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Politicans lie? Who knew?
We are in the season of Godwin's Law. Days after Bill Keller devotes his large weekend op-ed space to Iraq policy, Israel, Jews, antisemitism, taboos, and kernels of truth in foreign policy debate, Democratic congressman James Moran crosses that line unmistakeably. [Times links require login/password: bitemedia/bitemedia.]
accusations of fascism (TC Boyle: Mussolini wanted regime change in Ethiopia. Hitler wanted regime change in the Sudetenland.) intellectual third rail rehabilitation of right wing: socialists
the big Lie so many
tell when he;s ltying whwen his lips are moving read my lips
scripted press conference "war is our last resort"
posted by xian @
10:49 AM
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Wednesday, March 12, 2003  |
Can't anybody here play this game?
First they laughed Fleischer out of the room, then this petty payback against Helen Thomas, and now the stilted, scripted case-for-war, sorta, press conference is under scrutiny, according to this Kuro5hin thread, Ari Fleischer admits Bush called from a prepared list of reporters thread.
Insert "bush league" crack here.
posted by xian @
3:17 PM
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Tuesday, March 11, 2003  |
Vive La France
A Chronicle article from January 24 circulating among my environmentalist brethren and sistren (Taking on 'Rational Man') discusses the politics of academic economics, and the animosity between neoclassical economists and dissidents. While professors in the U.S. are being marginalized in subsidiary theoretical programs, French grad students have taken the lead in the rebellion:
The dissidents take heart from events in France. In 2000, an online graduate-student petition proclaimed that neoclassical economics, or at least its unbridled application in teaching and research, dwelt in unreality to the point of being "autistic."
The students dubbed their movement "Post-Autistic Economics" and quickly provoked a national debate of the French variety. Some leading publications and high-profile economists hailed the protesters, who, in petitions-cum-manifestoes, denounced economics as a morass of "imaginary worlds" that was mired in "pathological," pseudoscientific mathematics; that was aggressively excluding pluralism; and that was, even so, barely able to explain "l'économie de Robinson Crusoe."
posted by xian @
12:24 PM
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Shorter Chomsky Thrash
Dismayed at D-squared's removal of his Shorten Den Beste post that finally provoked a response from the man's reader-fans, The Poor Man offered a series of amusing Shorters, nailing himself in the process. The Chomsky one ("Shorter Noam Chomsky: Whatever someone said recently is pretty rich, considering East Timor"), which I thought was one of the funnier, drier ones, yielded the inevitable thrash in the comments area.
If e-mail weren't private, I'd love to hear more of Northrup's "weird e-mail" exchange with Den Beste.
posted by xian @
11:02 AM
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Uncle Osama wants you
Too much work, constant deadlines, and a general disgust with the state of geopolitics has made me reduce my reading of the media to a bare minimum. It's too easy to get stressed out and crazy from the barrage of propaganda, lies, and distorted truths in the mediasphere. Blogs are no better, in general, but I still find myself drawn back to Orcinus regularly. In a post about the legislator's who walked out to protest a prayer by a Muslim cleric, Neiwert articulates something he calles "The Orcinus Principium":
Those who foment war against Islam are objectively furthering the agenda of Osama bin Laden, and are thus an effective Al Qaeda 'fifth column.'
posted by xian @
5:38 PM
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Tuesday, March 04, 2003  |
Thank heaven for Orcinus
If Orcinus had a syndicated (RSS) feed, I'd put his headlines write on the main Mediajunkie page. By catching up with him today, I learned that someone actually is now transcribing Rush Limbaugh, got frightened by signs of the demonization of dissent, read about a Karl Rove lie on the record, got caught up on the right-wing hate movement's terroristic strategies as well as a creepy rapprochement with the equally antisemitic Islamist movement, heard about the latest Republican Trent-style bigot eruption.
Best of all was his reply to CPO Sharkey over at Sgt. Stryker (no relation to Jeff Stryker). I gather that reading about this debate must be some sort of political Rorschack test. Neiwert's analysis and documentation convince me utterly, aside from the occasional rhetorical fillip, while Sharkey's retorts brings to mind nothing so much as Usenet newsgroups, in which self-congratulatory told-ya's and asides to an insular supportive audience substitute for reasoned debate. I have no doubt that to regular readers of Stryker's page, the opposite it is true. Unfortunately, I suspect there's a "classwarfare" issue at play here. Perhaps Neiwert's educated prose and logic read as elitist to the more one-of-the-guys Sharkey? (Speaking of class warfare, howzabout we call Bush's tax plan, "a tax cut for Barbra Streisand"?)
I believe Instapundit has pointed to the exchange, which could even the playing field a bit, implicitly lending credibility to Sharkey's thin bluster. I noticed that Stryker categorized his triumphant rebuttal under "Anti-idiotarian," a good way of signalling to his cohorts that Neiwert is one-a them kooky America-hating lefties will probably oppose doing the right thing when push comes to shove. The backslapping comments to the post show the flavor of the discourse among Stryker's readership.
UPDATE: I shouldn't have tortured myself, but naturally htere is yet another followup by the main host of the Sgt. Stryker site, but by this time the entire range of discussion has veered off into namecalling and trivia. It's a pretty funny case of "panties in a bunch," naturally followed by a chorus of hooting support in the comments. The list of invective (one of the worst pejoratives apparently being "journalist") amounts to a series of sputters. I don't imagine any of Stryker's readers will follow the entire sequence or wonder in fact why only one of Dave's points was ever addressed before the theatrical washing of hands and "farting in your direction" kicked in.
posted by xian @
1:02 PM
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Friday, February 28, 2003  |
It's nothing personal, just business
The Bush Crime Family meme I've seen bandied about on the Well and elsewhere has spawned a comic at the Village Voice, The Bushopranos.
