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To: JohnM who wrote (7686)9/11/2003 10:34:16 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793778
 
Excellent interview with Miniter on NRO. He has the interviews with Clarke, Berger, and Lake, etc, to back up what he says.

September 11, 2003, 11:45 a.m.
Clinton?s Loss?
How the previous administration fumbled on bin Laden.

A Q&A by Kathryn Jean Lopez

Richard Miniter is a Brussels-based investigative journalist. His new book, Losing bin Laden: How Bill Clinton's Failures Unleashed Global Terror has just been released by Regnery. He spoke to NRO early today about the run-up to the war on terror.

Kathryn Jean Lopez: What did the Clinton administration know about Osama bin Laden and when did they know it?

Richard Miniter: One of the big myths about the Clinton years is that no one knew about bin Laden until Sept. 11, 2001. In fact, the bin Laden threat was recognized at the highest levels of the Clinton administration as early as 1993. What's more, bin Laden's attacks kept escalating throughout the Clinton administration; all told bin Laden was responsible for the deaths of 59 Americans on Clinton's watch.

President Clinton learned about bin Laden within months of being sworn into office. National Security Advisor Anthony Lake told me that he first heard the name Osama bin Laden in 1993 in relation to the World Trade Center attack. Lake briefed the president about bin Laden that same year.

In addition, starting in 1993, Rep. Bill McCollum (R., Fla.) repeatedly wrote to President Clinton and warned him and other administration officials about bin Laden and other Islamic terrorists. McCollum was the founder and chairman of the House Taskforce on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare and had developed a wealth of contacts among the mujihedeen in Afghanistan. Those sources, who regularly visited McCollum, informed him about bin Laden's training camps and evil ambitions.

Indeed, it is possible that Clinton and his national-security team learned of bin Laden even before the 1993 World Trade Center attack. My interviews and investigation revealed that bin Laden made his first attack on Americans was December 1992, a little more than a month after Clinton won the 1992 election. His target was 100 U.S. Marines housed in two towering Yemen hotels. Within hours, the CIA's counterterrorism center learned that the Yemen suspected a man named Osama bin Laden. (One of the arrested bombing suspects later escaped and was detained in a police sweep after al Qaeda attacked the USS Cole in 2000.) Lake says he doesn't remember briefing the president-elect about the attempted attack, but that he well might have.

So it is safe to conclude that Clinton knew about the threat posed by bin Laden since 1993, his first year in office.

Lopez: What exactly was U.S. reaction to the attack on the USS Cole?

Miniter: In October 2000, al Qaeda bombed the USS Cole in Aden, Yemen. Seventeen sailors were killed in the blast. The USS Cole was almost sunk. In any ordinary administration, this would have been considered an act of war. After all, America entered the Spanish-American war and World War I when our ships were attacked.

Counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke had ordered his staff to review existing intelligence in relation to the bombing of the USS Cole. After that review, he and Michael Sheehan, the State Department's counterterrorism coordinator, were convinced it was the work of Osama bin Laden. The Pentagon had on-the-shelf, regularly updated and detailed strike plans for bin Laden's training camps and strongholds in Afghanistan.

At a meeting with Secretary of Defense William Cohen, Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Attorney General Janet Reno, and other staffers, Clarke was the only one in favor of retaliation against bin Laden. Reno thought retaliation might violate international law and was therefore against it. Tenet wanted to more definitive proof that bin Laden was behind the attack, although he personally thought he was. Albright was concerned about the reaction of world opinion to a retaliation against Muslims, and the impact it would have in the final days of the Clinton Middle East peace process. Cohen, according to Clarke, did not consider the Cole attack "sufficient provocation" for a military retaliation. Michael Sheehan was particularly surprised that the Pentagon did not want to act. He told Clarke: "What's it going to take to get them to hit al Qaeda in Afghanistan? Does al Qaeda have to attack the Pentagon?"

Instead of destroying bin Laden's terrorist infrastructure and capabilities, President Clinton phoned twice phoned the president of Yemen demanding better cooperation between the FBI and the Yemeni security services. If Clarke's plan had been implemented, al Qaeda's infrastructure would have been demolished and bin Laden might well have been killed. Sept. 11, 2001 might have been just another sunny day.

Lopez: When the World Trade Center was first bombed in '93, why was it treated at first as a criminal investigation?

Miniter: The Clinton administration was in the dark about the full extent of the bin Laden menace because the president's decision to treat the 1993 World Trade Center bombing as a crime. Once the FBI began a criminal investigation, it could not lawfully share its information with the CIA ? without also having to share the same data with the accused terrorists. Woolsey told me about his frustration that he had less access to evidence from the World Trade Center bombing ? the then-largest ever foreign terrorist attack on U.S soil ? than any junior agent in the FBI's New York office.

Why did Clinton treat the attack as a law-enforcement matter? Several reasons. In the first few days, Clinton refused to believe that the towers had been bombed at all ? even though the FBI made that determination within hours. He speculated a electrical transformer had exploded or a bank heist went bad.

More importantly, treating the bombing as a criminal matter was politically advantageous. A criminal matter is a relatively tidy process. It has the political benefit of insulating Clinton from consequences; after all, he was only following the law. He is not to blame if the terrorists were released on a "technicality" or if foreign nations refuse to honor our extradition requests. Oh well, he tried.

By contrast, if Clinton treated the bombing as the act of terrorism that it was, he would be assuming personal responsibility for a series of politically risky moves. Should he deploy the CIA or special forces to hunt down the perpetrators? What happens if the agents or soldiers die? What if they try to capture the terrorists and fail? One misstep and the media, Congress, and even the public might blame the president. So Clinton took the easy, safe way out, and called it a crime.

Lopez: Bill Clinton was actually offered bin Laden? Could you set the scene a little and clue us in on why, for heavens sakes, he would not take advantage of such opportunities?

Miniter: On March 3, 1996, U.S. ambassador to Sudan, Tim Carney, Director of East African Affairs at the State Department, David Shinn, and a member of the CIA's directorate of operations' Africa division met with Sudan's then-Minister of State for Defense Elfatih Erwa in a Rosslyn, Virginia hotel room. Item number two on the CIA's list of demands was to provide information about Osama bin Laden. Five days later, Erwa met with the CIA officer and offered more than information. He offered to arrest and turn over bin Laden himself. Two years earlier, the Sudan had turned over the infamous terrorist, Carlos the Jackal to the French. He now sits in a French prison. Sudan wanted to repeat that scenario with bin Laden in the starring role.

Clinton administration officials have offered various explanations for not taking the Sudanese offer. One argument is that an offer was never made. But the same officials are on the record as saying the offer was "not serious." Even a supposedly non-serious offer is an offer. Another argument is that the Sudanese had not come through on a prior request so this offer could not be trusted. But, as Ambassador Tim Carney had argued at the time, even if you believe that, why not call their bluff and ask for bin Laden?

