Riots in Baltimore the last two weeks come as a very delayed reaction to the death in police custody of a young, unemployed black man. The press hasn't been emphasizing this as a white cop/black male issue so much, perhaps because Baltimore has a police force that is 50 percent black (along with the police commissioner) and a political leadership that is majority black. Over the last few weeks, that leadership has performed as badly as Ferguson's did.
What really happened to the original victim? As is usual in these cases (see Ferguson), the facts take a long time to seep out.
It has been discouraging to read about Baltimore lately. It is a good, authentic city with a lot of history. Of course some of that history is violent. Lincoln has to travel through Baltimore in disguise to get to his inaugural in 1861. I lived there briefly in the 1980s. Fun place--I drank my share of "Natty Bows"--but you had to stay on your toes.
I post this article as one of the few I've read lately that doesn't blame race for every problem. A Journalist who has lived there for 30 years
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Thursday, April 30, 2015
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
More Dangerous Fallacies on Iran
Congressman Tom Cotton became famous for sponsoring a letter to the Grand Ayatollah, which threatened Congress would nix the nuclear agreement. I link here his interesting interview in The Atlantic, in which he explains that in security matters, it is best to eliminate problems when they are small, before they become big. The Iran Deal May Lead to Nuclear War
Good advice. Except some security problems never become big, or unmanageable. We effectively manage lots of them: our southern border is "managed," Cuba, a "state sponsor of terrorism" until (apparently) yesterday, has long been "managed." Why? Because they never become bigger problems or really that threatening. Maybe we should have just continued to "manage" the Iraq problem, although Tom thinks we could have obtained a better outcome.
Is Iran such a problem that can be managed? We had been doing it. Is the worst case scenario really that Iran may start a nuclear war, as Tom warns? Or is it really that a fifth-rate power will get an expensive weapon that isn't useful or particularly influential?
Tom thinks that Iran gains too much from this deal. Well, it needs to gain something substantial, or there will be no deal, or a deal that Tehran has every incentive to break. Same for us.
Anyway, the interview is worthwhile if only for the rare experience of reading a journalist's tough questions and a congressman's honest answers. Good for both of them.
Good advice. Except some security problems never become big, or unmanageable. We effectively manage lots of them: our southern border is "managed," Cuba, a "state sponsor of terrorism" until (apparently) yesterday, has long been "managed." Why? Because they never become bigger problems or really that threatening. Maybe we should have just continued to "manage" the Iraq problem, although Tom thinks we could have obtained a better outcome.
Is Iran such a problem that can be managed? We had been doing it. Is the worst case scenario really that Iran may start a nuclear war, as Tom warns? Or is it really that a fifth-rate power will get an expensive weapon that isn't useful or particularly influential?
Tom thinks that Iran gains too much from this deal. Well, it needs to gain something substantial, or there will be no deal, or a deal that Tehran has every incentive to break. Same for us.
Anyway, the interview is worthwhile if only for the rare experience of reading a journalist's tough questions and a congressman's honest answers. Good for both of them.
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
Where's Snowden?
Here's an interesting interview with Russian journalist Andrei Soldatov on how Snowden is being handled. He is shielded from Russian journalists, who might be expected to be sympathetic to him. Interesting too that Snowden's latest public comments hinted that he'd be open to compromise on coming back to the U.S. See Snowden is Acting Strange
This article also has interesting speculation about the Nemtsov assassination, and the recent "hack" of the White House, which was really a phishing expedition.
Someday, you will come home, Edward. Probably as an exchange after we round up some Russian "diplomats" in Washington. It must have been discouraging to find out you are merely a trading card to be used by Putin at his pleasure.
By the way, the Daily Beast is a great source for these types of stories. Check it regularly.
Greetings to Mighty Whig readers in France! And to the Le Salon Beige blog: http://lesalonbeige.blogs.com/my_weblog/web.html
This article also has interesting speculation about the Nemtsov assassination, and the recent "hack" of the White House, which was really a phishing expedition.
Someday, you will come home, Edward. Probably as an exchange after we round up some Russian "diplomats" in Washington. It must have been discouraging to find out you are merely a trading card to be used by Putin at his pleasure.
By the way, the Daily Beast is a great source for these types of stories. Check it regularly.
Greetings to Mighty Whig readers in France! And to the Le Salon Beige blog: http://lesalonbeige.blogs.com/my_weblog/web.html
Friday, March 27, 2015
John Bolton's Dangerous Fallacies
Former UN ambassador and Republican operative John Bolton the other day wrote an op-ed in the Times advocating bombing Iran as the only way to stop its presumed nuclear weapons program. Bomb Iran His argument is simple: the Kerry negotiations will fail, and Iran will build a nuclear bomb. Bomb Iran now, before it's too late. He figures the US and Israel working together will set back Iran's program three to five years. We should also support regime change in Iran.
Bolton is a serious, hard-charging guy. His bio is impressive, even inspirational. He's done a lot of good things for the conservative movement in America. He's completely sincere. But he's nuts.
Bolton is a serious, hard-charging guy. His bio is impressive, even inspirational. He's done a lot of good things for the conservative movement in America. He's completely sincere. But he's nuts.
