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To: JohnM who wrote (5213)8/16/2003 9:50:19 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Respond to of 793856
 
This column was another page in the theme Friedman calls "Global Village Idiocy"



To: JohnM who wrote (5213)8/16/2003 11:51:24 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793856
 
not weak ones like this one.


Yeah, it he is not blasting the Administration he is "Weak." That is why you think Krugman is so good.



To: JohnM who wrote (5213)8/17/2003 11:08:37 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793856
 
This is a subject upon which Congress will do what is popular rather then what works best and is right. When you see what a hash they are making of things with the FCC, you can imagine what they will do in the Electical Industry.

Federal Standards for Utilities Face Partisan Hurdles
By DAVID FIRESTONE - NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 - The Bush administration called on Congress today to impose immediate standards for electricity reliability on utilities to prevent further power blackouts, but Congressional leaders gave little sign that the disputes holding up such standards were near a resolution.

Spencer Abraham, the secretary of energy, said the nation needed to move quickly away from a system where utilities decided how to respond to power failures to one of federal standards. Electrical experts said last week that the patchwork of standards could explain why some regions were able to avoid the blackout on Thursday while others were not. Strict federal standards could also prevent utilities from overloading transmission lines.

"We need to pass an energy bill that gives the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission the authority to impose mandatory reliability standards," Mr. Abraham said on CNN's "Late Edition." "The people who use the system have to adhere to high standards of conduct, or be punished if they fail to do so."

Those standards have been included in energy bills before Congress for several years but have been held up by partisan disputes over the administration's desire to drill for oil in the Alaskan wildlife refuge and other environmental issues. Democrats today called on the administration and Congressional Republicans to drop the drilling provision from an energy bill that is now in a House-Senate conference committee so the power standards can be quickly approved.

"This issue has been held hostage to the Republican agenda of trying to drill in the most pristine wilderness, environmentally sensitive areas of the country," Representative Edward J. Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat who is a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said on CNN. "We could have broken this issue off three years ago, five years ago. But they refused to allow it to move as a separate piece of legislation."

But Republicans appeared reluctant to separate the issues, for fear that the controversial provisions might not pass if they were not tied to the electrical standards that are widely considered vital. Mr. Abraham said it would be a mistake to drop the drilling issue, asserting that the nation needed more fuel to power its electrical plants. And the House Republican leader, Tom DeLay, appearing on "Fox News Sunday," blamed Democrats for blocking the energy bills, which he said might have prevented the blackout had they not been opposed by "environmental extremists."

Talks on the energy bill are likely to resume promptly when Congress returns after Labor Day. Each chamber has already passed a separate version, and negotiators will be under pressure to respond to the blackout by setting aside more difficult disputes.

Mr. Abraham said there was no need for immediate action on a separate provision in the energy bill that would impose federal standards on the economic side of the utility industry, moving away from a system in which state regulators determine how much power companies can make in generating and transmitting electricity. Many experts have said the current system discourages utilities from investing in new transmission lines and improving their connections to other grids. Mr. Abraham said it was more important to first agree to uniform technical standards.

Technical standards for preventing failures are recommended by a voluntary industry group, the North American Electric Reliability Council, and today the president of that group, Michehl R. Gent, said he needed federal authority to make those standards mandatory.

"We've been trying for the last couple of years to have some help from Congress to allow us to enforce reliability rules," Mr. Gent said on ABC's "This Week." "If there's a violation of the rules, we need to be allowed to enforce those rules."

Regarding economic regulation, Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico, who was energy secretary during the Clinton administration, said Congress had been swayed by the lobbying of electric utilities that prefer state rather than federal regulation of rates and profits.

"There are a lot of lobbies in the utility industry that like to keep the status quo so that they can keep making profits," Mr. Richardson said on CNN. "And as a result, our systems, our electricity grid, is overloaded with power."
nytimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (5213)8/18/2003 2:28:48 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793856
 
Lead article in "Atlantic" is a long article on Murdoch and the media. Too long to post.

The Age of Murdoch

Many see him as a power-mad, rapacious right-wing vulgarian. Rupert Murdoch has indeed been relentless in building a one-of-a kind media network that spans the world. What really drives him, though, is not ideology but a cool concern for the bottom line, and the belief that the media should be treated like any other business, not as a semi-sacred public trust. The Bush Administration agrees. Rupert Murdoch has seen the future, and it is him

by James Fallows

theatlantic.com



To: JohnM who wrote (5213)8/18/2003 2:39:53 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793856
 
Great Political analysis by Buchanan. The best I have read about this election. My thought when I finished it? The Dems should pay Buchanan to run a third party contest against Bush.


The Agenda
Politics

Four More Years?

The invincibility question

by Patrick J. Buchanan

The Atlantic Monthly | September 2003

"Is George Bush unbeatable?" Suddenly this summer that became the question du jour of cable TV and the Sunday talkfests. That it is being asked suggests that many consider it impossible that President Bush will lose to any of the current crop of Democratic candidates. From every standpoint, history, issues, money, persona?the defeat of George W. Bush in 2004 appears improbable.

Consider history. In the twentieth century seven Presidents were defeated or declined to run again, for one (or more) of four reasons: perceived failure as a war leader, economic distress, a revolt in the party, or a third-party candidacy that ruptured the incumbent's political base.

Harry Truman, in 1952, and Lyndon Johnson, in 1968, declined to run again. Both faced a major rebellion in the Democratic Party and a loss of public support after miring the United States in a seemingly unwinnable war in Asia.

