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 iary:
a register or record of events, transactions or observations kept daily
or at frequent intervals..." Merriam-Webster's Third.
By one of those caprices
that writers are entitled to in compensation for the very small financial
rewardsof their work, I have decided that I do not like the word "blog"
nor any of its participles, substantives, gerunds, conjugations, declensions,
or derivatives. I am therefore going to drop it, irrevocably, now and
forever. Instead of referring to these monthly round-ups as "bloggings,"
I have decided to call them "diaries." This seems to me much
more elegant and high-toned, in keeping with the intellectual level of
NRO, where matters of the utmost gravity are discussed in an atmosphere
of earnest scholarly inquiry, and movie starlets' breasts are never
mentioned at all.
The keeping of diaries
is traditionally supposed to be the hobby of virgins and generals. I am
neither of those things, and have not the patience nor the self-discipline
to be a conscientious diarist; but once a month I shall indulge myself
in some notes on the passing scene, and "diary" is as good a
word for these observations as any other. Everybody on board with that?
Herewith, my March diary.
The
Judge Pickering fiasco revealed once again the fundamental asymmetry
in U.S. politics. A person of conservative views any conservative
views is assumed to be a hate-twisted, narrow-minded, wife-beating
cross-burner, unless he can produce watertight evidence to the contrary.
A person of leftist views is assumed to be... normal, unless there
is photographic proof that he eats babies for breakfast. (And even that,
come to think of it, would probably be laughed off as just another "lifestyle
choice".... With support groups for infantivores springing up soon
after, followed by laws to prevent discrimination against them, quotas
in college admissions, and a Senate speech by Hillary Clinton accusing
the Republican party of being "mean-spirited" towards infantivores
of being, in fact, infantivorophobic.) To establish a person as
unacceptable in the minds of congresspeople and, I think, of the
not-very-attentive American public Leftists have only to uncover
some connection, however tenuous and disputable, between that person and
some out-of-bounds group or opinion, "out-of-bounds" being defined,
of course, by the Left itself.
And what would conservatives
have to do, if they wanted to tar some left-wing judicial nominee in a
similar way? To make him unacceptable to enlightened opinion to
the New York Times and the panjandrums of news TV? The question
has no answer. There is nothing comparable they could do. Establish
a link with Louis "gutter religion" Farrakhan? Dig up some fawning
comments about Fidel Castro, Nicolae Ceausescu or Pol Pot? Uncover some
pro bono legal work done for the Yahweh
Cult or La Raza? Who would care?
At election time
a year and a half ago, one of this country's most
brilliant and perceptive political commentators noted this fundamental
asymmetry:
We all had a lot
of fun watching the Republican convention pandering to all the many
constituencies they hope to woo from allegiance to the enemy: blacks,
Hispanics, homosexuals, and so on. But where was the equivalent phenomenon
in Los Angeles? Did the Democrats do any pandering to, say, the 59 percent
of Americans who think that homosexuality is immoral? To the whatever-large-per-cent-it-is
of Americans who think that immigration is out of control? Did they
heck. They don't need to pander. They are the party of Right
of "tolerance", of "inclusiveness", of "fairness",
of "working families". Republicans hope to win these laurels
for themselves: the Democrats hold them. We are postulants, seeking
admission to the Order of Virtue; the Dems run it. We are defensive;
they are confident. We pander to our enemies; they laugh at theirs.
What
did I think of the Oscars? Sorry, you're asking the wrong guy. The sight
of showbiz types slobbering over each other induces actual physical nausea
in me; and I find Whoopi Goldberg about as funny as an ingrown toenail.
I don't see a lot of movies, but I see enough to know that at least 95
per cent of what the studios put out is worthless crap. The last movie
I really liked? Toy Story 2. No, I'm not kidding. Next item.
When
I read articles like this,
telling us how fissiparous the Afghans are, and how impossible it is to
govern them, I always feel it's a job I might be able to handle, based
on early life experiences. My mother, may she rest in peace, was the 11th
of 13 children of an English coal miner. She married late, so that my
childhood was punctuated by the weddings of cousins. At each wedding,
the mighty clan would gather. However, these events always ended with
a fight and a family split, half the family swearing undying enmity to
the other half. I seem to have spent a good part of my childhood riding
the bus home from family functions, listening to my mother mutter: "I'll
never speak to that damn Laura again as long as I live! Did you hear what
she said about our Harold? ..." A few months later, the clan would
assemble for another wedding. There would be forgivings and tearful reconciliations...
until, at some point in the festivities, Nell would take offense at something
Jack told her Muriel thought she heard Doug say to Gladys, the family
would split along some new fault line, and everyone would go to the mattresses
again. I tell you, I knew all about cliques and factions before I could
tie my sneakers. Govern Afghanistan? Piece of cake. How do I apply for
the job?
I
noted in my piece last week titled "Kill
a Jew for Allah" that: "Institutional Islam is riddled with
Jew-hatred." I don't think that is a very controversial statement.
However, most Arab
Americans are not Muslims, but Christians of various small Middle Eastern
denominations. A thing I have never seen discussed in print is: How much
anti-Semitism is there among Arab Christians? Being a professing Christian
is, after all, as history all too abundantly shows, no obstacle to being
anti-Semitic, and Arab Christians tend to belong to tiny out-of-the-mainstream
sects that have been stewing in isolation for centuries.
A learned friend
(Jewish) who knows a great deal about such things summarized it for me
as follows.
