Tuesday, November 27, 2007
The Libertarian Anomo-absurdity, also, Ron Paul is an Idiot
Saturday, November 24, 2007
The Dilemma of Our Time
The Dilemma of our time: waste water, or waste wood.
I live in Southern California, where there is neither water, nor much wood to speak of. It is, after all, a desert climate. Furthermore, this year brought the lowest rainfall on record in Los Angeles. On the other hand, while the real water crisis lies about twenty years into the future, the air and climate change are finally IMMEDIATE concerns, and figuring highly in the climate change picture is deforestation. Now, I am currently in San Francisco, which is a city on the southern edge of an enormous forested region which a ways up the coast is the only temperate rain forest on earth. I’m in a coffee shop in the ‘tenderloin’, a district of the city I have never before heard of, although I am a frequent visitor to the city. It is, as I believe many Americans would agree, the most beautiful metropolis in the country, and at the very least rivals, if not exceeds easily, Montreal for most beautiful on the continent, and is just one more reason we shouldn’t turn Northern California into Lebanon which hasn’t seen her legendary cedars in millennia. Another is that every new inch of old growth forest we consume is meaningful, and in a city with so much wood nearby it might be worthwhile to consume with a special conscience toward not using disposable wood products, like toothpicks. Such is the well balanced dilemma in which I find myself; do I use a metal spoon, dirtying it so it will have to be washed in running fresh water; or do I use one of those flimsy wooden stirring things (in an aside, does anyone remember the Ducktails episode where the sawmill grinds down whole pine trees into single toothpicks?) which perpetuates an ‘it doesn’t matter’ attitude in a place that actually has an impact on the supply and certainly, therefore, the usage of such violent products? I took the wood thingy, I figured I might stir another lump of sugar into another tea later, or I could chew on the thing and punch my gums a bit in a bid to stimulate good oral hygiene.
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
The Most Reluctant Federalist
The irony of the world, is that in politics the step in the opposite direction from the most logical one is often the one that results most directly in progress in the right direction. Why is this? Maybe it is because when a leader moves against the grain of the people, it is that much easier to gauge what direction the people are actually moving in.
George Washington was elected without party politics. Although his deputies and confidants would almost exclusively tend toward the so-called Federalists, in particular Alexander Hamilton, and he himself tended toward the central authority philosophy they advanced, he was nowhere near the autocrat Hamilton hoped to someday be. Hamilton genuinely and unashamedly wanted the new country emerging on the coast of North America to be a Kingdom. At first, he envisioned George Washington as it's king, but admitted that it would not be practical to institute it in the atmosphere of 1776 North America, so he advocated instead for Senators and Presidents to be elected for life. After Washington's retirement, a relinquishment of power that could only have confused and dismayed Hamilton, and seeing no other candidate as well suited in his eyes, he began to see himself as the true potential president-for-life.
But strangely, it was not the Federalists who broke from the original path. It was Thomas Jefferson and his Democratic-Republicans who were seen at the time as splitting from the one party system. Though Jefferson represented by far the more accurate vision of government intended by the general consensus of North American rebels when they declared their independence and established a government soon to be declared "of the people, by the people and for the people," it was he who once again was obligated to declare a more qualified independence and effect his own 'second' revolution in order to keep the country on the path of self-determinism. Hamilton had begun organizing his faction while Secretary of the Treasury, consolidating his power by doling out the patronage of the Department of the Treasury to potential allies. Jefferson and his ideologues were in danger of being completely excluded from the political elite of the new government, so it was as a matter of political survival that Jefferson was forced to split from the Federalists.
Between Washington and Jefferson, a man held the office of the presidency who I had overlooked for my entire life until my mother recommended that I listen to the recent Pulitzer winning biography by David McCullough which she had taken out of the library in recorded edition. Ideologically somewhere between Washington and Jefferson, if he had not existed, Jefferson would almost certainly have been the second president. But because he did exist, Federalists backed him (and not Hamilton) which brought more moderates into the federalist camp.
