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Thinking about Iraq II

Sunday, November 5th, 2006

I’ve written the second portion of this essay at speed, recovering from being in jail with Borat. If any regular readers of this blog feel I’m unfairly characterizing their views, please comment patiently and shoot me an email. I do use some sarcasm here; none is intended against readers. Again, my purpose is to try and outline why I’m so #$)*#$ annoyed by the New York Times and to outline my thoughts on the matter, not to state an iron-clad argument.

Also, I believe we (Western, nominally Christian civilisation) are in a fight for our survival. I therefore feel strongly about the situation. You may well feel differently; fair enough. Please understand where I’m coming from though.

In the first part of this essay, I talked about my framework of thinking concerning the conflict in Iraq. I analyzed some good reasons for being against the war. My purpose wasn’t to argue the merits of the war; simply to point out that I — a supporter of the war — saw some good reasons to be against it.

Here, I’m going to talk about some bad reasons to be against the war.

A number of members of the Democratic party are guilty of this, as is the New York Times.

“I voted for the 87 billion before I voted against it”.

Poor, tin-eared, tone-deaf John Kerry. Yes, what he meant had some nuance, but, frankly, not very much. He was rightly eviscerated for this statement, and he’s never made much of a comeback.

Most Democrats and Republicans believed — throughout the 1990’s and early 21st Century — that Saddam Hussein was a danger.

The idea of ‘flip-flopping’ against the war because it wasn’t going very well is… well… unimpressive.

I detest Hillary Rodham-Clinton. But I admire and respect her intellectual consistency on the matter. In an almost steely fashion, she’s staked out some pretty bizarre ground.

Nonsense about Geneva conventions? Well, the US can abide by the conventions and torture all it wants. (which, I think, would be evil.) The Taliban and Iraqi insurgents aren’t signatories to the conventions and — guess what — they don’t abide by them! The beheadings kind of gave that away. The degree of ignorance and malice used by those who’d argue otherwise is stupendous.

In fact, I think we should abide by the conventions and refrain from torture. Yes, I think we should treat prisoners decently, but that’s utterly orthogonal to the Geneva Conventions. For centuries, both America and the Anglosphere have abided by a series of rules, written and unwritten, for the treatment of prisoners. Few other nations on earth have done so much, and no insurgent groups (to my knowledge) have even come close.

Bush lied about WMD’s? Man, the people who spout this are pretty thick. Or else they believe Bush is really a thickie. Or both. We know George Tenent (a Clinton appointee) walked into Bush’s office and said “Yes, Mr. President, the case for WMD’s in Iraq is a slam dunk”.

The Downing Street Memos are oft cited by people who don’t seem very bright — or literate.
Any reason for being against the war that’s lawyerish (in the sense of optimal decision making; not in a legal sense), irrational, or intellectually inconsistent … well, I don’t have a whole lot of respect for those reasons. They’re people trying to change horses midstream or just being plain looney. You can see a ton of good reasons to be against the war here.

Saddam had no WMD’s he was no danger. That’s the big argument. It’s false (he had some old WMD’s and he had a bunch of WMD programs on hot standby).
So. We come up against the New York Times, which has admitted it was probably wrong to reveal the SWIFT financial transactions. Of course they bury this under a discussion of their new Perfume Critic. No, I’m not making this up. Read the link. Good Lord.

They #$)*#$)ing come near treason — in the eyes of some — and pump out a mea culpa underneath comments on their perfume critic.

Yeah.

Borat should have worked for the New York Times.

Here’s the latest “November Surprise” from the Times and the article that made me write all this stuff.

Last March, the federal government set up a Web site to make public a vast archive of Iraqi documents captured during the war. The Bush administration did so under pressure from Congressional Republicans who had said they hoped to “leverage the Internet� to find new evidence of the prewar dangers posed by Saddam Hussein.

But in recent weeks, the site has posted some documents that weapons experts say are a danger themselves: detailed accounts of Iraq’s secret nuclear research before the 1991 Persian Gulf war. The documents, the experts say, constitute a basic guide to building an atom bomb.

Hmm… But Iraq was safe, wasn’t it? No real threat? That’s the argument that many anti-war people have made…

Among the dozens of documents in English were Iraqi reports written in the 1990s and in 2002 for United Nations inspectors in charge of making sure Iraq had abandoned its unconventional arms programs after the Persian Gulf war. Experts say that at the time, Mr. Hussein’s scientists were on the verge of building an atom bomb, as little as a year away.

