Ma Famille

A community for my family of subversives, compassionate humanitarians, and other rational thinkers.

Reporting for Duty

Posted by musecomandante on October 16, 2008

The following is a letter I wrote to the NoVoterLeftBehind organization volunteering on behalf of the fight against voter suppression.  I would encourage anyone who reads this to seriously consider the implications of allowing those who would seek to subvert the Constitution to succeed.

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I believe that voter suppression/enfranchisement is the front-line of the political theater.  I am disheartened and worried by the apparent lack of a sufficient counter-attack against the people who would deny their fellow citizens this fundamental right of American democracy.  For this reason, I want to contribute whatever I possibly can to this battle.

The words I have selected to describe this phenomenon are deliberate.  It is a war, and I want to work along side people who understand that it is a war.  I received my formal education in Sociology, and my ongoing informal education in military and geo-political history.  This is the frame of reference through which I view the treasonous efforts of those who would seek to subvert my constitutional right to vote.

I have spent much of the last two and a half years living outside this country, and have returned only recently.  Through my travels I have gained irreplaceable insight as to the nature of freedom and man’s relation to his citizenship.  My studies and experiences have led me to the conclusion that the upcoming Presidential election is the most important since the ascent of Lincoln.  America stands at an inflection point that will either lead to more freedom for its citizens or the continued institutionalization of those who wish to secure their own freedom at the expense of all others.

The voter suppression conflict requires more than simply litigating and agitating.  It cries out for a massive, coordinated media campaign as well as other strategies.  In my professional life I have worked for over twelve years as a Web Applications Developer, creating complex applications for business clients.  I cannot imagine that my skills and commitment would not be useful in any such efforts.  However, if I am not a good fit for your organization please direct me to where that might be.

Sincerely,
F.E.B.

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A Conservative Argument for Obama

Posted by musecomandante on October 6, 2008

I’m no conservative, nor am I huge fan of Barack Obama like many of my family and friends.  However, I do believe he is the only sane option in the upcoming presidential election.  This conviction is based on a number of reasons, but I’ll let a thoughtful conservative explain some of them in this excellent article.

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A Footnote

Posted by musecomandante on September 24, 2008

I wasn’t kidding or exaggerating when I likened the propaganda tactics of McCain’s presidential campaign to something that would make Hitler proud.  FDR said something eerily similar regarding the republican party propaganda he stared down, as explained in a very interesting article by Nicolaus Mills:

For Roosevelt, the Republicans’ distortion of his record was not business as usual. He saw their made-up attacks on his policies and patriotism as hitting below the belt, and he treated the attacks on him as having no legitimate place in American life. “They have imported the propaganda technique invented by the dictators abroad. Remember, a number of years ago, there was a book, “Mein Kampf,” written by Hitler himself. The technique was all set out in Hitler’s book,” Roosevelt observed. “According to that technique, you should never use a small falsehood; always a big one, for its very fantastic nature would make it more credible — if only you keep repeating it over and over again.”

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Why isn’t Obama Ahead by 20 Points?

Posted by musecomandante on September 21, 2008

Maybe, just maybe, this has something to do with it.

As I prepare for a return to the States after my long absence I feel rather ambivalent about what awaits me: an intense and under-handed character assassination campaign against Barack Obama, a monumental financial meltdown which I predicted over a year ago, and just the usual state of the States (as characterized by the article).  I’ve become very comfortable with my liberation from the latter.  In the middle of this I’m as poor as I’ve ever been and actually have to try and raise money from investors who might be considering their mattresses as the only safe place for their savings.  And now I return.  My timing is impeccable!

As I’ve told my parents and others, I will not live in America except on my own terms, those terms being the requirements of a truly free man.  In 21st century America is it only possible to live as a free man, as a free African-American man, as a rich man.  Otherwise, one is much too beholden, at least for my temperament,  to those who ultimately owe their position to subterfuge and the noose.  I will have no master.  So I will not stay, unless I am either on the road to riches or have arrived.  Furthermore, if Obama loses, regardless of my circumstance, I will be looking for another homeland to lay my head, at least on a part-time basis.  This too I have vowed, to my family and others.  I am sure that his defeat will mean the continuation of a long slow decline of a country that once held the greatest promise the world had yet seen.

