ThinkProgress Logo

Politics

What Happens in Neshoba…

mississippiflag%201.png

Emory historian Joseph Crespino argues fairly persuasively that David Brooks has it wrong about Reagan and the Neshoba County Fair.

Meanwhile, it was while Googling around to find an image to use for this post that I learned that the state flag of Mississippi is the emblem of treason and white supremacy you’ll find above, making it the only state that continues to use the Confederate Battle Flag as part of its state flag. Not only is Mississippi unique in this regard, but the voters of the state reaffirmed their commitment to white supremacists imagery in a 2001 referendum, in which the flag secured the support of 65 percent of Mississippi voters, which is approximately the size of the state’s white electorate. Under the circumstances, and given the state’s consistent support for white supremacist candidates in the 1948, 1960, and 1968 elections it’s hardly a stretch to imagine that white supremacist sentiments played a role in its political fate in 1980.

Politics

Judge orders White House to preserve e-mails.

U.S. District Judge Henry Kennedy today ordered the White House to “preserve copies of all its e-mails, a move that Bush administration lawyers had argued strongly against.” The order was in response to two lawsuits by CREW and the National Security Archive, which are seeking to determine whether the White House has destroyed approximately 5 million e-mails in violation of federal law.

Politics

106-year old WWI veteran speaks on the Iraq war.

This weekend, Frank W. Buckles, traveled to Arlington National Cemetary for a ceremony honoring his service in World War I. Buckles, 106 years old, is one of just three known suriving World War I veterans. Asked about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Buckles told the Washington Post, “I’m no authority, but I’m not in favor of war unless it’s an emergency.”

Yglesias

Beer Goggles

absolut.jpg

Jonah Goldberg and Steven Haywood both find the following scientific confirmation of the “beer goggles” effect to be objectionably obvious:

A recent study at the University of Glasgow found that alcohol makes the opposite sex appear more facially attractive, at least in the eyes of the drinker. Compared to abstainers, drinkers were more likely to rate someone of the opposite sex as attractive. Alcohol had no effect on the rating of same-sex attractiveness. This may explain why drinking in bars and at parties often leads to sex.

I actually think it’s an interesting finding. My hypothesis would have been that the causal mechanism was almost entirely a case of lowered standards and that something like “he looked better last night” was a pure ex post facto rationalization for past bad decision-making.

Photo by Flickr user Anders Ljungberg used under a Creative Commons license

Yglesias

Roger Cohen’s Case for Al-Jazeera

I got a rumor in my inbox this morning about how today’s Roger Cohen column was good and indeed it is: he argues that people should knock off the campaign against al-Jazeera’s English-language broadcast service and that this is a perspective people ought to hear.

That all seems quite right to me. I would add that there’s a pressing need, in my view, for someone to put up the money to start an outfit that would provide English-language translations of important stories in the Arabic press. Something like MEMRI but without the crazy political agenda.

Culture

Jens Lekman

jenslenkman.jpg

For a couple of years now, I’d been engaged in some kind of obscurely-motivated obstinate refusal to listen to Jens Lekman. But yesterday faced with the imminent expiration of some Emusic downloads, I got Oh, You’re So Silent Lens and, um, just like everyone says it’s awesome. And, indeed, When I Said I Wanted to Be Your Dog is awesome, too. And I’m pretty sure that if he has other albums, they’ll be awesome as well.

The moral of the story, in short, is that I’ve got to spend more time paying attention to the conventional wisdom. Similarly, when you find everyone touting the Nordic model (here too, but you need a subscription) of economics as well as indie pop, then maybe it’s time to just embrace it.

Yglesias

Did Paul Berman Tell Us So?

In the midst of an argument with Ian Buruma, liberal hawk extraordinaire Paul Berman tries to convince us that he actually called Iraq correctly, and has merely been magnanimous in not pointing that out:

I approved on principle the overthrow of Saddam. I never did approve of Bush’s way of going about it. In the run-up to the war, I became, on practical grounds, ever more fearful that, in his blindness to liberal principles, Bush was leading us over a cliff. [...] It is true and it is a matter of satisfaction to me that, in the years since then, I have not made a career of saying “I told you so.”

