We herewith confirm that [the] above-mentioned goods are not of Israeli origin, nor do they contain to any degree Israeli components, nor have they been imported from Israel. Lovely. My correspondent says, To sum it up: Fifty-seven years after Auschwitz, a German company (no less) issues a paper certifying that its products are Judenrein. Shouldnt there be some outrage? Or at least some concern? Yes, but not in Bahrain where they like no, where they demand that their furniture be Jew-free.
Several days ago, the New York Times ran a piece called My Excellent Brylcreem Adventure about hair-care products. The article included the line, Many of these brands evoke blank stares from anyone younger than Donald Rumsfeld, who was mocked in a National Review article for his Vitalis-friendly hair. Look, its no big deal, but the man the writer of the article couldnt possibly have read my piece. It probably came up in a Nexis search of Vitalis the writer, or a researcher, failed to note the context. Far from mocking Rumsfeld, the piece glorified him. It makes you wonder about other things in the Times in any newspaper that you dont know so well. I heard from someone recently who works for a think tank in Washington. He said he stopped reading the Times because it got so many things wrong, on the subjects he knows very well. So how could I trust the rest? he asked. An interesting question.
I thought of this when I read the following headline on Friday: Noelle Bush Handcuffed, Sentenced to 10 Days in Jail. Noelle Bush is Gov. Jeb Bushs daughter. America, folks, is a great, great country so unlike most of the other countries in the world. Thats why many foreign peoples dont understand us. They miss the point of us, entirely.
I wish I had had it back in college, when I was being force-fed Geertz. Included in the pieces available on the magazines website though you should really subscribe are Roger Kimball on Victorian nudity (yes), our own David Pryce-Jones on Albert Speer (hiss no, not Alger), Anthony Daniels (who often writes under the name Theodore Dalrymple) on book-browsing in Dubai and Havana (yes), a nifty piece by Martin Greenberg, brother of the late art critic Clement Greenberg, and a very odd piece on a very odd subject by a guy with an odd last name.
I cant tell you how angry Charlie Rangels comments make me. I can tell you that, in the Army, theres no black, no white, no yellow, no red . . . WE ARE ALL GREEN. They drilled that into our heads from Day One at basic training. My senior Drill Sergeant was black; I am a pasty-white Nebraskan; and Id follow him anywhere. Comments like Rangels merely illuminate how little people such as he actually know about the military. It is, in fact, the LEAST racist environment I have ever experienced. Its really about the only place where I have truly been judged solely on my actions and my merits. Well, that should make us proud to be American.
Not very smart of us Yanks. Hamza continues, Its absolutely essential that interviews with scientists occur on neutral ground. Like other scientists, I was watched all the time in Iraq. . . . I was able to talk freely only after my escape, first to a safe haven in Iraqs north in 1994 and then to Europe in 1995, and after assurances from the U.S. government that my family would be safe (they were later smuggled out of Iraq with U.S. government help) so score one for our guys. Iraqi scientists will certainly not talk freely to U.N. inspectors; to do so would be suicidal and has, in fact, proven so. More from Hamza: Saddam, I believe, is intent on the destruction of Iraq through his adventurism. If he achieves his goal of acquiring nuclear weapons, he will be [even] more of a menace to the region and Iraq. Many of the Iraqi scientists I knew shared this opinion and would be glad to cooperate if given a second lease on life by being allowed to leave. I hope were doing our best in this department but I fear were not. (Of course, if we invade, and liberate I dont know why I put that word between quotation marks all of this may be moot.) For years, the CIA and State Department have been perversely hostile to Ahmad Chalabi, the otherwise respected head of the Iraqi National Congress. Only the Defense Department has been properly receptive. So, as the first President Bush used to say, stay tuned.
But it could well be that the racial cards she brought to the table canceled out the offensive political and social views. Jurors might have said, Yes, shes a Falwellian monster but, hell, shes black and Indian! I was reminded of something interesting: Back in the 1980s, there was some talk never too serious that Bob Strauss would run for president. He is the Democratic Wise Man who has been in Washington for many years. Was Jimmy Carters campaign manager, for example, and chairman of the Democratic National Committee, and a million other things. Talking about a possible run, he once said (roughly), You know, some people say I have no chance because Im a Texan. Other people say I have no chance because Im Jewish. But I sort of figure that the one may cancel out the other, and Id be all right. I always loved that remark I can see the smile on his face when he said it.
By the way: Does it not suggest something interesting about the Arab worlds relationship to American culture that the Iraqi monsters campaign song should be Whitney Houstons I Will Always Love You? Not some wailing Middle Eastern ditty?
Quite right: One is a former something; one was a serviceman in nam. On a related note, I use maiden name in the present, as in, Mrs. Joness maiden name is Smith although one could make the case for was, too.
So, Arsenio Hall? In his monologue once, he said, Where does Sade [the singer] get off spelling her name like that, but pronouncing it like she does? Its like saying, My name is B-o-b, but I pronounce it linoleum. I always loved him for that. |
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http://www.nationalreview.com/impromptus/impromptus102102.asp
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