The Clinton administration simply did not want the responsibility of taking Osama bin Laden into custody. Former National Security Advisor Sandy Berger is on the record as saying: "The FBI did not believe we had enough evidence to indict bin Laden at that time and therefore opposed bringing him to the United States." Even if that was true ? and it wasn't ? the U.S. could have turned bin Laden over to Yemen or Libya, both of which had valid warrants for his arrest stemming from terrorist activities in those countries. Given the legal systems of those two countries, Osama would have soon ceased to be a threat to anyone.

After months of debating how to respond to the Sudanese offer, the Clinton administration simply asked Sudan to deport him. Where to? Ambassador Carney told me what he told the Sudanese: "Anywhere but Somalia."

In May 1996 bin Laden was welcomed into Afghanistan by the Taliban. It could not have been a better haven for Osama bin Laden.

Steven Simon, Clinton's counterterrorism director on the National Security Council thought that kicking bin Laden out of Sudan would benefit U.S. security since "It's going to take him a while to reconstitute, and that screws him up and buys time." Buys time? Oh yeah, 1996 was an election year and team Clinton did not want to deal with bin Laden until after it was safely reelected.

Lopez: This amazes me every time I hear it: You write, "When a small plane accidentally crashed into the White House lawn in 1994, West Wing staffers joked that it was [Jim] Woolsey trying to see the president..." How could the CIA director have that bad a relationship with his president? And this, after the first WTC attack. Did no one in the West Wing get it?

Miniter: Never once in his two-year tenure did CIA director James Woolsey ever have a one-on-one meeting with Clinton. Even semiprivate meetings were rare. They only happened twice. Woolsey told me: "It wasn't that I had a bad relationship with the president. It just didn't exist."

One of the little scoops in the book is the revelation that Clinton froze Woolsey out because the CIA director refused to put a friend of Bill on the agency's payroll. This account was confirmed by both Woolsey and the Clinton's consigliore Bruce Lindsey.

Considering the Justice Department's experience with Webster Hubbell, another Friend of Bill, Woolsey's decision may have done the CIA a great deal of good. But Clinton's pique did not make America any safer from bin Laden.

Another Clinton intelligence failure involved a refusal to help the CIA hire more Arabic language translators. In 1993, Woolsey learned that the agency was able to translate only 10 percent of its Arabic intercepts and badly wanted more translators. But Sen. Dennis DeConcini refused to approve the funds unless Clinton phoned him and said it was a presidential priority. Despite entreaties, Clinton never phoned the Democratic senator and the CIA didn't get those translators for years.

Lopez: In sum, how many times did Bill Clinton lose bin Laden?

Miniter: Here's a rundown. The Clinton administration:

1. Did not follow-up on the attempted bombing of Aden marines in Yemen.

2. Shut the CIA out of the 1993 WTC bombing investigation, hamstringing their effort to capture bin Laden.

3. Had Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, a key bin Laden lieutenant, slip through their fingers in Qatar.

4. Did not militarily react to the al Qaeda bombing in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

5. Did not accept the Sudanese offer to turn bin Laden.

6. Did not follow-up on another offer from Sudan through a private back channel.

7. Objected to Northern Alliance efforts to assassinate bin Laden in Afghanistan.

8. Decided against using special forces to take down bin Laden in Afghanistan.

9. Did not take an opportunity to take into custody two al Qaeda operatives involved in the East African embassy bombings. In another little scoop, I am able to show that Sudan arrested these two terrorists and offered them to the FBI. The Clinton administration declined to pick them up and they were later allowed to return to Pakistan.

10. Ordered an ineffectual, token missile strike against a Sudanese pharmaceutical factory.

11. Clumsily tipped off Pakistani officials sympathetic to bin Laden before a planned missile strike against bin Laden on August 20, 1998. Bin Laden left the camp with only minutes to spare.

12-14. Three times, Clinton hesitated or deferred in ordering missile strikes against bin Laden in 1999 and 2000.

15. When they finally launched and armed the Predator spy drone plane, which captured amazing live video images of bin Laden, the Clinton administration no longer had military assets in place to strike the archterrorist.

16. Did not order a retaliatory strike on bin Laden for the murderous attack on the USS Cole.

Lopez: You sorta defend Clinton against "wag the dog" criticisms in regard to that infamous August 1998 (Monica times) bombing of a pharmaceutical factory in the Sudan and some bin Laden strongholds in Afghanistan. That wasn't the problem, was it ? that we fired then?

Miniter: Certainly the timing is suspicious. The day before the East African-embassy bombings, Monica Lewinsky had recanted her prior affidavit denying a sexual relationship with Clinton. The sex scandals kicked into overdrive.

Still, the president wasn't doing too much in combating bin Laden because of his sex scandals ? he was doing too little. He should have launched more missile strikes against bin Laden and the hell with the political timing. Besides, after the East African-embassy bombings, any president would have been negligent not to strike back. If he had not, it would be open season on Americans. He would have been as ineffectual as Carter was during the Tehran hostage crisis. Indeed, this was the mistake made following the attack on the USS Cole.

But Clinton was distracted by sex and campaign-finance scandals and his political support was already heavily leveraged to get him through those scandals. If he fought bin Laden more vigorously, the leftwing of the Democratic party might have deserted him ? which could have cost him the White House.

Instead Clinton's token, ineffectual missile strikes that only emboldened bin Laden. He believed that America was too intimidated to fight back ? and was free to plan one of the most-murderous terrorist attacks in history.

Lopez: How did George Tenet perform during the Clinton years vis-à-vis al Qaeda/bin Laden?

Miniter: Tenet seemed to take a too legalistic view of CIA operations. He was risk-averse, wanting almost absolute certainty before recommending action, focused on safeguards against error and unintended consequences. Tenet seemed more concerned with not getting in trouble rather than relentlessly pursuing results to safeguard Americans against terrorism, the focus of a warrior.

Each time U.S. intelligence pinpointed bin Laden, Tenet was against a missile strike on the grounds that the information was "single threaded" ? a pet phrase of the director which means single source. The predator was armed and fitted with video cameras mostly to overcome Tenet's objections to taking out bin Laden.

Lopez: Madeline Albright ? frequently called upon expert nowadays ? what's her record vis-à-vis al Qaeda?

Miniter: Albright always insisted that diplomatic efforts would best yield results on bin Laden. Even after the Cole bombing, Albright urged continued diplomatic efforts with the Taliban to turn him over, even though that effort had been going on for two years with no progress. Two simple facts should have made Albright aware that the Taliban would never turn over bin Laden: Osama had married off one of his sons to Mullah Omar's daughter. The Taliban weren't about to surrender a member of the family ? especially one that commanded thousands of armed fighters who helped maintain Omar's grip on power.

