RT @nytimes: Danish Police Seize Protest Equipment http://bit.ly/4J1Qjp
RT @nytimes: Danish Police Seize Protest Equipment http://bit.ly/4J1Qjp
History deals rudely with the pretensions of those who presume to determine its course. In an American context, this describes the fate of those falling prey to the Wilsonian Conceit.
Yet the damage done by that conceit outlives its perpetrators. From time to time, in some moment of peril or anxiety, a statesman appears on the scene promising to eliminate tyranny, ensure the triumph of liberty, and achieve permanent peace. For a moment, the statesman achieves the status of prophet, one who in his own person seemingly embodies the essence of the American purpose. Then reality intrudes, exposing the promises as costly fantasies. The prophet’s followers abandon him. Mocked and reviled, he is eventually banished—perhaps to some gated community in Dallas.
(…)
What is it about Afghanistan, possessing next to nothing that the United States requires, that justifies such lavish attention? In Washington, this question goes not only unanswered but unasked. Among Democrats and Republicans alike, with few exceptions, Afghanistan’s importance is simply assumed—much the way fifty years ago otherwise intelligent people simply assumed that the United States had a vital interest in ensuring the -survival of South Vietnam. Today, as then, the assumption does not stand up to even casual scrutiny.
Tune in to the Sunday talk shows or consult the op-ed pages and you might conclude otherwise. Those who profess to be in the know insist that the fight in Afghanistan is essential to keeping America safe. The events of September 11, 2001, ostensibly occurred because we ignored Afghanistan. Preventing the recurrence of those events, therefore, requires that we fix the place. Yet this widely accepted line of reasoning overlooks the primary reason the 9/11 conspiracy succeeded: federal, state, and local agencies responsible for basic security fell down on the job, failing to install even minimally adequate security measures at the nation’s airports. The national-security apparatus wasn’t paying attention. Indeed, consumed with its ABC agenda—“anything but Clinton” were the Bush Administration’s watchwords in those days—it ignored or downplayed all sorts of warning signs, not least of all Osama bin Laden’s declaration of war against the United States. Averting a recurrence of that awful day does not require the semipermanent occupation and pacification of distant countries like Afghanistan. Rather, it requires that the United States erect and maintain robust defenses.
- In case you missed it, both the Times and the Post offered revealing looks into the Obama administration’s decision making process on Afghanistan. It’s remarkable how quickly both papers were able to get the scoop, and I’m especially glad that we won’t be learning about any of this from Bob Woodward.
- Massive clashes at universities and public institutions across Iran, as people took to the streets to mark the annual Student Day. It’s remarkable how resilient and insistent the movement has become, with scores of people still unafraid to risk their livelihoods to protest the illegitimate coup regime in power; and
- I’m surprised at how little attention the latest storyline out of Guantanamo Bay detention facility has been given to in the mainstream media. A recent study by Seton Hall University points to a cover-up of unprecedented proportions.
thedailywhat: [via.]
(via peyotecoyote)
(via peyotecoyote)
An old movie theater converted to a cool bookstore in Houston TX.(via J-a-x)
http://bit.ly/7jjHrn Iran is a maniac.