This is dreadful writing and sloppy thinking. Yet nevertheless, the New York Times appears to be asserting that just before the war, Iraq was a year away from producing a nuclear weapon.

Good Lord. These people aren’t maintaining configuration control over their lies!

Oh, it gets better.

A senior American intelligence official who deals routinely with atomic issues said the documents showed “where the Iraqis failed and how to get around the failures.� The documents, he added, could perhaps help Iran or other nations making a serious effort to develop nuclear arm

OK. We have to believe that Iraq was no danger… yet a document we obtained on their nuclear progress — that showed them to be within a year of a nuclear bomb! — is so bad that it can help Iran get a nuclear weapon faster.

And, yes, Bush is evil, stupid and bad, because he allowed these documents to be posted.

Keep things secret, it’s a war for oil and Haliburton. Let them be published, and you’re helping out Iran. Yeah.

There are a lot of bad things, and a lot of honorable reasons to be against the war. The New York Times, in my view, has crossed over to the other side.

To their eternal shame, some Democrats seem eager to join them. And this in a year when the Republicans have worked very hard to demonstrate they are manifestly undeserving of being reelected.
-wolfe

Monday Movies- Borat.

Sunday, November 5th, 2006

Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan

So we have Sunday Sonnets — working on finishing the first, the rest will be single posts, for I’ve learned; Friday Boobies, Saturday Songs, and, now, Monday Movies — reviews.

Thanks to those who sent Lawyers Guns and Money, and enabled my release. You know who you are. I’ll have to be careful partying with my old chum Borat in the future.

This film is emphatically not for children. Not at all. Features brief male nudity, disturbing scenes, and very disturbing dialog.
Whether it’s letting loose live chickens in a New York Subway, trying to kiss men from Brooklyn, or confusing the elevator in his hotel for his room, Sacha Baron Cohen’s bizarre blend of ignorance, naivete, anti-semitism, misogyny, and prejudice are powerful — and powerfully, though cringingly comic — tools in his journey across America.

A sample, as he interviews feminists in New York:

Borat: “In Khazakstan, is illegal for more than 5 women to be in same place except for brothel… So what it means, this feminism?”

Woman: It’s the theory that women should be equal to men [wild laughter from Borat] in matters social… You are laughing, that is a problem.

Borat: Do you think a woman should be educate?

Woman: Definitely.

Borat: But is it not a problem that women have smaller brain than man?

Woman: nearly speechless with anger

Borat: Give me a smile baby, it better for your face.

Woman, manfully summoning up patience: Well what you are saying is very demeaning…[continues]

Borat: (v/o, narrating) “I could not concentrate on what this old man was saying”.

There’s a magnificent bookend to this as he travels across Texas with a group of… I hate to say it, but well, rednecks (NB- I use the term with caution; I think careless use of it is racist). A group of good ‘ol boys who chat with Borat as follows:

Good ol’ Boy: You like the b—-s out there in the f—in old Russia there? … F— the S— out of them! The hos… you never call them again!

Borat: Why you don’t call them, because they don’t have telephone yes?

Man: No because they don’t have respect.

Horrible. Terrible. Sad, yet true.

And the scumbags talk about how minorities have more power, Jews have too much power, and they talk about slavery… “we wish — big shame”.

Jesus wept.
I’ve a lot of contempt for the kind of race-baiting that a few Democrats engage in. I despise the bigotry of some on the left.

Yet a bunch of these guys are conservatives. Disgusting. Contemptible. Repulsive. I laugh at their antics, but I’m not happy.
Stitched together from hours of outtakes of Americans reacting to Borat, combined with scripted scenes (with an added character; his producer) and a narrative voice-over that describes the loose plot of Borat’s journey to find Pamela Lee Anderson of Baywatch fame, it works incredibly well. It’s one of the most successful adaptations of a TV comic character to the big screen in decades. The Ali G movie was crap; this isn’t.

However deft the stylings of Baron Cohen [he does not hyphenate his surname, unlike his second cousin, Trinity college fellow Simon Baron-Cohen, professor of psychopathology at Cambridge, and author of some renowned works on autism, including some fascinating studies of gender and autism], one certainly winces at times. It’s emphatically not a film for children.

If you’re a small-screen fan of Borat, this is probably worth seeing in the theatre with friends. If you’re not, but enjoy South Park and the like, this is worth a look. If you’re neither, but have a good sense of humor, it’s probably worth renting down the road, if you’re planning on consuming some alcohol.

Rating:
8/10.