Five were rejected. William Howard Taft was done in by the third-party campaign of his patron Theodore Roosevelt. Herbert Hoover was wiped out by the Depression. Gerald Ford presided over the U.S. defeat in Vietnam and was bedeviled by Ronald Reagan right up to the Kansas City convention. Jimmy Carter led the country through a year of ignominy in the Iranian hostage crisis and gave us 21 percent interest rates and 13 percent inflation. George H.W. Bush antagonized his base and watched Ross Perot walk off with the populist right in November.

It is the experience of the father that haunts the son, because the strong hand that George W. Bush has been dealt in 2003, successful war President, popular with the people, and no Republican rival or third-party challenger on the horizon, is the hand his father held in the summer of 1991.

In retrospect, the senior Bush was a successful President. In his first year he liberated Panama and the Berlin Wall came down. In his second he cobbled together a twenty-eight-nation coalition to drive Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait. In his third he won the most decisive victory in U.S. military history, persuaded the Arabs to sit down with the Israelis at Madrid, and godfathered the reunification of Germany. Entering 1992, he could claim credit for having presided over America's successful conclusion of the Cold War and having helped to liberate 100 million people in Eastern Europe.

When Norman Schwarzkopf's triumphant Army of Desert Storm marched up Constitution Avenue in the victory parade in June of 1991, George Bush's approval rating had recently peaked, at 91 percent. Six months later Bush was scrambling to stave off humiliation in New Hampshire. The following November he was defeated, collecting only 37 percent of the vote. What went wrong?

Like Winston Churchill in July of 1945, Bush was a victim of his own and his country's success. With the defeat of communism, the Cold War coalition that had given the Republicans five victories in six presidential elections?and two forty-nine-state landslides?dissolved. Foreign policy, Bush's long suit, ceased to be central to national politics. As a voting issue it was off the table in 1992.

A second cause of Bush's defeat was the alienation of his base. The right had savaged Bush in 1980, when he made the strongest run of all the candidates seeking to deny Reagan the nomination. Elected President in 1988, he reciprocated, treating conservatives to some of the same dismissive contempt with which they had treated him?not only in his appointments but in his policies.

In 1990, at the behest of his budget director, Richard Darman, Bush threw over his "no new taxes" pledge and colluded with Hill Democrats to raise the top tax rates, which Reagan had cut back to 28 percent. In 1991 he went to the UN to declare that America's mission was to create a "New World Order." After the brutal battle to put Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court, Bush, at the urging of Senator John Danforth, embraced a civil-rights bill almost identical to the "quota bill" he had rejected. Small businessmen whose work force failed to meet some vague standard of diversity were forced to prove that they were not racists.

Then there were class and ideology. Reagan was Eureka College, Bush was Yale. Reagan was anti-government, Bush was big government. Reagan relished confrontation on matters of principle, Bush believed in compromise. Reagan's eyes misted over as he spoke of a "city on a hill," Bush was put off by "the vision thing."

Conservatives agreed: he was not one of us.

And Bush suffered an irreplaceable loss when Lee Atwater, his consigliere and ambassador to the right, died of a brain tumor. It was Atwater who had pulled George Bush's chestnuts out of the fire in 1988.

As of the end of July 1988, Michael Dukakis, just nominated at Atlanta, had opened up an 18-point lead, and Bush was deeply disliked by the media that wanted an end to the "Decade of Greed." But when Dukakis disappeared from the radar, conservatives?using issues poll-tested by Atwater?ripped into him for his membership in the ACLU ("Anti-Christian Liberties Union"), his hostility to gun ownership, his veto of a Massachusetts law to force schoolteachers to lead their students in the Pledge of Allegiance, and his release on furloughs of imprisoned felons, including Willie Horton, who brutalized and raped a woman in Maryland after fleeing while on a weekend pass.

Savaging Dukakis on these social issues all through August and the convention in New Orleans, the Republicans roared from 17 points behind to 8 ahead?a 25-point turnaround. By Labor Day, Bush had a seven-point lead that he never lost. It was Lee Atwater's greatest achievement.

But because Willie Horton was black and his victim was white, liberals for four years denounced an increasingly defensive Bush for having run a "racist campaign." To a country-club Republican, marinated in guilt over America's past, there is no more wounding charge. In 1992 Bush and James Baker III resolved to run a high-minded Republican campaign. No more Willie Horton ads. And with Atwater gone, Bush had no one to alert him to the rumbles on the right, and no one to tell him that survival depended on skinning Bill Clinton on the social issues, and on integrity and morality, where the Clintons were vulnerable.

The son, who saw all this happen, has gone to school on his father's mistakes and learned his lessons well.

Whereas his father broke his pledge and raised taxes, George W. has midwifed two of the three largest tax cuts in history. Whereas the father was contemptuous of conservatives, the son has courted them. Whereas the father vacationed in Kennebunkport, the son goes home to Crawford. Whereas the father is all Yale Yankee, the son is Midland-Odessa. Indeed, aides assure conservatives that although he remains his father's son, in his politics and policies George W. is Reagan's true heir.

All of which again raises the question: Is Bush beatable in 2004?

Right now, it appears most improbable. Not only has Bush won two wars in two years, but after 9/11?when he led the nation in mourning and resolve to avenge the atrocities?Bush bonded with the people in a way that his father never had. Like Reagan, he has an emotional hold on a vast slice of America, a hold that may be almost impossible to shake loose.