Here’s what Berman was actually writing in February 2003:

In my own judgment, Fischer and his fellow thinkers in Europe and even in the United States are making a mistake in failing to press for a harder line against Iraq—a harder line that might bring about Saddam’s collapse more or less peacefully or, if need be, not peacefully. It should be obvious that, in the Arab world, fascist and Nazi-like movements—political tendencies that call for random mass murder in the name of paranoid and apocalyptic ideas—have gotten completely out of hand. In the last 20 years, Baathist and Islamist movements—the two branches of what ought to be regarded as Muslim fascism—have killed millions of people and might well kill many more, and not just in the Muslim countries, as we have reason to know. A war against Muslim fascism ought to be seen as a continuation of the long struggle against Nazism and fascism in Europe—a continuation of the same decent and necessary cause that people like Fischer have always wanted to support, even if they have not always known how to do so in a sensible way.

He was worried about Bush’s failure to embrace liberalism, but it wasn’t a worry that this meant the war would go badly, it was a worry that Bush wasn’t being as rhetorically persuasive as he should have been:

Maybe Fischer is not convinced because the Bush administration has presented a series of side arguments about weapons, U.N. resolutions, and dark terrorist conspiracies and has failed to present the main argument, which is the single huge argument that has always sustained the Western alliance. This argument is the one about totalitarianism. It is the argument that says: The totalitarians are dangerous to themselves and to us, and we had better fight them. Fight wisely, of course, which the New Left notoriously managed not to do long ago, but fight. Why can’t Bush make that argument? I won’t speculate. But he could change. He gave up drinking long ago. Let him give up his arrogance, small-mindedness, and aversion to large and idealistic ideas today. It might help.

And here he was in January 2004 when many people still thought the war was going well:

What was the reason for the war in Iraq? Sept. 11 was the reason. At least to my mind it was. Sept. 11 showed that totalitarianism in its modern Muslim version was not going to stop at slaughtering millions of Muslims, and hundreds of Israelis, and attacking the Indian government, and blowing up American embassies. The totalitarian manias were rising, and the United States itself was now in danger. A lot of people wanted to respond, as any mayor would do, by rounding up a single Bad Guy, Osama.

But Sept. 11 did not come from a single Bad Guy—it was a product of the larger totalitarian wave, and the only proper response was to comprehend the size and depth of that larger wave, and find ways to begin rolling it back, militarily and otherwise—mostly otherwise. To roll it back for our own sake, and everyone else’s sake, Muslims’ especially. Iraq, with its somewhat antique variation of the Muslim totalitarian idea, was merely a place to begin, after Afghanistan, with its more modern variation.

In short, Berman was wrong. The reason he hasn’t made a career of telling us “I told you so” is that, in this instance at least, he didn’t tell us so. But now he’s trying to tell us that he did tell us so. But all he told us was that had Bush employed more Berman-style rhetoric then maybe more of Berman’s friends would, like Berman, have wrongly deciding that an invasion of Iraq was a good idea.

Politics

Bush To Give Keynote Address Honoring Federalist Society’s 25th Anniversary

ashcroftfed.gif In 1982, conservative legal scholars such as Antonin Scalia and Robert Bork held the Federalist Society’s first National Student Symposium, launching an organization meant to advance the “rule of law.” This week, the organization will celebrate its 25th anniversary with a three-day convention, featuring speakers such as Clarence Thomas and John Yoo, along with Scalia, Olson, and Bork.