Lopez: What exactly is the Iraq-al Qaeda connection?

Miniter: Osama bin Laden's wealth is overestimated. He had been financially drained during his years in Sudan and financing terrorist operations in dozens of countries, including training camps, bribes, etc., requires a large, constant cash flow. Saddam Hussein was unquestionably a generous financier of terrorism. Baghdad had a long history of funding terrorist campaigns in the bin Laden-allied region that straddles Iran and Pakistan known as Beluchistan. Documents found in Baghdad in April 2003 showed that Saddam funded the Allied Democratic Forces, a Ugandan terror group led by an Islamist cleric linked to bin Laden since the 1990s. Saddam openly funded the Iraqi Kurdish Group and its leader, Melan Krekar, admitted that he met bin Laden in Afghanistan. George Tenet testified to the Senate Intelligence Committee that Iraq had provided training in forging documents and making bombs. Farouk Harazi, a senior officer in the Iraqi Mukhabarat reportedly offered bin Laden asylum in Iraq. Salah Suleiman, an Iraqi intelligence operative, was arrested in October 2000 near the Afghan border, apparently returning from a visit to bin Laden. One of the 1993 World Trade Center bombers, Abdul Rahman Yasin, reportedly fled to Baghdad in 1994. Iraq ran an extensive intelligence hub in Khartoum; Sudanese intelligence officers told me about dozens of meeting between Iraqi Intel and bin Laden. Tellingly, reports that Mohamed Atta met with Iraqi intelligence agents in Prague several times in 2000 and 2001 have not been disproved. I have far more on this in Appendix A of Losing bin Laden.

Lopez: What most surprised you to learn about the Clinton years and terrorism?

Miniter: Three things:

1) That the Sept. 11 attacks were planned in May 1998 in the Khalden Camp in southeastern Afghanistan, according to American and British intelligence officers I interviewed. In other words, the 9/11 attacks were planned on Clinton's watch.

2) The sheer number of bin Laden's attacks on Americans during the Clinton years.

3) And how much senior Clinton-administration officials knew about bin Laden and how little they did about it.

Lopez: This sounds like this could all be right-wing propaganda. How can you convince readers otherwise?

Miniter: Most of my best sources were senior Clinton officials, including both of his national-security advisers, his first CIA director, Clinton's counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke, Madeline Albright, and others. Plus, I interviewed scores of career federal officials. None of them are card-carrying members of the vast right-wing conspiracy.

And, while I shine the light on Clinton's shortcomings in dealing with bin Laden, I also give credit where it is due. Chapter nine is all about one of the greatest (and least-known) Clinton victories over bin Laden ? the successful thwarting of a series of plots to murder thousands of Americans on Millennium night, 1999.

If anyone has any doubts about the credibility of this book, they should read the acknowledgements, which list many of my sources. Or peruse the more than 15,000 words of footnotes, that allow the reader to see exactly where information is coming from. Or examine the intelligence documents reproduced in Appendix B. Or pick a page at random and read it. Any fair-minded reader will see a carefully constructed and balanced account that attempts to lay out the history of Clinton and bin Laden.
nationalreview.com



To: JohnM who wrote (7686)9/12/2003 12:07:03 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793778
 
The first show in this series will be on Sunday, and I will be watching. Can they bring it off? I doubt it. TWT.

Senate Doors Are Closed to a TV Show
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG - [The New York Times]
September 12, 2003

WASHINGTON, Sept. 11 - The producers of "K Street," a new Home Box Office series that makes its debut on Sunday and depicts a firm of Capitol Hill lobbyists, have promised to blend fiction with reality. Now reality, in the form of the rules of the United States Senate, has intruded.

The Senate rules, it turns out, bar the use of Capitol and Senate space for commercial or profit-making ventures. That means the producers of "K Street," George Clooney and Steven Soderbergh, will be unable to film inside the Capitol or lawmakers' offices.

The two got the news on Wednesday, when the Republican chairmen and senior Democrats on the Senate's rules and ethics committees circulated a "Dear Colleague" letter, the same type of letter an aggressive lobbyist might beg a senator to write to drum up support for a bill.

"It would be very chaotic if we had film crews set up all over the place," Senator Trent Lott, the Mississippi Republican who is the chairman of the rules committee, told Roll Call, the Capitol Hill newspaper, which broke the story this morning.

"K Street" centers on a fictional lobbying firm, but blends in real politicians and lawmakers to try to give an insider's feel of how Washington works. A test episode showed actors mingling with senators, including Orrin G. Hatch, Republican of Utah, and Hillary Rodham Clinton, Democrat of New York. James Carville and Mary Matalin, the husband-and-wife team who are, respectively, Democratic and Republican strategists, will also be featured.

To give "K Street" a flavor of current events, the producers have set an ambitious schedule of writing and filming each episode the week before it is to be shown. The Senate edict may make that more difficult.

The best place to catch lawmakers on the fly is in the corridors of the Capitol. But the Senate rules mean that busy lawmakers who elect to appear in "K Street," named for the Washington street where many lobbying firms have their offices, will have to be filmed elsewhere. Some Senate aides say that is unlikely.

But Stuart Stevens, a Republican media consultant and co-producer of the show, said there were plenty of places to run into lawmakers."We care about the people, not the places," he said.

nytimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (7686)9/12/2003 12:14:45 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793778
 
I have been reading the exchange between you and Nadine today and, as you might suspect, shaking my head. You, and the rest of the left, just don't want to "get it." The Pals don't want peace. They tell you that in poll after poll and action after action. They are perfectly content to set there and let the UN keep them fed while they try to exterminate the Jews.

In Need of A New Abbas

By Charles Krauthammer

Friday, September 12, 2003; Page A31

Abba Eban once famously said that the "Palestinians never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity." The fall of moderate Palestinian prime minister Mahmoud Abbas -- systematically destroyed by Yasser Arafat -- represents a spectacularly missed opportunity.

Abbas wanted to end the terror and cash in on the American promise of an independent Palestinian state. Arafat, whose unswerving objective is a Palestinian state built on the ruins of Israel and who will not put down the gun until he gets it, undermined Abbas from the very beginning. He now has chosen a puppet as his new prime minister.

For 56 years, every time the Palestinians were offered the possibility of a state side by side with Israel, they chose rejection and violence.

In 1947 the United Nations offered them the first Palestinian state in history. Led by Haj Amin al-Husseini, the mufti of Jerusalem, who had spent the war years in Berlin as a supporter of Hitler, they rejected the offer, made war and ended up with a vast Palestinian diaspora.

