I may be back at some later date, but for now, I just don’t have the time. If the guest posters want to give it up, that’s their call. If they wish to keep it going, that would be their call too — and much appreciated. But sometimes you have to make choices. And I’m forced now to make such a choice. So. Take care. I’ll miss you.
July 26, 2008
The Vacuity of Hope: another “Obama Berlin speech†post [Karl]
In my initial take on Barack Obama’s speech in Berlin, I wrote: Substantively, I welcomed his call for more support from Germany to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan. However, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Wednesday she would make clear to Obama that there were limits to Germany’s military engagement in Afghanistan. Merkel may find Obama well-equipped physically, but this seems to be another case in which a government will
Something in the Air [Dan Collins]
This Baghdad is not the Baghdad that Barack knew, says the AP (!): The United States is now winning the war that two years ago seemed lost. Limited, sometimes sharp fighting and periodic terrorist bombings in Iraq are likely to continue, possibly for years. But the Iraqi government and the U.S. now are able to shift focus from mainly combat to mainly building the fragile beginnings of peace  a
a picture for a Saturday morning
I dunno, Starry Night works for me — though come November, I might be all about the Salvador Dali. Nothing says progressivism rising quite like melting clock faces and the like, I don’t think.
The New York Times wants us to see more dead US soldiers [Karl]
The New York Times has posted a photo gallery of dead or wounded marines, soldiers and civilians killed in Iraq, with the following story as a fig leaf: BAGHDAD  The case of a freelance photographer in Iraq who was barred from covering the Marines after he posted photos on the Internet of several of them dead has underscored what some journalists say is a growing effort by the American military to
Maverick met with the Dalai Lama in Aspen [Karl]
Per the Aspen Times: U.S. Sen. John McCain paused in his ongoing run for the presidency on Friday to trade a few pleasantries in Aspen with His Holiness the Dalai Lama, and to urge China to release Tibetan political prisoners and improve its record in human rights. The Dalai Lama — twelfth son of the Lama — looked graceful and striking in his traditional, flowing robes. A reporter asked McCain whether