And not only has Bush taken pages out of the Reagan playbook, but he and his strategist Karl Rove have taken them out of the playbook of Richard Nixon, the real architect of the New Majority coalition that gave the Republicans control of the White House for a quarter century.

Just as Nixon financed the Great Society, George Bush has co-opted the best of the Democrats' issues. Throwing over conservative principle, he has colluded with Senator Ted Kennedy to enlarge and expand the powers of the Department of Education. Now he is working on prescription-drug coverage for seniors?the first entitlement program since the advent of Medicare. Thus he has fortified himself along the Democrats' traditional avenues of attack.

How can the Democrats beat him?

As Reagan used to say, there are simple answers?there just aren't any easy ones. The Democrats need to hold on to the share of the black and Hispanic vote that they carried in 2000, and to bring home, or deny Bush, the share of the white vote that he got in 2000. What are the simplest ways to accomplish this?

One, prevent a Green Party run, which in 2000 siphoned off almost three million votes that would have given Al Gore the presidency.

Two, make a novena for a third-party candidate to run to Bush's right. The populist George Wallace held Nixon to 43 percent of the vote in 1968 and almost cost him the presidency. With Wallace out in 1972, Nixon rolled up 61 percent. Without a populist candidate on the right in 1988, Bush senior carried 53 percent. With Ross Perot in 1992, he carried 37 percent.

Though some in the media may portray George W. Bush as a right-wing extremist, he is surprisingly vulnerable to a challenge from his right. Issues: his soaring deficits; his preferential option for the rich; his sellout of conservative principle to embrace big government; his failure to protect America's borders and control immigration; his cave-in on the assault-gun law; his concessions to the gay Log Cabin Republicans; his refusal to put a stop to race preferences and reverse discrimination; his free-trade zealotry, which has helped to kill one of every eight manufacturing jobs in the United States while creating jobs in China; and, potentially the most explosive, his "quagmire" in Iraq. If U.S. soldiers are still dying from sniper fire and ambushes in Iraq in September of 2004, Bush could be vulnerable to the campaign slogan "Support Our Troops?Bring Them Home Now!"

Continued casualties would also raise anew the questions of why we went into Iraq in the first place, who "cooked the books" on the intel, who misled us about the weapons of mass destruction. The President dismisses this as revisionist history. But after World War I?which produced Bolshevism, fascism, and Nazism?the revisionist historians, who indicted the "merchants of death" and "British propagandists" who had "lied us into war," carried the day.

The Democrats are paralyzed in making a case against Bush on most populist issues because they agree with him on so many: war in Iraq, free trade, affirmative action, open borders, big government, amnesty for illegal aliens, foreign aid, gay rights.

Indeed, it has been the great success of Bush-Rove to talk the talk and affect the swagger of cowboy conservatives while occupying the center and the center-left and crowding out the moderate Democrats. When Senator Kennedy is hailing the President's "No Child Left Behind" education program and celebrating his prescription-drug plan, the only Democrats who can offer a clear alternative are too far left to carry a southern state.

The Bush-Rove strategy will work only as long as the right grins and bears it. But with the Beltway right having been declawed, neutered, and housebroken long ago, with no Republican challenger, and with no third party visible on the right, the strategy appears to have worked, and Bush appears to have dodged the bullet that killed his father's presidency.

[T] his reduces the hopes of the Democrats to three possibilities, over which they have no control.

First is a continuance of the jobless recovery over which Bush has presided, in which three million private-sector jobs have vanished since he took office. But with interest rates now slashed by Alan Greenspan to one percent, the deficit at $400 billion and rising, the third largest tax cut in history about to take effect, and a falling dollar propelling exports, even pessimists are predicting growth of four or five percent for 2004.

Second is a souring of America's victories in Afghanistan and Iraq by continued and widening combat in which Americans are dying every day. Our tolerance for that kind of war has not been tested since Vietnam. A June Washington Post poll showing that 44 percent of the nation already finds the casualty rate in Iraq intolerable does not bode well for Bush, or for the country?especially with Arabs and Muslims from outside Iraq turning up in firefights.

Third is a major scandal of the kind that has bedeviled Republican Presidents, though usually in their second terms: the Sherman Adams affair, Watergate, Iran-contra. Here Bush seems most vulnerable to revelations either of misreading intelligence prior to 9/11 or of cherry-picking intelligence to make a case for war. In Britain the issue may yet prove fatal to Tony Blair.

But events may conspire to kill Democratic hopes. If some terrorist horror on the scale of 9/11 occurs, how many Americans will rise as one man to cry, "Get me Howard Dean"? Will they not, rather, reflexively rally to the tough guys who win wars?Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Powell?just as Israelis rally to Ariel Sharon each time a new atrocity is perpetrated by Hamas?

From the standpoint of geography, too, it is difficult to see how the Democrats can do it. In forty years they have elected three Presidents, all from the South. Although three of the potential nominees are southerners (John Edwards, of North Carolina; Bob Graham, of Florida; General Wesley Clark, of Arkansas), none has broken out of low single digits nationally and none is running better than fifth in Iowa and New Hampshire, where the voting is just five months off. Today Bush would sweep every southern state, and he now leads Edwards, Graham, Richard Gephardt, and John Kerry even in their home states.

The Bush team has a war chest unrivaled in presidential history. The Democrats are scratching for cash. Bush also has something Nixon and Reagan never did: what Daniel Patrick Moynihan called "second and third echelons of advocacy." Conservatives, libertarians, and populists of the right dominate talk radio, the Internet, and the cable-TV channels that are nibbling the network news to death, and they are fully competitive on the op-ed pages of the national press.

