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Cold War River

Saturday, August 30, 2003

Journalists should have some respect for the truth.

D Day Gilligan barred from reporting duties:

History, it is said, is written by the victor, but journalists should have some respect for the truth.
Naughty, naughty: Are you from the BBC?
BBC executives denied that Gilligan's departure from day-to-day reporting on the Radio 4 Today programme was linked to revelations last week that he sent emails to two MPs on the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee suggesting questions they could ask Kelly that would be 'devastating' for the Government.
Donald Anderson, the Labour chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, said it was unprecedented for a witness to an inquiry to try to guide MPs' questions.
Mr. Gilligan is about to learn something himself about the sins of omission

· Dorothy Dixie [Guardian (UK)]
· Meister Spinners [BritishSpin]

Auction in stolen goods

Government is a broker in pillage, and every election is a sort of advance auction in stolen goods.
H.L. Menchken

Can any rational soul blame Supermen like Packer and Murdoch for attempting to sink Fairfax flagship which seems to be peppered with independent journalists?
The practice of socialising losses and privatising gains is hardly an Australian invention. As Alan Ramsey, of Fairfax Fame, once dangerously observed: Almost always, in politics, money is at the root of the greatest grovelling.

Dangers that Come with Freedom of Information Naked Leases: Shock Horror! Isolated Private Perks Exposed to Prying Public

Big businesses and some of the world's wealthiest people are renting taxpayer-owned land in NSW for peppercorn rates under a system that is riddled with inconsistencies and loopholes.
Office buildings, factories, marinas, petrol stations, restaurants, prestigious golf courses, five-star resorts and homes have been built on the land.
The total rent collected by the Department of Lands for 37.5 million hectares - nearly half the State - is just $60 million a year. That is less than $2 per hectare in the public purse.

· Identifying the Commonwealth Buck [SMH with a link to related article]
· Their Post Political Honor [SMH]

Postwar order

Antipodean Heros Nugget Coombs and his place in the postwar order

The publication of Tim Rowse’s biography of H.C. Coombs provides an appropriate context to further explore the life of Coombs. In particular, the relationship between Coombs and his environment is an important consideration, given Coombs’ iconic status in ‘progressive’ circles in Australia. Inquiry into the factors that both facilitated and constrained Coombs’ influence suggests that his influence has been overstated. But Coombs’ experience is relevant for a better understanding of the origins of the current economic policy regime in Australia.
· Coombs [The Drawing Board, University of Sydney]

Kids caught in the poverty trap

Hopes fade for children caught in the poverty trap

Australian children born into poor families have little chance of escaping poverty - at least by the time they turn 12, a new study indicates.
· Kids [ SMH]
· just scraping by [SMH ]

Dhildren caught in the poverty trap

Hopes fade for children caught in the poverty trap

Australian children born into poor families have little chance of escaping poverty - at least by the time they turn 12, a new study indicates.
· [SMH ]
· just scraping by [ SMH]

Thursday, August 28, 2003

Expulsion of members

Expulsion of members of the NSW parliament

The expulsion of an MP is an example of the power of a parliament to regulate its own constitution and composition for the purpose of preserving its dignity and efficiency, as well as to preserve public confidence in the institution. It is an ultimate sanction that is rarely used.
· MPs [Information Service, Parliament of New South Wales]

Wednesday, August 27, 2003

Business Mischief

Business THE SMALL BUSINESS ABOMINATION -- Celebrating 50 Years of SBA Mischief

In Amerika, an entrepreneur's only limit should be his or her own ideas and desire to succeed," states the website of the Small Business Administration, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year.
Nice slogan, but if "empowering America's entrepreneurs" is the SBA's mission, then entrepreneurship includes more than simply the crafting of new ways to offer customers a better mousetrap at a lower price; it includes political entrepreneurship, i.e., milking political connections, gaming the system, or committing outright fraud or bribery in order to procure special favors. This is what has made the SBA notorious for decades of scandals.
Of course, political entrepreneurship is at the core of the SBA, given its reliance on OTM (other taxpayers' money). But it has been especially pronounced under section 8(a) -- the SBA's set-aside program for "disadvantaged" groups, a nebulous term that has included non-whites, poor whites, and millionaires from poor states (like Susan McDougall of Whitewater fame), as historian Jonathan J. Bean explains in the summer issue of THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW.
The victims of corruption are not limited to anonymous taxpayers. Even after the 1988 SBA "reforms" passed in the wake of the Wedtech scandal, for example, self-made contractor Rebecca Browne, a Native American, turned down an offer to front for 8(a) money and, as a result, received death threats and had her equipment stolen; today she is homeless and destitute.
Tim Fay, owner of four-person video and CD production company, protested in vain that he was discriminated against when he was refused the opportunity to bid on a federal contract that was awarded (non-competitively) to a "disadvantaged" firm with one hundred employees and $11 million in annual revenue. Multiply the faces of Browne and Fay by tens of thousands and you begin to see how destructive the SBA's 8(a) set-aside program has been to genuine entrepreneurship. And multiply their faces by millions and you'll see the damage imposed on American taxpayers.
"Twenty-two years ago," Bean writes, "Louisiana businessman Kirk Fordice wrote to President Ronald Reagan, complaining that 'the 8(a) program is snowballing along . . . and leaving legitimate small business contractors bloody, beaten and bankrupt.' Hard-working business owners such as Rebecca Browne, Kirk Fordice, and Tim Fay are still waiting for the snowball to melt and for justice to be done. Recent history suggests that day may be a long time coming."

The law: A matter of the letter and the spirit

The local Chamber of Commerce was on the march last March – an army of money-makers and money-changers on a mission to make sure voters approved the SPLOST referendum.
Want taxes lowered, streets paved and rain drained? Just vote yes on March 18, chamber members told us time and time again.
The multimedia campaign was devised and delivered with military precision. Call it smart bombardment. TV and radio. Billboards and newspapers. Phone banks and direct mail. No weapon was left undrawn by the business brigade.

· Power [Savannah ]
· Bob, Mate! Screams and howls of the Industry [John Birmingham used be an author]
· Shame of the Cities [INDEPENDENT REVIEW]
· BEYOND THE BROKER STATE [THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW]
· 'Burn, Baby, Burn' [THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW]

Bob, mate! mate!

Bob, mate!

It's a bit rich for the Premier to blame mateship for alcohol abuse
Damn, but it's good to live in a state with an intellectual for premier. Not for us the dopey undergrad antics of the Queensland Premier, Peter Beattie, swimming with sharks or diving headlong into street brawls between outraged citizens and ladies of the night.
No, NSW is blessed by a thinker who'd like us all to peer more deeply into the way of things. Then we could see how a contested, ill-defined, malleable concept such as "mateship" lurks beneath society's problems with alcohol; 3000 deaths a year, unknowable levels of domestic abuse, marital breakdown, street violence and the disintegration of some Aboriginal communities. Who would have thought that "mateship" rather than policy failure, irresponsible profiteering, or simple criminal stupidity was to blame for the road toll or date rape or any of the other problems often linked to alcohol abuse?
Being fair to Carr, he made his comments during the opening speech at the NSW Summit on Alcohol Abuse yesterday. Such keynote addresses are almost inevitably content-free, allowing some worthy notable to plonk on at length like a champion trainspotter.
Carr is an intelligent man who despairs of the relentlessly moronic tone of most public discourse, and you can discern in his dog and trumpet routine at the summit an attempt to engage with the issue at something other than the level of a sound bite.
But that's hardly an excuse for shunting responsibility for the very real problems to which he alluded onto a chimera like "mateship". Perhaps he was attempting to encourage a discussion on the role of personal responsibility.
As so much of the worst of our drunken behaviour occurs in the presence of friends, what obligations do friends have to each other and to the innocent bystanders they might inconvenience, attack, vomit on or stumble over as they face-plant in a gutter? These are reasonable questions for a moral philosopher, or even a drunk with a philosophical bent.
However, Carr is a political leader in charge of a state that regulates the production, sale and consumption of alcohol. The state earns vast amounts of money from taxing the alcohol industry. It empowers armed agents in the form of the police to intervene, occasionally with fatal results, when citizens prove unable to handle their alcohol consumption.
And it is responsible for providing health care to those injured or otherwise incapacitated by the ravages of alcohol. It's a bit rich then for a person in such a position to fob us off with a lot of old tosh about the need to examine our culture and "the true value of mateship".
Carr reportedly said that society would have to change if we wanted to be rid of alcoholism. He asked whether we'd be "willing to adjust our mores, our way of life, to explore better means of managing alcohol".
These are the sort of vague motherhood statements politicians habitually deploy when confronted, not just by a difficult issue, but also by a complex array of cashed up powerful concerns with no interest in having that issue addressed, or their activities genuinely constrained by government action.
The Australian Hotels Association, its allies in the gaming industry, and of course the brewing companies which earn millions from selling their products to wife-beaters, drink-drivers and date rapists need fear nothing in a possible War on Mateship. Their response to Carr's speech was low-key, possibly non-existent.
· Screams and howls of the industry [John Birmingham used be an author]

