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Reliving the great moments of 2008

In memory of this year, I must present my favorite 2008 quotation. When asked why $700 billion was the bailout sum, a Treasury representative explained, "It's not based on any particular data point. We just wanted to choose a really large number."



(This from Forbes
.)


Tags: Bailout  
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Like it is

The Christian Science Monitor's Alan Dershowitz makes a blunt point and a good one: "...false moral equivalence only encourages terrorists to persist in their unlawful actions against civilians. The US has it exactly right by placing the blame on Hamas, while urging Israel to do everything possible to minimize civilian casualties."

In the words of Hugh Hewitt, read the whole thing.
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Nice folks

It's almost a truism in mainstream political discussion that "most Muslims are nice people." The problem with this assertion, simply put, is that it works from a Westernized, civilized assumption that people are basically nice and basically want to get along. This applies fairly well in a peaceful, reasonable, comfortable world of the North American or European kind. It does not automatically apply, though, to the vast swaths of the world that are not so fortunate and not so peaceful, including most of the Muslim world.

The great mass of Muslims are, of course, not terrorists. No one doubts this. But he great mass of Muslims do live in the Middle East and Indonesia, and the way people live in these places does not reflect Western softness. Poverty, ignorance, and subjugation make people harder than do education, wealth, and freedom.

Culture, we tell ourselves, is part of what makes us human and gives us identity. The kind of culture that average-Joe Egyptian experiences is not a celebration of heritage or a familiar song or an ornamental rug. It is fear of a brutal government, deep-rooted racial anger, and his faith as taught to him by fanatical priests.

Palestinian assaults on civilian targets are neither heroic nor morally ambiguous; they are the desperate, hateful flailings of a people unable to turn inward and build a stable society.

Tags: Islam  
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Horrors of Shari'a

The Jerusalem Post's Caroline Glick reports, "On Tuesday, Hamas legislators marked the Christmas season by passing a Shari'a criminal code for the Palestinian Authority. Among other things, it legalizes crucifixion."
Tags: Islam  
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Africa

As generalized as this is, it's one of the most intellectually honest, rational takes on African development I've seen. Mr. Parris, well done.
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The increasingly communicative IDF

They're on YouTube too.
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Again...

It's a lame thing to link to Mark Steyn all of the time, but this is just excellent.
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A fine stunt

The Iranians, suggests the Jerusalem Post, are providing troops for the Gazans under cover of sending medical supplies.

One is reminded of the Viet Cong habit of painting red crosses on the tops of their military vehicles.

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Tweet, tweet

The international community seems to have found new means of wartime communication.
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False Consciousness

Hmmm...
Tags: Islam  
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On not understanding Radiohead

It's hip to like Radiohead, and a lot of people with very limited understanding of Radiohead's intent listen to their music to be cool. I've been told that at concerts, when No Surprises is sung and the line

Bring down the government
They don't, they don't speak for us

comes along, audiences become very excited because they think this has something to do with Mr. Bush. The problem with this assumption is that this line occurs in the context of an intensely sardonic brit-pop tune that pleads somewhat pathetically for safety--the intent of the line is to suggest that political protest is a very safe sort of crusade.

Similarly, verses in Fake Plastic Trees like

Her green plastic watering can
For her fake Chinese rubber plant
In the fake plastic earth.
That she bought from a rubber man
In a town full of rubber plans
To get rid of itself.
It wears her out, it wears her out
It wears her out, it wears her out

are taken as sincere and eloquent lament. Fake Plastic Trees occurs, though, in the context of an album that skewers this kind of thinking. The album's main target, as expressed in the title track (The Bends), is world-weary post-hippy attempts to escape responsibility:

We don't have any real friends - No no no
Just lying in a bar with my drip feed on
talking to my girlfriend waiting for something to happen
I wish it was the sixties
I wish I could be happy
I wish, I wish, I wish that something would happen.

To which Radiohead responds, in track 7 (Just) with,

You do it to yourself, you do
and that's what really hurts
You do it to yourself, just you
you and no-one else

Fake Plastic Trees, then, is intended as a comment on self-created pain, not mourning about the world being synthetic in some profound sense.

Tags: culture  
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Ah, this here Communication Age

When Gutenberg and the Phoenecians invented text in 1439, communication was not for the slouch. Books were written in ghastly fonts, and had to contain information of critical importance to inveigle the largely illiterate public into digesting them. Letters were carried by very cold people on very tired horses over very long distances. When something was said, it was said at great length.

In 1775, when Alexander Graham Bell introduced "e-mail", conciseness became an option. "E-mail" had no standardized length, and there was no reason to draw out what could be quick.

With the advent of Twitter, communication was raised to hitherto unimaginable heights of punchy virtuosity. Twitter's tweaks are limited to the tune of a couple of hundred characters, self-focused, and directed at no one in particular. Brevity is the soul of wit.

In light of this progression, I propose that there be a new website devoted entirely to this sort of personal status feed (preferably with a one-syllable name to save time) that presents each individual's feelings with a single screen-filling emoticon.

:{

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The Great Moon Hoax of 1835

This is a classic.
Tags: Media  
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More on the European pullout

"Iraqi MPs have authorised the government to sign agreements allowing British and other non-US troops to stay on in the country after 2008." So reports the BBC.


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Canada: Appreciation

T-Rex fills us in on the fates of exceptional Canadians.
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