Where are those humorless lefties when you need them? This cartoon fights the Bush restoration/rematch narrative that put their team within striking distance of the prize with a psychoanalytical reprise of the one-term Bush "not getting it" syndrome.
posted by xian @
12:16 PM
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Thursday, February 20, 2003  |
This morning I woke up in a curfew...
First-hand reports from Miguel Octavio of The Devil's Excrement indicate that Hugo Chavez has jailed opposition leaders in Venezuala:
Woke up in a Dictatorship today Today I woke up in a Dictatorship. Up to now Hugo Chavez and his hoodlums had been using the law to "hide" the repressive and intolerant nature of this Government. Last night they detained one of the two most important leaders of the opposition and an order is out to capture the Head of the Federation of Unions (CTV) the other visible leader of the opposition. The charge: treason and inciting rebellion. This is political, this is repressive and coupled with assasinations last Monday indicates to me that Chavez has decided to step out of Democracy. The charges against the two most important leaders of the opposition are just an excuse to neutralize them and silence others. The Government quickly charges two political opponents on these charges, but assasins from April are still free or not charged, no investigation has been made of other gunmen on Dec. 6th. and many other political and violent crimes have yet to be investigated. But this one has, with efficiency. Maybe the world will now understand what is going on here in Venezuela.
posted by xian @
11:19 AM
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Get your war on early and often
My favorite pundit for these extreme times has gotten Get Your War On No. 19 out:

posted by xian @
5:44 PM
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Wednesday, February 19, 2003  |
Lucky Ducky strikes again
Tom the Dancing Bug has been having a great old time lampooning the Wall Street Journal's Lucky Duckies trial balloon that complained about the unfair and progressive U.S. federal income tax.
posted by xian @
6:04 PM
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Monday, February 17, 2003  |
Guardian takes on "appeasers" meme
The Guardian deconstructs the "Saddam = Hitler" argument (without invoking Godwin's Law!), and turns the table on the question of who is appeasing whom. We'll leave deconstructing the specious "Bush = Hitler" protest signs as an exercise for the class.
posted by xian @
12:20 PM
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Hyperventilating about Flapdoodle
On today's New York Times op-ed pages, Bill Safire applauds the bipartisan shackling of the proposed TIA and gives cover to libertarian-inclined right-wingers waiting for a signal on Patriot II: the wrath of Ascroft. Over on the opposite side of the page Bob Herbert notes the stealthy way the Bushies are defunding "compassionate" priorities while presiding over a larger budget build-up than we ever saw under Clinton:
The day after Mr. Bush's upbeat speech to the religious broadcasters, The Times's Robert Pear revealed that the administration was proposing a change in federal law that would result in rent increases for thousands of poor people receiving housing aid.
The administration has proposed a restructuring of Medicare that would curtail, rather than enhance, delivery of health services to the elderly.
In the $2.2 trillion budget that Mr. Bush sent to Congress last week was an unconscionable proposal that would eliminate after-school programs for 500,000 children. In the arena of bad ideas, that one's a champion.
posted by xian @
8:36 AM
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Thursday, February 13, 2003  |
Michael Lerner reconsidered
OK, so wait a minute, is Michael Lerner (of Tikkun) "deeply silly" or not?
posted by xian @
2:07 PM
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Wednesday, February 12, 2003  |
More on closed-source voting machines
Every warblogger's favorite idiotarian rag, The Guardian, has a little article today on voting-machine paranoia:
One is Georgia, where all the votes in 2002 were cast on Diebold screens. The sitting Democratic senator and (to general astonishment) governor were both defeated in the election. Nine of Diebold's 12 directors are listed as Republican donors. The other case is Nebraska, where more than 80% of the votes last November were counted on machines produced by the leader in the field: ES & S. Nebraska handily re-elected its Republican senator, Chuck Hagel, who just happens to be the company's former chief executive and remains a major shareholder. I do not remotely suggest either election was rigged, though Charlie Matulka, Hagel's beaten Democratic opponent, has protested in a manner somewhat unusual for a candidate who only got 15%. This is probably all just paranoia, but the Paranoid party has as much right to participate in elections as anyone else - and to know how and why they have lost.
posted by xian @
1:54 PM
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Parsing Osama
Speaking of jumping to conclusion, MSNBC has retracted its original interpretation of the Osama tape as saying that bin Laden encouraged the overthrow of Saddam. Apparently, while Ba'ath socialists are infidels, it's OK to stand with them to fight against the U.S.
Meanwhile, the invaluable Mark Kleiman tries to sort out the layers of meaning betwen what maybe-Osama, maybe-Powell, and maybe-Reynolds have said.
posted by xian @
11:45 AM
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Jumping the gun
Looks like I jumped to conclusions. The news appears to be that Kerry will have surgery for prostate cancer, not that he will be dropping out of the race. When TPM posted that this news would "shake up" the race, I mistakenly assumed this meant a reshuffling of the candiates. My bad. Best wishes to Kerry in undergoing this becoming-more-routine medical treatment.
posted by xian @
12:59 PM
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Tuesday, February 11, 2003  |
Which Dem is about to drop out?
TPM hints that a prospective Democratic presidential candidate is about to drop out of the race for health reasons.
posted by xian @
11:51 AM
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