- He offers no evidence a massive attack will succeed, even if it could be justified legally.
- He fails to consider that such an attack might make Iran more dangerous and give more support to the Tehran regime. It would also convince them they NEED a nuclear bomb.
- He doesn't see how bombing Iran will discredit any Iranian opposition. ALL presidential aspirants in Iran have backed its nuclear program.
- He pays no heed to international blowback against the US. Why that would be worth just delaying Iran's program, he doesn't say.
- He ignores how such a bombing might in fact make other nations MORE sympathetic to Iran.
- He acknowledges that other nuclear programs have been discontinued by negotiation, but somehow Iran is different.
- He assumes that, in response to Iran, other nations will go out and get their own nuclear bombs. (I guess by magic.) He takes the Saudis' threats for granted.
- He doesn't apply this logic to North Korea, which presumably has the bomb and is demonstrably more pugnacious than Iran is.
Bolton is fighting an old war. Iran represents no threat to us. (Never has been, really.) In fact, Israelis don't even believe Iran represents a threat to them. Bibi's "winning" in Israel (such is the inherent perversity of proportional representation systems) had nothing to do with his stance on Iran.
The best policy on Iran: keep pushing for concessions and keep dialogue open. Get them to stand down centrifuges. Increase inspections. De-escalate tensions and ease sanctions.
Okay, it might not work. Got any better ideas?
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
The Mysterious Lee Kwan Yew
Singapore's great Mandarin leader just died at age 91. Like other authoritarian rulers--one things of Ho Chi Mihn--he had for some time held the title of "senior minister." For the ruler of a city-state, he exerted a good deal of influence and earned a great deal of respect.
Kissinger offers a tribute to his friend here. The World will miss Lee Kwan Yew Journalist David Ignatius provides another perspective, which reveals something of the closed nature of Lee's thinking: Fearful visionary
One story I like about Lee, told by Charles Hill in his book "Grand Strategies." The Harvard faculty during the Sixties invited Lee to speak. They expected him to denounce the Vietnam War. To their surprise, he supported the war, which he maintained, gave the other nations in Southeast Asia freedom to grow and prosper without fear of Communist influence or intimidation.
Something else to keep in mind: Lee represents a kind of modern Leviathan vision. To explain, Lee offers a formula for peace and economic prosperity, as long as you give up political freedom and certain civil liberties. In their recent book "The Fourth Revolution" Micklethwait and Woodridge described Lee's as an alternative future model to be wary of.
Americans once earned something about Lee's model when a young man was caned on the buttocks for vandalism. This was a significant national story twenty years ago. us-student-tells-of-pain-of-his-caning-in-singapore
Kissinger offers a tribute to his friend here. The World will miss Lee Kwan Yew Journalist David Ignatius provides another perspective, which reveals something of the closed nature of Lee's thinking: Fearful visionary
One story I like about Lee, told by Charles Hill in his book "Grand Strategies." The Harvard faculty during the Sixties invited Lee to speak. They expected him to denounce the Vietnam War. To their surprise, he supported the war, which he maintained, gave the other nations in Southeast Asia freedom to grow and prosper without fear of Communist influence or intimidation.
Something else to keep in mind: Lee represents a kind of modern Leviathan vision. To explain, Lee offers a formula for peace and economic prosperity, as long as you give up political freedom and certain civil liberties. In their recent book "The Fourth Revolution" Micklethwait and Woodridge described Lee's as an alternative future model to be wary of.
Americans once earned something about Lee's model when a young man was caned on the buttocks for vandalism. This was a significant national story twenty years ago. us-student-tells-of-pain-of-his-caning-in-singapore
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Putin Has Nothing on the IMF
Here's a provocative piece from the National Interest on the real danger to Ukraine. bretton-woods-the-real-threat-ukraines-sovereignty A lot of countries probably would agree. Has any other institution done more to cause political instability?
I never quite understood why the many Ukrainians revolted for a free trade agreement with the EU that would have wiped out the rest of their industry.
I never quite understood why the many Ukrainians revolted for a free trade agreement with the EU that would have wiped out the rest of their industry.
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Venezuela's Collapse: A Key Indicator
I've read numerous articles over the years on Venezuela's declining health care system; this one perhaps is the saddest: Venezuelans Suffer
If anything demonstrates the failure of the Chavez system, it is this. Caracas brought in all these Cuban "doctors" (most of whom are nurse practitioners) but it allowed its public hospital system to collapse.
Anyone out there who still supports this phony "socialist" revolution? Chavez fans, speak up. Granted, he was a political genius of sorts. But it was more as a power artist, not as an institution builder.
His successor, Nicolas Maduro, is living proof that Darwin's theory of evolution is false.
If anything demonstrates the failure of the Chavez system, it is this. Caracas brought in all these Cuban "doctors" (most of whom are nurse practitioners) but it allowed its public hospital system to collapse.
Anyone out there who still supports this phony "socialist" revolution? Chavez fans, speak up. Granted, he was a political genius of sorts. But it was more as a power artist, not as an institution builder.
His successor, Nicolas Maduro, is living proof that Darwin's theory of evolution is false.
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