In 1978 the Camp David accords between Egypt and Israel offered the Palestinians a five-year period of autonomy during which negotiations for final status would be conducted. They might have had their own state 20 years ago. They rejected the offer -- and the treaty -- out of hand.

Precisely 10 years ago this Saturday, the Oslo accord was signed in Washington, bringing Arafat and the PLO back to Palestine for what was supposed to be a historic reconciliation with Israel. Rather than making peace and establishing new Palestinian institutions, Arafat used the next decade to turn the Palestinian territories into an armed camp -- a "Trojan horse," as Palestinian moderate Faisal Husseini openly admitted -- for renewed war on Israel.

Abbas was lucky to lose only his job. At previous hinge points in Middle Eastern history, those advocating compromise and peace met a harsher fate. Jordan's King Abdullah, grandfather of King Hussein, was assassinated in 1951. Three months after Anwar Sadat addressed the Israeli Knesset, one of his top advisers, Youssef Sebai, editor of the al-Ahram newspaper, was assassinated in Cyprus. The moderate intellectual Issam Sartawi was assassinated in Portugal in 1983.

Abbas's fall is only the latest chapter in this tragic story of the Palestinians' repeated decision to refuse the dignity of independence if it meant accepting Israel. Every peace plan, every road map, every truce is bound to fail until the Palestinians make a historic collective decision to accept half a loaf and build their state within it.

What should the United States do now? The editorialists are issuing the usual knee-jerk call for the Bush administration to intensify its efforts in the peace process.

What peace process? Intensify efforts with whom? With Arafat -- who is behind the terror, who destroyed Abbas, who will never sign a peace treaty and whose commitment to war-until-victory is as enduring as was Ho Chi Minh's and Mao Zedong's?

The United States went a very long way toward the Palestinians by issuing the road map and the guarantee of statehood if they dismantled the terror apparatus, stopped the murderous incitement and began the process of reconciliation. Abbas appeared ready to take that road. Which is why Arafat brought him down.

The fundamental principle of U.S. policy now must be to prove that Abbas was right. That means no negotiations with Arafat or with any new prime minister beholden to him. That means supporting Israel in its war on terror. And that means not only supporting military responses to atrocities such as the double suicide bombings on Tuesday -- responses such as the expulsion of Arafat -- it also means reconsidering the administration's puzzling opposition to the Israeli security fence.

The fence is a uniquely effective way to stop suicide bombing. We know that because not a single Palestinian suicide bomber has come out of Gaza, where there already is a fence.

The fence not only will save lives by preventing suicide attacks, it will change the strategic equation by neutralizing the terror weapon. Without that card to play, the Palestinians will have an incentive to rethink the Abbas option and to renew the tentative step that he represented of settling with the Jews by dividing the land.

If the fence is built, yes, some Palestinians will be cut off from their fields. On the other hand, if the fence is not built, innocent people on the other side will be blown to bits. Which of these two misfortunes is the more morally compelling?

When the Palestinians finally retire Arafat and find their new Abbas, the fence can come down. In the meantime, a barrier to terror is not just a strategic but a moral imperative.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company
washingtonpost.com



To: JohnM who wrote (7686)9/12/2003 1:09:56 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793778
 
A Debate in Black and White

By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 11, 2003; 8:48 AM

It was not a question a white journalist would have asked Howard Dean.

"Frankly," said Ed Gordon of Black Entertainment Television, with Vermont's population just 0.5 percent black, "there's been some concern . . . that you will have a difficult time connecting and really understanding the concerns of minorities, in particular African-Americans."

Dean argued that "I'm the only white politician that ever talks about race in front of white audiences. Black folks have heard lectures from white politicians for a long time. . . . White folks need to talk to white people in America about race."

Moments later in Tuesday's Baltimore debate, Gordon said that unemployment is 10.9 percent for blacks and cited a study that more white applicants than blacks were called back for low-wage jobs.

"And that's why we need affirmative action in this country," Dean said. "There is a built-in bias of people who do the hiring, they automatically assume people who look like them are more qualified than people who don't look like them."

The exchanges were striking because we hear so little on the campaign trail these days about affirmative action or inner-city joblessness. Everyone is chasing the stereotypical swing voters, many of them in the great mass of American suburbia, and mainstream reporters rarely ask about the poor.

It's not surprising that a panel of three black journalists, at a debate co-sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus Institute, would ask questions from a different perspective (though there were also a lot about Iraq and foreign policy). But it helped take us beyond the usual soundbites (Note to Dick Gephardt: Calling Bush "a miserable failure" worked well in last week's debate; repeating it in Baltimore just gave it a "Groundhog Day" flavor).

I'm usually skeptical of panderfests before this or that interest group, when the questions seem to boil down to "What are you going to do for us?" and the candidates do everything but beg. But because the Baltimore panel, moderated by Fox's Brit Hume, asked good questions, some of the candidates were pushed to address issues important to one of the party's core constituencies. I didn't know that Dean, whose ability to excite black voters remains in question, was a strong supporter of affirmative action. And John Edwards took issue with Dean's stance of being the only contender to discuss race with white audiences.

Fox's Juan Williams asked whether blacks should consider the GOP or flirt with the idea of a black American party. Al Sharpton said to Democrats that "we helped take you to the dance and you leave with right wingers."

Williams asked about substandard education for black and Hispanic children. Edwards replied that "we still have two public school systems in America, one for the 'haves' and one for the 'have-nots.' "

Gordon asked John Kerry if he'd feel comfortable if his kid faced the same opportunities that the average black child does. Kerry said he'd be "outraged." Joe Lieberman used a similar question to talk about having marched with Martin Luther King 40 years ago.

Not all the questions were home runs, though. I could have done without Farai Chideya's "what's your favorite song?" interrogation.

Democratic Chairman Terry McAuliffe, at a breakfast with reporters, wasn't ecstatic about the debate, says Salon's Alexander Bolton:

"Strangely McAuliffe didn't want to talk much about the debate held just the night before in Baltimore, sponsored by Fox News and the Congressional Black Caucus. If the Albuquerque debate was a win for the DNC, the second may have been a loss. It revealed some of the party's weaknesses, in particular cracks in the alliance with pro-Israel Jews, and strained ties with African Americans under forty. Maybe it's appropriate the debate was cosponsored by Fox News, which many Democrats lambaste for being a mouthpiece for conservative viewpoints and the Republican party."

Hamlet-in-the-wings Wes Clark has finally gotten the phone call he may have been waiting for, says this Washington Post report:

"Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean has asked retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark to join his campaign, if the former NATO commander does not jump into the race himself next week, and the two men discussed the vice presidency at a weekend meeting in California, sources familiar with the discussions said.

Clark, in a telephone interview yesterday, said he did not want to comment about the private meeting."

Which means it must be true. Does Dean think he's got his thing sewed up or what?