I admire John Adams. He was a strong character, and if it weren't for him the U.S. would have allied itself directly with France and almost certainly reignited the war with Britain. I don't believe for a second Hamilton would have been the second president, which would almost certainly have resulted in Alliance with Britain and War with France, but the fact that he kept us out of that war entirely is the greatest precedent he could have set for our country. I'm not claiming that Jefferson was the democratic reincarnation of Jesus Christ. He was, in all honesty, too much of a believer in pure democracy. Pure Democracy doesn't work, as the war in Europe eventually proved, with the rise of Bonaparte to power and the subsequent Terrors. I consider it unfortunate that his existence assured the survival of the extremist Federalist ideology, which is the exact ideology which is giving us such grief today in Washington. It is sad that somewhere between the competing personalities of the two men, Adams and Jefferson, who had been friends and would become friends again later in life, that they could not have competed within the one party framework, marginalized Hamilton, and thereby have circumvented two hundred and ten years of divisiveness and alternations of regressions and progress.
But Adams, the Giuliani of the Federalist party, gave Hamilton relevance, and although Hamilton never became president, he set a precedent of Presidential over-reaching which has resulted in the swollen executive branch we have today. Adams did not want to be a Federalist, he did not want to be rivals to his onetime friend Thomas Jefferson, and he did not want to dilute the legislative branch's authority, which he wrote ought to be the ultimate sovereign authority. But in being president, despite being a truly admirable president and doing things no other president could have done in his place at that time, in being a FEDERALIST president, he is the precursor to George W. Bush.
I didn't know this until this week, but George W. Bush has appointed, whenever possible, members of a club called the Federalist Society, whose members include Supreme Court Justices Scalia, Thomas and Alito, as well as Kenneth Starr, Orrin Hatch and Michael Chertoff. As you can see, Skull and Bones is hardly the dirty little secret of the Bush Administration. The Federalist Society is.
We have an opportunity to truly destroy the Republican party in this country today. This does not mean that we will destroy all fiscal responsibility, nor that we'll destroy religion, although I devoutly hope we will shake it from its place of honor at the table of governance, where it has NO FUCKING PLACE. There are plenty of Democrats who believe in the ideology of John Adams, that of peace through strength, of avoiding foreign entanglements (as George Washington told us to do) yet still believe in the rule of law. The Federalist Society believes in the rule of the lawgiver, which is a Monarchy or worse a Dictatorship. If you really want an America that is democratic and safe and not dependent on other countries for financial stability, find yourself a democratic candidate who will become a member of the 'Blue Dogs' when he's elected to Congress. These are 'conservative' Democrats, and they will expand the party into something the founding fathers could only dream about. "We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists" Jefferson said in his first inaugural address, and in 2009, 208 years later, we have a chance to make that vision a reality, to make America safe for democracy, where all philosophies are welcome under the canvas of one party, where all views are heard by all Americans, and which supports and upholds the constitution instead of systematically undermining it.
Monday, November 19, 2007
Understanding
It has to do with a certain type of prejudice that in all honesty, I doubt most men are aware they are subject to. It is a well known evil of the modern, advertising based economy that women are deluged with demeaning images which not only reinforce the classic gender roles of society, thereby partially undermining the strides we have made, particularly in the last 90 years toward a more egalitarian gender relationship. I don't dispute that, not at all.
But on the other side of the coin is what I consider a far more insidious stereotyping. It is mainly more insidious because it goes unrecognized so much of the time, but also because of the multiple levels of twistedness that it puts into our self images in this life.
Men, as they are represented in media, are lascivious, disinterested, beer guzzling, football watching, bikini cheering louts. We perceive them as interested exclusively in sex, and in romance only inasmuch as it can get them laid. It's in beer commercials, car commercials, even more subtly in ads telling us what gifts to give for Christmas: "Every kiss begins with [jewelry]" (I refuse to give those bastards free press).
For those of you who are pulling faces and wondering when I'm going to get to the misrepresentation; NEWSFLASH: Men want romance too. Even though many of them are convinced they do not, they WILL NOT be happy without it. Any relationship based exclusively on sex will inevitably become boring to them. Furthermore, WOMEN WANT SEX!!! (ohmigod, he said it! Horrors!)
