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Yglesias

An Army of Kagans

While The Weekly Standard has to make do with using Frederick Kagan’s wife to write articles proclaiming the Kagan surge plan a success, The Washington Post believes in integrity and trots out brother Robert Kagan to do it instead. Maybe someday we can get Donald Kagan’s take on all this. If only the whole world were made up of members of the Kagan family, then maybe George W. Bush would be a really popular president.

At any rate, you’re not supposed to mention Robert Kagan in polite professional punditry circles without observing that he’s much smarter and a much more honest writer than your average neocon. This pearl of wisdom even has the virtue of being true. Sadly, as Glenn Greenwald exhaustively demonstrates, this really isn’t saying very much. For a neocon, he has a great analytic track record on Iraq, which means his track record is horrible rather than, say, horrifyingly horrible. That he gets to slander his employers at the Post in the first graf of his terrible column merely demonstrates how nice it must be to be a conservative . . . well-worked refs are the best refs to have.

Yglesias

God Still Against Global Warming

The National Assocation of Evangelicals has rebuffed an effort by James Dobson and other old guard preachers-slash-GOP-operatives to get the NAE to drop a “creation care” plank expressing the need to combat global warming and return to an exclusive focus on banning abortions and cutting taxes.

Much more from Ed Kilgore here.

Yglesias

That’s the Ticket!

I have to say, I really think more pro-lifers should do blog posts spelling out the close connections between opposition to abortion rights and opposition to contraceptives generally. While I obviously disagree with the “double no” conclusion of Katherine Jean-Lopez and the Pope, I agree with them about the connectedness of these issues and I’m fairly confident that the more people who see the linkage, the less viable pro-life politics will become.

Media

Unhooked Again

I think my colleague Ann Friedman has the last word on Laura Session Stepp’s jeremiad against the hook-up.

Yglesias

A Lazy Post

Tony Smith has a pretty great article in today’s Post. I’m just going to quote a bunch of it:

Iraq had flustered the congressional Democrats because Democrats don’t have an agreed position on what America’s role in the world should be. They want to change the Bush administration’s policy in Iraq without discussing the underlying ideas that produced it. And although they now cast themselves as alternatives to President Bush, the fact is that prevailing Democratic doctrine is not that different from the Bush-Cheney doctrine.

Many Democrats, including senators who voted to authorize the war in Iraq, embraced the idea of muscular foreign policy based on American global supremacy and the presumed right to intervene to promote democracy or to defend key U.S. interests long before 9/11, and they have not changed course since. Even those who have shifted against the war have avoided doctrinal questions.

But without a coherent alternative to the Bush doctrine, with its confidence in America’s military preeminence and the global appeal of “free market democracy,” the Democrats’ midterm victory may not be repeated in November 2008. Or, if the Democrats do win in 2008, they could remain staked to a vision of a Pax Americana strikingly reminiscent of Bush’s. . . .

The early positions of the 2008 Democratic presidential candidates illustrate their party’s problem. The front-runner, Hillary Clinton, has not moved from her traditional support of the DLC’s basic position — she criticizes the conduct of the war, but not the idea of the war. Former senator John Edwards and Sen. Barack Obama are more outspoken; both call the war a serious mistake, but neither has articulated a vision for a more modest U.S. role in the world generally.

It isn’t easy to offer a true alternative. The challenges to world order are many, as are the influential special interests in this country that want an aggressive policy: globalizing corporations, the military-industrial complex, the pro-Israel lobbies, those who covet Middle Eastern oil. The nationalist conviction that we are indeed “the indispensable nation” will continue to tempt our leaders to overplay their hand. The danger lies in believing that our power is beyond challenge, that the righteousness of our goals is beyond question and that the real task is not to reformulate our role in the world so much as to assert more effectively a global American peace.

As I say, I agree.

Graham: ‘The Fact That Schumer Asked For [Gonzales] To Step Down Means He Won’t’

Today on CNN’s Late Edition, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) was asked about Sen. Chuck Schumer’s (D-NY) call for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to resign. Graham said, “I think the fact that Senator Schumer asked for him to step down means he won’t,” claiming that Schumer’s statement “does interject a little politics here.”

Graham played down the administration’s purge of U.S. Attorneys, calling it perfectly within President Bush’s authority and merely “poorly handled” and “unseemly.” He also repeated Karl Rove’s lie that President Clinton also purged attorneys. “Clinton let them all go when he took over,” Graham said. Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2007/03/grahamatty.320.240.flv]

As President Clinton’s former chief of staff (and Center for American Progress President and CEO) John Podesta told us on Friday, Rove’s claim is pure fiction:

Replacing most U.S. attorneys when a new administration comes in — as we did in 1993 and the Bush administration did in 2001 — is not unusual. But the Clinton administration never fired federal prosecutors as pure political retribution.

Digg It!

Transcript: Read more

Politics

Escalation may force Miss. Guard to Iraq.

“Still recovering from Hurricane Katrina and a previous stint in Iraq, the Mississippi Guard is among a flock of ill-equipped units. But ready or not, some of the state’s guardsmen have been told to align personal affairs and begin girding for possibly another trip to Iraq. … ‘Every state, none of us has the equipment that we need, but we’re not crippled and some other states are,’ said Lt. Col. Tim Powell, a spokesman for the Mississippi Guard.”

Climate Progress

The Real Roots of Darfur: Climate Change

“The violence in Darfur is usually attributed to ethnic hatred. But global warming may be primarily to blame,” concludes the Atlantic Monthly (subs. req’d).

darfur.jpg

The article is worth quoting at length for two reasons. First, the world needs to understand its moral obligation in Darfur if human emissions of greenhouse gases were a major contributing cause to the crisis. Second, the article almost single-handedly contradicts an absurd article that appears in the same issue by Gregg Easterbrook suggesting that global warming might have as many winners as losers (which I will discuss in a later post). Here are the key parts of the Darfur article:

Why did Darfur’s lands fail? For much of the 1980s and ’90s, environmental degradation in Darfur and other parts of the Sahel (the semi-arid region just south of the Sahara) was blamed on the inhabitants. Dramatic declines in rainfall were attributed to mistreatment of the region’s vegetation. Imprudent land use, it was argued, exposed more rock and sand, which absorb less sunlight than plants, instead reflecting it back toward space. This cooled the air near the surface, drawing clouds downward and reducing the chance of rain. “Africans were said to be doing it to themselves,” says Isaac Held, a senior scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

But by the time of the Darfur conflict four years ago, scientists had identified another cause. Climate scientists fed historical sea-surface temperatures into a variety of computer models of atmospheric change. Given the particular pattern of ocean-temperature changes worldwide, the models strongly predicted a disruption in African monsoons. “This was not caused by people cutting trees or overgrazing,” says Columbia University’s Alessandra Giannini, who led one of the analyses. The roots of the drying of Darfur, she and her colleagues had found, lay in changes to the global climate.

Read more

Politics

Waxman plans hearing on Halliburton move.

Time’s Karen Tumulty comments on Halliburton’s plan to move its headquarters from Houston to Dubai: “Is this about tax breaks? Getting beyond the reach of congressional subpoenas? And what about all that sensitive information that Halliburton has had access to? At a minimum, reincorporating in Dubai would mean that Halliburton will be paying less taxes to the U.S. Treasury, even as it collects billions from government contracts.” She also reports, “Henry Waxman is already planning to hold a hearing on this, an aide tells me.”

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