Conversely, if Obama wins?  If he wins?  I’ve found myself curiously and deeply sucked into the outcome of this presidential campaign.  This is not due to Obama himself, I’ve never been a fan of the democractic party orthodoxy and he is nothing if not an orthodox democrat, but because what is at stake and what he represents.  Yes, as he so often seeks to remind us, Obama represents change for the better.  And hope.  As I promised my friend Cameron last night, if Obama wins, if he wins… I will dance in the street.

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Know Thy Enemy

Posted by musecomandante on September 8, 2008

This post was taken from an email reply to my sister, Aliya, regarding her dissemination of damaging information about Sarah Palin, the GOP ’08 VP candidate.

i don’t even think it’s worth getting worked up about that lady, she is a joke, but the republican strategy is no joke at all and has worked quite successfully before.  this excellent article sums up one of the most critical reasons why http://www.huffingtonpost.com/adam-mckay/were-gonna-frickin-lose-t_b_124772.html.  the republican propaganda machine would have made hitler proud, and that’s not an exaggeration.

it’s definitely not time to panic or lose hope yet, but know who your dealing with and know their strategies.  there’s no way the race should be as close as is being reported (and I suspect it actually isn’t) but there does exist a very good chance that the representative of the american industrial oligarchs (mccain) will win with the same strategy they used to get their last representative (george w) in office.  these people are the descendants of the hamiltonian monarchist that jefferson believed would come to represent the biggest internal threat to the country.  they have no use for democracy except when it serves to keep them on top of the social hierarchy, which is why they are so comfortable with propaganda campaigns that are based on outright lies, character assasination, and just for good measure, voter suppression.  as with oligarchs everywhere they are more than willing to let the rest of the country go to hell in a hand basket as long as they can maintain their monopoly of capital.  i mention all this as a rather long winded way to say know thy enemy!

the stakes in this election are greater than at any time since the ascent of lincoln.  we all need to keep that in mind, no matter what distractions- like a gun-toting, christian absolutist, no-nothing from alaska as vp pick- the conservative propaganda machine trots out.

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The Roots of Neo-Socialism: A Beginning

Posted by musecomandante on September 4, 2008

As an amateur political theorist (and actual sociologist according to the University of Illinois) I do a lot of reading and thinking about the nature of societies and our various political systems.  This has been supplemented in a very crucial way by a fair amount of international travel over the past couple of years.  My thoughts in this area are still evolving, but some foundational principles are beginning to emerge.  One such principal is that universal access to education, not any old education, but a world-class education from kindergarten to doctorate, is necessary for a free and just society.  I have been heartened by Obama’s call for a more limited, but still radical by modern American standards, policy of universal education.

The spark behind my decision to write about this now is an excellent article about one man’s attempt to revolutionize elementary and middle school education in a particularly downtrodden area of Harlem.  Note that the article is a post in a new education blog that I will be following and recommend based on the promise and premise of the reporting thus far.

In the article, the author states that “Canada [the man responsible for the Harlem project] wants, in essence, to create a European-style social democracy within Harlem.  In Europe people who hold such views are generally called “social democrats”, but I think neo-socialist sounds much cooler.  Expect to hear more from me, eventually much more, on this subject.

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Georgia on my mind

Posted by musecomandante on August 5, 2008

This is a very interesting piece about the current state of the American south, and what a state it is.

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The Blood has Never Dried

Posted by musecomandante on July 1, 2008

This post is in response to today’s article The Big Payback (I love that title) at the Root.com regarding reparations to African-Americans for slavery and the succeeding general repression. It is also a supplemental musing on the meme I first introduced in the brief post 634 Years is a Long Time.

The title of this post is a partial quote from Doria Dee Johnson during an interview with Gwen Ifill of the Jim Leherer News Hour (PBS). The occasion, now almost exactly three years ago, was the issuing of a formal apology by the U.S. senate for failure to act in response to the widespread lynching of African-Americans in the not so distant past. Mrs. Johnson attended the vote as a family representative of her great, great grandfather Anthony P. Crawford, a somewhat notable lynching victim.