-wolfe

Thinking about Iraq I

Friday, November 3rd, 2006

The purpose of this essay is not to spark a debate about the morality, propriety, or even common sense of the Iraq War. Rather, it’s to swiftly outline a portion of my framework of thought on the subject, and examine some things that trouble me about some of its opponents. For the record, I have no sense that those who post here make any of the errors I shall examine in part II. Quite the reverse.

Wherein wolfe talks about some good reasons to oppose the war, in his view:
One of the things that troubles me about much of the publicized antiwar left is its sheer intellectual incoherence, and, in cases, vitriol and disingenuousness. Some of the antiwar far-right shares those aspects, notably vitriol.

There are certainly many generally rational (or at least intellectually consistent) reasons to be against the Iraq war.

One could be a pacifist. I’d personally respectfully disagree, but it’s a morally and intellectually consistent position, provided, of course, that one is against wars that begin under Democratic Presidents as well as Republican ones. (The War of Independence, War of 1812, The Mexican War, The Civil War, Spanish-American War, more fighting with Mexico, World War 1, Intervention in Haiti, World War 2, Korea, Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, Gulf War I, Bosnia, Afghanistan — all of these were presumably wrong to a pacifist).

I think they’re dead wrong, but I admit they see a better world than I do, and virtually every genuine pacifist I’ve met has had an admirable degree of integrity, intelligence, and personal moral responsibility.

Faux-pacifists who think bombing Bosnia’s hospitals is wonderful, but Iraq is wrong? Sorry, no.

One could believe that preemptive war is wrong — that many of the wars listed above were right, that Afghanistan was right, but that Iraq was wrong. Fair enough. (Bosnia would also have been wrong — arguing that humans rights grounds supported intervening preemptively would also support such intervention in Iraq). I am troubled by the fact that most of those up in arms over the Iraq War on a preemptive basis never said ‘boo’ about Bosnia.

Notable exception: Paleo-conservatives such as Pat Buchanan. I don’t remotely agree with the Paleos, and I find them forming some pretty disturbing alliances with the anti-semitic far left, but it’s at least an intellectually consistent position.

One also would have had to oppose the Clinton-era “Iraq Liberation Act“. Again, few of those now protesting did so.

One could be opposed to the war on the grounds that foreign ‘adventures’ are a bad thing and dangerous to the Republic. This is generally a conservative and isolationist criticism, but it would certainly be possible for a leftist to hold to it as well. Again, you’d have to be against most of the wars over the last century. This is pretty much the Jerry Pournelle school of thought.

One could be against the war on utilitarian grounds: that fewer people were dying under Saddam than are dying now — especially fewer Americans. A weak argument, given that jihadi activity didn’t start in 2003, and while Iraq has proven a flashpoint — or flypaper for terrorists — many jihadis would still be cheerfully looking for their virgins, simply elsewhere. Still, it’s an argument one can make.

One could be against the war – and this, frankly, is more or less my concern and objection — based on the grounds that its objectives do not seem realizable in the real world. Instilling democracy in a tribalistic country that’s only known various forms of dictatorship is not an easy thing.

The Anglosphere took roughly a thousand years to go from the Magna Carta to our present state of democracy. England, Scotland, Wales, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the US all benefit from the ‘golden thread’ of liberty that runs through a shared common law and common constitutional heritage — something the Founders noted in the 9th and 10th Amendments, and noted explicitly elsewhere throughout the constitution (e.g. Habeas Corpus).

It’s a staggering degree of arrogance to think that we can help accelerate Iraq through a thousand years of progress in two or three years. It’s a process that will take generations.

I was for the war, reluctantly, for many reasons. But if the objective was to instill democracy in a few years, then Bush and his advisers were out to lunch. (I discount the idea that they were lying to the American people about the commitment that would be required; it doesn’t readily pass Occam’s razor for me. If someone’s going to argue that Bush lied about something, though, this would seem the most powerful argument: that the American people were deceived as to the length of commitment that would be required to accomplish one of the key stated objectives).

It’s worth noting we’ve been in a ‘quagmire’ (as the New York Times is wont to say) in Germany, Japan, and Korea for over 50 years now, and Bosnia for a decade.

One can be unhappy about the war and possibly opposed to it on the grounds that it’s been mismanaged. This is debatable; certainly aspects have been horribly mismanaged. But a great deal of the criticism comes from the hindsight brigade which seeks to apply legalistic reasoning to every error.

In an engineering (and rational) sense, one is always concerned about optimal decision making — the most correct decision in a situation, based upon the knowledge at the time.