The AP's Ron Fournier says Dean is starting to trip over his own tongue:

"Howard Dean is learning that his words count -- and can count against him -- as the Democratic presidential front-runner. From the Middle East to race, Social Security and campaign-finance reform, the former Vermont governor is getting singed by nearly every hot-button issue he touches.

"His eight Democratic rivals hope to slow Dean's momentum by highlighting his policy flip-flops and misstatements, probing every pronouncement for the slightest sign of a gaffe. Dean has given them plenty of ammunition, though his foes have taken some liberties with his record. . . .

"After they were slow to recognize his summer ascent, Dean's opponents opened the fall campaign by questioning his foreign-policy credentials and attacking his positions on taxes and trade. Rival campaigns also highlighted shifts in Dean's policies, including his denial that he ever suggested raising the retirement age, though he has.

"Dean argues that any open-minded politician evolves on issues -- or gets caught musing aloud about possible reversals, a habit Dean says he picked up as governor. 'Sometimes I think out loud when I shouldn't,' he said."

Kerry, who was heard to mutter "Dean, Dean, Dean, Dean, Dean" in Baltimore, may be playing catch-up with the good doctor again:

"Senator John F. Kerry said yesterday that he would break a federal spending cap, reject public financing for the presidential primaries, and possibly use his personal funds if Howard Dean's fund-raising strength leads the former Vermont governor to go beyond the federal spending limit," says the Boston Globe.

"Dean sent a letter to the government in June saying he would abide by the limit, but is now considering exceeding the cap. 'If Howard Dean decides to go live outside of it, I'm not going to wait an instant,' Kerry said in an interview at his campaign headquarters. 'Decision's made. I'll go outside. Absolutely. I'm not going to disarm.'"

There goes the ketchup money.

Roger Simon has some post-debate conclusions:

"The Howard Dean camp has to be very worried about Dennis Kucinich. Kucinich and Dean both opposed the Iraq war, but Kucinich is now flanking Dean to the left by saying, 'The best way to protect our troops is to bring them home!'

"Why does Dean have to worry about this, since Dean is the front-runner and Kucinich has no chance of winning the nomination? Because Kucinich is going to take votes away from Dean in Iowa, where anti-war feeling runs high, and if Kucinich takes away enough votes, Dean could lose the state to Gephardt, who is running a close second to him in the polls there. . . .

"Dean also got hit again on his gun control stand. . . . Though some in the Democratic party want to abandon gun control as an issue in order to court the Bubba/Nascar vote, they are kidding themselves. They are never going to get those votes. George Bush is the Bubba/Nascar president. Why do you think he landed on that carrier in a flight suit? Why do you think he said, 'Bring them on' to those Iraqis attacking Americans? Why do you think he likes to spend a month clearing brush on his ranch? This guy is a Bubba/Nascar voter!

"And the Democrats, in a vain attempt to win those votes, run the real risk of losing the support of suburban women who like gun control."

Slate's William Saletan does the scorecard thing: "Kerry was as lively as Kerry gets. He'll never convince viewers like me, who find him stiff and absurdly formal, that he isn't stiff and absurdly formal. . . .

"Howard Dean's performance was near-perfect. Strategically, Dean is way ahead of the pack. He has fulfilled the affirmative part of the campaign: giving people enough reasons to vote for him. Now he has the luxury of focusing on the negative part: dispelling the reasons to vote against him. Accordingly, his preparation for the last two debates seems to have focused on acting presidential and conveying competence in military and foreign policy. Tonight he accomplished both. He was at ease and in command. Rectifying his performance in Albuquerque, he projected confidence without constipation."

Now there's a bumper-sticker slogan!

National Review's Michael Graham spanks Dean:

"Sen. Lieberman tried to make hay out of Dean's recent comment that America should not take sides in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but it had little affect. An audience that cheers Al Sharpton with gusto is unlikely to be concerned about the security of Israel. However, Dean made a quite astonishing statement in rebuttal, namely that the Democrats 'need to beat Bush so we can have peace in the Middle East.'

"If there were even a chance that Dean is right, and defeating George W. Bush would bring about peace between Israelis and Arabs, I'd change my voter registration tomorrow. What this comment reveals is the fundamental failing of the Democrats in this debate: While they agreed that every Bush policy has been wrong, they offered virtually no alternative policies to set America right. The fight against terrorism was reduced last night to complaints that Osama is still free and Iraq is still dangerous. But not a single suggestion on what to do about either condition."

Yesterday I cited a Republicans for Dean blog. Andrew Sullivan said it seems "full of far-left rhetoric" and "extremist Bush-hating. . . . If these guys are real Republicans, I'm a hetero." Andrew later backed off, and the site's author, Dennis Sanders, took exception:

"This site is written by a moderate Republican who lives in Minneapolis. The goal of this site is twofold: to be a place for disillusioned Republicans who are interested in the Dean Campaign and to make the case as to how Dean adheres to Republican principles such as fiscal responsibility, limited government and national security in ways that the present administration does not." He says his co-blogger, Steve, after posting some "poorly chosen" words, is moving on and will no longer be part of the site.

The Weekly Standard's Bill Whalen tackles the gender gap in California:

"Chicks just aren't digging Arnold -- and that goes double for Dixie Chicks. 'He is a great film star,' the Chicks' banjo-playing Emily Robison told a German newspaper this week. 'But I find his idea to run for governor absolutely insane. America should be governed by people who have a clue. I hope he doesn't win.'

"It's no shock that the Lone Star trio ventured to Europe and took a swipe at a Republican politician. . . . But what is surprising is how few celebrities have joined the chorus. Sure, there's Cybill Shepherd. She once made out with Gray Davis. Now, she makes out Arnold to be Western civilization's greatest threat. 'That would be the worst tragedy in the history of California,' the former 'Moonlighting' star confided to 'Access Hollywood.' 'I think that we are the laughingstock of the world, with Arnold Schwarzenegger running [for] governor. I think he's a real hypocrite. I think he has a past that is going to come out, and I'm not going to mention what it is, but it's not going to be pretty.'

"But beyond Cybill, Hollywood has taken a pass on Arnold-bashing. There's no liberal vitriol coming from the red carpets, no doom-and-gloom prophecies that a Schwarzenegger administration will rape the environment, re-segregate lunch counters, or condemn women to back-alley abortions -- not one iota of the spite and malice directed at the George W. Bush or a conservative punching bag like Tom DeLay."

In the New Republic, Jill Stewart chides the local press for going on Cruz control:

"You'd hardly know it from the simpering coverage by political reporters who typify the sad state of journalism in California, but recall candidate Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante is proposing fixes that polls suggest are horribly divisive and not at all what voters have in mind. Yet as I watch the deepening media bitterness toward Arnold Schwarzenegger for failing to sit down for one-on-one interviews, and for missing Wednesday's too-safe debate, I see that the journalistic herd is moving to protect its natural ally -- the Democrat Bustamante -- as it prepares for a classic pack journalism stampede.