Finally, there are the debates. They were decisive in the victories of John F. Kennedy in 1960, Carter in 1976 (after Ford's gaffe on Poland), Reagan in 1980, and Bush in 2000, when Gore booted it away. The last best hope of a Democratic Party to erase its deficit in a single night is the possibility that the President will stumble or his opponent will appear masterly or set the country afire with his passion, charisma, or ideas. But it is difficult to see how a Gephardt, Kerry, Dean, or Joseph Lieberman could do that in a match against a newly confident and assertive George W. Bush.

Can Bush be beaten? Assuredly?but absent celestial intervention, maybe not by any of the current crop of Democratic candidates. As Damon Runyon observed, the race is not always to the swift nor the battle to the strong, but that's the way to bet.

The URL for this page is theatlantic.com.



To: JohnM who wrote (5213)8/18/2003 2:58:29 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793856
 
The new "Atlantic" is an absolute feast! This book review of Edward Said's new edition of "Orientialism" is outstanding. It is impossible to top Hitchens for this type of article.

Where the Twain Should Have Met

The cosmopolitan Edward Said was ideally placed to explain East to West and West to East. What went wrong?

by Christopher Hitchens


Orientalism
by Edward Said
Vintage Books

I first met Edward Said in the summer of 1976, in the capital city of Cyprus. We had come to Nicosia to take part in a conference on the rights of small nations. The obscene civil war in Lebanon was just beginning to consume the whole society and to destroy the cosmopolitanism of Beirut; it was still just possible in those days to imagine that a right "side" could be discerned through the smoke of confessional conflagration. Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation was in its infancy (as was the messianic "settler" movement among Jews), and the occupation itself was less than a decade old. Egypt was still the Egypt of Anwar Sadat, a man who had placed most of his credit on the wager of "Westernization," however commercially conceived, and who was only two years away from the Camp David accords. It was becoming dimly apprehended in the West that the old narrative of "Israel" versus "the Arabs" was much too crude. The image of a frugal kibbutz state surrounded by a heaving ocean of ravening mullahs and demagogues was slowly yielding to a story of two peoples contesting a right to the same twice-promised land.

For all these "conjunctures," as we now tend to term them, Said was almost perfectly configured. He had come from an Anglican Palestinian family that divided its time and its property between Jerusalem and Cairo. He had spent years in the internationalist atmosphere of Beirut, and was as much at home in French and English as in Arabic. A favorite of Lionel Trilling's, he had won high distinction at Columbia University and was also up to concert standard as a pianist. Those Americans who subliminally associated the word "Palestinian" with swarthiness, bizarre headgear, and strange irredentist rhetoric were in for a shock that was long overdue. And this is to say little enough about his wit, his curiosity, his care for the opinions of others.

Within two years he had published Orientalism: a book that has exerted a galvanizing influence throughout the quarter century separating its first from its most recent edition. In these pages Said characterized Western scholarship about the East as a conscious handmaiden of power and subordination. Explorers, missionaries, archaeologists, linguists, all had been part of a colonial enterprise. To the extent that American academics now speak about the "appropriation" of other cultures, and seldom fail to put ordinary words such as "the Other" between portentous quotation marks, and contest the very notion of objective inquiry, they are paying what they imagine is a debt to Edward Said's work. It isn't unfair to the book, I hope, to say that it also received a tremendous charge from the near simultaneous revolution in Iran and the later assassination of Anwar Sadat. The alleged "Westernization" or "modernization" of two ancient civilizations, Persia and Egypt, had proved to be founded upon, well ... sand. The word of the traditional policy intellectuals and Middle East "experts" turned out to be worth less than naught. Although this book said little on the subject of either Iran or Sadat, it burst on the knowledge-seeking general reader even as it threw down a challenge to the think tanks and professional institutes.

To be appraised properly, Orientalism ought to be read alongside three other books by Said: Covering Islam (1981), Culture and Imperialism (1993), and Out of Place (1999). The last of these is a memoir, which was the target of a number of scurrilous attacks essentially aimed at denying Said the right to call himself a Palestinian at all. The first is an assault on the generally lazy press coverage of the Iranian revolution and of all matters concerned with Islam. Culture and Imperialism is a collection of essays showing that Said has a deep understanding, amounting at times to sympathy, for the work of writers such as Austen and Kipling and George Eliot, who?outward appearances notwithstanding?never did take "the Orient" for granted.

In scrutinizing instances of translation and interpretation, the inescapable question remains the same: Who is interpreting what and to whom? It is easy enough to say that Westerners had long been provided with an exotic, sumptuous, but largely misleading account of the Orient, whether supplied by Benjamin Disraeli's Suez Canal share purchases, the celluloid phantasms of Rudolph Valentino, or the torrid episodes in T. E. Lawrence's Seven Pillars of Wisdom . But it is also true that Arab, Indian, Malay, and Iranian societies can operate on a false if not indeed deluded view of "the West." This much became vividly evident very recently, with the circulation of bizarre libels about (say) a Jewish plot to destroy the World Trade Center. I, for one, do not speak or read Arabic, and have made only five, relatively short, visits to Iraq. But I am willing to bet that I know more about Mesopotamia than Saddam Hussein ever knew about England, France, or the United States. I also think that such knowledge as I have comes from more disinterested sources ... And I would add that Saddam Hussein was better able to force himself on my attention than I ever was to force myself on his. As Adonis, the great Syrian-Lebanese poet, has warned us, there exists a danger in too strong a counterposition between "East" and "West." The "West" has its intellectual and social troughs, just as the "East" has its pinnacles. Not only is this true now (Silicon Valley could hardly run without the work of highly skilled Indians, for example), but it was true when Arab scholars in Baghdad and Córdoba recovered the lost work of Aristotle for medieval "Christendom."