This may be a wrong decision, in hindsight, but that simply wasn’t knowable at the time. The question is not so much “why were we wrong”, but “Could we have done better, based upon what we knew, and could we improve our information gathering and use of information so as to do better next time”?

Lawyers, of course, love attacking this. It can lead to some nice malpractice judgments against people who simply were using the best tools and knowledge available at the time.

One could be against this war because some of the intelligence seems faulty. There were few WMD’s discovered — none, other than ~500 aging gas shells, and no significant signs of large-scale reconstituted WMD programs. Sure, there were nuclear centrifuges buried under rosebushes and the like. While it remains possible that WMD’s were shipped out of the country to Syria, even if this were true it would simply mean that the invasion had been a failure in a different sense.

The problem with this argument is that it comes back to the idea of what was known at the time. We knew of contacts between Saddam and al-Qaeda (though no coordination), and we knew Saddam was a sponsor of terrorism in the mid-east, an attempt to assassinate a US President, and was probably linked to the first WTC bombing.

There certainly were people who stated there were few WMD’s and that a war wasn’t worth it. I disagreed with them at the time, and, on the basis of the last half, I still do. I have to admit though, that those people — unlike the like of John Kerry — have an admirable consistency and can certainly claim a logical and coherent argument.
One can be against the war because of the prospect — or actuality — of personal suffering. The loss of a family member. This is tragic, and difficult to argue, but it’s an orthogonal argument to the virtue (or lack thereof) of the war. Moreover, to reverse the argument, we don’t let the parents of children slaughtered on 9/11 make our country’s policies either, or we might well have nuked Afghanistan from orbit, judging by much of what I read on 9/12.

There are a host of other reasons, good, honorable and consistent, for being against the war. I shan’t examine them here, for my purpose is merely to outline my framework of thinking about the issue.

And then there are the bad reasons to be against the war. The illogical and inconsistent reasons.

That’s the next part. And anyone who read the New York Times today can probably figure out where this is headed.

Respectfully submitted for your consideration,
-wolfe

Shut up and Sing!

Thursday, October 26th, 2006

Content advisory: Some language and images not suitable for young viewers. Nothing that wouldn’t be seen on an American supermarket Magazine cover early in the 21st century though. This one’s also very long.

If you want to start downloading this video to get an advance of what I’m going to be linking (or hate reading lots of words), here goes:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0BZ6aqgvdFI

(But if you hate reading lots of words, you’re on the wrong blog).

Shut up and Sing!“. I’ve mixed feelings about that phrase — even leaving aside its rudeness. To explain it, I’m going to need some time. Here in North America, Hollywood and the music industry are overwhelmingly left-wing. I could — and probably shall — write a whole other blog post on why I think this is so, but that’s another story. (Rudyard Kipling, C.P. Snow, and Stalin all have useful comments on this).

Beccy Cole
Slightly Pouty? Check.
Entertainment Industry? Check.
Politically reliable views? Uh…

For those of us on the starboard side of life, it can be a bit tedious. You find a great writer, artist, or songwriter who’s work you really enjoy, and *presto* you discover that he or she not only disagrees with everything you believe in but holds you in utter contempt for believing it.

Read the Bible? You’re likely an inbred ignorant moron.

Voted Republican? You must be a redneck racist.

Really, I don’t expect the people I pay to entertain me (via Nielson ratings, or via buying their songs, CD’s, going to their movies) to share my views. I don’t remotely mind them expressing theirs, even, possibly, as part of their performance. (This latter is much dodgier, since I paid to see them perform).
I do mind it when they spew out contempt for me and what I believe in.

This has nothing to do with free speech, and everything to do with freedom of choice, freedom of association, and free markets.

The Dixie Chicks are a good example.

Dixie Chicks
The Dixie Chicks. Entertainment Weekly 2 May 2003
Photo Illustration.

In the days before the Iraq War, the Dixie Chicks were touring the UK. Natalie Maines, their lead singer, said at a concert in London, “Just so you know, we’re ashamed the President of the United States is from Texas”.

This shocked many Americans of divers political views. It was viewed as poor form of her to criticize the President while on foreign soil and poor judgment to criticize him when the country was on the verge of war.

Needless to say, many conservative country music fans (US country music fans tend to be conservative as opposed to liberal) announced they’d stop buying the Dixie Chicks’ CDs.

The photo illustration above pretty much encapsulates the media firestorm at the time.