Ok, so why do I bring all this up? Well, while we were talking today, my sister told me that it makes her uncomfortable when a man addresses his physical attraction to her before spending some time getting to know her on a personal level. She says it makes her think she knows what he's interested in. I know, I know, this sounds perfectly reasonable. The only problem, to me, is that its dishonest. I mean, the very first thing a person has with another person is physical. Even online, you see the way people are in general before you can ever know how they interact with you. This is just basic. Certainly the moment someone looks you in the eye you begin to work on that romantic chemistry, but unless that physical chemistry is there on some level, for whatever reason it's there, whatever physical characteristic it's based on, there's no point in looking for romance with that person.
I really think this is an unhealthy way to approach relationships. Basically it is like asking men to behave like they haven't noticed how beautiful you are until he knows you better. You're expecting him to lie, or at least to behave dishonestly, before you even get to know him. How can you trust a man to be honest in the future if everything begins with a lie?
So, I think this is really about women's insecurities. They are constantly told they're not beautiful enough by advertising, so when a man tells them he thinks she is, her first instinct is that he's deceiving her. It's very twisted. They don't want to feel like they're being lied to, so they want you to lie to them.
I just think we need to be more accepting of sex. This goes for women who are actualized in their sexual drive, as I wrote about in the last post, and for men who are actualized and forthright about their attraction as well. I'm not saying that there doesn't need to be a certain level of respect still, just that respect isn't what's represented when a man pretends he isn't interested in something that is, after all, the real reason we date in the first place. Respectfully acknowledging mutual attraction while exploring the personal connection between two individuals is far healthier than asking those people to deny an entire portion of themselves until a 'socially acceptable' amount of time has passed.
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Is there an American culture?
This is still a blog promoting intellectualism and sophistication, of course, and although my fascination with it must annoy and become tiresome for some of my friends, in point of fact, their aversion to it has been frustrating and tiresome to me for a while now as well, and is the real motivation behind this site. The world needs more intellectuals, America needs to get over itself and stop pretending that it’s cool to be coarse.
Speaking of the Azzuri, I wanna give a shout out to Jack White, the most intuitive musician to make a platinum record since Lennon himself. (Sorry. If you didn’t catch the segway, the Italian National Team’s unofficial anthem for the World Cup was Seven Nation Army—the same number of teams they played on the way from the group stages to the Cup, by the way) I repeat, the White Stripes are the most musically deep band making music in the world today. Jack White has the vocal maturity and expressive resonance of a Michelangelo painting, for those who have not heard Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground, there are lines in that song that are poignant enough to break your heart the first time you hear it. Other songs, like Hotel Yorba, Blue Orchid and Jolene will absolutely rock your world off its axis. I can only hope they eventually achieve the level of recognition the Beatles got, because as far as I am concerned, they are the first band since them to deserve it.
I’m going to stop now, because I’m trying to keep these short enough to absorb effectively. But I leave off with one last thought; that sports are as intricate and complex an expression of culture as theater is. A well staged Shakespeare or Aeschylus is as riveting as a come-from-behind, last minute, Super Bowl-winning touchdown. In return, a perfectly executed, four play goal line stand, can be as emotionally draining as any production of Medea ever staged. And both require equal parts talent, effort, artistry, intuition, practice, and awareness of the circumstances relative to history on the part of the players in order to be truly epic.
All politics is local
"What's so wrong with that?" she asked, "the whole world is full of conflict."
I laughed again and explained that the problem with Europe, and with much of America too is that in Democracy people are supposed to understand that their self-interest is best served by acting in the interest of everyone.
"Oh Democracy," she laughed scornfully, in exactly the attitude I think so many Americans have found to be the most infuriating thing about France in the last two decades, "Americans are always talking about Democracy." She would have gone on, but I interrupted.
"Uh, yeah," I said, in a tone I also use with a petulant child, "What the hell is wrong with you Europeans? I mean, YOU invented Democracy, not us. You sort of let us show you how to set it up, copied it roughly, and you basically haven't thought of it since."