In the same interview Mrs. Johnson also states, “I would say that because of Anthony Crawford’s demise, someone got rich. And the Crawford family suffered behind that. So that needs to be discussed.”

Interested readers can view the full interview here (which I recommend), and/or read the full transcript.

Now, I’ve never met or spoken to Mrs. Johnson, but we have this in common: we are both direct descendants of Anthony P. Crawford. In fact, there were family members with whom I am very close who were also present at the nation’s Capital that day. This brings us to the crux of the matter.

During the most recent Christmas holiday I remember quite vividly telling my Dad that “…all legitimate claims must be paid.” I don’t remember the exact nature of the discussion, but I do remember that I had my great, great grandfather in mind when I made that statement. The incontrovertible fact is that one can inherit grievance just as one inherits wealth, and for African-Americans they are often the opposite sides of the same coin. Thus the fundamental claim that underlies any call for reparations is firmly planted in the most basic norms of justice. Yet despite the legitimacy of the claim, I believe directing too much energy into the reparations effort would be unwise.

There is absolutely no chance in hell that any form of federal reparations will be on the table in the near future. One of the core reasons for this is a nearly ubiquitous (and obviously racist) American history mythology. The presidential campaign of Barack Obama has provided occasion for all manner of public and private evangelizing on behalf of this cherished mythology, but my first memorable encounter with it occurred during my sophomore year at a university smack dab in the heart of middle America. I can’t recall how the subject came up, but my best friend and roommate at the time (who happened to be white) bluntly asked me “how come black folks don’t just work hard and get ahead” like his grandfather had done. He carefully explained to me how his grandfather had “worked in a factory” all his life so that his descendants could have opportunities like attending university. What I can recall is that my response was stunned silence, simply because I had no good answer, followed by a mix of humiliation and rage. Our friendship ended shortly thereafter.

Now, I would tell my then best friend, quite calmly of course, that my grandfather worked very hard all his life, primarily as a mailman for the very same university we were attending. And that he was trained as an electrician in the segregated U.S. Army during WWII, but upon his return home was denied membership in the local electrician’s union, a stalwart bastion of racial exclusion at that time. It’s quite possible my friend’s grandfather, who immigrated from Europe, was a member of that very same union. I would tell my then best friend about the man from whom I believe I inherited my natural ambition and inability to stand-down, Anthony P. Crawford. I would tell him how Mssr. Crawford was prosperous and proud, and how he was lynched one fine day in 1916 for exactly that reason. I would tell him how the Crawford family was run out of town and their land appropriated, thus cursing them to impoverishment that lasted for generations.

Unfortunately for the both of us, I couldn’t tell my then best friend anything at all, because I didn’t know. I didn’t find out these things until much later in my adult life, and only after actively searching for the truth. The truth being that African-Americans were, and many of us still are, the hardest workers one can imagine. We once valued family so much, and many of us still do, that our marriage rate was 90%, significantly higher than our white peers at the time. The pursuit of education by African-Americans was, and in many cases still is, almost a religion unto itself. My grandfather did not have much wealth to give his children, but both of my parents have masters degrees!

The truth is that the present American racial hierarchy is not a result of African-Americans being lazy or profligate, disinterested or incapable of advanced learning. The America of today is the product of a systematic white terror regime that nearly obliterated the necessary social foundations upon which a free people must stand. The U.S senate would not have convened three years ago to apologize to one man’s family. My great, great grandfather’s story was all too common. In fact, his story, and mine, encapsulate in a very real way the experience of African-Americans in the United States. That is the real history.

The truth also includes the fact that, like my 18 year old former self, African-Americans are, in general, a lost people. A people who have only the vaguest notion of how we arrived where we are. If I didn’t know the history of my own family, how in the world could one expect my then best friend to know? Who would have told him? Certainly not me.

What is required now, and which will ultimately be more valuable than any possible reparations, is a concerted effort to disseminate and institutionalize the true history of African people in the United States. Wherever and whenever the American mythology raises it’s head the challenge must be swift and zealous. We must wrest away control of the popular narrative and do everything possible to ensure that the true story be told. The story of a great slave rebellion that has few peers in the annals of human civilization. A story that is unfinished, and ongoing.