I happen to think President Bush phrased it succinctly, though not as eloquently as he could have. Of course the Dixie Chicks response… well lets just say that made Bush look like Demosthenes, Socrates, Cicero, Jackson, Patton, Sojourner Truth, Jefferson, Bryan, Churchill and Arouet rolled into one:

‘’The Dixie Chicks are free to speak their mind,’’ Bush told Tom Brokaw at the time, adding, ‘’They shouldn’t have their feelings hurt just because some people don’t want to buy their records when they speak out. You know, freedom is a two-way street.’’

After watching this footage, Maines repeats the president’s comment about how the group shouldn’t have their ‘’feelings hurt,’’ incredulous, and then says, ‘’What a dumb f—.’’ She then looks into the camera, as if addressing Bush, and reiterates, ‘’You’re a dumb f—.’’

Bush had it right. They’ve got a total right to say whatever the #$)* they want about him — without being called traitors, sluts, or Saddam’s angels. They don’t have a right to not have people be offended; they don’t have a right to evade the consequences in a free market economy of their speech.

There should be no governmental consequences for insulting the president… that’s a no-brainer. But for people to say “Hey. I don’t like this. I’m not going to buy their tunes anymore” … well, that’s life.

Freedom is indeed a two-way street; they are totally free to trash him, and people are free not to buy their albums.

If you don’t want to suffer negative financial consequences of your political views as an entertainer, then, well, Shut up and Sing!

Note how the Chicks responded. This, in my view (I welcome disagreement from gwallan) is how most of those on the left typically respond: with invective and a total “I miss the point” attitude of arrogance, conceit and entitlement that only a media culture heavily in bed with them could support. (Not to say Conservatives are never ill-mannered or irrational either).

“You’re a dumb f—”? Yeah, real persuasive argument there, Socrates.

By implication, everyone that agrees with Bush’s point on freedom is also a dumb f—. Thanks Chicks. Last album of yours I’ll buy.

Now here’s a reverse example, from the other side of the world.

Beccy Cole, the pouting minstrelette portrayed at the top.

She’s got a superb song, “Poster Girl” that is the emotional parallel to the “You’re a dumb f—” response from the Dixie Chicks, yet logically, its the antithesis.

Yes, it’s saccharine, sappy, and a touch maudlin. If you loathe country music, you may well not like this. But the lyrics are well worth listening to.

It’s a response to her fans who heavily criticize her support of Australia’s war efforts “On the wrong side of the world”.
It beats “You’re a dumb f—” as a response to fans with whom you disagree.

Poster Girl (lyrics copyright by Beccy Cole Music Pty Ltd. Transcribed by wolfe)

Maybe I’m naive to think we all could get along
So i read your words and all I ask is that you hear my song

You ripped my poster off the wall
‘Cuz I’m the singer that went to the War

You see no good in me at all.
Well pardon me if I believe I haven’t got it wrong
And before you turn your back on me I’ll sing you
One more song

Cuz I shook hands with the diggers [Australian SAS] on the wrong side of the world
With a wife at home that holds her breath and brand new baby girl
And the digger fights for freedom and a job that must be done
And I let go of his hand so proud to be Australian

And if unlike me if you feel no pride at all
Then go ahead and take me off the wall
Because I prefer to be a poster girl on the wrong side of the world

And I’m just the girl that sings the crazy songs
Not qualified to sit and judge
I’ve been right and I know I’ve been wrong
but I’m for peace and I’m for love.

And I admire the burning fire that causes you to fight
I only wish the wrong side of the world had the same right

Now that’s a response to critics. Polite, respectful, and an attempt to intellectually and emotionally engage.

One can, by all means, [I don't] dismiss her arguments, but not, I think her sincerity and civility.

She’s got it right. She’s just the girl who sings the crazy songs… but here’s her world view, and here’s why she does what she does.

I’ll take Beccy Cole from the far side (but emphatically not the Wrong side) of the world any day, over the Dixie Chicks. I’d hope people of good will from the left would take her attitude and decency over that of the Dixie Chicks.

So: ‘Shut up and Sing!’ ?  No. Just explain, and treat those who disagree with you respectfully and decently.

-wolfe

Despicable.

Sunday, October 15th, 2006

This post has been updated since originally being filed.

Poverty stricken mother of the baby Keanu Reeves is adopting tells her story.

The mother of the little girl adopted by Keanu Reeves in Malawi has described her feelings of confusion and powerlessness in the face of the actor’s determination to take her only surviving child away.

Peasant Yohane Banda, who can barely read or write, admitted she didn’t fully understand what was happening when she went to court on Thursday in her best clothes to see for the first and only time the man who was offering her 13-month-old daughter a new life in the West.