The Copts [Egypt's
largest Christian sect] are so brutally repressed by the Egyptian state
that it is hard to say whether they have the energy to hate the Jews;
they are too busy surviving. The Maronites were Israel's primary allies
in the Lebanon War; before their betrayal at the hands of Ehud Barak,
you could have argued that they were Israel's best friends in the Arab
world. The small Armenian population in Israel proper has always had
good relations with the Jewish state. And non-Arab Christian minorities
in the Arab world such as the Assyrians have been at least
occasional allies; at any rate, the exile communities in the West have
been. Where there is anti-Semitism among Middle East Christians, it
comes from the mainstream churches; that is to say, the eastern Orthodox
and Uniate churches of Syria and among the Palestinians.
March
22nd arrived, heralded as "the first day of spring." This may
be astronomically correct, but it is climatological nonsense. Spring,
so far as I am concerned, is the months of March, April, and May. Summer
is June, July, and August; fall is September, October, and November; winter
is December, January, and February. Who cares about solstices and equinoxes?
That stuff all went out with the Druids. Let's keep things simple, and
do it by months. And can anyone complete the ditty I remember only the
first half of, tagging the months with their (North Atlantic) characteristics:
"Freezy, sneezy, breezy, showery, flowery, bowery..."?
"They
[school administrators in Montgomery County, Maryland] want to demonstrate
[to high school kids] how to use condoms. Such demonstrations, supporters
say, could help stem a rise in sexually transmitted diseases, as well
as teen pregnancy."-Washington Post, 3/19/02.
Everyone believes
that condoms prevent disease we even use "prophylactic"
as a synonym for "condom." I suppose there must be something
in it. However, I recall a conversation with a doctor in the Royal Army
Medical Corps many years ago, who claimed that condoms help diseases
to spread. His argument is not for the squeamish, so please skip the rest
of this section if you don't want the details. When donning a condom,
this medical man pointed out, you have to roll it on; and this is very
difficult to do without trapping, and thereby plucking out, some pubic
hairs. Now, the site where a hair has been freshly plucked out is (he
claimed) a tiny lesion, and a perfect entry point for disease.
I've been carrying
this theory round in my head for years, without really having any idea
whether or not it is sound. Can any reader with a solid medical background
please give me an opinion?
Two
follow-ups on my
"historians" piece earlier this month.
(1) After my description
of Sima Qian's letter to his friend Ren An, which I described as one of
the great documents of antiquity, some readers emailed in to ask where
a translation of that letter could be found. It is printed as an appendix
(Appendix Two) to Records of the Grand Historian: The Qin Dynasty,
the first of the three volumes in Burton
Watson's translation of Sima Qian's great work.
(2) I mentioned the
poet Eric Ormsby, and that fine magazine The
New Criterion , to which Eric and I are both occasional contributors.
Unforgivably, however, I failed to mention another magazine, Parnassus:
Poetry in Review, with which Eric is even more closely associated,
and in which I too once
published a piece. I hereby apologize, correct the omission, and recommend
Parnassus to you without reservation, if you care at all about
poetry.
After
my
Ireland piece, several readers asked why I write about IRA terror
(which they agreed is bad) but not about the "loyalist" gangs,
who do things just as wicked. That's an easy one. I only have a few hundred
words to say what I want to say; so on a subject like Ireland, about which
there is a very great deal to say, I have to select. What are my criteria
for selection? The main one is: I want to tell you things you won't read
elsewhere. Since the U.S. media is fiercely and aggressively pro-IRA and
anti-Ulster Unionist, I try to state the case for the Unionists when I
can. They do, after all, have a very good case, though you would never
know it from watching TV or reading The New York Times.
Are "loyalist"
terrorists beastly? Yes, they are. But who in America doesn't know this?
Who in America doesn't know that Unionists are beastly tout ensemble
that they are arrogant, sneering, bigoted monsters, whose chief
pleasure is to grind the faces of poor suffering Catholics? That's what
the IRA shills in the U.S. media tell you. At the time of Gerry Adams's
1994 visit to this country, I was astounded to hear U.S. newscasters retailing
the "fact" that Northern Ireland Catholics could not vote, were
disenfranchised. That was a naked lie, but it was put about very widely
in the U.S. media, and millions of Americans probably believe it. I was
even more astounded, now I come to think of it, to hear Larry King address
Adams as "Mister Ireland." Since Adams's party was at that time
polling around 2 per cent in elections in the Republic of Ireland, this
is equivalent to calling Ralph Nader "Mister America."
That's the U.S. media,
that's what they're like liars, hypocrites, and fools, for the
most part. I aim to tell you something you won't hear from them. If your
pleasure is to hear about the cruelty, bigotry and intolerance of the
Ulster Unionists, switch on your TV, go to the movies, or buy a newspaper.
I aim to give you the other stuff.
One
of the things that columnists are plagued by, in fact, is a sort of Hegelian
faction out there in reader-land. The philosopher Hegel, if I have not
misunderstood him, argued that no statement you can make about anything
in the universe is completely true, because the manifold connections that
exist between everything and everything else mean that the only completely
true statement would be one that encompassed all of creation. Just so,
if I say an approving word about (for example) the Turks, I get angry
letters from Armenians demanding to know why I didn't mention the 1915
massacres, and from Greeks demanding to know why I didn't mention the
1974 invasion of Cyprus. The answer is: because that's not what I was
writing about. Go write your own damn articles, you Hegelians. Then
I can have some fun reading them and telling you what you left
out.
P.S.
to the last: Anyone who can say anything coherent about Hegel thereby
acquires a license to quote W. H. Auden's brilliant clerihew on the old
bore, as follows:
No-one could ever
inveigle
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Into offering an apology
For his Phenomenology.
(I guarantee, I
guarantee, I shall now get e-mails chiding me for calling Hegel a
bore and assuring me that the Wissenschaft der Logik is, when approached
in the right spirit, more fun than the all-night laundromat.)
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