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What Does a Neo-Atheist Believe?

Posted by musecomandante on June 11, 2008

I don’t know the origins of the term neo-atheist, it may have been coined to describe people like Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, and Sam Harris who are leading thinkers in the latest wave of western anti-religiosity. I admire these three men, and through reading them or about them (I can’t remember which) came upon the neo-atheist moniker, but that’s not why I use it. In fact I’m not sure any of them use the term, although I would like to think of myself as in the same intellectual company as these illustrious authors- at least in regard to our fundamental world view that is. No, I like the term because I think it is more accurate and aggressive than “agnostic”, which I never felt completely comfortable with.

By my definition, being a neo-atheist is an important position between that of agnostic and atheist. Atheism is an assertion that there is no god, which is as unprovable and unknowable as the opposite assertion. And agnosticism is just wishy washy. Neo-atheism does not assert that no god is possible, only that the existence of any of the gods created by man, from the very ancient past to this very second, is certainly impossible. Ahau-Kin (a Mayan sun deity), Zeus, and Allah are all put on the same plane and in their proper place.

So what does a neo-atheist believe? I believe that the principles of scientific inquiry are the purest and surest foundation upon which man can base his understanding of the universe, including his own existence. Scientific inquiry is the only proven means for discovering the truth.

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Lest We Forget

Posted by musecomandante on June 2, 2008

Current Book: Bad Samaritans: The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism

It appears that Barack Obama may very well clinch the democratic party presidential nomination this week, or so one can hope. As we look forward to a milestone in the primary process I think this is a particularly opportune moment to contemplate a more sober milestone in our recent history: the political campaign undertaken by the bush administration to (successfully) lead the nation into a historic occupation of Iraq. It is this war, the ruinous pinnacle of an ideology ginned up by american oligarchs for their own benefit, which guarantees that the upcoming presidential election is arguably the most critical since the ascent of Lincoln.

Starting in October of 2002 and continuing through March 2003, I had a debate via email with my corporate attorney JMW, a fairly firm believer in the ideology of the aforementioned oligarchs. My friend and fellow musician TL also lurked in on the conversation, and made a welcomed contribution at one point. TL went on to study business law himself.

JMW wrote: What’s your take on his evaluation of Powell? [I believe this was in reference to Harry Belafonte referring to Colin Powell as a house slave.]

FB wrote: Hey JMW,

Unless the whole iraq thing is a shrewdly calculated game of high-stakes, geopolitical chicken I’m very disappointed with Powell’s support of that policy. Unfortunately, with the evidence showing the cheney-rumsfeld-wolfowitz-axis pushing for ‘regime change’ in iraq since at least the time of the clinton administration, I’m disinclined to believe that W is that smart.

I wouldn’t go so far as to call Mr. Powell a house-slave, he has been one of the few voices of moderation on this issue. However, I can understand how this whole thing can ilicit very strong feelings and depending on how far Mr. Powell is willing to tow the line, the house-slave analogy might not be inaccurate. I think we’re dealing with a very grave issue, namely will the U.S. adopt an imperialist stance cloaked in 21st century rhetoric, and will we pursue actions based on this stance which I believe could sow the seeds of WWIII.

JMW wrote: Yeah, but aren’t cabinet officials supposed to publicly tow the line, white or black? It’s been leaked for months that privately, Powell has been off the “hawk” reservation. Publicly, however, he does what any loyal cabinet official – tout administration policy.

Even when Patrick Moynihan (sp?), a Democrat, was in Nixon’s cabinet, he never publicly strayed from administration policy. But that doesn’t make him an Irish chamber maid.

[A few months later, in March 2003 I sent JMW a link to a Newsweek article (no longer available) and our debate about the war was renewed.]

JMW wrote: I disagree with the premise of his article – “they oppose us because we’re powerful and they fear us.” I side with those cited in the article who “make the argument that Europeans are now pacifists, living in a ‘postmodern paradise,’ shielded from threats and unable to imagine the need for military action.”