Media

Media The BBC led the launch of radio in 1922 and television in 1936

It seems every generation has a media revolution. For my mother, it was radio; for me it was television; for my children, it is digital.
Each revolution is different, and we are still learning about how digital can make a real difference to people's lives.
Today I want to look at the future of the BBC in the context of what we already know about how the digital revolution is unfolding.

· Unfolding [DigitalSpy]

Capital Imperialist
The BBC has been alarmed by the increasingly close relationship between the Government and Mr Murdoch's British newspapers, at a time when the BBC's relationship with New Labour is strained as never before. The frostiness of the relationship has raised speculation that the Government will consider abolishing the licence fee in its forthcoming review of the BBC's charter.
· Power of One [Independent ]

God himself had lost patience

God himself had lost patience
My little Lenin!” said Stalin, tapping Kruschchev’s skull in mockery: “His head is hollow!” But looking stupid was part of Krushchev’s plan
· Thunder roared, forked lightning crackled and a wall of rain fell from the sky [LBR ]

Sunday, August 24, 2003

Leading Lady

It’s worth noting that in the many months since Media Dragon first went live, I haven’t felt the need to recommend too many articles to you. Still, colourful insider stories do find their way to my desk from time to time, and "good" isn’t nearly strong enough a word to describe the article penned by Alex Mitchell. Alex does not seem to have as high opinion about Vaclav Havel as I have, but we share the wisdom embedded in the quote by Charles de Gaulle: In order to become the master, the politician poses as the servant.

Bloodstained Premier Shakespearean City of SIN

The script for the election of the next Lord Mayor of Sydney in March 2004 has a quality that is purely Shakespearean.
History, power and a highly developed sense of public duty course through her veins. She is the great-granddaughter of Thomas Hughes, member of the Legislative Council and mayor of Sydney in 1903, and author of an impressive book called Sydney: Biography Of A City.

· The leading lady, Lucy Turnbull, is daughter of the city's noblest Queen's Counsel [SMH]

Saturday, August 23, 2003

Telling the Truth

Clever man deceives by telling the truth

We simply become like the thousands of other low-wage working parents with few options and little hope. We are being set up to fail. Then we are punished for "failing." We "welfare queens" ask you to consider the social costs of current welfare policies as they relate to the future of our society. This is one thing that all of our children share.
· Truth [CommonDreams ]

Freedom And What?

Anger and alienation have infected a system that treats vocal citizens as troublemakers.
Thursday, Aug. 28 is the 40th anniversary of the famous March on Washington, the venue for one of the world's best remembered speeches: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have A Dream."

· 40 Years After The Dream [TomPaine ]

Now Is Our Time! Amateur Hour

For democracy to truly work, regular people need to get involved.
· Involvement [TomPaine ]
· Americans have not turned toward Bush; they've turned away from the whole system [TomPaine ]

Alienation

Freedom And What?

Anger and alienation have infected a system that treats vocal citizens as troublemakers.
Thursday, Aug. 28 is the 40th anniversary of the famous March on Washington, the venue for one of the world's best remembered speeches: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have A Dream." However, as various voices and interests have co-opted the speech and the memory of the march to suit their interests, few have taken the time to reach back to its true origin and theme. Called "A March for Jobs and Freedom," the March on Washington focused not only on the equality of whites and blacks, but on the rampant economic inequality which prevented franchised blacks -- indeed, those of any racial background other than white -- from gaining the true economic equality that would grant them genuine power. Below, we've excerpted some of the other speeches given at the "March for Jobs and Freedom" to launch a series focusing on the civil rights movement, race relations and economic justice.

· 40 Years After The Dream [TomPaine ]

Green Evitas

In the wake of the February 10 2001 WA election, media commentators have finally begun to acknowledge the source of Hanson's popularity. As ABC, SMH, and NSW Parliamentary Library election commentator Antony Green put it: It's very hard to know what the electorate is thinking at the moment. You've got the suspicion that they don't really like the governments they've got, and they're prepared to just toss them out and they don't care who gets in as a replacement.

Absolute New Oz Modern day Evita & Ka!!sers

Corrupting the democratic process, a Queensland practice as common as palm trees. Actually when you consider branch-stacking, a heinous distortion of democratic principles, it's a national rot.
· Now we feel sorry for her! [ Webdiary]

· It's Porridge for Pauline [BBC]
· Branch Stacking [IchUbersportingpundit ]
· Do not Mention the Kaiser: ALP soft on rorters [ABC ]

$400K and counting - MoveOn has a big day

$400K and counting - MoveOn has a big day
Dear MoveOn member,
In one day MoveOn members have contributed more than $400,000 for our "Defend Democracy" campaign. We've been overwhelmed by the response. The 11 Texas legislators who are right now risking everything for us and for democracy are deeply grateful to receive this support....
http://moveon.org/texasads
Our democracy has survived 227 years for one simple reason: when confronted by extremism, Americans have always united in defense of freedom. The redistricting fight in Texas is a piece of a larger attack on democracy nationwide -- Impeachment; the 2000 election; intimidation on Capital Hill; the California recall; and now congressional redistricting at the whim of the Majority in Congress.
Texas is a first step. Next week, we will ask for your help to defeat the California recall -- specifically, to recruit friends and family in California who are angry about the recall and want to do something about it.

· We can stop this attack on Democracy if we once again stand united [MoveOn ]
· Power to the People [Dennis J. Kucinich:
CommonDreamer]

Friday, August 22, 2003

How Not to Judge Voters & Judge

Tip of the Proverbial Iceberg::Voting Machine

The voting machine wars are heating up and the implications of vote fraud in America are even more ominous.
Computer scientist Avi Rubin, whose Johns Hopkins University team found serious flaws in Diebold Election Systems software abruptly resigned from VoteHere, another election software company.

· VoteHere [ScoopNZ ]
· Suddenly, salivating politicians' hearts go out to Hanson [SMH ]
· Justices order removal of Ten Commandments monument [CNN ]

Man in Little India

McGreevey's Man in Little India

Jeff Pillets and Clint Riley of the Bergen Record investigate one of New Jersey Gov. Jim McGreevey's top fundraisers in the state's South Asian community, an ex-cabby named Rajesh "Roger" Chugh, finding that Chugh leveraged his friendship with Jim McGreevey to intimidate the immigrant community and become the virtual lord of Little India.
· Chugh offered appointments to state posts [ New]Jersey
· MONEY, POLITICS & POWER Invesatigative Series [North JerseyviaScoop]

Man in Little India

McGreevey's Man in Little India

Jeff Pillets and Clint Riley of the Bergen Record investigate one of New Jersey Gov. Jim McGreevey's top fundraisers in the state's South Asian community, an ex-cabby named Rajesh "Roger" Chugh, finding that Chugh leveraged his friendship with Jim McGreevey to intimidate the immigrant community and become the virtual lord of Little India.
· Chugh offered appointments to state posts [ New]Jersey
· MONEY, POLITICS & POWER Invesatigative Series [North JerseyviaScoop]

Wednesday, August 20, 2003

The námêsti,

The námêsti,
the square that bears your name,
bore the names of soldiers
of the young Red Army—until nineteen
eighty-nine, the year no one had to die,
not God nor Kafka, for whom the fire

to warm the icy world was words.