"Poor Schwarzenegger. The signs are everywhere.

"Bustamante wants to toss out California's much-cherished Proposition 13 -- at least the half that keeps commercial property taxes from skyrocketing. He claims that'll stop 'skyscrapers' from shirking their fair share of the tax burden. But in truth, Bustamante's plan to grab $3 billion in taxes will also hit California's struggling mom-and-pop stores and ubiquitous immigrant-owned shopping strips. Incredibly, the media is virtually silent on Bustamante's controversial plan. Instead, they've repeatedly pummeled Schwarzenegger because his advisor, billionaire Warren Buffett, merely suggested Proposition 13 might deserve a fresh look.

"I marvel, too, over the protective media glow that has encircled Bustamante ever since he refused, in a written response to the Los Angeles Times several days ago, to support a cap on Sacramento's overspending."

The papers are full of 9/11 stories today, on the second anniversary, and Gregg Easterbrook, the New Republic's latest blogger, takes on one sensitive issue:

"So far only about 40 percent of the survivors of those killed on 9/11 have filed for payments from the federal fund. Some of the others may be too paralyzed with sorrow to act, but others of the remaining 60 percent have been waiting for ruling on whether they can sue. Tuesday a federal judge said they can. Set aside the logic of the judge's decision, which in effect held that American, Boeing, United, and the landlords of the World Trade Center all could have reasonably foreseen that 19 suicidal fanatics simultaneously would seize four large airlines and use them as guided missiles. Gee, lots of people foresaw that, didn't they? What's going to happen now is that at least some fraction of the 60 percent of families who have not filed for federal payments will sue.

"Which means: some 9/11 families are getting greedy. It's time this was laid on the table.

"Families who have taken the federal compensation have, so far, received average awards of $1.6 million, tax-free. Families of the United States personnel murdered by Al Qaeda in the Kenya and Tanzania terror attacks of 1998 received, on average, nothing. Families of the several hundred United States military personnel killed in Afghanistan fighting to destroy al Qaeda, and killed in Iraq fighting at least in part against terrorism, received, on average, $9,000, taxable.

"Now some 9/11 families are saying $1.6 million isn't enough. Set aside whether they should be receiving anything from taxpayers, given the myriad other circumstances in which Americans die annually in various horrible events every bit as traumatic and devastating to their families, who receive nothing at all. Assume for the sake of argument that something about 9/11 justifies offering victims' estates a very large special payment. Yet some 9/11 families are saying very large is not large enough. This is greed; it is employing the memory of lost loved ones for gold-digging."

Finally, what in the world is the Justice Department doing investigating ABC News for smuggling uranium? Check out my story in this morning's Washington Post.

washingtonpost.com



To: JohnM who wrote (7686)9/12/2003 1:40:32 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793778
 
Good Column - REASON

September 11, 2003

The Day Nothing Changed
Two years later, it's August 2001 all over again
Matt Welch

For the past week I've been reading through 35 years worth of Reason back-issues, in advance of the magazine's upcoming Jade Anniversary special. Viewing history through this lens, an action-reaction pattern quickly emerges: Huge unforeseen event rocks Washington, the government devises some over-reaching program to address it, then Reason throws a dart (or several). Several years later, maybe, the rest of the country comes around to the magazine's point of view.

So, for example, a double-edged spike in inflation and unemployment in 1971 convinces Richard Nixon to establish a wage-price freeze and a 10 percent tariff; Reason's Manuel S. Klausner calls the executive order "an act of supreme defiance against the free market and the freedom of Americans," and 32 years later we can't really fathom such a thing ever happening again. Watergate begets campaign finance reform; a foreign oil crisis begets forced rationing and a tax on domestic producers; the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan begets the reintroduction of military draft registration, and so on.

Of course the magazine has been wrong before, and I've heard rumors that the government has done a worthwhile thing or two in its history, but the basic formula holds: crisis creates government expansion, which compels citizens to change their behavior and sacrifice some freedom.

What's striking to me about the two years since that atrocious morning, in comparison to the lesser crises from 1968-2000, is how little we've been asked?or forced?to do or change.

Yes, President George W. Bush just asked us for another $87 billion to fund Iraq reconstruction (on top of the $79 billion already spent, and the estimated $55 billion extra that will have to come soon), and yes, we will be paying off the effects of a half-trillion-dollar budget deficit for unknown years to come. Certainly, it is hard to currently assess the effects of increased government secrecy, eroded privacy, and the PATRIOT Act.

But my guess is that, aside from inconvenience at airports, more than 99 percent of the people reading this column have not been concretely affected by any of the new enforcement or prevention measures introduced since the Sept. 11 massacre. The United States military is under pretty serious strain, but nobody's talking about drafting random 18-year-olds. There have been no ration cards, no war bonds, no great National Program of Sacrifice.

Those lines outside military recruitment centers didn't last long at all. The much-ballyhooed meeting of the minds between Hollywood and the Pentagon amounted to little more than a few pina colatas with Karl Rove at the Beverly Peninsula Hotel, and the odd Jennifer Garner commercial for the CIA.

In other words, while the all-professional military was sent overseas to win two wars, we were mostly free to do whatever the hell we wanted. And what we've wanted to do, increasingly, is revert to our lives of 731 days ago.

In recent weeks the signs have been unmistakable. Just like in August 2001, we've been distracted by shark attack scares, treated to blow-by-blow Greta van Susteren coverage of an investigation into the suspicious death of a Modesto girl, and excited by news of the upcoming hobbit movie. Bush's popularity is eerily similar?a 59 percent/37 percent approval/disapproval rating from Aug. 25-26 (according to Gallup), compared to 51 percent/39 percent on Sept. 7-10, 2001.

After a brief and occasionally exhilarating season of ideological cross-dressing, the old Red/Blue divide has re-asserted itself. The New York Times best-seller list is an advertisement for political polarization, with Al Franken, Joe Conason, Michael Moore, Jim Hightower and Hillary Clinton currently tag-teaming on Ann Coulter, who has built quite a career out of branding patriotic Americans as "traitors." Media bias, that great buzz-killing Rorschach Test of a topic, is back with a vengeance.

Should we be concerned about this seeming dissolution of National Unity, and lack of government-mandated sacrifice? I think not.

First, it is a testimony to the country's strength?a strength nourished by liberty?that it is able to absorb such a fantastic wound in such a short period of time. Second, by letting each of us work out his or her own reaction to events, rather than being drafted into a monochromatic War Effort, the hysteria that accompanied far less grave acts of aggression in the past has been largely avoided.