All she knew, as she sat in her dirt-stained cotton skirt, a check blouse and her treasured black denim jacket at the High Court in Lilongwe, the capital of Malawi, was that the dark-haired caucasian man standing before him her in a black suit was hoping to take her daughter away.

Yohane’s court ordeal will further intensify criticism that Reeves had flown into the poor African country and used his wealth and celebrity status to try to steamroller authorities into granting a fast-track adoption.

Meanwhile Yohane, 31, whose husband Maro died a week after their daughter was born, was left to reflect on the confusing events of her day in court with Reeves.

This is despicable. Wealthy western men are able to rip away a child from a loving mother, a recent widow?

Are we not revolted by this!?

And why all the CRAP about how she was dressed? What does that matter? “dirt-stained cotton skirt”? Her “treasured black denim jacket”? How condescending and contemptuous of her. Come on, that’s all a blatant invitation to disrespect her. And her background as a peasant? vs. Reeve’s as a movie star!? WTF!?

That is so sexist. My Lord. If the situation were reversed, would we be talking about how a father was dressed? Disgusting.

Would we be dismissing him in that way via his social status? Despicable.

Moreover, some say Reeves has an odd sexual background. What if he might be trying to be some kind of ghastly pedophile and abuse that young girl. If nothing else, can he really raise her properly?

Oh wait.

Sorry.

I got that entire story totally wrong. It’s not Keanu Reeves; it’s Madonna. Yohane is not a widow, but a widower who lost his beloved wife. The child isn’t a girl, but a boy.

So there’s no problem. It’s just a dad and son being split up, and a woman is in control.

Commenting on his background, and the way he’s dressed is perfectly appropriate, it shows how much more important Madonna is than he.

Cool beans. Back to normal, all. No need for outrage. (And no, I don’t think Mr. Reeves is remotely a pedophile, just a bad actor who nevertheless entertains millions.)

UPDATE: Thanks to Biz for spotting a missed gender change on my part, rectified above via strikeout.

Some below seem to have the impression that I am suggesting it’s harder for a man to give up a child than a woman, or that the story of a woman being forced to give up her child to a foreigner is somehow less important than a man. This is not the case at all; by doing the gender reversal I was trying to point this out. Evidently this was a decidedly unsuccessful effort on my part — and/or I’m wrong on what I do believe — that flying in and taking a child away from a loving parent who doesn’t fully know or understand what’s going on (rather than helping the parent) is a bad thing. 

I also believe far more effort is generally made to prevent a child being separated from his/her mother than his/her father. I readily admit Zogmama’s counterexample of Jolie’s adoption is a good one.

I also think the oft-made feminist complaint that reporters focus overly on a woman’s clothing is neatly countered here; Biz makes the excellent point, below, that this is in part a matter of bad reporting.
-wolfe

The ‘yellow race’ ?

Friday, October 13th, 2006

This one’s for Female and Gwallan. Well, everyone, but it’s a story with an Aussie tie-in.

File this under ‘what was he smoking’. Those who’ve followed my writings know that I tend to support Israel. By and large, I think she’s on the right side against some truly evil forces. That doesn’t mean I support everything she does, and, honestly, at times I wish the state of Israel had been created out of Southern Manitoba… or some such place far, far away from the Middle East. But what’s done is done.

And I hate political correctness. It’s dumb, asinine.

With that out of the way, Naftali Tamir, Israel’s Ambassador to Australia (and New Zealand and assorted other bits of Oceania) said some utterly stunning things in an interview with Haaretz, an Israeli newspaper, earlier this week.

“Israel and Australia are like sisters in Asia. … We are in Asia without the characteristics of Asians. We don’t have yellow skin and slanted eyes. Asia is basically the yellow race. Australia and Israel are not - we are basically the white race. We are on the western side of Asia and they are on the southeastern side.”

Whoa. Yeah, there are Jewish racists. I knew a couple of them, growing up. But most Jews I know have been amongst the most urbane and cultivated people I know. Tolerant of (and at times curious about) my faith, and generally very decent people.

This is… this is frankly crazy-sounding talk. It’s like what we expect to hear from a drunken Hollywood actor.

This way of perceiving the world — as the “white race” vs. the “yellow race” — it’s a weltanschauung that I have considerable difficulty in grasping. It’s like something out of the Victorian age (or, for resolute Americans, the Gilded Age).

It’s not that I can’t see things in terms of power politics. Pre-9/11 (and to some degree post-) I’d no trouble with the vision that the middle of the 21st Century was likely to be a struggle (probably scientific and economic in nature) of some sort between America and China, with Europe fading away. But that wouldn’t have been a racial struggle in even a tertiary sense! I’d say nationality, ideology, culture, and religion (in roughly that order) all would have come well before race as causes.