Soviet invasion of Prague Be Not Afraid: As the Universal Solidarity of Freedom Always Prevails

Tomorrow will mark the 35th anniversary of the Soviet invasion of Prague, a vile act which put an iron blanket over freedom in Central Europe for the next 21 years.

The solidarity of the Czechoslovak underground was deeper than the fear of secret police my countrymen shared. Freedom transcends geography, culture and generations. It especially the solidarity of young (naive) romantics, like Jan Palach, who at the age of 22 dreamt of and sacrificed for liberty.
As my folkloric teacher, Marta Chamillova, used to sayIf you want to set something afire, you must burn yourself.
In history there are times when action has to be taken, Jan Palach said from his deathbed.
As B Webb of the Guardian observes: 'Exchanging brutalism for another is not what Havel and his kind have in mind nor do such prescriptions fit the democratic habit of the Czechoslovak temperament, formed long before communism's arrival to power.
· Prague's Second Spring [Current Affairs Bulletin March 1990]
· The Tyranny of Fraternal Normalisation [MediaDragon]
· An Invasion Remembered [NCA]
· Tanks Rolling into Prague [BBC ]
· Communism and freedom cannot coexist [Boston ]

Political arenas

Opponents of progress often want decisions to be made in political arenas

Candle makers, after all, cannot be expected to hail the invention of the electric light bulb, nor hostlers the advent of automobiles, nor canal-boat owners the building of railways, nor TV broadcasters the laying down of cable systems.
· Can this advance be sustained? [Reason]

Monday, August 18, 2003

If one is to remain human

The character in the Quiet American said, Sooner or later, one has to take sides. If one is to remain human.

In some ways, it was a selfish act. I did it so I could sleep at night.

Caroline Baum interviews Elliot Perlman (Good Weekend SMH 16 August 2003 p 33)
Perlman hesitates when asked if he misses Australia.
I am not homesick but I have such affection for the country, it is a member of your family no one can make you angrier... Wherever I am, whether it is with lawyers or writers, I feel like the loyal opposition.

Legal cases teach you to see the effect one can have by telling a story first, before someone else tells it. The natural tendency is to believe the first version, which in court is the prosecution. In life, it is the case presented by the media.

We had such promise, such great institutions. But I have seen terrible changes in the last 20 years, a rapid descent in to inequality and insecurity barely known in the past 100 years. I have been saying in my fiction that Australia has undergone a profound social revolution. In a population of 20million, 2 1/2 million are on social security, one million children come from homes where no one has work, two million are precariously employed. Ducted fear is piped in to offices... No one can plan to pay off their home or their kids education and the arts are grossly underfunded, while most disenfranchised are ingnored except to encourage their hatred of any one different and almost no one in the literary community has said anything about it. And you wonder why I am angry!

All too human

All too human

What do we do in these crazy times?
I became so disillusioned with politicians and what was going on around me that I decided to write an autobiographical album and reaffirm my own sense of identity," he says. "And reaffirm some fundamentals such as the value of humanity over politicised definitions of what people are supposed to be.
For instance, the whole issue of nationality. Politicians are trying to make everyone paranoid and territorial, whether it's about asylum seekers or immigration or anyone who isn't white. It's got to a point where the idea that one human being is as valuable as another has become a radical concept. This issue of nationality is used to manipulate people's thinking away from that. The whole notion of being proud to be English or Australian or American feels very bizarre to me. And this is going on right across the world.
It's very clever to tie up morality and nationality. A very clever technique of government. Particularly people like John Howard, who I have absolutely no respect for whatsoever, unfortunately. It's a tool to make people feel that they are on the moral low ground if they disagree.
Ignorance is almost being championed by the media and governments right now," he says. "All these things are very useful tools: to promote ignorance, to promote prejudice, to promote insecurity and paranoia. It's very easy to rule people and acquire more power. And to feed more lies into people's minds. And it feeds upon itself.
I'm much more afraid of people like John Howard than I was Pauline Hanson because Pauline Hanson you could see coming a mile off and she was too thick to make any real difference. But John Howard knows how to get into people's psyches to promote that nationalism and use that to create negativity and hostility and aggression and territorialism. It's a very clever technique, something politicians use the world over.
If everyone was to think of themselves first of all as just simply human beings and think of other people then, as human beings, we'd have a very different world.

· feed more lies [SMH ]

Sunday, August 17, 2003

Kafka & Ka!!

The big thieves hang the little ones.
-- Czech Proverb

Komputerised Operational Policing System (KOPS) A Different sort of Hanging

Traffic files 'big brother gone mad'
· Ka!! Files (Kafka Kome & See) [SMH ]

Saturday, August 16, 2003

Presenting Antipodean Anonymous Bloggers: The Tongue in Czeech

Presenting Antipodean Anonymous Bloggers: The Tongue in Czeech (#2a Aug 2003 AD)
The same friend who asked me last week whether I deliberately skipped czeching out ABCWatch has also pointed out that the relationship & continuity between the practices of blogging and toilet graffiti is rather strong. Often, there is flaming and counter-flaming around a particular graffiti.

One of the main reason I went straight to After Grog Blog was that I do not know my Roman alphabet too well since I was brought up on the staple diet of Soviet cyrilic letters (sic).(smile)

Strangely, most of the journalists I seem to admire happen to carry I am from the ABC press badges. As a result, I have a fairly balanced biased for ABC. Without any doubt the ABC has on its books some dead wood, some of the damp leaves have even been decorated with journalistic awards, (but then again Hitler was nominated in the late 1930s for Nobel peace prize.) I believe Russell Balding inherited an organisation peppered with community minded staff and most programs are blessed with walking and talking encyclopaedias.

Conspiracy leaden rumour has it that Uncle ABCWatch and bloggers like Prrrrofessor Yupib are sexed up group of ASIO uncles. In 30 years the younger generation will examine the validity of the sievx gossip too. Some are In De-nial that sexing down is also taking place in virtually world down under.

In a recent entry Unisexed UNCLE ABCWatch denies being the kind of simpleton who saw effects where there are (sic), in fact, only phenomena, and then tried to attach causes to them, he would conclude that Richard Alston's assault on Auntie had had some moderating effect.

Then we read that it's to Miranda Devine's credit that she's defending Auntie, after David Marr's use of his Media Watch pulpit for a gratuitous attack on her.
This is her argument:

There are pockets of audacious bias in the ABC, but similar pockets exist in other media, and appeal largely to the already converted. Fair-minded people apply a mental filter.
But the ABC is also about much more than AM. It's Play School and Bananas In Pyjamas in the mornings when other channels run cartoons in between ads which turn three-year-olds into Coco Pops junkies. The ABC is Angela Catterns and Sally Loane, Richard Glover and James Valentine, providing pleasant, informative, ratings-winning radio. It's The 7.30 Report and Lateline doing a professional job on tough issues. Tony Jones the other night gave Richard Butler a polite but deadly grilling about his flip-flopping position on WMDs. The ABC is Australian Story, consistently the best, most surprising gem on TV.


Unisex UNCLE ABCWatch fails to tell us what he expects, wants or is; They-He-She only state(s) what IT... is not:
READER JIM T. HAS BEING (sic)DOING A GASTROPOD, and lifting material, but from Andrew Sullivan rather than the New York Review of Books.
He expects ABCWatch to publish it?
What do you think this is? The Australian?


Insomaniacally Informaniac (sic), Media Dragon, is on the hunt, unmasking and honouring bloggers who are serving, for better or for worse, the virtual Antipodean world. The blogscroll was stolen in the middle of the day from the local Parish.
My bohemian licence really just wanted to create something speculation-provoking and perhaps useful and fun.

Presenting Antipodean Bloggers: The Truth Laid Bear (#2 Aug 2003 AD)

What kinds of personae do we make? What relation do these have to what we have traditionally thought of as the 'whole' person? Are they experienced as an expanded self or as separate from the self? Do our real-life selves learn lessons from our virtual personae? Are these virtual personae fragments of a coherent real-life personality?
-Sherry Turkle

media & the net: Paging Alan Anderson Alan of Weblogestan


The value of blogs like Alan Anderson is that they use their blogs as a memory aid, to leave useful URL's for friends and generally as a personal tool. Other people do read it to, and they get an, interesting view into my daily rituals, but they couldn't care less if no-one viewed it. Also, these bloggers record of how people go about their Ausie life and as a result future historians will blOrgasmise over the fingerprints so generously typed behind.

