SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: D. Long who wrote (16091)11/14/2003 4:17:30 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793613
 
Most Seafaring Movies are dull as dishwater. I hope this one makes it.
__________________

Success On the High Seas

By Charles Krauthammer

Friday, November 14, 2003; Page A29

The great director Billy Wilder was once asked about subtlety in movies. "Of course, there must be subtleties," Wilder said. "Just make sure you make them obvious."

The trailer for "Master and Commander," the seafaring epic opening today, can hardly be described as subtle. It is a dazzling montage of dramatic scenes of early 19th-century naval warfare, with cannonballs, bodies, furniture and masts flying all over the place. Nonetheless, my first reaction to a screening of the film was that it was beautiful and brilliant, but I was not sure it would find a mass audience because of its subtlety.

Perhaps subtlety is the wrong word. It perfectly describes director Peter Weir's mind and manner, but perhaps refinement is the word for what might hinder the film's commercial success. Weir gives us some magnificently choreographed naval mayhem, but it is spread over two hours of thoughtfulness and restraint.

The story, drawn from the Patrick O'Brian novels, is framed by battle scenes between a British and a French warship. The TV trailer promises " 'Gladiator' at sea." But the movie is really about the nature of naval life in the age of sail, the nature of command and the nature of friendship (between the ship's captain and the ship's doctor).

Although entirely fictional, "Master and Commander" might be considered the most dramatic and brilliant naval documentary ever made. It should be on the reading (viewing) list of every college course on the history of naval warfare. Weir has given unbelievable attention to every detail of the period -- the cookware, the rigging, the uniform buttons, the drinking songs, the instruments of surgery.

And the mode of speech. This is where I worry about subtlety. I speak English reasonably well, but I could only make out about half of the dialogue. That is because Weir has maintained an unswerving fidelity to the period dialect (the 1805 action is situated about halfway between us and Shakespeare's time, and so are the diction and syntax). Pepper that with nautical nouns you have never heard of, often issued in Russell Crowe's barely audible drawl, place them in a cacophony of ship sounds (another example of Weir's fidelity to authenticity), and you sometimes wish that the movie had been accompanied by subtitles.

Weir's restraint carries into a remarkable austerity regarding women. In the movie's version of a love interest, a Brazilian beauty in a small boat selling wares offshore to the sailors of Captain Aubrey's ship catches Aubrey's eye for a moment at a considerable distance. For about five seconds you see Aubrey (Crowe) returning her glance.

And that is it. Indeed, that scene marks the only appearance of women in the entire two hours of the film, setting a new record for sexual austerity in an epic, a record previously held by "Lawrence of Arabia."

The austerity works as film, as does the fidelity to detail. My only worry is that it won't sell to the kids who flock to see "Pirates of the Caribbean," who expect sex and swashbuckling between their battle scenes, and whose patronage is needed for the movie to recover its $135 million cost.

It is perhaps odd to worry about a film's box office, but when a film is as splendid as this one, you want it to succeed. Perhaps it will be helped in the United States by its timing. We are at war, and this is a film not just about the conduct of war but about virtue in war. Its depiction of the more ancient notions of duty, honor, patriotism and devotion is reminiscent of what we glimpsed during live coverage of the dash to Baghdad back in April but is now slipping from memory.

The film was first planned a decade ago, long before Sept. 11, long before Afghanistan, long before Iraq. But it arrives at a time of war. And combat on the high seas -- ships under unified command meeting in duelistic engagement in open waters -- represents a distilled essence of warfare that, in the hands of a morally serious man such as Weir, is deeply clarifying.

Even better is the fact that the hero in his little British frigate is up against a larger, more powerful French warship. That allows U.S. audiences the particular satisfaction of seeing Anglo-Saxon cannonballs puncturing the Tricolor. My favorite part was Aubrey rallying the troops with a Henry V, St. Crispin's Day speech featuring: "Do you want your children growing up and singing the Marseillaise?" It was met by a chorus of deafening "No's." Maybe they should have put that in the trailer too.