My great-grandmother was a lovely lady. But, traveling through Britain in the 1960’s she’d say “Look! There’s another one! [meaning a non-white person]“. She might well have expressed views identical to those of Mr. Tamir. She’d certainly have found nothing strange about them.

But she was born in the Victorian Age, with Victoria ascendant. She’s been over 30 years in the gloam of the grave.

She wasn’t Israel’s Ambassador in 2006.

-wolfe

UPDATE: “The Foreign Ministry on Friday condemned remarks by the Israeli ambassador to Australia” I should darn well hope so.

-w

Girls Shouldn’t Read.

Friday, October 6th, 2006

Well, at least they shouldn’t read something icky. Like the Bible.

Amber Mangum was a frequent reader during lunch breaks at her Prince George’s County middle school, silently soaking up the adventures of Harry Potter and other tales in the spare minutes before afternoon classes. The habit was never viewed as a problem — not, a lawsuit alleges, until the book she was reading was the Bible.

A vice principal at Dwight D. Eisenhower Middle School in Laurel last month ordered Amber, then 12, to stop reading the Bible or face punishment…

It’s a lawsuit. So who knows if the allegations are true. But I’ve personally felt discrimination while reading the Bible.

I was in a Faculty lounge, reading my KJV. A pair of feminist professors stopped by.

“Do you actually believe that!?” one said.
“Well, I’m dubious on the sun, moon, and stars standing still for Joshua… but yes, I believe in God and Jesus Christ.”

She snorted with contempt.

“Come on, what are you, a Rethuglican?

Fortunately for me, my department chair is a deeply closeted Christian (shh!). Also fortunately for me, I simply lecture. My main job is in the corporate world.

And somehow, I don’t think if I’d been reading the Holy Koran that those ‘ladies’ would have stopped and made their acerbic comments.

Just an early 21st century vignette from my life… and, allegedly, Amber’s.

People aren’t free to push religion as science. They shouldn’t be free in any number of ways. But there should surely be tolerance for diverse beliefs. I’m a highly rational Christian that tends to believe in Intelligent Design. (I don’t remotely think ID should be taught as science; I think evolution is a fairly sound theory. I just don’t think that everything arose through blind chance) But when I’m treated with contempt — by people considerably dumber than I — because of my beliefs… well… I find that insulting. And pathetic.

Speak Freely! Have you been hurt in the workplace by your beliefs?

-wolfe

Best performance from Bob Hope ever

Wednesday, October 4th, 2006

A young Bob Hope delivers this immortal political opinion.

Hope: Maybe you know what a zombie is?

Expert: When a person dies, and is buried, it seems a certain voodoo priest who has the power to bring him back to life…

Woman: Horrible!

Expert: It’s worse than horrible because a zombie has no will of his own. You see them sometimes, walking around blindly with dead eyes, following orders, not knowing what they do and not caring…

Hope: You mean like Democrats?

Hollywood must have been very different back then.
-wolfe

Montreal Shootings (3)

Saturday, September 23rd, 2006

Jan Wong, a Toronto journalist, seems to agree with much of my basic thesis on the Dawson college shootings.

What many outsiders don’t realize is how alienating the decades-long linguistic struggle has been in the once-cosmopolitan city. It hasn’t just taken a toll on long-time anglophones, it’s affected immigrants, too. To be sure, the shootings in all three cases were carried out by mentally disturbed individuals. But what is also true is that in all three cases, the perpetrator was not pure laine, the argot for a “pureâ€? francophone. Elsewhere, to talk of racial “purityâ€? is repugnant. Not in Quebec.

Not surprisingly, her remarks have drawn outrage from many, including the Premier of Quebec and the Prime Minister of Canada.

Jan Wong’s argument [is] prejudiced, absurd, irresponsible and without foundation.

I’ve great respect for the PM. I think he’s a pretty good guy. But, he’s trolling for votes in Quebec, and, sensibly, has no desire to open old linguistic wounds. He’s desperate to avoid being painted as “right-wing” by a media that’s very hostile to him. Finally, he didn’t spend the time growing up in Quebec that a good number of my family did. He’s seen primarily the best of Quebec; I’ve seen the best (which is great indeed) and the worst.

I know few here have great interest in this topic, but I wanted to follow it up. I think the challenge of building stable, happy societies from diverse cultural elements will remain one of the great challenges of the 21st century for the West.

