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I have two (immediate) thoughts about this: First, the pressure from parents concerning abortion is not necessarily against; the pressure from parents is often for. Second, this news item triggered a memory from the Democratic convention of 2000. I was there, covering the conclave along with my NR colleagues. To and from the convention center, we took shuttle buses. One night, I was sitting on a darkened bus, returning from the convention center and the Democratic delegates around me were talking about Joe Lieberman. He had just been confirmed as vice-presidential nominee. "But he's for parental notification!" one woman spat. Another countered, "Yes, but that's better than parental consent!" I don't think I had ever fully realized just how fanatical is the Democratic party on abortion. To be in favor of parental notification was a conservative, rather risky position; to be in favor of parental consent why, Attila the Hun!
The people want better-paying jobs, do they? Then why not cut taxes for the "rich" (who tend to be employers, entrepreneurs)? And since when did a more socialized economy afford cheaper prescription drugs that is, drugs that people would consider worth taking? Anyone who longs for Canada's or Britain's experience doesn't know anything about it. We're supposed to have two free-market parties in this country (unlike, say, France, where even les conservateurs are socialist). Then why won't the Democratic party acknowledge that a free economy is as good for health care including pharmaceuticals as it is for everything else? Candidate Kerry also said, "When I am president [shudder], I am going to grow national service in America." Yes, you read that right. He ought to be disqualified on grounds of violence to the language alone.
This triggered a memory in me, and may well have in you: Midway through the 40th president's first term, the New York Times in its infinite wisdom editorialized, "The stench of failure hangs over Ronald Reagan's White House." And that's not the stinkiest editorial that paper has published!
A great man and he'd be a great chief justice.
"Jay, I thought you might find this funny. I work as technical support for [a major governmental institution]. We recently deployed software that blocks various websites that are deemed inappropriate. Now, while I would block all non-work-related web material if I were in charge, basically all that is supposed to get blocked is 'adult' material. So imagine my surprise when I tried to access a paintball website www.gunsnstuf.com and was redirected to a webpage that notified me that access had been denied because the content was deemed inappropriate by [the institution]. Imagine my even greater surprise when I was instructed to test the web-blocking software and found that it allowed access to www.playboy.com and some other adult websites, but denied access to just about every single gun website imaginable. "None of this material is work-related; I can understand the desire to block access to these sites in the workplace. But if you're going to spend thousands of dollars blocking web material, it seems silly to emphasize gun websites over adult websites. "P.S. This software also blocks access to Nazi websites, but allows free rein to terrorist websites, including Hezbollah's site and Hamas's site, which include instructions for terrorist activities." Ah, America in 2003.
"The Beijing Intermediate People's Court sentenced Xu Wei, 28, and Jin Haike, 26, to ten years. Yang Zilin, 32, and Zhang Honghai, 29, were sentenced to eight years . . . "The case has long enraged human-rights advocates, in part because the group's activities seemed to be innocuous and in part because the four men had been imprisoned for over two years without a verdict in their trial." That report was filed by Elisabeth Rosenthal in the New York Times. (Incidentally, Rosenthal has just won the first-ever Osborn Elliott Prize for Excellence in Asian Journalism. Elliott is a former Newsweek editor and, from my experience of him, a capital gent.) A few years ago, I did a piece on the Falun Gong, and the Chinese government's insistence on killing it. It is not a political group, and it should pose no threat to the PRC. These are people who just want to follow their philosophy/religion and do gentle, slow-motion exercises (usually in parks). I asked Harry Wu, the great dissident, why Beijing should consider the Falun Gong so threatening. He said that the regime is so fragile, "they do not want people organized for anything, for any purpose, no matter how benign." I have never forgotten the example he used: Say you're Chinese, and you have an interest in matchboxes. You meet a neighbor who also likes matchboxes. Then the two of you discover a collector in another town. Uh-oh. "That's when the government gets worried," said Wu. "Today, you are a matchbox organization. But tomorrow, you may turn your group to another purpose." Some people say that the PRC is not Communist anymore that they're just an authoritarian one-party state, not dissimilar to old Mexico under the PRI. I don't believe it. Just read the newspapers.
Did you note that "hard-liners" and "diplomats"? Is that the way you would have put it? Do those strike you as exactly parallel? Look, that paper commits way bigger offenses than this, but let's play with it a little. You could have said "hard-liners" and "soft-liners" (very parallel). You could have said "hawks" and "doves" (certainly acceptable). You could have said "realists" and "diplomats" (unacceptable, I concede though I like it). But "hard-liners" and "diplomats" not the kind of thing you'll find published in good ol' NR (you are subscribing, aren't you?).
It's a bad habit, I think this name-changing. Every time I see a Founder yanked off a school in favor of Dick Gregory (or someone), I wince. And I wince even when My Hero is involved. In my view, we should just find new things to name more recent greats after even if the mountains are largely taken.
Jimmy Carter, Tim Robbins, Nancy Pelosi, Dan Rather, John Kerry, Jean Chrétien they all look ridiculous! I hate to laugh, but . . . geez. Bill Clinton is priceless: on the golf course (evidently), with a dopey look on his face and a cigar bluntly protruding from his mouth. I laughed my [hiney] off.
It need hardly be added that George W. Bush and the War on Terror have driven certain segments of the Right mad, too.
Uh, pardon my right-wing paranoid self, but . . .
"Bush: The Definition of 'Is.'" I quite agree. Print it! Ship it! Boast it! It's quirky, smart and, as they say in the political biz, "comparative" (though fairly subtly so).
"I felt exactly the same way during a 'humorous' news panel at the Conference on World Affairs held here in Boulder, Colo. The nationally renowned liberal panelists made jokes about the president's intelligence, and the liberal audience laughed uproariously. I've never experienced wink-wink-nudge-nudge smugness on such a large scale before. I told a friend later I felt like I needed to take a shower. "And this is exactly why I disagree with your assertion that there is a nearly irreparable split between the 'Two Americas' along Left vs. Right lines. I would locate a more profound split in life, not only in our country between the smugly self-righteous (and often highly vocal) people and the curious and thoughtful (and often more circumspect) ones on either side of the political divide. I'm a liberal atheist, and I've disagreed with many of the Bush administration's policies from Day One. I am extremely grateful that the war went so quickly and relatively (as wars go) bloodlessly, and I am hopeful for the future of Iraq, but I continue to have grave misgivings about this administration's foreign policy (I admit the U.N. is imperfect, but I think its goals remain more than worthy of our best, most earnest efforts). "That said, I disapproved of many of the tactics of antiwar protesters, I've never referred to President Bush as 'Dubya,' and my response to policies I find objectionable will not be to sneer at our president or compare him to one fascist after another, but simply to haul tail campaigning for the Democratic candidate next year surely not a point of view you would find 'alien'? "I mean, I don't want to sound like a sap, it's just that I really do believe that people of good conscience and character can be found, in great numbers, on either side of most political issues. "Best wishes, and thanks for your writing." Um, let's just say that, in my time, I haven't run across many left-liberals like that and I'm grateful for her. Good week, y'all. |
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