Tuesday, April 15. 2008Wichita BlogsThe Wichita Eagle has taken to quoting bits from their website blogs on the editorial page. Oftentimes the writing and thinking is much sharper than their editorial writers can muster. For example, on April 13 they had an item about how please Sen. Pat Roberts is with Gen. Petraeus, followed by an item titled ". . . But Iraqis unimpressed by Petraeus testimony":
Another item: "Glickman laments rising cost of campaigns":
They didn't explain further, but my understanding is that Tiahrt entered the campaign season with a warchest over $2 million. He is for all intents and purposes Boeing's bag man on Capitol Hill, so thoroughly wed to the tanker scam that Bush nicknamed him Tanker Todd. The only way I can imagine anyone challenging him is if they run against the money, making Tiahrt's sponsors the great issue of the campaign, driving that message home everywhere using a cheaper medium, paper. The Eagle also carried a letter by Rev. Michael Poage, titled "Selective Morality," which started:
Personally, I can't see why Bush, or any other US president, would want to attend the opening of any Olympics outside of the US, or why any other nation would want Bush, or any other US president, to show up. Quite simply, the security hassles on top of every other fool thing should be prohibitory. The Olympics has gotten to be such a gargantuan national ego thing that one hardly needs any other reason to want to stay clear. For China this amounts to a national coming out party, a symbol that they're one of the big dogs now, which of course merely validates what's already the case. I imagine that India, Brazil, Indonesia, Turkey, and further down the line Iran, will want to follow in the same line. As for the anti-Chinese protests, my immediate reaction is: I think it is lazy and cowardly for any American to protest a foreign government more strenuously than they do opposing their own when it is engaged in comparably bad behavior, as the US government most certainly is. (Maybe you can make an exception for individuals who have immediate ties to affected people, but that is very rarely the case here.) Part of this is that it's just too easy to get people to turn against some other government, especially when it doesn't challenge one's own -- China, Russia, Sudan, Iran, Burma, Zimbabwe are all easy marks, but you don't see much agitation over Egypt, Colombia, Ethiopia, or other so-called allies with equally dubious records. When such protests occur, one suspects some sort of hidden agenda, the work of some secret sponsor. I don't know whether this is the case here, but the CIA (for instance) has a long track record of orchestrating protests. We know that China is viewed warily by the neocon right -- one reason they so missed 9/11 was that the US was so busy war gaming against China. Which leads to another problem with Americans protesting China, or virtually any other country except the US: all protests default to demands on one's own country, and the US has a long history of acting badly even when a protest goal is virtuous. Part of this is because the US tends to act unilaterally (with or without token followers), and such actions primarily serve to undergird US power throughout the world, which ultimately does more harm than good. My reasoning here is a little more subtle than Rev. Poage's, but his instincts are right, including his proposal for a war crimes tribunal to try Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and Wolfowitz. After all, anyone who wants the right to criticize others first has to clean up their own act. Trackbacks
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