To: D. Long who wrote (16091)11/14/2003 4:56:09 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 793613
 
That piece I just posted by Spengler was so interesting that I found a bit more by him. Here is an answer to letters to the "Asian Times" in 2001.
_______________________________________

Contrary to the impression of some readers, I am an admirer of the United States, and something of an aficionado of American history. America's Civil War remains one of my favorite wars, in part because it is one of the few wars literally fought to the death. It ended only when the rebel Southern states no longer could put enough men into the line to fight. Among modern wars in the Western world, only Europe's Thirty Years War stands comparison. Fully one-quarter of all military-age men in the slave states died in the Civil War, which President Lincoln (here the English historian Paul Johnson is correct) pursued as a religious crusade.

As he made clear in his Second Inaugural address, now chiseled into the wall of his memorial, he saw the devastation as divine judgment. Somewhere Lincoln remarked that in every Southern town there existed a class of men fit only to hunt, dance, gamble and duel, and that there existed no solution for such a problem except to kill them all. I suspect Lincoln knew all along how horrible the resolution of the conflict would be. Had Americans had an inkling of what lay in store for them, someone doubtless would have assassinated Lincoln before rather than after the war. They would have permitted the South to secede, and slavery would have spread like cancer from the Mason-Dixon Line to Tierra del Fuego. It was America's (and humanity's) great good luck that Northerners deluded themselves that they could put down the rebellion in a matter of weeks. Once into the war, they found the courage to pursue it to the bitter end.

America now has entered another war from which, if they could envision the hardships and sacrifices ahead, Americans would shrink back in horror. It is better, I suppose, for them not to know. The truth will not make you free, contrary to St John (and the lobby at CIA headquarters). Oftentimes it will scare you silly. If the letterbag at Asia Times Online reflects the opinions of well-informed Americans, we have nothing to worry about.

I should leave the matter there, but pride requires me to clarify one point, namely my use of the fighting-word, "racism". Referring to Washington's racism toward the Islamic world, I mean precisely what President Bush means by "the soft bigotry of low expectations". Like the Labour Zionists whom the genial Jabotinsky derided, the West shows contempt for the Islamic (especially the Arab) world by attempting to buy it off - with modern weapons for the Egyptian regime, promises of economic development, and intervention on behalf of Muslims in Kosovo and Bosnia. Did someone mention Kosovo? Is it not obvious that American diplomacy provoked Milosevic into a confrontation precisely in order to stage a "Wag the Dog" war on behalf of Albanian Muslims, as a sop to the Islamic world?

The Arabs are not so stupid as to mistake manipulation for friendship, and not so cheap as to be bought off by American military hardware. Much of the elite of the Arab world, perhaps a majority of its most energetic and intelligent young men and women, despises the United States for trampling on what they consider the patrimony of Islam by virtue of its global hegemony. They cannot be placated, because their culture ("the stuff out of which we weave the illusion of immortality", I said in a recent essay) is at peril. In the camp of the United States one finds the enervated, corrupt puppets of the new empire, the hated foreign-aid kleptocrats. Compared to them the feckless South Vietnamese army looked like gods and heroes. These are the "moderate Arabs" upon whom America counts to catch the rustlers. Imagine a group of Afghans who speak no English turning up in a Western movie pursuing the bad guys, asking passersby in Tajik, "Which way did they go?"

If you don't know where you are going, any road will take you there. It matters little where America begins the war. The war will escalate, on terms not of America's choosing. America eventually will prevail, but in a way and with costs not measurable in the nightmares of the readers of Asia Times Online.

atimes.com



To: D. Long who wrote (16091)11/14/2003 5:23:26 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793613
 
"As the Democrat party gets smaller, it becomes more liberal, elitist, and angry," Gillespie wrote, "and as it becomes more liberal, elitist, and angry, it gets smaller."



November 13, 2003, 8:29 a.m.
Red America
How Bush will likely beat his 537-vote "landslide."

There's been a lot of talk about recent studies showing a decline in the percentage of American voters who identify themselves as Democrats.