For perspective, look no further than the Reason archive, this time a March 1981 column from Murray N. Rothbard, in response to the U.S. embassy takeover in Iran:

"At the time of writing it is difficult to predict the outcome of the explosive Iranian crisis. But several important points can now be made. In the first place, the crisis has uncovered some particularly ugly aspects of the American character, traits that apparently have festered beneath a gossamer-thin layer of civilized values. In particular, jingoism and racism. Throughout the country, and on countless college campuses, angry demonstrators have called for the 'nuking' of Iran and for the deportation of all Iranian students from the United States. Iranians here?even citizens born here but who suffer the stigma of Iranian descent?have been harassed and beaten up."

There are more than a few things to be worried about on this awful anniversary, and more than a few fights to pick with this government about how best to prevent theocratic lunatics from blowing up Los Angeles or Chicago. But we are at our strongest when we no longer have to sing "God Bless America" during every seventh-inning stretch, when we no longer feel compelled to watch 16 hours of CNN every day, and when Merle Haggard is free to write skeptical new songs about war. By resisting the historical temptation to encroach on our personal behavior, the Bush Administration, if it has done nothing else, has allowed us to find our own strength.

Matt Welch is a Reason associate editor.

reason.com



To: JohnM who wrote (7686)9/12/2003 7:29:16 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793778
 
THE POLLSTERS
Mark Mellman

Show us the money, polls say

Responsible leaders know you cannot invade a country like Iraq, destroy its institutional infrastructure and just walk away. Whatever the original merits of the war, the United States cannot just declare victory and depart.

Most Americans understand that principle. ABC News pollsters put the argument squarely when they asked: “Do you think the United States should keep its military forces in Iraq until civil order is restored there, even if that means continued U.S. casualties or should the United States withdraw its military forces from Iraq?”

Nearly seven in 10 Americans, 69 percent, recognized our responsibility to stay in Iraq until order is restored.

But those results mask the public’s seething disquiet with the administration’s Iraq policy. Voters still believe we did the right thing in taking military action against Iraq (61 percent), but they doubt almost everything the administration has done since and are extremely wary of the lives and money that continue to be poured into the effort. President Bush’s speech Sunday night is likely to heighten, not quiet, those concerns.

Americans do not believe that Bush has a plan for winning the peace. A CNN/Gallup/USA Today poll found just 44 percent saying that “the Bush administration has a clear plan for handling the situation in Iraq.”

That is just one point more than those who thought Bush has a plan for handling the economy! (No plan for the economy and no plan for Iraq. The White House ought to be worried.)

With or without a plan, voters believe we have lost control of developments in Iraq. In May, CBS found just 20 percent believing we were not in control while 71 percent thought we were. Now a plurality (47 percent) thinks we are not in control of the situation, while just 42 percent think we are. Only 5 percent think things are going very well in Iraq — and they must work in the White House communications office.

More important, there is a growing perception that Bush is spending too much — in lives and dollars — on Iraq. More than three quarters (76 percent) are concerned that we “will get bogged down in a long and costly peacekeeping mission in Iraq.”

Thirty-one percent want to decrease the number of U.S. troops in Iraq. Thirty-seven percent of Democrats and 36 percent of independents share that view. When asked about troop levels in the context of continuing attacks on U.S. personnel, 48 percent told Newsweek they favored a withdrawal of the U.S. military, with 47 percent opposed. Today, only 32 percent are willing to keep U.S. troops in Iraq for more than two years.

There is even more distress about the amount of money being spent. Back when we were only spending $1 billion a week, just 34 percent supported that spending. Only 17 percent would support it for over two years. At the same time, voters are worried that domestic priorities are being robbed. Sixty-six percent want more spending for education and 71 percent more spending for healthcare.

With just 11 weeks of Iraq spending, Bush could have kept his promise to fund his own education bill. Now, with an $87 billion request, public tempers are likely to fray.

In the end, Americans will do the responsible thing. But they believe that if we can afford to educate Iraqi children, we can afford to educate our own; if we can afford healthcare for Iraqis, we can afford it for Americans; if we can rebuild Iraq’s electric grid, we can rebuild our own. It’s not guns versus butter. It’s butter for them versus butter for us.

That’s part of the reason 69 percent want the United Nations to take the lead in rebuilding Iraq.
Mark S. Mellman is president of The Mellman Group and has worked for Democratic candidates and causes since 1982.


thehill.com



To: JohnM who wrote (7686)9/12/2003 8:00:03 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793778
 
California Insider - A Deal in the Works?

Seeds of a deal?
People listening closely to Tom McClintock throughout the campaign know that he’s always implied he believed voters would drop him for Arnold Schwarzenegger on Election Day if they concluded that he had no chance to win. Now he’s made that very clear in an appearance on Fox News Channel’s “Hannity & Colmes” show:

“There'd be no need to pull out in that case,” McClintock said of the possibility that he remains a distant third. "My support would go to Arnold if it looks like Arnold's the only hope of stopping Cruz Bustamante, and I think Arnold's support would come to me if our momentum continues and they realize they can actually have their first choice and he can win."

While some people might not take seriously the senator’s belief that “Arnold’s support would come to me,” McClintock’s take might contain the seeds of a peace pact between the two leading Republican candidates.

What if the two candidates, after this weekend’s Republican convention, issued a joint statement pledging to focus their campaigns against Bustamante and not one another, and urging their supporters to unite on Election Day behind whichever candidate they (the voters) believed had the best chance of winning?

This would end the talk of getting McClintock out of the race, save Arnold from Tom’s sniping, and unite the party behind its common cause. McClintock, through his comments, is already signaling as much to his supporters. For Arnold to do so would seem to be a risk: he could elevate McClintock by implicitly acknowledging that the senator might have a chance to win. But since most people don’t think McClintock does have a chance, all Arnold would really be doing is gaining Tom’s support for joining forces at the end.

Another option: the two could agree this weekend to throw their support behind whichever Republican candidate is leading in the average of the three most recent independent polls by some date, say Oct. 1. Again, a stacked deck for Arnold, since he is leading handily in the polls. But also a way for Schwarzenegger to show he’s not afraid to compete, a chance for McClintock to pull off an upset, and a graceful way to end the feuding with no hard feelings.

sacbee.com



To: JohnM who wrote (7686)9/12/2003 9:31:39 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793778
 
I thought of your dislike of my usage of "men and money" when I read this.