Cultural-political interaction, then, must be construed as dialectical. Edward Said was in a prime position to be a "negotiator" here. In retrospect, however, it can be argued that he chose a one-sided approach and employed rather a broad brush: "Without examining Orientalism as a discourse one cannot possibly understand the enormously systematic discipline by which European culture was able to manage?and even produce?the Orient politically, sociologically, militarily, ideologically, scientifically, and imaginatively during the post-Enlightenment period." ("Produce," as in "cultural production," has become one of the key words of the post-Foucault academy.) In this analysis every instance of European curiosity about the East, from Flaubert to Marx, was part of a grand design to exploit and remake what Westerners saw as a passive, rich, but ultimately contemptible "Oriental" sphere.

That there is undeniable truth to this it would be idle to dispute. Lord Macaulay, for example, was a near perfect illustration of the sentence (which occurs in Disraeli's novel Tancred ) "The East is a career." He viewed the region both as a barbarous source of potential riches and as a huge tract in pressing need of civilization. But in that latter respect he rather echoed the feeling of his fellow Victorian Karl Marx, who thought that the British had brought modernity to India in the form of printing presses, railways, the telegraph, and steamship contact with other cultures. Marx didn't believe that they had done this out of the kindness of their hearts. "England, it is true, in causing a social revolution in Hindustan was actuated only by the vilest interests," he wrote, "... but that is not the question. The question is, can mankind fulfill its destiny without a fundamental revolution in the social state of Asia?" To the extent that empire licensed this, Marx reasoned, one was entitled to exclaim, with Goethe,

Should this torture then torment us
Since it brings us greater pleasure?
Were not through the rule of Timur
Souls devoured without measure?


Said spent a lot of time "puzzling" (his word) over Marx's ironies here: how could a man of professed human feeling justify conquest and exploitation? The evident answer, that conquest furnished an alternative to the terrifying serfdom and stagnation of antiquity, and that creation can take a destructive form, need have nothing to do with what Said calls "the old inequality between East and West." (The Roman invasion of Britain was also "progress," if the word has any meaning.) Moreover, Marxism in India has often been a strong force for secular government and "nation building," whereas Marxism in China has led by a bloody and contradictory route to a highly dynamic capitalist revolution. To discount all this, as Said did, as a "Romantic Orientalist vision" (and to simply omit the printing press, the railways, and the rest of it) is to miss the point in a near heroic way.

The lines from Goethe are taken from his Westöstlicher Diwan, one of the most meticulous and respectful considerations of the Orient we have. And Said's critics from the conservative side, notably his archenemy Bernard Lewis, have reproached him for leaving German Orientalism out of his account. This is a telling omission, they charge, because Oriental scholarship in Germany, although of an unexampled breadth and splendor, was not put to the service of empire and conquest and annexation. That being so, they argue, what remains of Said's general theory? His reply deals only with the academic aspect of the question: Goethe and Schlegel, he responds, relied on books and collections already made available by British and French imperial expeditions. It might be more exact to point out, as against both Lewis and Said, that Germany did have an imperial project. Kaiser Wilhelm II visited Damascus and paid for the restoration of the tomb of Saladin. A Drang nach Osten ("drive to the East") was proposed, involving the stupendous scheme of a Berlin-to-Baghdad railway. German imperial explorers and agents were to be found all over the region in the late nineteenth century and up to 1914 and beyond. But of course they were doing all this work in the service of another, allied empire?a Turkish and Islamic one. And that same empire was to issue a call for jihad, against Britain and on the side of Germany, in 1914. (The best literary evocation of this extraordinary moment is still Greenmantle , written by that veteran empire-builder John Buchan.) However, the inclusion of this important episode would tell against both Said, who doesn't really allow for Muslim or Turkish imperialism, and Lewis, who has always been rather an apologist for the Turks. Osama bin Laden, as we must always remember, began his jihad as an explicit attempt to restore the vanished caliphate that once ran the world of Islam from the shores of the Bosporus. As we often forget, Prussian militarism was his co-sufferer in this pang of loss.

Among Edward Said's considerable advantages are that he knows very well who John Buchan was and that he, Said, was educated at St. George's, an Anglican establishment in Jerusalem, and also at a colonial mock-English private school, Victoria College, in Cairo. (One of the head boys was Omar Sharif.) There were some undoubtedly penitential aspects to this, recounted with dry humor in his memoir, but they have helped him to be an "outsider" and an exile in several different countries and cultures, including the Palestine of his birth. When he addresses the general Arab audience, he makes admirable use of this duality or multiplicity. In his columns in the Egyptian paper Al-Ahram he is scornful and caustic about the failures and disgraces of Arab and Muslim society, and was being so before the celebrated recent United Nations Development Programme report on self-imposed barriers to Arab development, which was written by, among others, his friend Clovis Maksoud. Every year more books are translated and published in Athens than in all the Arab capitals combined. Where is there a decent Arab university? Where is there a "transparent" Arab election? Why does Arab propaganda resort to such ugliness and hysteria?