I’ll avoid a long diatribe by concluding: Defending peace should never be the subject of a popular vote. Churchill faced similar retorts from 1935-39 while urging the British to oppose German rearmament and to rearm Britian – i.e. that the population overwhelmingly opposed war. He responded, saying “national security is the prime directive of any government, and requires no mandate from the people.” Blair has taken this to heart, and refuses to become another Chamberlain.

Failing to use force in response to a threat because a majority oppose it, has the same pathos as not building hospitals because you oppose disease – i.e. the disease is coming whether you like it or not. You can prepare for it, or you can not.

After all, with the exception of the defeat of the Nazis, fascism, socialism, and communism, war has never solved anything.

FB wrote: I think you missed the point of the article entirely. The premise of the article is that the bush administration’s particular brand of diplomacy has caused severe geopolitical isolation at a time when it is paramount that we lead the world by consensus through the very international institutions that *we* founded for this purpose. Unfortunately, it seems to clear to me, and to many others around the globe, that bush made up his mind about invading Irag before attempting any diplomacy. When things didn’t go his way, he labeled the UN ‘irrelevant’. This is the sham that is arrogant in nature. The UN was not founded to be a rubberstamp puppet parliament for the US, and to treat it as such will foster enmity from those countries who we would usually find to be more willing to align their interest with ours (the whole point of diplomacy).

I also disagree with the pacifist argument. Would one argue that Russia is pacifist, with their ongoing and bloody war against terrorists in chechnya? How about China, one of the most militaristic regimes on the planet? I think the pacifist label is misdirected even in the case of France, who have shown themselves to be quite willing to pursue military action in the case of their African quasi-colonies, and in the balkans under the UN banner. The only country that one could plausibly argue falls in the pacifist camp would be Germany, but even they actively supported the first gulf war.

No, the issue is not pacifism, but national and supra-national interests. Russia and France both have substantial economic ties to Iraq, and just as important, have large muslim populations in their midst. Thus their interests do not necessarily coincide with our own. Plus, France and Germany see part of their role as counter-acting US power via the UN and EU for this very reason. Terrorism is no stranger to continental Europe and the UK, but with their muslim populations and proximity to the middle east they have to deal with it differently. Our diplomatic failure was not providing them with a compromise that protects their vital interests as well as ours.

Obviously, I’m finding it very difficult to avoid a long diatribe 😉 I find it very interesting that you mention Churchill who may have faced similar retorts, but a very different scenario. Note that Churchill was advising that britain rearm herself *in case* of renewed german aggression (deterrence). To my knowledge (which happens to be pretty extensive in this area), Mr. Churchill *never* called for britain and her allies to launch a pre-emptive strike against Germany. For him to do so would have violated both the letter and spirit of the treaty of versailles, despite German re-armament, and the consensus of how democracies are to conduct war that has been at least implicit since the time of Jefferson. In fact, the second world war did not begin until the territorial aggression on the part of Germany.

Thus we come to the heart of the matter. As a student of military history and geopolitics, I am no pacifist, and am in fact very much in favor of maintaining an unassailable military advantage. This is one of the few things that our central government can do well, and it should not fail at this task. However, the new doctrine now being established by bush and his cronies is essentially a fancy version of ‘might makes right’. The idea that the US is claiming for itself the right to change ‘regimes’ at will and launch pre-emptive strikes absent an irrefutable imminent threat or territorial aggression is a startling change in both our explicit and implicit foreign policy. In my opinion, this new policy is also an unprincipled, arrogant, and dangerous one.

The war in Iraq is not about terrorism directly, although that is the official rhetoric. I haven’t heard one substantial shred of evidence that Iraq poses an imminent threat of the type bush seems so fond of repeating. This man committed territorial aggression, but has not done so since the first gulf war (which I wholeheartedly supported). If that’s not containment then what the hell is? No, this war is about projecting American power in the heart of the middle east by means meant to scare the shit out of our enemies. Let’s call it what it is. Put into laymans terms, what we’re saying is if we don’t like your government you better get with the program or we’re going to come in and kick your ass. We have taken it upon ourselves to reshape the world in a manner more to our liking and strategic interests, through the mechanism of war specifically. In this sense we have embarked upon a new phase of empire building. And just because we have good intentions doesn’t make it a better idea than when it was pursued by imperialist Britain, Japan, Germany, or Rome.

