Wise words from our President

Administration’s Tone Signals a Longer, Broader Iraq Conflict (NYT)

No shit? I’d almost be tempted to ascribe this to, oh, reading the newspaper for once, instead of trusting the same people who started a problem to keep you apprised of its status.

Well, at least we can be grateful for the remarkable feat of infrastructure our administration has pulled off: creating the largest, most sophisticated terrorist training facility in recorded history, complete with daily live-target practice, and capable of handling tens of thousands (maybe more!) of trainees at a time. The price may be a bit high – something in the ballpark of $100B and a few thousand American soldiers’ lives, to say nothing of the number of Iraqi civilians caught in the crossfire – but if you really want to create an effective, well-trained and well-equipped enemy, there’s just no substitute for a large country, out-of-the-way for us but centrally located for them, with no functioning government and a steady American military presence just large enough to draw fire but nowhere near large enough to actually stabilize things.

Published in: on October 17, 2005 at 00:18  Comments (4)  
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New nominee

President Bush has nominated White House Counsel Harriet Miers to succeed Sandra Day O’Connor on the Supreme Court. She has no prior judicial experience; her background is as an attorney, including as the President’s personal attorney, chairwoman of the Texas Lottery Commission, staff secretary to the President, and deputy chief of staff.

Unlike the nomination of John Roberts, this one smells extremely bad to me. I’d be willing to lay at least 2:1 odds that she has a strong ideological bent, simply based on her background; but more to the point, is it really proper to be making an obvious patronage appointment to the Supreme Court, especially after the rollicking success of his last famous one?

Published in: on October 3, 2005 at 11:09  Comments (6)  
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Your tax dollars at work

FEMA reroutes Katrina-bound ice to Maine.

Glad to see our government is in good hands, here.

Published in: on September 21, 2005 at 00:22  Comments (2)  
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Questions for Roberts

In an op-ed piece in the New York Times, Kathleen Sullivan suggests some questions to ask Judge Roberts at his confirmation hearing. These seem like very good questions; I would be especially interested to hear his answers to the third. (Four other people also contributed questions, but those seem substantially less relevant to me)

One question about which I would love to see Judge Roberts’ reasoning would be, To what extent do individuals have the right to make their own medical decisions, and why? Unfortunately this would be an inappropriate confirmation question; any of the germane subquestions would be far too likely to have direct bearing on cases that could come before the court in the future. But his thinking on this matter would be (IMHO) very illuminating: this is closely associated with the question of the rights of individuals when they do not have any obvious conflict with the rights of other individuals or the duties of the state, and therefore of his broader approach to questions such as privacy. Sullivan’s third question broaches this indirectly, though, so it may answer the matter well enough.

Published in: on September 12, 2005 at 00:43  Comments (8)  
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Of course! It’s so clear now!

The people still in New Orleans are there because they want to be there. Fortunately, our brave New Orleans superintendent of police will “save them from themselves” and their own, selfish desire to stay in the city.

Published in: on September 6, 2005 at 18:03  Comments Off on Of course! It’s so clear now!  
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Worst excuse ever

Pat Robertson apologized for calling for the assassination of Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez today, but claims he was “misinterpreted” by the press:

“I said our special forces should ‘take him out.’ ‘Take him out’ could be a number of things, including kidnapping.”

Well, I’m glad that’s straightened out, then.

Published in: on August 24, 2005 at 16:32  Comments (12)  
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Shifts in sentiment

Sometime in the past month, there seems to have been a shift of sentiment in our government, and it’s finally become allowable to admit certain things, like the fact that the war in Iraq was an ill-conceived operation, based on entirely unrealistic ideas, and has ended in almost total failure. Of course, this doesn’t quite reach to the highest levels – Bush still makes speeches saying things like “Iraqis are taking control of their country, building a free nation that can govern itself, sustain itself and defend itself. And we’re helping Iraqis succeed” – but there’s a remarkable willingness of officials involved to finally admit that we’re leaving in the foreseeable future, having achieved little or nothing of the lofty goals which were touted at the start of the war. This article from the Washington Post is a good example; lots of quotes from various people, mostly speaking on background but unusually candid.

At the same time, there’s no conjoint movement to cut back on the encroachments into American civil rights over the past few years, nor do I expect there to be one so long as this administration continues; people have come to expect continuous surveillance, background/credit/affiliations being easily investigated, in cases tagged as “relevant to national security” things like the detention of people without any of the protections we would normally expect in civil society. Recent more subtle changes seem to assist that; for instance, US cell phones are now required to transmit GPS locations (for emergency services, of course…), and Nokia’s latest mobile services API makes it possible to write server-side applications that use that location information – without any software being installed on the cell phone. (Nokia isn’t the only one, of course; that’s just the first example I found to hand) I’ll let the technically minded among you imagine a couple of uses for that; it’s sort of a fun exercise, if you think about it as though you were a police officer, a private investigator, a marketer, or simply an armed robber.

Published in: on August 14, 2005 at 16:09  Comments (2)  
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When evolution is outlawed…

Apparently, our President wants equal time for intelligent design in American schools, saying that “both sides ought to be properly taught” so “people can understand what the debate is about.”