When Linguists Attack
Fed up with the PC domination of the academic linguistics, one professor fights back against the establishment.
by David Skinner - Weekly Standard
09/12/2003 12:00:00 AM

THE PERSECUTION OF SCHOLARS for gender bias, on even the flimsiest evidence, has long been a fact of life in academe. Should one professor write, "Mary entered the kitchen," another boils over with feminist indignation, convenes a panel to investigate, and soon the whole campus is sucked into a tedious speakathon on the evils of sexism. But more than just the hobbyhorse of a few discontented radicals, heightened scrutiny for potential offense to preferred political groups has become policy within most disciplines. So it comes as an unexpected pleasure to see the practice of telling scholars what to write and say receive the kind of treatment it deserves.

Along these lines, in 1992, the Linguist Society of America began urging scholars to use androgynous names when writing example sentences. The aim, set in the Linguist Society of America Guideline for Nonsexist Usage, was to get linguists to forgo stereotypes and to "avoid peopling . . . sentences with just one sex." If anything, argued University of Wisconsin linguist Monica Macauley and co-author Colleen Brice five years later in Language, the official journal of the LSA, efforts to steer linguists away from unsavory example sentences needed to be expanded. For a taste of political correctness from its true vintage years, we'll examine their article, "Don't Touch My Projectile." The title is a disingenuous play on the kind of suggestive humor sometimes found in example sentences, which the authors argue needs to be stricken from textbooks.

MACAULEY AND BRICE'S case starts from the illogical premise that much can be learned about present-day bias in example sentences by studying grammar texts from over the last 25 years. Thus do Macauley and Brice construct a sample using texts that had been written before feminism rose to its current commanding heights in academe. And a good deal of their criticism proceeds from this historically skewed sample. For instance, after complaining that women don't appear nearly as often in subject sentences, they try to score an additional complaint from the fact that men appear in a greater variety of jobs in example sentences. Obviously the latter is at least partly a function of the former and not prima facie evidence that textbook writers have narrow views of what jobs women can and cannot hold.

Throughout their piece, Macauley and Brice do much to call their own reasonableness into question. At one point, they complain that men appear more often than women as causal agents in their sample of example sentences. And "in the relatively small number of cases where males are depicted as experiencing emotion, they almost always experience heterosexual affection." In a footnote, the authors write, "Thanks to Siobhan Somerville for pointing out to us that such examples show heterosexist bias as well." Indeed, these textbooks, which go back as far as 1969, should have shown more sensitivity when it comes to the recognition of gay feelings.

When not complaining about women's relations to the means of causality in example sentences, Brice and Macauley complain about the actions associated with women in example sentences, especially those that make women seem bitchy. Verbs like "call, scold, yell, get angry, and shop" are all given the sideways glance, even if they appear in a surprising and empowering sentence like this one: "The woman scolding the policeman is my mother." (Unlike Macauley and Brice, Mom here clearly isn't one to get over-worried about the presence of masculine authority figures.)

Sometimes the efforts to ward off stereotypes become just nonsensical, as when the authors complain that men appear too often with cars and that they are always the ones fixing them. "No females fix cars in any of the ten textbooks, while 53 males do so." According to the Department of Labor, this is not only true of language textbooks: Less than two percent of automobile mechanics are women. Also laughable is the authors' complaint that "males far outnumber females (by a 6-to-1 ratio) as the perpetrators of violence." Indeed, this is another stereotype that happens to be true. Men are responsible for several times more violent felonies than women are. It really is no wonder they should be responsible for more violence in example sentences.

Furthermore, making a practice of having women fixing cars and committing assault in example sentences would only single an author out as tendentious. (Ex: "Ms. Macauley hotwired the car and ran over her assailant, screaming 'Take that you linguistic chauvinist! Who's getting tenure now?'") With academics like Macauley and Brice making the case for expanded vigilance regarding gender bias and sexual stereotypes in example sentences, no wonder this fantastical policy has come in for a beating. Now the beating--the real beating, from a fellow linguist.

WRITING IN THE Spring 2003 issue of Language, Paul Postal of New York University questions every possible rationale for the LSA's policy and visits many an argument offered by Macauley and Brice. Stating the obvious, Postal begins by noting that political considerations are not central to the mission of LSA or to that of linguists generally.

Then with the most withering sarcasm, Postal attacks the LSA policy for its exclusive focus on one type of offense. "There are many possible sources of offense, for example, those involving personal hygiene or dress habits (both potentially relevant to LSA meetings). Military organization and children's summer camps have codes about such matters. Should the LSA develop recommended lists of soaps and suggestions about how often to use them? Should shorts be banned or ties and brassieres required?"

Next the respected linguist asks why the guidelines don't address obscenity, racial epithets, "characterizations of people in drastically unkind ways," and so on. Good question. "As a consequence of the limitations, for no stated or justified reason, it accords perfectly with LSA policy to fill one's examples with . . . the most vicious hate-spewing, racially, ethnically, religiously, etc., demeaning remarks, but use of 'waitress,' 'chairman,' or generic 'man' puts one beyond the pale."

Almost as troubling to Postal is the threat to free speech represented by the guidelines on nonsexist language. He compares the policy to the law under which former French general Paul Aussaresses was prosecuted for "trying to justify war." The law and its supporters, writes Postal, are "incapable of distinguishing the content of views from the right to express them." But here's the good professor's jaw-breaking punch: "Underlying that incapacity is a dogmatic, total assurance of knowing exactly what things other people should be allowed to say. I believe the same impulse underlies the LSA guideline."

Furthermore, Postal points out, any standard that prohibits certain language because of its' being "offensive to" a certain group or person is necessarily subjective. This opens the door to a ban on words that merely seem offensive. Postal cites the case of a fourth-grade teacher in Hanover County, North Carolina who got in trouble last year for teaching the word "niggardly" during a vocabulary lesson. When a parent protested the racist-sounding word (which of course has nothing to do with African Americans), the teacher was pressured to apologize, received a formal reprimand, and was sent to sensitivity training.

Finally, Postal makes the rather daring argument that even if it were the case that women readers were harmed by female under-representation in example sentences, it still wouldn't justify the LSA's code. Pay special attention to his brilliant argument by analogy: "If some research showed that visually handicapped people are harmed by hearing or reading (in Braille) references to sight, would that justify a code banning 'look,' 'see,' and 'stare'? . . . At best, it would create a potential clash of distinct desirables (avoiding harm vs. freedom of speech; avoiding harm vs. reliance on individual responsibility)."

Rarely does one see an academic go postal like this (sorry, you were probably waiting for some more inventive play on this man's name), but the LSA policy and its defenders are more than deserving of such extraordinary orneriness. During the '90s, intellectual life on college campuses suffered profound harm from the advances of grievance-committee scholarship. Students who should have been arguing the relative merits of great literature and philosophy got caught up in late-night bull sessions about whether to call their female classmates womyn. Such victim-status politics has given scholarship a bad name and detracted from the higher pursuits that are supposed to the mission of higher education. Let's hope Postal's attack spawns many imitators.
weeklystandard.com