Much of secular Arab nationalism was led and developed by Europeanized Christians, often Greek Orthodox, whereas much of atavistic Islamic jihad ism relies on anti-Jewish fabrications produced in the lower reaches of the tsarist Russian Orthodox police state. Said has a fairly exact idea of the traffic between the two worlds, and of what is and is not of value. He is a source of stern admonition to the uncritical, insulated Arab elites and intelligentsia. But for some reason?conceivably connected to his status as an exile?he cannot allow that direct Western engagement in the region is legitimate.

This might be a narrowly defensible position if direct Islamist interference in Western life and society had not become such a factor. When Orientalism was first published, the Shah was still a gendarme for American capital in Iran, and his rule was so exorbitantly cruel and corrupt that millions of secularists were willing to make what they hoped was a temporary alliance with Khomeini in order to get rid of it. Today Iranian mullahs are enriching uranium and harboring fugitive bin Ladenists (the slaughterers of their Shia co-religionists in Afghanistan and Pakistan) while students in Tehran risk their lives to demonstrate with pro-American slogans.

How does Said, in his introduction to the new edition of Orientalism, deal with this altered and still protean reality? He begins by admitting the self-evident, which is that "neither the term Orient nor the concept of the West has any ontological stability; each is made up of human effort, partly affirmation, partly identification of the Other." Fair enough. He adds, "That these supreme fictions lend themselves easily to manipulation and the organization of collective passion has never been more evident than in our time, when the mobilizations of fear, hatred, disgust and resurgent self-pride and arrogance?much of it having to do with Islam and the Arabs on one side, 'we' Westerners on the other?are very large-scale enterprises."

This is composed with a certain obliqueness, which may be accidental, but I can't discover that it really means to say that there are delusions on "both" these ontologically nonexistent sides. A few sentences further on we read of "the events of September 11 and their aftermath in the wars against Afghanistan and Iraq." Again, if criticism of both sides is intended (and I presume that it is), it comes served in highly discrepant portions. There's no quarrel with the view that "events" occurred on September 11, 2001; but that the military interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq were wars "against" either country is subject to debate. A professor of English appreciates the distinction, does he not? Or does he, like some puerile recent "activists" (and some less youthful essayists, including Gore Vidal), think that the United States could not wait for a chance to invade Afghanistan in order to build a pipeline across it? American Orientalism doesn't seem that restless from where I sit; it asks only that Afghans leave it alone.

Misgivings on this point turn into serious doubts when one gets to the next paragraph: "In the US, the hardening of attitudes, the tightening of the grip of demeaning generalization and triumphalist cliché, the dominance of crude power allied with simplistic contempt for dissenters and 'others,' has found a fitting correlative in the looting, pillaging and destruction of Iraq's libraries and museums."

Here, for some reason, "other" is represented lowercase. But there can't be much doubt as to meaning. The American forces in Baghdad set themselves to annihilate Iraq's cultural patrimony. Can Said mean to say this? Well, he says it again a few lines further on, when he asserts that current Western policy amounts to "power acting through an expedient form of knowledge to assert that this is the Orient's nature, and we must deal with it accordingly."
In the process the uncountable sediments of history, which include innumerable histories and a dizzying variety of peoples, languages, experiences, and cultures, all these are swept aside or ignored, relegated to the sand heap along with the treasures ground into meaningless fragments that were taken out of Baghdad's libraries and museums. My argument is that history is made by men and women, just as it can also be unmade and re-written, always with various silences and elisions, always with shapes imposed and disfigurements tolerated, so that "our" East, "our" Orient, becomes "ours" to possess and direct. This passage is rescued from sheer vulgarity only by its incoherence. The sole testable proposition (or nontautology) is the fantastic allegation that American forces powdered the artifacts of the Iraq museum in order to show who was boss. And the essential emptiness of putting the "our" in quotation marks, with its related insistence on possession and appropriation, is nakedly revealed thereby. We can be empirically sure of four things: that by design the museums and libraries of Baghdad survived the earlier precision bombardment without a scratch or a splinter; that much of the looting and desecration occurred before coalition forces had complete control of the city; that no looting was committed by U.S. soldiers; and that the substantial reconstitution of the museum's collection has been undertaken by the occupation authorities, and their allies among Iraqi dissidents, with considerable care and scruple. This leaves only two arguable questions: How much more swiftly might the coalition troops have moved to protect the galleries and shelves? And how are we to divide the responsibility for desecration and theft between Iraqi officials and Iraqi mobs? The depravity of both is, to be sure, partly to be blamed on the Saddam regime; would it be too "Orientalist" to go any further?

I said earlier that I wondered whether Said was affected, in this direly excessive rhetoric, by his role as an exile. I am moved to ask again by his repeated and venomous attacks on Ahmed Chalabi and Kanan Makiya, Iraqi oppositionists denounced by him, in effect, for living in the West and being expatriates. Never mind that this is a tactical trope of which Said should obviously beware. The existence of such men suggests to me, in contrast, that there is every hope of cultural and political cross-pollination between the Levant, the Orient, the Near East, the Middle East, Western Asia (whatever name you may choose to give it), and the citizens of the Occident, the North, the metropole. In recent arguments in Washington about democracy and self-determination and pluralism, it seemed to me that the visiting Iraqi and Kurdish activists had a lot more to teach than to learn.

At that same far-off and long-ago conference in Cyprus, so near to the old Crusader fortresses of Famagusta, Kantara, and St. Hilarion, I also had the good fortune to encounter Sir Steven Runciman, whose history of the Crusades is an imperishable work, because it demonstrates that medieval Christian fundamentalism not only constituted a menace to Islamic civilization but also directly resulted in the sack of Byzantium, the retardation of Europe, and the massacre of the Jews. It is desirable that the opponents of today's fanaticisms be as cool and objective in their recognition of a common enemy, and it is calamitous that one who had that opportunity should have chosen to miss it.