She didn't answer. I knew I'd gotten through to her, but I didn't want her to get resentful again, so I changed the subject. There's an old axiom that there is nothing that makes a person feel humiliated more than being caught in a moment learning.
Every day after that evening, for the rest of that week, and especially when I came back from a quick tour of Geneva and Milan, that thing that had become so quintessentially French became ever so slightly less pronounced, like a cake of dried mud on the bottom of your shoe that gets loosened little by little as you slap the sole against the driveway.
Now, I would never dream of implying that I think I have so much influence over the world that I changed all of Paris with one conversation, or with a few conversations that I had beside that one. I can’t imagine I was the only American in Paris just then who felt frustrated at the bitterness directed at all Americans when it was mainly caused by George Bush’s idiocy. But I know I affected that girl’s attitude, and her attitude affects many other peoples’ attitudes. Everyone has an exponential effect on the rest of the world, and if each of those thirty Americans had one moment like mine, one conversation where they really hit on the thing that was bothering them, the ripple effect was really, really noticeable across the city.
A note on the nature of independent journalism
Mob rules govern the behavior of people in a crowd, whether that crowd is physical, or far more figurative, like an ideological bloc. I beg readers not to be offended by my vitriol, it is not, I repeat, directed at any individual, but at the tendencies of entire groups of people. I do hold in complete distain the ideologies I’ve lambasted, but the individuals I know who might fit into those categories would never hear me speak so scornfully to them. I certainly do not hesitate to apprise them of my opinion, that much of me is true both on and off the internet, but I do try and remain respectful in telling them I think they are wrong. On this blog, I feel no such restraint. I basically feel that this is the function of independent journalism, which is exactly what blogging is, even more than freelance journalism, since a blogger doesn’t need to sell his story to an editor, he just writes it and it either gets read or it doesn’t get read. As a result, the blogger is completely free to speak his mind without restraint, and that is what I do. In public, in person, I moderate myself, not because I want to look good, but because I genuinely value respecting every individual on a basic, minimum level.
Monday, November 12, 2007
The War in Iraq
I have already made reference to my position in yesterday's post, so I'll just paraphrase what I said there. I was against the war from before most people knew it was being considered. In fact, the main reason I marched in protests against the war in Afghanistan is because I knew that it was cover for starting the war in Iraq. Warning to conservative freaks, do not dispute me, you WILL be made to look stupid (mainly because you are).
I am not now, however, in favor of pull-out; immediate, measured or otherwise.
The only possible outcome--and this too, is not available for debate--of premature troop reduction in Iraq is a domino effect of theocratic regime change throughout the entire Arab world. Now, for those of you who do not dispute that, many will dismiss this as their right to choose their own government.
The problem, is that this assumption is blatantly untrue, and so incredibly dismissive of Arab intellect as to be extraordinarily insulting. The underriding assumption is that all Muslims, and particularly Arabs (some of you redneck liberals aren't even aware that there is a difference), are so religious that the only government they would be happy with is the one spelled out in the Qur'an.
Think about this, assholes; do all Italians want the Vatican to resume control of their lives? Do all Americans want their countrymen to stone adulterers to death? What in the names of all the gods makes you think that only Muslims, of all the peoples on the planet are still stuck in the 6th century? Oh yeah. You're easily led. After everything. After all the events of the last six years, you still can't tell what is propaganda, and you're still too lazy to find out truths for yourselves.
Yet the sad irony is that if we do not sustain the current government of Iraq, their next government will be based on Sharia law. Why? For the same reason that if liberals in America cede the field to Hillary Clinton, they will lose the White House again. The conservative forces in this world, be they relative conservatives like Rudolph Giuliani, or true conservatives like Josef Stalin have no reluctance to use violence and intimidation to achieve their goals. They will use whatever means of coercion they can get away with. If we let them get away with intimidation, ethnic cleansing, assassination and, yes, terrorism, they will get the upper hand, they will topple their government, and they will install their own regime. Not because the general population of the Arab world desires it, but because they will be too terrified to oppose it.