· Cutting Accent [Alan Anderson]

Alan mates and mates and procreates in both virtual and newspaper lands. To Anderson sons life is more common sense, than cutting science. So cut the bull! A mixing pot of tough convict sons are described as mates:
Tim Blair - Aussie journo and decent right-wing bloke.
Tex - He whacks them hard and often.
Gil Shterzer - The Israeli Guy, living on freedom's frontier right next door to the crazies.


EXTRACTS: Good on him:
The Pope is about the only one in Europe who appears to care about those people - and the only one to listen to scientific advisers. Good on him. He has partly redeemed his claim to moral authority in my eyes.

The Bad:
Those Yanks sure know how to throw a BBQ. Throw another Islamofascist on the barbie, lads.

The Funny:
It is with great regret that I announce the capture of Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf, a.k.a. Comical Ali.
***
Reader: "Alan, you promised to make your site prettier, and all you've done is steal Tim Blair's template."
Alan: "You try holding down a full time job and blogging. Anyhow, you're meant to be reading me for my insightful commentary (cue sniggering), not my choice of colours.
"I wanted this template first, but bloody Blair went and stole it. And I'm only changing to it now because some technophobic reader with a version of Netscape older than I am has complained that he can't load my site. Guess who that was."

Dictionary:
Pissweak cowards or military hawks

Idiosyncrasies:
"Oh, but Alan, it's not an actual bomb; you don't know whether he would ever have used the centrifuges, etc, etc."
To which I reply, "Shut up, you leftie morons. The point is that he was hiding stuff, just as we thought. We couldn't know what, precisely because he was hiding it, and Hans Blix wasn't about to excavate the back yard of every scientist in Iraq. But we weren't about to take the risk. Now you've got evidence that he was trying to deceive us, so you can take your leftie whinging and shove it up where it belongs, together with your dole cheque, you parasitic communist losers."
***
My letter in today's Australian:
"UNION criticism of the breaking of the picket line at BHP Steel highlights a fundamental misconception on the part of many Australian protesters about what constitutes "peaceful protest".
I would fight tooth and nail for unionists' right to protest peacefully at a rally or march. But people have a right to enter their place of work. To blockade their access and then cry "violence" when you are removed is disingenuous. The act of blockading another citizen's right of way is itself an act of violence.
It is high time that we became less tolerant of such unlawful behaviour. Police should be instructed to use all necessary force to break picket lines as soon as they are formed. Anything less is a concession that the rule of law can be usurped by mob rule."

Character Stengths:
Gambling is a great Aussie tradition, so it's time for a bet. When will the War on Iraq start? Unfortunately, I can't run a proper gambling competition (stupid laws), at least not openly. Nor do I have much in the way of prizes to offer. So this one will have to be a friendly bet.
Send in your guess of the day that war will be declared. To clarify, this is the day (Washington DC time) that President Bush announces that the military solution is going ahead. Closest guess(es) will at least get a mention and copious praise for the guesser's strategic insight - or blind luck.
Here's a hint. My guess is 10 February.

Weaknesses:
Andrew Bolt wins the prize for quote of the week with his retort to the Victorian Government committee on water usage which came up with this mendacious twist on the totally banal contemporary fascination with the culturally exotic: "something could be learnt by exploring the drought response strategies adopted by indigenous people, plants and animals".
Like what? Getting Melburnians to suck the juice of the pigface? Having us move from waterhole to waterhole? Making us leave our weak behind? Which tribal strategy did the author of this fashionable piety have in mind?
Challenges:
DEFENCE is a form of insurance. As with most insurance, the temptation is to dispense with it. But as September 11 demonstrated to the US, such an approach to matters of national security can have devastating consequences.

Opportunities:
Getting back to first principles, that is. Left and Right should be over; it should be right or wrong; no matter is writing it whether it is Tim Blair or Tim Dunlop.
Image:
· Amen [ Google]
Quote & Link:
One of the annoying things about believing in free will and individual responsibility is the difficulty of finding somebody to blame your problems on. And when you do find somebody, it's remarkable how often his picture turns up on your driver's license.
-- P.J. O'Rourke
· Three Strikes...and [FiremenUnion ]
Doing:
Lloyd Evans, attending a convention of young Trots and Maoists in the UK, brings us an observation which accords with my own experience:
The hard Left tend to dress carelessly and without any attention to style. Many are physically ill-favoured too. There were plenty of keen-eyed youngsters around, but I don’t recall a single stunner. Guts, limps, spots, humps, corns, boils, scars, tics: these are marks that distinguish the species.
Reading:·
The Voyage of the Catalpa: A Perilous Journey and Six Irish Rebels' Escape to Freedom [Guardian(UK)]
Loving:
Father Christmas and Easter Bunny
Watching:
WWII movies
Bias:
Even Right of Tim Blair. In response to email correspondence, let me state for the record that I did not mean to imply that I agree with all of the new Governor General's views. In particular, I do not support serious religious education in government schools. With that said, I think that the multiculturalists' obsession with wiping any trace of Easter or Christmas out of the classroom is ridiculous. Those festivals are essentially secular Australian events now, quite apart from their separate existence as Christian religious festivals. Anyone who can take offence at Father Christmas and the Easter Bunny needs to take some happy pills and get over themselves.
Temper:
Alan spits out words like a machine gun in Charlton Heston's hands.

Businesses operating without a license

Businesses operating without a license

Michael Mansur and Lynn Horsley of the Kansas City Star used city licensing records to find many Kansas City businesses operating without a license. "City officials acknowledge that the amount of lost revenue could be sizable. 'We're easily missing out on hundreds of thousands of dollars in business license revenue,' said Troy Schulte, the city's acting budget director." In 1989, the paper did a similar survey of business licenses and found similar problems. "After that 1989 investigation, city officials promised to beef up enforcement. But in recent years the city has eliminated field agents who check compliance.
· Making license administration more costly and enforcement more cumbersome [ viaScoop]

Voters

Florida Voters

Beth Reinhard, Tim Henderson and Erika Bolstad of the Miami Herald surveyed the voter rolls in Broward and Miami-Dade counties, finding "nearly half a million people who have never cast a ballot," some 25 percent of the electorate in two of Florida's largest counties. Miami has had its own recent experience with voter fraud - including dead people and felons voting - and now sends regular notices warning people who change addresses that they could be dropped from the rolls. Broward hasn't made a similar effort in four years. "Removals are the lowest priority,'' said Bruce Eldridge, Broward assistant elections supervisor for systems. "Changes of address and new registrations are more important because these are active voters." A sidebar tracked some of the non-voters, including those who moved to Spain, went to jail or simply haven't voted recently.
· Vote Less [Miami ]

Deep Financial Doo doo

California financial problems

Here's one big reason California is in deep financial doo doo. Gray Davis is in trouble because he is the symbol of massive mismanagement of state finances. The legislature is as ignorant of economics as he is. They all focus primarily on keeping their wonderful perks and power.
· Their motto is: Give it all away and the people will love us [SACBEE ]
· Onto the candlelight's back: Powerless in the City [VOW]
· Sydney Shelter [SMH]

Party Animals

Young People Are Speaking -- Is Anyone Listening?

But to the Democratic pols who are wondering why we aren't Party animals, many of us would say: Why should we care about you if you've never shown you care about us? This impression--and with it, the desert landscape of American politics--will only shift when these people start to listen to what we're already saying.
· Party Animals [CommonDreams ]

My Virgin Exposure to Faking Sculptures Lev Kerbel

One of the premier sculptors of Socialist realist works whose statues of Lenin once graced city squares across the Eastern bloc, has died, NTV television reported Thursday. He was 85.
· 85 [Moscow Times 08/15/03]

The Saudi Hot Seed Potato

The Saudi Hot Seed Potato

It seems as if almost everyone except the Bush administration wants the public to see the 28 pages of classified information withheld from the recently-completed congressional report on the terror attacks of September 11.
· Missing 28 pages [Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber edit PR Watch]

Friday, August 15, 2003

Financial problems

The mystery of government is not how Washington works but how to make it stop.
-- P.J. O'Rourke

Future Seen Through a Crystal Ball

On the afternoon of December 7, 2004, as the Legislature was preparing to adjourn for the year, state Treasurer Michael Egan of Cronulla rose on the Legislative Council floor and asked his colleagues to approve a measure to give interest free housing loans to state employees.