Unfortunately, I believe that our pursuit of this policy will make the world a more dangerous place for Americans, not a safer one. In fact, my study of geopolitics leads me to conclude that there is a rather uncomfortable probability that this misguided policy will put into motion a complex evolution of events culminating in WWIII. This is a new empire that I want no part of.

JMW wrote: First, humor: “Going to war without the French is like going hunting without an accordion.”

Now, seriousness:

Yeah, never meant to imply that Russian or China were pacifists – just Europe. And as to France’s actions in Africa, I must differ with your contention that they were carried out with the imprimatur of the UN. My understanding was that they acted without consulting the UN and/or the security council, as this has been the rebuttal to France dubbing the US “unilateralist.”

As to Churchill, I consider myself a self-taught expert on the man. He did in fact urge action against Germany for its rearmament, and really stepped up the rhetoric when Germany reoccupied the Rheinland in violation of the terms of surrender as embodied in the Treaty of Versailles. Iraq similarly is violating its terms of surrender, and deserves “preemptive” action.

Also, I differ with the contention that Bush is acting “preemptively” (although he couches it in those terms to when pandering to the public’s short attention span). To the contrary, he is enforcing the terms of surrender from 1991. Iraq’s violation of the terms is the instigating act, causing our actions not to be “preemptive” but rather reactive.

Finally, it seems that your contention is, that the rest of the World has the largest case of penis envy since A&M focused on beating UT as its sole source of school spirit; and for some reason, the US should pander to the World’s feelings of injured pride, as irrational as those feelings may be. Well hell: How do you respond to that? My first thought would be to tell them to build a military, and maybe the world will listen to you – Hell, it worked for the Russians for 50 years.

Which brings me to another point – I’m tired of the slogan “might doesn’t make right”; As if “mighty” and “right” are mutually exclusive. Has it ever occurred to anyone that the US is “mighty” because we’ve been on the “right” side of the issues so often? Just ask the Russians who were on the “wrong” side of the issues so often. The US is time tested.

FB wrote: Ha, I’ve heard that one before.

I only meant that French participation in the balkans was under the imprimatur of the UN. Plenty of countries have taken ‘unilateral’ action in their own interests. Russia in Chechnya, the US in Grenada, France in Africa, etc. The similarity in all of these cases was that they were small scale and isolated, and none of them really fell under the realm of the UN- meaning there were no existing UN resolutions or treaties of surrender, so no one really cared. The Iraq situation is different in terms of the sheer scale, strategic importance, geopolitical implications, the fact that a major war was already fought under a UN coalition, and the treaty of surrender was negotiated and enforced under the auspices of the UN.

Absolutely correct. The key here is the territorial aggression and the explicit violation of the treaty of surrender. Also, Churchill not only prodded his own government to act, but he urged all the governments who were party to the treaty of surrender to enforce its prohibitions. Also, Churchill was a consumate diplomat and understood the purpose and importance of diplomacy. When he couldn’t get the versailles coalition to agree with his assessment of the new german threat he didn’t berate or belittle them, at least not in public. Perhaps that was because he understood that Britain couldn’t take the fight on herself, but even it could have, why do so if it’s not necessary? I wouldn’t even put bush in the same ballpark as Churchill when it comes to leadership in matters of national security and international diplomacy. We’re talking little league vs. the majors.

I could believe that if it weren’t for the fact that the original, publicly stated goal of the bush adminstration was ‘regime change’ and not enforcement of the treaty of surrender (disarmament). I have no problem with enforcing the terms of surrender, and in fact think that it is imperative that we do so and not repeat the mistake of the allies in tolerating german re-armament until hitler posed a serious threat. However, the terms of surrender were negotiated under the auspices of the UN and thus should be enforced by the UN. And most conspicously, the Iraq terms of surrender say nothing about removing the Baath regime from power.