I hope we succeed. I don’t think Quebec is a great model to follow on this, though it’s great in many other respects.
-wolfe

Another Academic Shooting in Montreal (2)

Sunday, September 17th, 2006

Last time, we discussed some of the history of Montreal (and Québec).

We wound up noting that the society had gone from arch-socially-conservative to arch-socially-liberal. A very high divorce rate, high illegitimate births, high abortion rates, and very low fertility.

Elements of, to put it bluntly, bullying at best, and minor terror at worst had been permitted to seize control of the social fabric and rend it, particularly treatment of minorities.

More specifically, for those not “pur laine” (literally “pure wool”) descendants of old-line French settlers, there was now a profound ‘otherness’ to their presence in society. On the surface, Quebec was a welcoming multi-cultural state. Digging deeper, this wasn’t so clear. At least neither the welcoming nor multi-cultural part.

So. We now have a series of boys and men. (NB- one essay, linked below, is by “Morris Wolfe”. He’s no relation, and is not remotely the source of my pseudonym, ‘wolfe’.):

Gamil Gharbi aka Marc Lepine, the son of an Algerian Muslim immigrant and a Quebec woman. His father was a violent alcoholic who abused the family. Gharbi changed his name to the more Canadian (or at least Quebecois) “Marc Lepine”, both to repudiate his father, and, perhaps, to try and fit in.

Valery Fabrikant, born in Minsk, and immigrated to Canada in 1979. Appointed as an associate professor, eccentric, with a severe personality disorder, he harrased his colleagues and spoke of shooting people.

Kimveer Gill, 25, whom published reports have identified as the most recent shooter, and as a first or second generation Canadian of Indian origin.

Lepine was a young man who, rejected by the Canadian Armed Forces (as anti-social and unstable), and rejected by Ecole Polytechnique (as not having the prerequisites) as an engineering applicant, blamed his troubles upon women and feminism.

Horrifyingly, in December 1989, he went to Poly, shot and killed large numbers of young women, almost all engineering students.

Such a shock. First, it was the slaughter of women; second, women who were doing something bold and different. Engineering isn’t an easy path; some have likened it to being educated by a firehose of knowledge.

This was a solidly left-wing jurisdiction, with nice gun control, unlike the terrible United States. How could this happen?

Time passed. Gun laws tightened.

In 1992, Valery Fabrikant, in Montreal’s second of four [I think] universities where engineering is taught (Laval, McGill, Poly, Concordia) himself went on a killing spree, at Concordia. You can read about the poor and disgusting man’s story in the link above, but suffice to say he wasn’t aiming at women; he was aiming at engineering professors and department heads.

And now, 2006. Another academic shooting. We need to be careful here. Mr. Gill may not be the shooter. He may indeed be not ‘immigrant anglo’ consigned to double minority status by a perhaps-hostile society but, conceivably the purest of the pur laine.

That said, I’m not holding my breath. If I’m wrong, I’ll certainly humbly retract.

Now. What the #$*) am I saying? That immigrants are more likely to commit crimes?

Quite the contrary. Legal immigrants are traditionally more law-abiding, not less. My Dad’s an immigrant to North America, so I guess that makes me second generation.
Yet… 3 mass-shooting sprees in 17 years in one city. All 3 are by males. All 3 under a heavy regime of gun control. All 3 by first or second generation immigrants who appear to feel very alienated. [Mr Gill's website, according to the Volkh Conspiracy, a generally reliable lawyers' blog, is discussed here.]

Three men — I’d almost be tempted to call Gill and Lepine boys, for in my mind they were not remotely mature despite their chronological age — Three men/boys shoot many people.

It’s the tip of the iceberg. Society’s situation doesn’t remotely excuse their behavior. But it remains the tip of the iceberg.

Three men, loosely attached to society, feeling no constraints, lash out in evil.

Millions of women in Quebec, feeling no constraints, respond with abortions, and illegitimate births.

A society that tolerates decades of low-level terror, harrassment, bullying, and ostracization of minorities, coupled with utter destruction of traditional institutions, and a society that focuses on the destruction of the family and the exaltation of the state… can only reasonably accept the unintended consequences of radical narcissistic selfishness.

Lepine and Fabrikant are guilty. No excuses. Ditto, the Montreal Shooter, presumably, at time of writing, Mr. Gill.

But, as a lot of leftists love to cite “root causes”, there is value in looking at where the formation of evil can be incubated, and why. Doesn’t change responsibility. Does make us wonder if the hard left-wing bullying tactics of Quebec are really what we would want for Canada or the US.
-wolfe