California financial problems

Here's one big reason California is in deep financial doo doo. Gray Davis is in trouble because he is the symbol of massive mismanagement of state finances. The legislature is as ignorant of economics as he is. They all focus primarily on keeping their wonderful perks and power.
· Their motto is: Give it all away and the people will love us [SACBEE ]
· Sydney Battlers in Exile

The Tyranny of Good Intentions

The Tyranny of Good Intentions

Turning lawyers into government spies
Legal Privilege

Paul Craig Roberts has a good piece on the mounting attacks on attorney-client privilege in the name of 'law and order':
Just as government bureaucrats used the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 to assault the Bill of Rights and our constitutional protections, they are now using "accounting scandals" and "tax evasion" to assault the attorney-client privilege, a key component of the Anglo-American legal system that enables a defendant, whether guilty or innocent, to mount a defense against the overwhelming power of the state.

· Riiights [TownHall ]

Thursday, August 14, 2003

Thousands of doctors back proposal in JAMA

Thousands of US physicians have endorsed a broad proposal that would abolish for-profit hospitals and insurers and transfer all Americans into an expanded and improved Medicare program for all ages, reigniting the debate over universal health care a decade after President Clinton's failed plan.
· No Longer Exchanging One Brutalism for Another [CommonDreams ]

Wednesday, August 13, 2003

Council faults media's coverage of government

Council faults media's coverage of government

Media coverage of the federal government is growing increasingly scarce, and what news there is isn't very uplifting, according to a survey released yesterday by the Council for Excellence in Government.
· Coverage [Boston ]

The verge of making history

Government is a broker in pillage, and every election is a sort of advance auction in stolen goods.
H.L.Menchken

Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys.
P.J.O'Rourke

Californians are on the verge of making history:
· By any measure of performance, Gray Davis has failed miserably. [StarONLIne ]

Political Manifestos

Power-brokers This is a victory for the True Believers: Whatever it Takes

T rust me, I am a born-again Greenie.
Puffed Graham Richardson once upon a time, and like a fool, I took him at his word. (Never again, Richo. Never, ever again, mate.)

· Political Manifestos [SMH ]

Tuesday, August 12, 2003

There's Something To The State Of Denmark

There's Something To The State Of Denmark

We're from the government and we're here to help.
In the most countries, such a statement elicits gales of laughter. Even in my home state of Minnesota, a state with a well-deserved liberal reputation, the belief that government is a problem, not a source of solutions, has become a common one. Thanks to thoughtful and purposeful government, Danish society has become a model of cooperation and mutual respect, and all of its citizens benefit.

· Danish society [TomPaine]


by Steve Martin It All Depends on What You Mean by 'Have'

So if you're asking me did Iraq have weapons of mass destruction, I'm saying, well, it all depends on what you mean by "have."
See, I can "have" something without actually having it. I can "have" a cold, but I don't own the cold, nor do I harbor it. Really, when you think about it, the cold has me, or even more precisely, the cold has passed through me.
Let me try and clear it up for you. I think what you were trying to say was, "At any time, did anyone in Iraq think about, wish for, dream of, or search the Internet for weapons of mass destruction?"

· To Be [NYTimes ]

Politicians blog for votes

Internet US politicians blog for votes
· Fisking [ Journalism]

· Blogging [HinduTimes]

Monday, August 11, 2003

Think

It's hard to conceive that it would take more forces to provide stability in post-Saddam Iraq than it would take to conduct the war itself and secure the surrender of Saddam's security forces and his army. Hard to imagine.
-Paul Wolfowitz (said prior to the war)

Although it claims to be independent the centre is funded by businesses, and its work is shaped by its libertarian/laissez faire philosophy.
· Bipartisan [SMH ]
· The idea factories [SMH ]

Sunday, August 10, 2003

Culture of a Parliamentary Bureaucracy

Culture of a Parliamentary Bureaucracy

Can fiction be fact? A Note

R.L. Cope (NSW Parliamentary Librarian, 1962 to 1991)
Australiasian Parliamentary Review, Spring 2001 16 (2) pp 209-211.

Fiction, drama, television, radio and movies have many examples of political intrigue in the legislative arena as their central theme. Often the novel or play is adapted for television and film. High drama (House of Cards, Advise and Consent, The West Wing, for instance) and satire (Yes, Minister) are two recurrent elements. But there seems virtually no comparable (serious or satirical) literary or mass media attention paid to the parliamentary bureaucracy and the world of parliamentary mandarins. This probably suits many parliamentary officers, especially those who regard or even promote their job as something of a ‘mystery’ (in the mediaeval sense), to be protected and perpetuated. Admission to this calling is guarded and, once attained, is a source of pride and prestige. However, compared with the robust public nature of parliamentary politics, the less known concerns of parliamentary mandarins offer slim scope to writers and filmmakers.

In 1996 a novel appeared which would have called forth reactions of outrage, disbelief and certainly anger from parliamentary mandarins at Westminster. Philip Hensher’s Kitchen Venom has three clerks from the Journal Office of the House of Commons as its chief protagonists and the culture of the parliamentary bureaucracy as exemplified by them is described in some detail. The belong to the chosen few ‘who have understood that truth is secret; that truth resides in secret, and that the fewer these men (e.i. clerks) were, the truer this was’ (p 43). These words are written about what is entailed in compiling the Journal of the House. It would not usually be worth considering a work of fiction as an appropriate authority on this topic, but the author in this case is, as the work’s dustcover states, ‘a House of Commons clerk’s from the Journal Office. He is presumably able to comment accurately as an ‘insider.’

Hensher’s depiction of the working ethos of the clerks in the Journal Office and the nature of parliamentary service is unflattering, satirical and damaging. Not even the head of administration, the Clerk of the Commons, is spared: he could hardly be pleased to read: (John) ‘remembered the sickening feeling he had had when he realized that no sense of humour and an ability to bore on endlessly were vital qualities for anyone wanting to be Clerk of the House’ (p.15). The Clerk of the House is described as

‘the highest sort of person who works in the House --so high that one can hardly think of him as working in the House, more as nobly devoting a part of his distinguished hours and minutes to sit in the chamber of the House ... (p. 40)’

Does this read like a pen portrait drawn from real life?

While the clerks are depicted as experts in their field, the three in question are seen more ‘gentlemen than players’. ‘What their job was no Member knew; what their purpose was, not even they quite understood. From day to day, they performed small rituals, and they recorded, and they checked what they had recorded ...’ (p. 41). What is striking is the disdain they show for parliamentary representatives as a class and for the parliamentary process:

‘(The clerks of the House of Commons) have no respect for them (Members); they laugh at them; they compile lists of the twenty most idiotic Members, and the twenty most debauched; they do not work for them ... they treat Members to their faces with civility, and behind their backs as inferior undergraduates who have mistaken their ambitions. (p. 40)’

It is not unexpected that this book led to the author ceasing to be a clerk of the House of Commons.

There are various strands to the book, of which homosexuality is one. Two of the clerks are identified in this way and one actually murders a young Italian male prostitute with whom he falls in love. There is fulsome detail of the aspect of the plot.
Parliamentary politics play a very minor role; no politician is personally named, although references are made to a female prime minister and events leading to her toppling. Some passages vividly evoke, on the other hand, the atmosphere of the parliamentary buildings at Westminster.

Philip Hensher is the author of three novels and is one of the youngest member of the Royal Society of Literature and ‘the only author of his generation to be included in the Oxford Book of English Short Stories.’ These details are from the website of the British Council Russia where further information can be obtained. Hensher is obviously an author to watch.