The URL for this page is theatlantic.com



To: JohnM who wrote (5213)8/18/2003 4:05:20 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793856
 
Bush honing his smart weapons

August 17, 2003

BY ROBERT NOVAK SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST

George W. Bush's main fund-raisers and contributors expected a pep talk from the president when they were his guests for a barbecue at Crawford, Texas, last weekend but instead received a long and enthusiastic portrayal of U.S. capability to remove ''evil'' regimes.

In a speech that lasted close to an hour, President Bush described the use of American military power in Iraq as ''history-making.'' He said the use of smart weapons to ''decapitate'' any regime's tyrannical leadership was no ''blunt ax.'' Instead, it showed dictators that they ''can't hide'' from avenging Americans.

A footnote: Bush's political advisers welcome a Democratic presidential campaign strategy attacking the president's handling of Iraq. ''Please throw us into the briar patch,'' said one Bush lieutenant.

GOP loves Gephardt

After getting the talk from President Bush at Crawford, Texas, his top money men talked Democratic politics among themselves and discovered that they agreed on who will be the opposition's probable presidential nominee: Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri.

They calculated that Gephardt's endorsement by 11 international unions will enable him to win the Iowa caucuses and do well enough in the early primary elections to be nominated. The Republicans also figured that former House Democratic Leader Gephardt enjoys a big advantage in congressional at-large delegates to the national convention.

A footnote: Gephardt's forces have all but given up hope for an AFL-CIO endorsement when its executive council reconvenes in October. However, his operatives claim the support from 11 individual unions still makes Gephardt labor's choice even if he does not get the AFL-CIO's blessing.

Rev. Al's non-attack

African-American ministers in the Los Angeles area made an unsuccessful effort last week to get the Rev. Al Sharpton to attack Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, the possible Democratic replacement for Gov. Gray Davis, for accidentally using the ''N-word'' two years ago.

Speaking in Oakland in January 2001 to an African-American audience, Bustamante stumbled in reading a long list of historic black organizations bearing the word ''Negro'' and said ''nigger.'' Some black leaders criticized the lieutenant governor even though he apologized profusely.

Sharpton called Bustamante this week and was satisfied by his explanation of the 2001 incident. The ministers who wanted the black presidential candidate to attack Bustamante are close to Davis, whose chances for beating the recall would improve if there were no viable Democratic alternative.

Arnold's adviser

President Bush's advisers are keeping him well away from the California recall election, but they are not pleased with the posture of Arnold Schwarzenegger's campaign manager, George Gorton.

Gorton, who ran Republican Pete Wilson's last successful campaign for governor, is reported as critical of the ''right-wing'' Republicans opposing Schwarzenegger. The Bush inner circle thinks Schwarzenegger is at his best speaking his own words, as he did in announcing his candidacy on NBC's Jay Leno program, rather than reading staff-written rhetoric.

Daschle's home

A District of Columbia tax saving of less than $1,000 on his new Washington home has helped Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle's foes in the conservative Club for Growth claim that he is ''a Washington resident and not the average man of Aberdeen (S.D.).''

D.C. tax records show that Daschle claimed the $30,000 ''homestead'' tax exemption on the French colonial home he purchased on fashionable Foxhall Road for $1.9 million. While intended to help lower-income Washingtonians, the exemption is available for any home in the nation's capital that is the occupant's ''permanent'' residence. But South Dakota law requires that all of its elected officials be residents of the state.

Neither Daschle nor Republican former Rep. John Thune has announced his candidacy for their expected Senate showdown next year.



To: JohnM who wrote (5213)8/18/2003 6:49:55 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793856
 
You are the only one I know who was trapped like this, John.

The Bits Are Willing, but the Batteries Are Weak
By AMY HARMON - NEW YORK TIMES

For many Internet addicts, the blackout last week was a rude reminder of just how decisively the vaunted 21st-century digital lifestyle can be laid low by a disruption in 19th-century electrons.

While hardly enjoyable, being severed from the usual sources of food, water and transportation has occurred in previous power failures. But losing access to the digitized information that permeates our lives ? from work-related records to Google searches to e-mail love letters ? punctured a cherished illusion of the cyberage: that cyberspace is a separate universe, immune from real-world physics.

Digital bits are often portrayed as a parallel world. If we do not need bodies to communicate or bookstores to buy books, the intuition beckons, why would we need something as mundane as power cords?

But under cover of blackout, the digital world revealed itself as very much in electricity's thrall. Surely, it should have been obvious: personal computers do not work when they are not plugged in. Laptops and MP3 players require batteries, as in charged.

"Power electrons are the mother's milk of the information age and power distribution is a lot more fragile than we imagine," said Paul Saffo, director of the Institute for the Future. "Carry spare batteries."

Yet to judge by the confusion, frustration and occasional acts of desperation during the electricity cutoff, some stalwarts of the information age have not fully grasped that they are subject to something as prosaic as a blown fuse.

"I was in the middle of writing an important work e-mail," said an aggrieved Mike Pearlstein, an animator drinking lukewarm beer with newly befriended neighbors at a restaurant in the Chelsea section of Manhattan on Thursday night. "I tried to use the batteries, but they weren't working; nothing was working."

When one of his companions observed that had he been glued to his computer, he would not have had the pleasure of meeting them on his apartment stoop that night, he simply said, "I really wanted to send that e-mail."