One must ask, if the bush administration’s goal was enforcement of the treaty of surrender then why the complete lack of interest in the plan put forth by France and Germany that basically called for a military inspection regime? Under this plan the UN would have posited a large occupying force in Iraq along with the inspectors. Indeed, the Russia/France/China/Germany coalition kept bringing up this idea until the very end. How the hell would Saddam have re-armed under such a scenario? And if he had thwarted this plan, I find it utterly implausible that it would not have resulted in a large-scale UN military intervention.

The only plausible reason why the bush administration failed to even consider such a plan was because it did not share the same goal. Basically, for the sake of political cover (especially needed for tony blair) the bush gang tried to get the UN to provide the US with carte blanche authority to remove the Baath regime. When some folks on the UN security council declined to do so, we decided the UN was irrelevent. That’s not diplomacy, that is a deliberate sham.

I guess the true test of whether this is merely ‘treaty enforcement’, or marks the first implementation of a more sinister doctrine, will be after the war is over. My interpretation of the bush national security document (which you should read if you haven’t already) and his own words are that we will be applying this policy of ‘pre-emptive right’ wherever there are rogue regimes that could possibly pose a danger to us sometime in the future. Iran and North Korea come to mind. If this isn’t the last but the first in a series of wars then I’m right, case closed.

No, that’s not my contention [the penis envy argument]. It may be that many in the world are envious of our power, but that’s not the point. I’m not going to restate all the reasons why diplomacy is a good thing, even for the world’s lone superpower, *especially* for the world’s lone superpower. I think the article does an excellent job in that regard. However, I will say that one of the best ways to maintain an unassailable military advantage is to convince other countries that it is not even worth trying to match our military might- and in fact they would be better off aligning themselves with us and getting some of the goodies of aid and trade with the world’s largest economy. This is something that can only be accomplished through diplomacy.

Ask yourself this. Would you rather live in a world where as an American you are greeted with respect and kindness on your world travels? Where you are able to pursue business interest all over the globe, and people actively seek your business? Or one where you are afraid to leave your own borders, or even travel to NYC out of fear for your safety. I believe this new policy and lack of diplomacy is more likely to produce a world like the latter rather than the former.

[In response to JMW’s assertion that the US has not only been right, but time tested.] I’m not sure I agree with that at all. The US, or more specifically US administrations, have been on the wrong side of things many times, both on domestic and international matters. Let’s not forget who propped up the Baath regime in its fight against the khomeni regime of Iran (that would be us). The fact is, might and right are not mutually exclusive, but they are not mutually inclusive either. The absence or presence of overwhelming might is not a moral justification for anything at all.

JMW wrote: O.K., I’m presenting a new issue, if I may:

Which would you classify as more pure: America’s motives for promoting war, or the French motives for opposing it?

AND, that begs the question:

Which would you classify as a more genuine reflection of true motives:
Bush’s public statements in favor of war, or Jacque Chirac’s against it?

TL wrote: I agree with you whole-heartedly, FB. The new U.S. doctrine of military preemption was brewed up mostly by Paul Wolfowitz, who saw the potential benefits of having our national finger on ALL of the world’s weapons programs, so that they could be monitored and rooted out. In a way, it makes sense. The sheer vastness of the devastation that a nuclear war would cause almost calls for a witch hunt- as we’re seeing now (“Does Iraq have weapons of mass destruction?”, the international community asks. “Well, they certainly would if they could, and that’s good enough for us”, answers the US). But Wolfowitz and his cronies underestimate the cleverness and resourcefulness of extremists- who are the real enemy of the U.S.. If we had a policy of carefull watchfulness, terrorists would still have it in for us, but only with a general sense of anti-Americanism. But with this new policy of preemption, we’re putting our “controlled by the USA” stamp on every holy piece of land from North Korea to Cuba. Anybody who’s ever studied war knows that people do not stand aside and let their destinies be controlled without a fight.

The extremists start the wars, and the rest of us pay the consequences.

FB wrote: First, let me amend my last statement a bit. I didn’t mean to imply that geopolitics can or should conform to simple codes of morality. There are always many shades of gray, and the truth is this about power and the balance of power.