Those interested in the parliamentary institution as distinct from the parliament as a political forum will have mixed feelings about this novel. It cannot be taken to represent more than fictionalised, possibly tendentious, view on one administrative aspect of the House of Commons. It is not an agreeable picture with its suggestion of unworthy privilege and spurious values in a Dickensian institution. Certainly the reader whose curiosity about the real nature (fact rather than fiction) of the Commons bureaucracy is stirred, does not gain impression that either the Ibbs Report on House of Commons Service (1990) or the House of Commons Commission itself makes a noticeable impact on the lives of the officers described. Reform of parliament in both its political and its bureaucratic aspects may be something of a beguiling mirage. We may consequently feel the justice of the proposal of Professor Robert Hazell, recently a visiting lecturer in Australia, that parliaments need more openness on their performance and a stronger sense of accountability. Hazell has principally in mind the work of parliamentarians themselves, but Hensher’s book would seen to point to the need for a more stringent accountability and tighter management practices in parliamentary administration as well.
· Bureaucracies [BlogCity]

CEO, Patriot, sos

A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government.
--Edward Abbey

people: St Judith, the Antipodean That Fears No Evil

The Max Gillies portrayal of John Howard (Australian Prime Minister)- as akin to a Barry Humphries Sandy Stone character in dressing gown and slippers leading Australians back to the past - drips with satire. Most theatre audiences have found it richly funny; many have also found it deeply disturbing.
· The Theatre of the Absurd: Middle ground of power [Sydney Morning Herald: Spectrum p17 (9th August 2003)]

people: CEO

An outstanding "must read" article by David Sirota. I often said to my friends: "The Republican Party IS ENRON!" This is part of what I mean by that:
· George Bush is a CEO, alright. And that's the problem [Popmatters ]

A very expensive business: Parliamentary Empires

Legislature A very expensive business

Ninety-three years ago, Queensland's Andrew Fisher, our fifth prime minister and Labor's second, decided it was absurd that five departments answering to five senior bureaucrats, each with his own little empire, should run the new Australian Parliament, which at the time met in Melbourne. Fisher said so but nothing changed. Ninety-one years on and the five departments are still there, still run as autonomous empires, despite an estimated 20 attempts at scaling down over the years since Fisher's first abortive attempt, though now only four senior bureaucrats are in charge, not five. Two of these are the heads of the Department of the Senate and the Department of the House of Representatives. Each is a bloke, with unrenewable 10-year contracts, and each is paid $188,000 a year.
· Parliamentary Empires [SMH ]

Meaning of 'Have'

by Steve Martin It All Depends on What You Mean by 'Have'

So if you're asking me did Iraq have weapons of mass destruction, I'm saying, well, it all depends on what you mean by "have."
See, I can "have" something without actually having it. I can "have" a cold, but I don't own the cold, nor do I harbor it. Really, when you think about it, the cold has me, or even more precisely, the cold has passed through me.
Let me try and clear it up for you. I think what you were trying to say was, "At any time, did anyone in Iraq think about, wish for, dream of, or search the Internet for weapons of mass destruction?"

· To Be [NYTIMES ]

Myths About Liberalism

Myths About Liberalism

The Myths links are an extenstive read (some 50 pages) and, coupled with Dave Neiwert's dissertation on Fascism, one can easily kill a summer afternoon.
·
THE LONG FAQ ON LIBERALISM
[Huppi.com ]

Saturday, August 09, 2003

FROM IRONY TO INTIMIDATION

"GOP GOES FROM IRONY TO INTIMIDATION", Jim Hightower, Jim Hightower's Common Sense Commentary, 4 August 2003

Jim Hightower is a gem. I heard him on National Public Radio today, as I have many times, and as always, wished that his ideas would get wider distribution. They are so "right on the mark". His commentaries can be used to contrast the milk-toast commentary that has become the trademark of the mainstream media. Also, note the repressive approach the RNC lawyers take against the Wisconsin TV stations!

Check this out!

"Apparently the Bushites think that "Irony" is the name of a far off planet, for they never seem able to see it in their own work.
Irony is George W standing adamantly against affirmative action, oblivious to the obvioius fact that he's the privileged poster-child of America's aggressive affirmative action program for the rich.
But one of the latest actions by the Bushites proves that they couldn't find irony if we let them use the Hubble Telescope. It came in the form of a threatening letter sent to Wisconsin TV stations by the Republican Party's top lawyer, Caroline Hunter. It seems that these stations were airing an ad produced by the Democratic Party, that calls for a bipartisan independent investigation of the false information used by Bush and the White House to mislead the American people about the supposed "imminent threat" posed by weapons of mass destruction they claimed were in Iraq.
The lawyer's letter to the TV stations demanded that they not air this ad because – get this – she blithely says that stations have "no right to willfully spread false information in a deliberate attempt to mislead the American people."
Yoo-hoo, Ms. Hunter, call home once you zoom past Pluto. Oh, the irony! The White House willfully spreads false information to mislead the American people – but if anyone is bold enough to point out this deception, they get slapped with charges of being false and misleading.
Bush's GOP henchwoman wasn't playing pattycake with the TV stations, either. "As an FCC licensee," she wrote station managers, "you have the responsibility to exercise independent editorial judgment... This letter puts you on notice... you are obligated to refrain from airing this advertisement." That's no small threat, given that the Bushites have politicized the FCC and can make life hell for a local station.
This is Jim Hightower saying... This is more than ironic – it's crass political intimidation."
(GhostDansing)

Cold War's Forgotten People

Cold War's Forgotten People

The end of the cold war made a unified Germany the favoured destination for large numbers of migrants from farther east – including ethnic Germans from Romania and the former Soviet Union. How has the country managed these huge inflows, and what lessons does German experience offer to a possible Europe-wide migration model?
· East is West [OpenDemocracy ]
· Roma, Europe's forgotten people

Colourful character

Colourful character proves to be IRA chief's downfall

An unlikely US double agent helped convict the man behind one of Ulster's worst atrocities. Mr Rupert jokingly described himself as a "whore" who would work for anyone if the price was right, but he insisted it was moral conviction that drove him to spy on dissident republicans, and a heart-wrenching television documentary about the Omagh bombing that spurred him to testify against McKevitt.
· Double Agent [Age]

Step Across This Line

Rushdie Step Across This Line

It is no surprise that Rushdie's intellectual inquiries have so often centered around the notions of borders and boundaries; transgressions and journeys; the crossing of frontiers, and the struggle to come to grips with that often elusive idea: home.
The imperative title is an entreaty to the reader: “Free societies are societies in motion,” Rushdie writes, “and with motion comes friction. Free people strike sparks, and those sparks are the best evidence of freedom's existence.” Free people cross boundaries; they step across lines.
Sadly, that is not always as easy as it ought to be. (Rushdie was not permitted to set foot back in India, which banned Verses even before its public release in that country, until 2000.)
In April 1993, after the publication of a Times of London op-ed suggesting “that fully two-thirds of Tory MP's [Members of Parliament] would be delighted if Iranian assassins succeeded in killing [Rushdie],” a desperately frustrated Rushdie wrote: “Either we are serious about defending freedom, or we are not. ... If these MP's truly represent the nation—if we are so shruggingly unconcerned about our liberties—then so be it: lift the protection, disclose my whereabouts, and let the bullets come. One way or the other. Let's make up our minds.” He notes the difference between borders designed to keep people in (e.g., the Soviet Union), and those designed to keep others out (e.g., parts of the United States). During the Plague Years, Rushdie felt the sting of both.

· As a taut wire cuts through cheese [ YaleReview]

Friday, August 08, 2003

In denial

Strange Crayfishing boat

Skrijel has always claimed that he was "set up" by police.
· Smoke/Fire/Joint [SMH ]

MovingOn

Anyone who reads this blog on a regular basis knows I'm a big fan of the Bohemian philosopher king, Vaclav Havel. I know, as anyone who has crossed the Iron Curtain should realize, that Carmen Lawrence is shaping out to be the Antipodean Havel in a skirt. Czech out this thoughtful essay worthy of wide distribution, along the lines of The Power of the Powerless, which served as the most extensive theoretical underpinning for Charter 77 and democratic revival. Withering democracy could yet become the polis of our dreams describes how political bullies have dumped voters for a sleazy mix of opinion polls and donor largesse...