SELF-DETERMINISM, the ideal espoused and upheld EXCLUSIVELY by democracy, is not the inevitable result of America steering clear of involvement. Believe it or not, we DESERVE our place as the leader of the free world. In fact, if it were not for our existence, the free world WOULD NOT BE FREE, it would be ruled by monarchs, not even the one generation at a time autocracy of dictators, like Hitler, who by the way would rule the world if we had not intervened.
The right of people, not only here, but worldwide to choose their own leaders, only survives because we protect and even because we actively cultivate it. We need to stop thinking it is such a bad thing to intervene in the affairs of other countries. Granted, we must use caution and foresight in the ways in which we intervene. We must take responsibility for our failures, but for our successes too. We must stop being ashamed of who we are, and begin taking pride in who we are once again.
The thing about Iraq is that it is not Vietnam, or rather, it does not have to be Vietnam. In Vietnam we installed a puppet government, headed by a president in name only, who believed he was a king, who ran his government as a fiefdom and who was aided and abetted by this government in doing so. We were the bad guys. We were the ones denying the Vietnamese the government they wanted, we were the ones terrorizing the people, we were the ones supporting a dictatorship.
Iraq can be different. In 2003 Haliburton invaded. It was given effective monopoly of the construction and oil industries by no-bid contract. The U.S. Army, under the command of William Casey, offered no opposition to the status quo, though as an institution the Army itself has been better than it ever has been before at policing itself and prosecuting criminal soldiers. Casey in fact flatly refused to conduct a 'hearts and minds' campaign in Iraq, just as the commanders of the Army in Vietnam had done. He represents the same 'old school' of military thought that failed to secure Vietnam and failed to stabilize Somalia years later. Sadly it takes thirty years for an institution as old and tradition driven as the U.S. Army to fundamentally change.
But David H. Petraeus is the leader of the new wave of military thought. He has a Doctorate in international relations which he earned by writing his dissertation on "The American Military and the Lessons of Vietnam: A Study of Military Influence and the Use of Force in the Post-Vietnam Era". He graduated from West Point less than a year before the end of the war in Vietnam, and he has dedicated his military career to changing the U.S. military's relationship to force. He is also the lead author of the current edition of the Army Counterinsurgency Manual, again an attempt, a highly successful effort to change the way the Army operates in a theater of war. He has fundamentally changed the strategy of the U.S. Army, not just the war in Iraq, the entire army. Not only is the commander directing his troops to win the 'hearts and minds' of the average Iraqi, he is hiring and promoting and offering plum opportunities for the most prominent commands to officers who successfully prosecute this strategy. This is how things change.
The war in Iraq is winnable. This is exclusively because the Democrats won the 2006 election. Almost every person in this country believed that we elected the Democrats in 2006 to get us out of the war. No. We elected the Democrats to do exactly what they said they would do: FORCE THE PRESIDENT TO CHANGE HIS STRATEGY. Why have we lost sight of this? Mainly because the most obvious result of the win was the resignation of Donald Rumsfeld, and this happened less than a week after the election took place. IF THE DEMOCRATS HAD NOT WON, RUMSFELD WOULD NOT HAVE LEFT OFFICE. IF RUMSFELD HAD REMAINED IN OFFICE, DAVID PETRAEUS WOULD NOT BE COMMANDER OF MULITNATIONAL FORCES IN IRAQ. Donald Rumsfeld was the architect of Bush Strategy in Iraq, the current strategy in operation in Iraq is entirely the responsibility of David Petraeus. If Democrats had been truly, truly politically savvy, they would have embraced David Petraeus with open arms, saying "Here we have a rational, reasonable, intellectual, highly-educated warrior. Here we have our chance to change course." Let's RESERVE JUDGEMENT, give the NEW STRATEGY a chance to work. We want to get out of Iraq, and this is a possible way forward. If it does not work, then we can reasonably say that we have tried everything we can and pull out with our honor at least intact, even if our pride is a bit damaged.
