Interesting bit from NRO’s Stanley Kurtz (who describes himself as being “on the neo-realist end of the neo-con spectrum”) about the necessity of the Iraq strategy as a nuclear deterrent, not as a program to push democratization: The problem in Iraq was never that it already possessed WMD’s, but that it might someday manufacture or purchase nukes. The failure to find WMD’s, and the resulting shift in the administration’s rhetorical
March 2006
WaPo Surrenders to the VRWC!
Though its name (Red America) sounds vaguely like some Tony Kushner one-acter that imagines a forbidden tryst between Joseph McCarthy and Lillian Hellman (“He Loved His Country, But He Loved Her Communist Dewpatch Even More!”), in actuality it is the moniker of the Washington Post‘s spanking new political blog. Run by RedState co-founder Ben Domenech, former Capitol Hill political journalist, contributing editor to National Review Online, and—after 9/11, the youngest
On the Belarus Election controversy
Publius pundit has several posts and links; Yahoo has ongoing photo updates here. From Publius: In just a couple of hours, we will see if democratic opposition candidate Alexander Milinkevich’s call to the people for street protests against an obviously fraudulent election will pan out. People are to meet at October Square in the middle of Minsk at 6:30 p.m. wearing smiles first and foremost. They will call for a
bored with calling Bush a liar and spinning tales of Halliburton perfidy and greed, one brave progressive takes on a new target
brave progressive: “Yes, but how can you prove it’s Monday? And don’t go citing western calendars, either—because those are “evidence” of nothing more than how widespread the western hegemonic meme of dividing the week into 7 days has become. And besides, calendars don’t prove that, from the very first, some proto-fascist didn’t put ‘Monday’ on, say, Wednesday, just to cement his authority and control over the PEOPLE!”
When ex-Fellow Travelers Attack
Christopher Hitchens wastes no ammo going after the feckless, cufflink and Kir Royale UN / anti-war crowd—the transantional progressivists’ last great hope for a world ruled by tailored bureaucrats who, on their way to cocktail parties, pause to initial documents everyone knows, deep down, will be ignored or finessed or massaged or excused by the really bad actors of the world—but that can be used to henpeck and worry and
grain of salt alert, but be that as it may… (updated)
“Bin Laden Sought ‘Joint Operations’ With Saddam”. Yes, it’s Newsmax. But hell, if Jane Hamsher or Arianna Huffington can quote, say, the Nation or Alec Baldwin with a straight face, I reserve the right to cite Newsmax on occasion. And besides, Newsmax is referencing the Weekly Standard, whose credibility is not in dispute (except among those who dismiss anything “conservative” as ipso facto unreliable). Just, y’know, trust but verify: An
The time has come, the walrus said, to talk of many things: of shoes and ships and sealing wax, of cabbages and the strange happenings going on in this NYT editorial
From “Spreading Genocide to Chad”: “Is this really what we have come to? The United Nations has described the carnage in Darfur as the world’s biggest humanitarian crisis but continues to prove itself completely useless at doing anything to stop it. In the Security Council, China protects Sudan. Europe, for its part, has been inert.” Of course, as Allah pointedly notes in an email, “One could say exactly the same
From the “Department of things as predictable as a Duncan Black blog post”: “‘Impeach Bush’ chorus grows”
From The Sunday Times: The movement to impeach President George W Bush over the war on terror began with a few tatty bumper stickers on the back of battered old Volvos and slogans such as “Bush lied, people died†on far-left websites. But as Democrat hopes rise of gaining control of Congress this autumn, dreams of impeaching Bush are no longer confined to the political fringe. A poll last week
“Showbiz Update”
I missed this nugget during my Oscar liveblogging. From the Weekly Standard’s “Scrapbook,” March 20: When George Clooney accepted his Oscar for best actor in a supporting role earlier this month, he mentioned that “we are a little bit out of touch in Hollywood every once in a while. I think it’s probably a good thing. . . . This Academy, this group of people, gave Hattie McDaniel an Oscar
Hayden points to breakup with Fonda as proof of her unending desire to have him back
Well, not exactly. But I did receive an interesting email from Todd Peters that perfectly encapsulates the return of the Pinterian absurdist ethos: Last night I watched one of the network news shows, something I rarely do. I think it was NBC but I’m not sure. They were discussing the anti-war protests and were interviewing Tom Hayden. What made me laugh out loud was his explanation for why the anti-war