Rising Democracies An Interested, Involved Citizenry is Vital to Democracy


Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina said this week he won't run again for the Senate, as he's discouraged by the excessively partisan and counterproductive direction of the nation's politics.
· Partisanship [Madison ]
· Total Information Awareness program that's right out of George Orwell's 1984 [Former Vice President Al Gore: MoveOn ]
· The Running Man: Arnold Schwarzenegger for governor [SanFrancisco: Ms Universe wants to be Mr California]

Thursday, August 07, 2003

Huricane Blix

How The Left Lost Teen Spirit

If the Democratic Left can't get hip to young voters, writes Danny Goldberg in Dispatches from the Culture Wars, they will stay in the political wilderness, and deservedly so.
· If politics abhors a vacuum [TomPaine ]

Howard Dean. The Left's Mr. Right?
· Oll Korrect [MSNBC]

Thanks Technorati for Going Retro Czex

In January 1977, 230 prominent Czech intellectuals signed and published a manifesto announcing the formation of Charter 77, a "loose, informal and open association of people" committed to human rights. Signatories included the playwrights Vaclav Havel and Pavel Kohout. The United States charged Czechoslovakia with violating the 1975 Helsinki Accords on human rights.
· Helsinki 1975/Stokholm 2003 [CNN Chater77]
· Yesterdays Hero [Jozef Imrich City Blog]

Stokholm: Huricane Blix

Fukuyama

OpinionJournal:
  • Francis Fukuyama: What if it turns out Saddam didn't have weapons of mass destruction?

  • Brendan Miniter: Congressmen aren't the only Washington pols who want to raise taxes


  • Wednesday, August 06, 2003

    Loyal Henchmen: The Devil's Disciples

    Loyal Henchmen The Devil's Disciples

    Louis Menand has a very interesting essay in the New Yorker on totalitarian regimes and the people who live under them:

    Few puzzles in political philosophy are more daunting than the Problem of the Loyal Henchmen. The Problem of the Loyal Henchmen is a subset of the more familiar Problem of Authority. Why does authority command obedience? A man who tells you to pick your gum wrapper up off the sidewalk is generally ignored; a man in a uniform who makes the same request, even if it is the uniform of a bus driver, is instinctively obeyed. People wearing white lab coats and carrying clipboards, with no other evidence of expertise, have succeeded in persuading subjects in psychology experiments to act in the belief that they are torturing other human beings. In these cases, people can persuade themselves that the authorities they obey are benign ... that picking up litter and torturing other human beings in a laboratory are in the interests of civic order and scientific progress. The Problem of the Loyal Henchmen arises when people willingly obey authorities everyone knows to be evil. Why, after the villain has fled in his private submarine, and while the high-tech palace crashes and burns, does the last unincinerated member of the villains private militia risk his life to take a shot at James Bond? Loyalty to Blofeld? Loyalty to the principles of Blofeldism? What could that mean?
    ...
    The more extreme and outrageous the totalitarian ideology, therefore, and the more devoid of practical political sense, the more ineluctable its appeal. Totalitarian rule, Arendt argued, is predicated on the assumption that proving that a thing is true is less effective than acting as though it were true. The Nazis did not invite a discussion of the merits of anti-Semitism; they simply acted out its consequences. This is why documents like the memorandums for which Alfred Dreyfus was convicted of treason and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion continued to be believed even after they had been exposed as forgeries, and why the Moscow Trials were defended even by people who knew that the confessions were fraudulent. It is why some of the defendants in those trials went uncomplainingly to be executed for crimes they had not committed.. Blofeldism, an impossible and megalomaniac belief in world domination, is a perfect parody of Nazism and Stalinism just as empty and just as deluded, although, thanks to 007, not nearly as deadly.

    · And it gives plausibility to the henchman who sacrifices his life to take a final shot at James Bond [NewYorker]

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

    When I despair, I remember that all through history, the way of truth and love has always won. There have been murderers and tyrants, and for a time they can seem invincible. But in the end they always fall. Think of it, always.
    - Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948)

    Web Monitoring Subversives.com?

    We can see how this could be useful for government agencies interested in our work - to get a daily update on any new material we put up. Essentially it is the same job that Media Monitors, a press clipping service, does. The difference is that Media Monitors acts in a transparent manner and declares which newspapers and journals it monitors.
    · Antipodean Kiev 2003 AD [sievx ]

    What’s Wrong with Twinkling Buttocks?

    A crude culture makes a coarse people, and private refinement cannot long survive public excess. There is a Gresham’s law of culture as well as of money: the bad drives out the good, unless the good is defended.
    · Take restraint away, and violent discord follows [city-journal ]

    Leave No Millionaire Behind

    The President and his party have cooked up the ultimate recipe for keeping political power. A nation in a constant state of anxiety -- over the thereat of terrorism, or a potential war -- is a nation off balance. And that insecurity is the perfect cover to divert public attention from the country's serious domestic problems and the administration's political agenda
    · Agenda [MotherJones ]

    Tuesday, August 05, 2003

    Intelligence Failure

    Pundits PENTAGON SCRAPS INFORMATION MARKET

    In proposing a virtual market to help predict contingencies in the Middle East and elsewhere, PAM set out to achieve what years of pseudo-reform of U.S. military and intelligence agencies had failed even to attempt -- to bypass the hierarchical bureaucracy that has led to numerous deadly intelligence failures.
    PAM was based on the insight that markets, driven by economic actors with powerful incentives to guess correctly, often know better than a handful of professional prognosticators. This point has been well illustrated by the web-based Iowa Political Stock Market, a virtual market that has consistently predicted election outcomes more accurately than pollsters.
    · Intelligence Failure [Independent.]
    · Decision Markets [EntrepreneurialEconomics]

    Monday, August 04, 2003

    Sanctions

    Iraq Masters of the Masks

    Scott of Nota, Nota, Bene Fame, has ploughed through the nine-screen NYTimes Magazine piece on Iraqi sanctions so you do not have to. As Scott rightly points out, the article tries to answer the simple question: "Were Sanctions Right?" Every time David Rieff comes perilously close to saying, "No way, definitely not," he backs off, ever so slightly. But that's certainly the impression I came away with. Witness how sanctions became one of the police state's most effective weapons of control:

    In many ways, Saddam Hussein became a master at manipulating the sanctions system to his own ends. Under the rubric of the oil-for-food program, the United Nations allowed the Iraqis themselves to publish their list of humanitarian requirements and then to select the foreign companies with which it wished to do business.
    This provision meant that the Iraqi government was able to set up a well-orchestrated system of kickback schemes in which a contract would be signed at far more than the cost of fulfilling it, with the difference deposited secretly by the selected contractors in Iraqi government-controlled accounts all over the world. As a result, Saddam Hussein and the Baath elite got rich off the sanctions, and a great many international businessmen, notably in the Arab world, in France and in Russia, made handsome profits as well.

    · Baa... [Scottymac ]

    PS: The big thieves hang the little ones.
    -- Czech Proverb

    China

    Make A Difference Release of a "Web writer" urged by Journalist group

    The Committee to Protect Journalists sent a letter to President Hu Jintao urging him to release, apparently, a blogger named Lou Yongzhong who writes for a web page called Secret China.
    Southerlybuster
    rightly observes that blogosphere really should do what we can protect our own. The CPJ gives the address for protest letters as :
    His Excellency Hu Jintao
    President, People's Republic of China
    C/o Embassy of the People's Republic of China
    2300 Connecticut Ave., NW
    Washington, D.C. 20008
    Via facsimile: (202) 588-0032
    Australians should use:
    His Excellency Hu Jintao
    President, People's Republic of China
    C/o Embassy of the People's Republic of China
    Coronation Drive Yarralumla, ACT
    Canberra ACT 2600
    Fax: (02) 62739615
    · Secret China [ PRCNews]

    Fourth estate

    It's a pleasure to be with such a star From the soapbox to the fourth estate

    There's a myth about press conferences, that the president is the man in the arena and the journalists are picadors waiting to do him in
    · Annoy the Media, Vote for Bush [CSMonitor]
    · N. Korea Warns U.N. Not to Hamper Talks [ABC US]

    Sunday, August 03, 2003

    Let those Big Thieves Crucify You...

    Let them call me a rebel and I welcome it, I feel no concern from it; but I should suffer the misery of demons were I to make a whore of my soul.
    -Thomas Paine

    Like any Velvetish Theatre of the Absurd, Laughter has the power to rattle our bones, open our senses, stir out minds, move us personally, and shake the world.