Instead, they decided to whine for TWO YEARS STRAIGHT about a war they cannot stop. Oh but what if they cut off funding for the troops? Just imagine LA Times photographs of tables full of soldiers, entire mess halls full of American soldiers, and every plate is empty. Just imagine. Would you still vote for Democrats if you saw that? I sure as fuck would not. But the main point is that THE WAR IN IRAQ IS WINNABLE. I know that the end of the Vietnam war has demoralized the American public. You do not really believe, down in your deepest psyche, that we CAN win an all-out war. STOP BEING SUCH A BUNCH OF BABIES! So you got punched in the nose, 30 YEARS AGO! Get up! Fight! Have some self respect! Believe it or not, democracy is the best thing that has ever happened to this world. We want to keep it. And if we want to keep it, which, I assure you we do, we are going to have to fight for it. Like I said, I would not have chosen this fight at this time. But the fact is that you either elected that bastard or you allowed your friends to not vote and therefore allowed that bastard to be elected. GET OFF YOUR ASSES! VOTE in 2008, and VOTE DEMOCRAT, but don't be surprised when the democrat you elect fights on and wins the war. GODS I hate progressive extremism.
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Welcome to My Blog - What I Mean, What I Intend
Welcome. I hope you are stimulated by my ideas and arrested by my stories. I am a passionate political partisan, and a word loving author. Someday I hope to be a research professor at a prominent public university, probably in fields relating to History, Anthropology, Literature or Linguistics. I value intellect and sophistication above all other things, characteristics which are unfortunate rarities in contemporary America. But more about that some other time.
HybridCourage.blogspot.com is my address. Hybrid is me; it refers to my multiple ethnicities, my 'mongrel' blood, of which I could not be prouder. There is nothing more American than miscegenation, and there is no one with a better claim to the identity 'American' than those of my peers whose heritage cannot be described by filling in a bubble on a questionnaire. Courage is why we're here, both you the reader and me the blogger. We are looking for courage and finding it in each other.
I am a liberal, and I say that not only as a distinction from conservatives, but from 'progressives'. Progressives are cultural relativists, they tend to be pacifists, they avoid direct confrontations in favor of insulation and isolation. They generally endeavor to inspire change by encouraging party cohesion. I am not a progressive, though I like a great music festival as much as the next leftist. I consider progressive philosophy passive aggressive. As I understand it, the healthiest behavior is simple assertiveness, which is difficult and often turbulent, but far more effective than aggressive or passive-aggressive behavior. I categorically prefer peace to violence, tolerance to the alternative, but unfortunately, while these principles might serve in our own factional infighting, the truly rival party has no such scruples. Until we can exterminate their ideology (and I propose doing so by educating all children, worldwide, not by Napoleonic slaughter of conservatives, by the way), we haven't got the luxury of playing Mr. Nice Guy.
This is especially true in the context of the climate crisis. It is said by the timid that revolution doesn't happen until there are maggots at the ends of the forks, but in case of climate change, by the time there are maggots at the ends of the forks, it will already be too late. WE CANNOT WAIT. We must change the attitude of this world RIGHT NOW.
So, here I am, saying the things progressives won't say, and conservatives don't want you to hear. I'm not middle of the road, I'm not a centrist. I'm just pragmatic and more sophisticated than Karl Rove imagines. I protested the war in Iraq, I even organized marches and demonstrations. But now that we have invaded, we must do what we said we would. There are certain inescapable consequences to invading a country, the only way to end with a result that is not completely unacceptable and worse than before, and I'm talking about worse for the Iraqis themselves, is to follow through with making the lie we were told at the outset a reality in the end.
So that's me, that's why I'm here. There is a lot of absurd political extremism out there right now, and I'm not sure which side makes me fear the future more, conservative imbeciles or liberal nutballs. Future posts will address not only geo-political issues from a realist perspective, but social issues, sexuality, my own personal stories and perhaps, from time to time, some of my fiction, which draws inspiration from the genre of magical realism and I strive for linguistic and anthropological flavor to increase the realism.
Hope you enjoy, or are stimulated by my content. Feel free to drop me a line, I'll try to respond.