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February 23, 2006,
7:58 a.m. Not long ago, there was a stunning exchange in an Iraqi courtroom, and I want to be sure you know about it. Saddam Hussein was acting up shouting “Down with traitors!” and “Down with America!” and so on.
Saddam said, “For 35 years I led you, and you say, ‘Eject him?’” Judge Abdel-Rahman replied, “I am a judge and you are a defendant. And you have violated order in the court. I am implementing the law.” You might say, “Ho-hum what’s the big deal about that, Nordlinger?” This is a momentous deal, in the Middle East. That language is absolutely radical, revolutionary, unheard of, in the Arab world: “I am a judge and you are a defendant. . . . I am implementing the law.” And these words are earthshaking not just in the Arab world: For most of human history in most times and places “justice” has been a matter of brute force: The strong put the weak up against the wall. True liberal order has been a rarity. And now Iraq is having a taste a big taste of that. Proper justice is being administered to the former dictator himself. In the midst of everyday crises a Koran and a toilet, a Danish cartoon, a vice-presidential accident we should pause, once in a while, to acknowledge this. I don’t think I’ve heard anything so electrifying since the War on Terror began: “I am a judge and you are a defendant. . . . I am implementing the law.” Huge.
But the good Bush critics are always telling us that Saddam is a mere secularist annoyance what truck could he possibly have with extremist Islam, al Qaeda, our real enemies? Yeah, yeah: Before he was toppled, Saddam put an inscription from the Koran on the Iraqi flag; he claimed to have had a Koran written out in his own blood; etc., etc. Dictators use what they can, and we should be spared more talk about how Saddam was just a standard secularist, not to be confused with the cancer now attacking our world.
Quite so. After 9/11, Bush decided to harass them unmercifully. And he has kept to his plan and that is why he is invaluable as commander-in-chief in this era. This will be more broadly recognized much more after January 2009.
And what would possess a man to say such things? We’re not talking about just any man, either. We’re talking about a former vice president of the United States; the almost president of the United States the man who received more votes in the 2000 election. About the worst thing you can do, in the present climate, is fuel Arab paranoia. And Arab paranoia very much includes the rounding up of Muslims in the United States; the keeping of said Muslims in depraved conditions; general American hostility. Al Gore essentially told these people that Muslims in the United States are treated the way pretty much everybody is in the Middle East. I didn’t think that, at this point February 2006 I could be shocked or disheartened by Gore. He went around the bend long ago. But this was, indeed, shocking and disheartening. By comparison, his remarks on the natural environment are calm and sensible.
Oh, hang on: Dean is chairman of the party. Sorry. But you see the point, don’t you?!
Will these UW kids ever be ashamed ashamed that they refused to honor their illustrious alumnus, 20 years after his death? Perhaps. That would be nice.
It was the city’s Board of Supervisors, by the way, that declared the Iowa unwelcome. To what party do these supervisors belong? If the Democratic party and that would be a shock why shouldn’t Republicans, around the country, use this as a campaign issue? Why aren’t Democrats at large forced to confront this? If Republicans did something analogous I can’t think what that would be wouldn’t the entire country, led by the media, be up in arms? (I recall that Arizona, for a spell, refused to adopt Martin Luther King Day as a holiday. There were serious boycotts of the state of Arizona. It was an outright pariah among states.) But, of course, if Republicans act or talk they are denounced as McCarthyite. George Clooney might make a film about us. Let him!
Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has accepted an invitation to visit Cuba from President Fidel Castro, in gratitude for Cuba’s support of Iran’s nuclear program. . . . Just in case you had forgotten the character of the Cuban regime, or the Iranian or the Syrian, or the Venezuelan.
If you can work it into some conversation, bully for you.
For a review of the pianist András Schiff, with the Cappella Andrea Barca, please go here. For a review of Verdi’s Forza del Destino at the Metropolitan Opera, please go here. For a review of the tenor Eric Cutler, and a review of the New York Philharmonic Ensembles, please go here. For a review of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, conducted by Mariss Jansons, please go here. For a review of the soprano Felicity Lott, please go here. For a review of a concert spearheaded by the pianist Richard Goode, please go here. For a review of Saint-Saëns’s Samson et Dalila at the Met, and a review of the New York Philharmonic, under Lorin Maazel, please go here. For a review of the St. Lawrence String Quartet, please go here. For a review of Verdi’s Traviata at the Met, and a review of the tenor Rolando Villazón (in recital), please go here. For a review of . . . As the Republicans said in 1946 (it was their campaign slogan, after a long, long season of Democratic dominance): Had enough?
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