    The Fight for Freedom Begins with Ourselves

    There has been a lot of talk about the need for courage in fighting for liberty. I agree. It's time now for us to take a hard look at our actions and ourselves in order to preserve liberty and democratic values. If we don't remove the log from our own eye, we can't see clearly enough to reform other countries corrupt governments or conquer terrorism.
    · There is a price to be paid for freedom...Let's pay it even if it makes us more vulnerable to terrorism [Common Dream]

    Conservatives

    The “Conservatives Are Crazy” Study: Paid For by Taxpayers

    Congressional investigators call for a new look at funding academic research.
    An academic study of conservatism that lumped together Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Ronald Reagan, and Rush Limbaugh was funded by federal grants, according to congressional investigators.

    · Research [National Review]

    Undercover officer sues for mental damage

    An undercover policewoman has accused Internal Affairs officers of fabricating evidence to obtain a search warrant, engaging in misconduct and failing to act on evidence of drug trafficking.
    · Act of unveiling [SMH ]
    · Please not another RC; let just big thieves hang the little thieves [SMH ]

    The big thieves hang the little ones

    We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office.
    --Aesop

    The big thieves hang the little ones.
    -- Czech Proverb

    Three virtues: humility, docility and responsibility Ethics is everybody's business: The sad decline of ethics in business, politics and the media

    Humility is in reality, a strength and involves acknowledging both our abilities and our limitations.
    Docility, usually perceived negatively, literally means easy to teach. Learning should be a lifetime experience.
    Responsibility, to those less fortunate than you, to your community, to your country, to the world. And he cited Penn's motto, "Leges sine moribus vanae" (laws without morals are meaningless). There is elegance in simplicity.
    The importance of ethics to the maintenance of a free and democratic society, and the need for leadership in setting the tone for ethical behavior.

    · A lack of ethics erodes confidence in our primary societal institutions: government, business and the press [Daily Pennsylvanian]

    Saturday, August 02, 2003

    Irony

    I don't make jokes. I just watch the government and report the facts...
    -- Will Rogers

    Hope to government officials: Remember, you guys, your salaries are paid by the tax payers, and I may be one some day.
    — from "My Favorite Spy" (1953) Quote courtesy of Allan R M Jones

    Irony Curtain Velvet Laughter

    Hope was famous for making fun of politicians. In the 1950s this was considered proof that our democracy worked. No small accomplishment considering what was going on elsewhere in the world: we could laugh at our leaders! But Hope’s political commentary, like his social observations, never cut deep, never dealt with real issues, were meant to tickle the funny-bone, not excite the brain. Politicians liked being “insulted” by Hope. It gave them the aura of Everyman, and they trusted that Hope’s barbs would not be pointed.

    Abraham Maslow, one of the founders of humanist psychology, was soon to ask, what is a healthy reaction to racism, poverty, totalitarianism, and the husband who wants his wife to remain a child? Maslow’s answer, written in Toward A Psychology of Being, was, It seems quite clear that personality problems may sometimes be loud protests against one’s psychological bones, of one’s true inner nature. What is sick then is not to protest when this crime is being committed.
    Like any Velvetish Theatre and Irony of the Absurd, Laughter has the power to rattle our bones, open our senses, stir out minds, move us personally, and shake the world.
    · Sicknik humor [Common Dreams]

    Messy Myths

    The ability to criticize is one of the great strengths of our democracy. ..

    Messy Myths The Lunatic Fringe of Spinmeisters

    Mike Seccombe offers a sobering assessment of perfect::spin::
    in my favourite paper the Sydney Morning Herald this very morning.
    Mike profiles John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton, the PR Watchers who for months have been busy exposing the president's penchant for marketing - as opposed to truth-telling.
    Stauber and Rampton, the Madison-based debunkers of corporate spin, have written up their compelling case against the White House's "case" for war in an exceptional new book, "Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq" (Tarcher/Putnam). It is difficult to imagine a more timely text.
    This is not a matter of ideology, but of ethics. The systemic corruption resulting from the new spin is just as serious in Britain or Australia as in the US. The tools of manipulation are as available to the Labor Government of NSW as to the Liberal Federal Government.
    I met the authors in Sydney in late 1990s when Wendy Baker invited them to discuss their other books called "Toxic Sludge Is Good for You" and "Trust Us, We're Experts." John Stauber predicted the limited chances of my story ever being noticed by big publishers. Indeed, George Lucas of Simon & Schuster fame repeated Staubers sober observations along the lines of any story of escape dated 1980 would be considered too old by publishing houses. ... I have an email from Lucas to prove that it was not only old it was ancient (spinning smile)
    By George [Thanks to the underground connections for this link as it is not available directly from SMH site]
    · Unveiling Myth's of Mass Deceptions [Alternet]
    · Take people seriously - seriously [SMH ]
    (PS:: Seriously, later, much later after the UTS workshop, I found out that Wendy assumed I was some kind of a spy (grin))

    The Class Wars:

    A Regal Obituary

    To give the students a real comparison of social extremes related to income the university could send them on field trips to the upper and lower class parts of town and have them analyze their experiences and the people with whom they come in contact.
    The students might spend a few nights at homeless shelters learning about the denizens: the homeless families, the single mothers and their children, the mentally ill, the down on their luck, the teenage runaways and throwaways.
    Next students can note the appearance and infrastructure of educational facilities at schools in poor neighborhoods.

    · Then, onward to the lush lawns, private schools [CommonDreams ]

    Blogging Daschle Gets Trendy

    When Senators start blogging, you know that the weblog trend has truly gone mainstream. South Dakota senator and Senate minority leader Tom Daschle has started to write a blog, called Travels With Tom It will feature the Democratic leader's stories about his travels and meetings with constituents.
    · ArgusLeader [Sioux Falls, South Dakota]

    Friday, August 01, 2003

    Tax

    Validity of grants,

    Serious questions have been raised about the accountability of the giant clubs industry and the way it gives out tens of millions of dollars in grants to community organisations each year.
    · Gaming [ SMH]

    Moral value

    The Politics of Drug Wars

    Drug war rhetoric that blames pot and crack for inner city poverty may comfort some hard working (alcohol consuming) working and middle class citizens, but it does so at a cost even to them. The police may not harass and repress them as much as they do inner city minorities, but the very rhetoric or the drug war now feeds the corporate assault on the free time of middle class Americans. Hard work becomes the all encompassing moral value and the solution to all that troubles the economy.
    · Civil liberties and privacy for all are increasingly challenged [Commondreams]

    The Politics of Drug Wars

    The Politics of Drug Wars

    Drug war rhetoric that blames pot and crack for inner city poverty may comfort some hard working (alcohol consuming) working and middle class citizens, but it does so at a cost even to them. The police may not harass and repress them as much as they do inner city minorities, but the very rhetoric or the drug war now feeds the corporate assault on the free time of middle class Americans. Hard work becomes the all encompassing moral value and the solution to all that troubles the economy.
    · Civil liberties and privacy for all are increasingly challenged [Commondreams]

    The Politics of Drug Wars

    The Politics of Drug Wars

    Drug war rhetoric that blames pot and crack for inner city poverty may comfort some hard working (alcohol consuming) working and middle class citizens, but it does so at a cost even to them. The police may not harass and repress them as much as they do inner city minorities, but the very rhetoric or the drug war now feeds the corporate assault on the free time of middle class Americans. Hard work becomes the all encompassing moral value and the solution to all that troubles the economy.
    · Civil liberties and privacy for all are increasingly challenged [Commondreams]

    Stalin

    Stalin Ordered Hit on John Wayne

    British actor and writer Michael Munn's new book JOHN WAYNE: The Man Behind the Myth claims that Soviet leader Joseph Stalin plotted to have the Duke murdered because of his outspoken anti-communism. But Stalin's successor Nikita Krushchev was a fan of Wayne's and ended the efforts after he took power. Krushchev is quoted as telling Wayne in 1958, "That was a decision of Stalin during his last five mad years. When Stalin died I rescinded that order."


    You're not going to read a book
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    The tale, not the teller,
    is what matters most ...

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