Last summer, pollster Mark Penn found that just 32 percent of voters called themselves Democrats, which led Penn to conclude that, at least on the party-ID issue, "the Democratic party is currently in its weakest position since the dawn of the New Deal."

Now a new study by the Pew Research Center pegs the Democratic number at 31 percent, versus 30 percent who call themselves Republicans.

That's very bad news — if you're a Democrat — but what does it actually mean?

Just who are those voters who have switched party affiliation? And perhaps more important, where are they?

As it turns out, many are right where Democrats don't want them to be — in the swing states that could determine the winner of next year's presidential election.

In Minnesota, for example, Democrats used to enjoy a 31-26 advantage in party identification. Now, it's 31-28 in favor of Republicans. In 2000, Bush lost the state by about 58,000 votes out of 2.4 million cast.

Next time around, with more Republicans, he might do better.

In Michigan, Democrats used to enjoy a 33-26 advantage. Now it's 31-29 in favor of Republicans. In 2000, Bush lost the state by about 217,000 votes out of 4.2 million cast.

In Iowa, Democrats used to enjoy a 32-27 advantage. Now, it's 34-27 in favor of the Republicans. In 2000, Bush lost the state by about 4,000 votes out of 1.3 million cast.

In Wisconsin, Democrats used to enjoy a 33-29 advantage. Now, it's 30-29 in favor of the Republicans. In 2000, Bush lost by about 6,000 votes out of 2.6 million cast.

Those are the states that have turned over. In some other states that Bush lost narrowly, Democrats maintain their edge — just less so.

For example, in New Mexico, Democrats used to enjoy a 40-30 advantage. Now, it's 39-35. In 2000, Bush lost by just 366 votes.

And in the most important swing state of all in 2000, Florida, Democrats used to enjoy a 38-33 advantage. Now, it's 37-36 in favor of Republicans. That means Bush might be able to build on his 537-vote landslide.

"Republican gains have come across the board, both geographically and demographically," the Pew report says. "There have been increases in Republican party affiliation in nearly every major voting bloc, except among African-Americans."

And even though Democrats still have a tiny 31-30 advantage nationwide, that may be of little use next year.

"Because Republicans traditionally turn out to vote in higher numbers than do Democrats, the current division in party affiliation among the public could provide the GOP with a slight electoral advantage," the Pew report says.

Much of the discussion about the study has emphasized its conclusion that the United States remains deeply divided politically.

Some commentators have suggested that the study says the country is even more deadlocked than it was in 2000. "The red states get redder, [and] the blue states get bluer," wrote the Washington Post's E. J. Dionne.

Yet that doesn't seem to be the case. According to Pew, red states have indeed gotten redder, but blue states have gotten redder, too. Even the bluest of the blues, such as California, are a bit less so than a few years ago.

Why is it happening? Republican National Committee chief Ed Gillespie has an obvious partisan stake in the situation but nevertheless offered a cogent analysis in a recent memo to party leaders.

"As the Democrat party gets smaller, it becomes more liberal, elitist, and angry," Gillespie wrote, "and as it becomes more liberal, elitist, and angry, it gets smaller."

Ask Democrats and they'll tell you the Pew numbers don't reveal much about anything. The Democrats point out, reasonably, that party affiliation will not matter if more and more people decide not to vote for Bush.

"The number we'll be watching is the number of people who vote for or against President Bush," said Democratic National Committee spokesman Tony Welch.

Welch pointed to a recent Marist College poll that found that 44 percent of those surveyed said they definitely plan to vote against Bush next year, while 38 percent said they definitely plan to vote for him.

"Unless you're a bean counter worried about registration, this is what matters," says Welch.

Well, yes. But the Marist poll also found Bush beating any Democrat matched against him.

And the trends in party affiliation in the swing states that went to Gore in 2000 suggest that it's going to be harder for a Democrat to win those states in 2004.

Count all those beans together and they could mean big trouble for the next Democratic nominee.

— Byron York is also a columnist for The Hill, where this first appeared.
nationalreview.com