The Federalist Society has experienced a golden era under President Bush, who will, not surprisingly, be giving the keynote address at the organization’s black tie gala on Thursday. It has served as a gateway for judges and legal aides who strive to work inside the administration, in effect promoting individuals who have dedicated themselves to enforcing a right-wing ideology rather than the law. A look at the oversized influence Bush has afforded the Federalist Society:

– Filling top-level appointments. When he took office, Bush immediately filled many of his administration’s top appointments with current and former Federalist Society members, including: Gale Norton (Interior Secretary), John Ashcroft (Attorney General), Spencer Abraham (Energy Secretary), Ted Olson (Solicitor General), and Michael Chertoff (Homeland Security Secretary).

– Filling career Justice Department slots. Under Bradley Schlozman, approximately “half of the 14 career lawyers hired” for the Justice Department’s Civil Rights division were members of the Federalist Society, “up from none among the eight career hires in the previous two years.”

– Filling judicial vacancies. Administration officials note that in the early days of the Bush presidency, “about a quarter of their judicial nominees were recommended by the Washington headquarters of the society.” In 2005, The New York Times reported that “15 of the 41 appeals court judges confirmed under Mr. Bush have identified themselves as members of the group.”

– Tracking U.S. attorneys’ Federalist Society membership. Political appointees in the Justice Department, such as former Gonzales aide Monica Goodling, assessed U.S. attorneys based not only on prosecution experience and political experience, but also whether they were members of the Federalist Society.

In 2005, the White House seemed to recognize the dangers in associating too closely with the conservative society. It aggressively resisted media efforts to (accurately) characterize then-Supreme Court nominee John Roberts as a member of the group, going so far as to call and pressure reporters to report otherwise.

Apparently, that’s all water under the bridge. Not only is Bush speaking at the anniversary celebration, but so is Roberts.

UPDATE: Rudy Giuliani is the only presidential candidate who will be speaking at the convention. His Justice Advisory Committee includes Federalist Society members Olson and failed court of appeals nominee Miguel Estrada, as well as society co-founder Steven Calabresi.

UPDATE II: Although Mitt Romney won’t be speaking, his lawyers committee will be holding a breakfast at a nearby lobbying organization on Friday. View invitation HERE.

UPDATE III: In 1970, Bush was rejected by the University of Texas law school. As a backup, he attended Harvard Business School.

Digg It!

Climate Progress

OPEC issues bizarre oil threat, Financial Times also confused

NPR’s Marketplace called me today for comments on this bizarre Financial Times article, “Opec to seek assurances on oil demand.

Apparently these absurdly rich countries — with projected revenues of $658 billion this year — who are selling their product at nearly $100 a barrel, are threatening not to invest in new production unless the consuming countries promise to maintain demand. Seriously! No, seriously:

Opec will this week seek assurances from some of the world’s biggest oil consumers that they will maintain their demand as the members of the oil cartel come under intense pressure to boost investment in production capacity.

This is the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard, which is saying a lot, considering who our President is. First off, who exactly can speak for the consuming nations and make a binding promise to keep up demand in the face of record-breaking prices? Nobody. This is capitalism. If high prices lead to fuel-switching, how could, say, President Bush, promise to stop it — especially since he has already promised to encourage fuel switching?

Second, as I blogged recently (“Get used to high oil prices“), pretty much every producing country, except Saudi Arabia, is producing flat out. Yet demand keeps going up even at these prices. If OPEC is really worried about demand destruction, then they should want to invest in as much new production as quickly as possible. Indeed, the IEA predicted back in July (“IEA warns of impending oil and gas supply crunch“) the world will see “increasing market tightness beyond 2010, with OPEC spare capacity declining to minimal levels by 2012.”

Third, IEA projects global oil demand will “expand by 1.9 million barrels a day, or 2.2% a year on average, reaching 95.8 million barrels a day by 2012, up from 86.13 million barrels a day this year.” OPEC would be crazy not to invest in as much new supply as they could to meet this demand. Where is a better place for their money — holding dollars?

So what is the really motive behind this bizarre threat? And how is the normally dependable Financial Times confused?

Read more

Older

Switch to Mobile
ThinkProgress Signup Overlay Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress

Sign Up