) reach further and more immorally or more criminally that the fowarded narrative.  That would seem likely at this point.

Cheney is quite masterful at the information/propaganda game as well as at behind the scenes manipulation of persons and institutions so the next bit of time ought to provide a good study in how pathologically authoritarian personalities function in a modern (relatively democratic and relatively transparent) governmental situation.

Today’s notable headline – “Doing their bit for the environment and economy” category

Berlin brothel offers discounts for cyclists

Discounts also offered for “customers who can prove they took public transport”. There’s a High Occupancy joke in here somewhere.

h/t Matt Yglesias

So, a Rabbi with a Lugar, an Evangelist with an AK47, and a Buddhist with a shotgun walk into a bar…

Changes in gun legislation in Arizona and Tennessee comes despite bloody rampages in recent months

Medical insurance company exec turns against the American system he was a part of

Wendell Potter, former head of Public Relations for Cigna, speaks out against his industry…

interview here (I caught it two nights ago…it’s very good

Goldfarb and the Weekly Standard

Writing on a Rasmussen poll which ranks Palin as being the top choice among Republicans on the issue of national security…

In a perfect world national security conservatives would probably choose Cheney as the 2012 nominee, but he wasn’t on the Rasmussen list, and folks shouldn’t be terribly surprised that Palin comes out on top in this breakdown.

“What planet is this fellow and his WS institution writing from?” might well be your response.  The lady’s education of the world and its history, even of American history, is more paltry than many high school students each of us might know.  Worse, her curiosity about such is obviously close to zero (which is precisely why she isn’t educated on these matters).

So, the obvious question presents itself…why does Goldfarb and the Weekly Standard support and promote this individual for VP and even for future president?  Andrew Sullivan suggests:

What Goldfarb means, I suspect, is that the neocons could use her, as they used Bush, for more wars, invasions and occupations – for liberty!

It’s a thesis with a good deal of explanatory power.  And to make it even more useful, one day somebody is going to do a bit of serious investigation of the ties linking the Weekly Standard/Commentary crowd and the military/industrial complex with its enormous financial stake in continued and expanded militarism.

Quote of the day – Sorry to be rude, Your Majesty, but…” category

From NPR analyst Jennifer Pozner:

Ironically, though Palin has railed against unfair treatment by the mainstream media, she has mostly been referring not to blatant sexism but to reporters who wouldn’t show her “respect and deference.” The last thing journalists owe any politician is deference.

h/t Crooks and Liars