Saturday, November 1, 2008

November 1 - New posts at Heidi Li's Potpourri



A variety of new posts are available at the new home of Heidi Li's Potpourri.

A couple, but there are others:

Conscientious objection and conscientious abstention
The Equal Rights Amendment and the First Hundred Days


technorati tags:
| |
More at: News 2 Cromley

3 Days And Counting - The 14 Speeches of the Obama Campaign: #3, End of Primary Season/Minneapolis Speech



June 3, 2008: Minneapolis, Minnesota - The End of the Democratic Primary Season





technorati tags:
| |
More at: News 2 Cromley

YOUR help is needed



OK.

This is it.

The weekend where the rubber hits the road. I'm going to ask you to get them to come along with you and do whatever you do: phonebank, canvass, organize for GOTV. All hands on deck. We really need for everyone to do what they can. Go to BarackObama.com to see where you can help in your state. November 4th is Tuesday. This is the day where we can see the America we want to happen actually be realized. November 4th is that first crucial step.

technorati tags:
| |
More at: News 2 Cromley

The Phoenicians really got around



One in 17 residents of the Mediterranean basin has some Phoenician bloodline.

technorati tags:
| |
More at: News 2 Cromley

We... Uh, We Entrusted This Guy with Our Foreign Policy?



This, from Larry Eagleburger, is perhaps the most pathetic walkback that I've ever seen:
You are witnessing something quite unique—a man who’s about to talk to you while he has his foot in his mouth. I made a serious mistake yesterday. I was quoted correctly. I wasn’t thinking when I said it—in fact, I was discussing foreign policy, and this was in that context. And I was just plain stupid. And if I have given the flim-flam artist Barack Obama some success with this, I am deeply apologetic. I did not intend it.

In fact, if you look at this carefully, on the question of experience for example, Sarah Palin has been a governor, she has executive ability, she knows energy issues. Now you tell me what Barack Obama has ever done in the way of executive business, doing anything in the executive field. He has been in the Senate for some two years and he has been there half of the time and seldom votes on issues.

I’m sorry, I made a terrible mistake.

Should have claimed that you were off your meds, Larry.

technorati tags:
| |
More at: News 2 Cromley

Big Fights on Old Questions



How important is Gallipoli to Australian identity?
A row has erupted between Australia's PM Kevin Rudd and his Labor predecessor Paul Keating over the importance of Gallipoli, a WWI battle site in Turkey.

Mr Keating dismissed as "nonsense" the view that a new Australian identity was forged in 1915 at Gallipoli, where 300,000 troops were killed or injured.

Mr Rudd disagreed saying: "It's part of our national psyche, it is part of our national identity."

Not being Australian, I can't definitively comment on the importance of Gallipoli to national identity. However, Gallipoli does have a few of characteristics that mark it as critical national symbol. First, it was indeed an enormously costly battle, one of the first such fought by Australia. Second, it was a defeat; for some reason, defeats seems to produce national psychic markers more than victory. Finally, it was a defeat that could be blamed on the British. Australian national identity has little to do with any conflict against the Turks, but much to do with distinguishing Australia from Great Britain. The perceived British betrayal of Australia at Gallipoli would seem to provide this distinction, and thus provide the grounds for the creation of a real Australian national identity. I understand that the Dieppe Raid plays a similar, if more understated, role in Canada. Of course, Gallipoli is also crucial to Turkish national identity; Mustafa Kemal rose to prominence as a commander at Gallipoli, and this line is about as singular a distillation of the role of battle in modern nationalism as I can imagine:
I don’t order you to fight, I order you to die. In the time it takes us to die, other troops and commanders can come and take our places.

As is this, apparently inscribed on the Attaturk memorial in Canberra:
Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives... you are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours... You the mothers who sent their sons from far away countries wipe away your tears. Your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. Having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well.


In a rather more serious dispute:
A high-ranking Japanese military official was dismissed Friday for writing an essay stating that the United States had ensnared Japan into World War II, denying that Japan had waged wars of aggression in Asia and justifying Japanese colonialism.

The Defense Ministry fired Gen. Toshio Tamogami, chief of staff of Japan’s air force, late on Friday night, only hours after his essay was posted on a private company’s Web site. The quick dismissal seemed intended to head off criticism from China, South Korea and other Asian nations that have reacted angrily to previous Japanese denials of its militarist past.

Actually, it's the Japan Air Self-Defense Force, not the Japanese Air Force. Anyway, in addition to claiming that Roosevelt tricked the Japanese into attacking Pearl Harbor, General Tamogami asserted that many East Asian countries have a positive view of Japanese behavior in World War II (maybe he's thinking of Indonesia?), and that Korea was "prosperous and safe" under 35 years of Japanese colonial rule. The article was apparently submitted for an essay writing contest on a website, and won General Tamogami $30000. Hope it was worth it...

technorati tags:
| |
More at: News 2 Cromley

Homophobia is Not A Means of Advancing Gay and Lesbian Rights



To echo what Rob (and Henry) have said, it's worth drawing a distinction here. Reasonable people can argue about "outing" in the sense of, say, a newspaper publishing reliable information that a politician with rabidly anti-gay views is in fact gay or lesbian. While I agree with Rob that I don't have a lot of sympathy for a politician who wants to make the consensual sexual choices of adults a major political and public policy issue and then gets outed, I'm not really crazy about even this. Homophobic positions are equally bad on the merits whether they're advanced by heterosexuals or not, and a cursory examination of justifications for discussing various irrelevant aspects of the lives of public officials will show that "hypocrisy" justifications tend to become pretty weak tea -- it gets so that anybody who's ever appeared in public with their spouse is completely fair game. Basically, I would say that I probably wouldn't publish such information in most cases and don't think it's really relevant to anything, but there's at least a fair argument to be made in such cases.

But the anti-McConnell ad is another matter entirely, completely beyond any reasonable justification. The salient fact is that the ad is disgustingly homophobic. It's just directly trying to mobilize anti-gay sentiment against McConnell, which is beyond any progressive pale. Fighting bigotry with bigotry isn't a defensible position, and of course the ad isn't even trying to do the former. Nobody should want to unseat McConnell this way.

technorati tags:
| |
More at: News 2 Cromley