However, there should be a set of accepted bedrock principles that drive our international conduct and that should set the boundaries for what we are willing to do. I think this is especially true for something with as serious implications as a policy of ‘pre-emptive regime change’, for lack of a better phrase.

[In response to JMW question regarding bush/chiraq motives] My analysis does not conform to those terms. Everyone at the UN has their own motives (re national interests), sometimes these are compatible with ours and sometimes they are not. As far as I’m concerned, the core issue has nothing to do with France. That is simply a case of failed diplomacy.

The way I see it, the core issue is whether or not a policy of ‘pre-emptive regime change’ is a good idea or not. I think it is a very dangerous and arrogant policy, that has no grounding, moral or otherwise, in our democratic tradition. I think it lacks any legitimacy whatsoever, and the arguments put forth to support it basically boil down to ‘might makes right’. Perhaps Mr. Chirac thinks the very same thing, and having seen through our diplomatic sham was intent on doing his best to thwart us at every turn. There’s no way to know, and I don’t think it really matters.

Motives are not relevant to this discussion, as everyone at the international table is primarily motivated by their own national interests. Let’s deal strictly with cause and effect. I’m sure bush thinks he’s doing the right thing, but that in and of itself doesn’t make it right or the best course of action. If we take for ourselves the exclusive right to determine whether or not a regime is not only tyrannical or despotic, but deserves the sharp end of our military stick absent an imminent threat or territorial aggression, we have crossed a line that I believe will lead us, and the world as a whole, down a very dangerous path indeed.

I think that gentlemen of good faith can disagree on this matter. However, I think we can agree that we should both hope that I’m wrong- because if I’m even close to being right we’re in for some dire times ahead.

I will end this debate with a quote I stole from a recent article on the
subject:

President Eisenhower in 1953, who was presented with a plan to disarm Stalin ’s Soviet Union. He said: “All of us have heard this term ‘preventive war’ since the earliest days of Hitler. I recall that is about the first time I heard it. In this day and time…I don’t believe there is such a thing; and frankly, I wouldn’t even listen to anyone seriously that came in and talked about such a thing.”

JMW wrote: I liked the Eisenhower quote.

By the way, didn’t we preemptively remove Noriega from Panama? I seem to remember that the justification for that regime change turned on Noriega’s facilitation of drug importation to the U.S.

FB wrote: Another timely article on msnbc.com [no longer available]. The brilliant Mr.
Schlesinger makes two very important and chilling points: first, that the Japanese used the same policy we are now pursuing to justify Pearl Harbor. Secondly, that bush and his cronies are complete idealogues.

JMW wrote: Lord, I wouldn’t throw stones in the glass house of the ideologues . . . And don’t you dare try to paint yourself a pragmatist.

FB wrote: Actually, I do consider myself a pragmatist- at least in the sense that I don’t adhere to any formal or informal school of thought. My contention has always been, and remains, that the policy in question is a misguided and dangerous one. I came to this conclusion based on my study and understanding of geopolitical history, particularly military history.

There are many people close to me who had a severe aversion to bush even before he gained office. I am not one of them. I didn’t vote for him, but after the controversial election, I was totally neutral and willing to give him the benefit of the doubt. Basically my attitude was, now that in your office give me a tax cut and let’s see what else you do. I think I expressed this to you before.

It wasn’t until the culmination of this whole Iraq business that I changed my opinion. I was hoping that bush was playing a brilliant game of geopolitical brinksmanship, and actually believed this might be the case until very recently.

My intention was to show you through my arguments that I’m not in the same camp as the typical ‘bush bashers’ or anti-war cadres. I don’t believe this war is about oil*, or any other such nonsense. This was an attempt on my part to enumerate what I think are powerful arguments for why this war is both unjustified and potentially pernicious in its long term effects.

*Additional Note June 2, 2008: Actually, the reason Iraq is of any strategic interest at all to the U.S. and worthy of an occupation is directly related to it’s status as a major oil producer and to bush’s status as a champion of the petrocarbon-capitalists members of the american oligarchy. What I meant was that the war was not designed to secure Iraqi oil for american industry in a simple and direct fashion.

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