Coming just two days after the latest Internet worm, Blaster, caused headaches for many computer users, the blackout further underscored the vulnerability to technology that millions of people have come to take for granted.

The Internet itself, designed to route around damage and bolstered by a battery back-up at leading telecommunications companies, held up just fine during the power loss. But traffic dipped at eBay, Amazon and other electronic commerce sites because people could not plug in to log on.

"We've transitioned to a computer-based world where we need reliable power," said David J. Farber, a computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon University who was married in New York three minutes before the 1965 blackout. "When things like this happen, our whole information society sits there and sort of shakes because we can't get at it."

For Mr. Farber's son, Manny, 35, the first of his difficulties came when he needed to call colleagues on Friday. He was confident that an antique rotary phone he had would stand in for the fancy cordless one that had been rendered useless by the blackout ? until he realized that the phone numbers he needed were stored on his computer.

"I have a business-card scanner," Manny Farber explained. "I do have backups, but they're on CD's."

As the batteries on his cellphone and digital camera ran low on Friday, Mr. Farber said he was contemplating buying a meal he did not particularly want at a diner in a neighborhood that had power so that he might surreptitiously charge the devices.

With the dependency on electrons beginning to sink in, digital information refugees began to ration the battery power on their portable devices like water.

Lorna Keuning, 35, of Park Slope, Brooklyn, forced herself to shut down her iBook on Thursday night when the battery meter was in the red so she would have enough charge to check the Internet in the morning. Her first act on waking up to find the power back on was to plug it in. "From now on, I'm always going to make sure it's fully charged," Ms. Keuning vowed.

The longer-term significance of such temporary inconveniences may be negligible, but experts on Internet infrastructure say it is increasingly important to strengthen the link between the dual grids of electricity and information that power the economy.

Jessica Litman, a law professor who lives in Ann Arbor, Mich., said she kept going halfway up the stairs to her computer to get blackout news online before remembering that her sole news source at that point was the car radio. The experience made her appreciate both the luxury of electric power and the ability to tailor her Internet news delivery.

"A car radio tells me what it wants to tell me," Ms. Litman said. "One of the things I realized was how differently I think about the news."

Sapped of their potency, the sights and sounds of digital devices can become even more conspicuous. In the dark, cellphones served as pale blue flashlights even when they would not connect their callers. Strangers debated the merits of calling plans while constantly hitting redial.

" Verizon works, Cingular doesn't," declared Paul Likens, 38, holding one phone to each ear at a table outside a Chelsea restaurant.

Their batteries dying, some people plugged cellphones into the cigarette lighters of their cars to make calls. The lucky owners of BlackBerry devices, which rely on an older network than mobile phones, occasionally sent text messages for the less fortunate.

George Nemeth, of Painesville, Ohio, learned of the blackout during a cellphone call with a friend whose power supplies, connecting several home computers, started beeping the alarms of an unexpected surge.

Mr. Nemeth, who keeps an online journal known as a Web log or blog devoted to Cleveland-related news, said his immediate impulse was to post the news. But when he got home, there was no power at his house either.

"It was disturbing," Mr. Nemeth said. "But my wife enjoyed it because we actually talked for the whole time. When we have power, we're usually both on the computer."

Indeed, many found the 24-hour respite from computers a welcome break. Debbie Dick, an insurance consultant who lives in Detroit, said she had spent the time reading and grilling outside with her 15-year-old daughter.

"I look at it as time to relax," said Ms. Dick, 34, as she waited in a line for gasoline on Friday afternoon.

But for those who use high-speed connections to instant-message friends and family, or to shop, work, or get news and sometimes post it themselves, the withdrawal symptoms were acute.

"Panic sets in when there's a slightest glitch," Jen Chung, editor of the Gothamist Web log, wrote in an e-mail message. "Something like this blackout puts life on hold."

For some bloggers, it was a time for extreme measures. Grant Barrett wrote Thursday evening on his blog, www.worldnewyork.net, "Keeping it short because I'm doing it the old-fashioned way: laptop battery, flashlight and dial-up, the bare necessities." He had just trudged home from Midtown Manhattan to Greenpoint, Brooklyn. "It's now past sundown and the city is black."

Mr. Barrett posted digital pictures, captions and his personal blackout story using a slow dial-up Internet account because his high-speed router required electricity.

"It's the human communication impulse," Mr. Barrett said by telephone of his compulsion to post under such conditions. "Does that sound too grandiose? It's just some moron typing in the dark."

If so, he was not the only one, although other candlelight bloggers appear to have waited until the next morning to post their accounts. At www.camworld.com, Cameron Barrett (no relation) posted a selected list of New York blogs, covering blackout accounts from playing Monopoly by flashlight to being stuck on the Q train.

At a time when the zeros and ones of computer communication seem to zip through the ether, weaving in and out of blogs, phones, music players, bank accounts and address books, the idea that digital data operate in their own dimension is seductive.

But until long-promised new fuel technologies ? from fuel cells to mictoturbines to Sterling engines ? liberate cyberspace from the power grid, the digital economy will continue to rely on Thomas A. Edison's technology.

Ms. Keuning, during an interview late Friday night touching on her battery-saving practices, stopped in midsentence and inhaled sharply as her illuminated laptop screen went dark: `Oooh, something just happened; we're having a power surge," she said.

Then Ms. Keuning, a media buyer whose blackout blog entry is posted at www.lornagrl.com, breathed out as she realized that she'd made a mistake."My computer just went to screensaver," she said.
nytimes.com