It’s probably not really worth too much discussion in this forum, but it’s fascinating to see how this culture of false debate has emerged. If a public figure were to go out and say that the sky is green, the press would simply report it, and then ask someone else what color they say the sky is, satisfied that by presenting “both sides” of the issue they’ve discharged their duty, and (seeing that there are clearly two sides who disagree) now being able to describe it as a disputed issue. What you won’t hear is the press actually checking the facts themselves; such things are “not their department.” This is especially true when there are a large number of people who, for one reason or another, feel strongly about backing whomever it was who made the false statement; the media are really averse to flat-out contradicting someone when that may alienate readers.

But if a political movement grows, and out of fear of contradicting them nobody ever says they’re wrong, where do we end up?

The rather simple problem with the “debate” over the teaching of evolution, which nobody ever seems quite willing to say, is that the reason we don’t teach “intelligent design” or other forms of ersatz creationism in school isn’t because there’s a secular humanist bias, or because we don’t want to favor one religion over another; it’s for the rather simple reason that these things are false, and known to be false. The fact that one group strenuously advocates for them doesn’t make them any more true, and no matter how loud these groups are, the fact that people are out there saying something does not make it true, nor does it make the debate legitimate or worth people’s time; if a thousand people claim the sky is green, even by divine revelation, the sky will still be blue, and trying to convince them will still be an elaborate waste of time.

Or to say this in a more religious context, we are given senses and a faculty of reason, and we do not derive our laws and our sense of the universe from omens and signs. As R. Jeremia said, the Torah has already been given at Sinai; that is, the set of divine interventions needed to create this world was done at the creation of the world, and so the world is complete within its own context: we can study it in its own right, without having to resort to revelations “explaining” for us things which our own senses can understand on their own. (Baba Metzia, 59a-b) (Yes, I realize that making a religious argument in this context seems odd, but I don’t believe there’s any fundamental contradiction between religion and reason; only when people start misunderstanding the difference between stories and the world around them, to the extent that they reject the evidence of their own senses.)

And now, our president has decided that he needs to weigh in on this issue, because without his wisdom and guidance, where would we be?

Published in: on August 3, 2005 at 10:09  Comments (35)  
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And the source is…

Looks like Newsweek just came out with their article about the source in the Valerie Plame case, based on what Time magazine decided to hand over to prosecutors. And the finger goes on – Karl Rove himself.

This is interesting; while I’m not even slightly surprised that he was the man behind it, it’s very unusual for someone so highly placed to directly involve himself in this sort of business. The style is a bit unusual in recent years, too – it essentially amounts to the use of government power (in this case knowledge of people’s secrets) to directly attack political opponents of the administration.

The legal issue is the Intelligence Identities Protection Act, which makes the knowing revelation of an undercover agent’s identity a felony; given the high profile of this investigation so far, it’s going to be increasingly difficult for the Justice Department to avoid making at least some prosecutions in this case. There will probably be some conflict between the actual prosecutors and the AG’s office in this case, with the AG not wanting to prosecute anyone too high-profile (remember that Rove is a friend of Gonzales) but the prosecutor not wanting to drop a public case. Media impact will probably have a strong effect on this – if Rove’s picture is in front of a lot of newspapers with questions like “what did he know?,” it probably will go to trial, but if the newspapers wait for Fox News to take it first, the odds are that enough false rumors will start circulating (e.g. that Cooper’s e-mails were hoaxes) that no prosecution, or other adverse consequences, will actually happen.

If this does concern you, get in touch with your local papers, television stations, and so on, and ask them for more coverage of the story. If they know that their readers are interested, they’ll push the matter.

Published in: on July 10, 2005 at 11:56  Comments Off on And the source is…  
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Our military has gone mad.

The US military has decided not to prosecute 17 soldiers in charges related to 28 prisoner deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan, against the recommendations of military investigators. Now, some little gems from this:

In one case, an Iraqi LCOL was killed in custody at a US base in Al Asad, principally as a result of blunt trauma and asphyxia from being lifted to his feet by a baton held to his throat. Special Forces Command determined that this force was lawful “in response to repeated aggression and misconduct by the detainee.”

An Army Special Forces case that was dropped involved the shooting death of a prisoner in Afghanistan, dropped because “the soldier involved was not well-informed of the rules of engagement.” (I am certain there is some sort of confusion that might make a soldier believe that the shooting death of a prisoner, whom I presume was not armed, was within RoE. I’m not sure what this confusion might be, but I’m sure there’s a really good explanation here)

But apparently things are OK, according to Army spokesman Lt. Col. Jeremy Martin: Apparently the prisoners who died represent only a tiny fraction of the 70,000 detainees held by American forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. Well, that makes me feel better.

So it looks like the unsurprising is happening: Rather than risk a blow to morale from actually prosecuting soldiers for criminal offenses ranging from dereliction of duty to murder, this one is going to get papered over, all the way down to the people on the ground. The officers responsible for these incidents, of course, aren’t even being mentioned – and, I’m suspecting, are in line for promotions.

Not good, guys; I appreciate the need to get information as much as anybody else, but this is a pervasive climate of torture and murder. The signal that this is OK so long as it’s for a good reason is not an acceptable one to be giving to our enlisted personnel and our officers – and even less so to our enemies, who are watching this case with great interest.

Published in: on March 25, 2005 at 19:11  Comments (10)  
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