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Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Browse Alert
Tom Engelhardt: Petraeus, Falling Upwards.
How to succeed at being a general without actually succeeding
at anything you're assigned to do. Now he's moving to Centcom,
where he gets to screw with Afghanistan and Somalia as well as
Iraq. Once again the Bush Administration manages to suspend the
Peter Principle.
Chris Floyd: New Britney Spears Sex Tape Bares All!.
OK, it's actually about Somalia. Bad shit happening there.
Mostly America's fault. Don't say you didn't know.
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Fear and Loathing in the Stupid Season
With Obama pinned down unable to talk about anything but the
unfortunate Rev. Wright, I now see that Clinton is running ads
attacking Obama for his failure to endorse John McCain's "gas
tax holiday" idea. We've already talked about why this is a bad
idea. Paul Krugman
argues
that Clinton's version is merely pointless rather than evil, but
he misses the real point: that this is publicly identified as
McCain's idea, and that once again Clinton is shilling for him,
letting him sound like a reasonable person instead of a lunatic.
Even if her tactic gains her some ground against Obama, it only
digs her a deeper hole against McCain. They're practically a tag
team.
Krugman goes on to slam Obama once again on health care -- "so
poisoning the well by in effect running against universality." I'm
not up on those details, but if Clinton can find some room to run
to the left of Obama on health care, I'm all for that. (At least,
as far as I know, she hasn't come out and endorsed McCain's idiot
do-nothing policies.)
Further down in his blog, Krugman quotes Walter Shapiro on Obama:
"By predicating almost his entire campaign on inspiration and process
(he can reform the broken system in Washington and Clinton cannot),
Obama has deliberately forsaken bread-and-butter issues as a means
of persuasion." Krugman adds, if Obama "runs this way in the general
election -- if it's about the candidate's awesomeness, not about why
progressive policies make peoples' lives better -- it's a formula
for defeat." Seems to me that may have been a legitimate poke back
when Edwards was in the race, but I don't see that Clinton has any
credible space to the left of Obama -- especially not when she's
running on her husband's coattails, let alone McCain's. As it is,
Obama crushed Edwards, running for Democratic votes where talking
up progressive policies should be preaching to the choir. Whether
he shifts his emphasis in the fall against McCain, where there's
a lot more space between their policies, remains to be seen. But
one thing I wonder is whether, given the media, people will notice.
For example, this is what Obama had to say about the Clinton-McCain
gas tax holiday:
This isn't an idea designed to get you through the summer, it's
designed to get them through an election. The easiest thing in the
world for a politician to do is to tell you what they think you want
to hear. But if we're gonna solve our challenges right now, then we've
gotta start telling the American people what they need to hear. Tell
'em the truth.
I don't suppose you heard that on the evening news.
Monday, April 28, 2008
Music: Current count 14414 [14403] rated (+11), 749 [750] unrated (-1).
Week cut short with drive to Detroit starting Friday. Working on new
laptop computer, which is kind of strange. Keyboard isn't very good.
Jazz Prospecting (CG #17, Part 2)
Late breaking news today is that the Village Voice has postponed
my Jazz Consumer Guide another week. It had been scheduled for this
week, but I hear that the section got space squeezed at the last
minute. So I've been promised the May 6 issue.
Prospecting is short this week. I had to pack and drive to Detroit,
where I will be away from my normal working environment for the next
week or two. Very awkward place to work, with many distractions, so
I don't expect I'll have much to show for it. One added strangeness
is that I'm breaking in a new laptop. Some nice things to it, best
being Ubuntu Linux pre-loaded with drivers that make everything work.
Keyboard is awful. Bought a small USB mouse, which works but I don't
like the unsmooth wheel. External USB disk drive plugged right in
and worked, too. Haven't tried the wireless yet -- will be a first
for me, but I expect it to work too.
Meanwhile, here's the prospecting I got done before I took off.
Don't know whether I'll do more next week. I brought 200 CDs with
me -- about 65-70% unrated jazz, so in theory I could work on them,
but I didn't bring the packages or paperwork, so it may be hard,
and I'm likely to have other distractions. Playing a new CD now,
but I've already forgotten what it is. Not very good, sorry to
say. (Oh, yeah, new Bobby Watson, on Palmetto. Let's try the new
Fieldwork, on Pi. There, that's better.)
Mail's being held, so I'll catch up with it when I get back
to Cowtown.
Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey: Lil' Tae Rides Again
(2007 [2008], Hyena): Tulsa group, mainstays are keyb player
Brian Haas and bassist Reed Mathis, with newcomer Josh Raymer
taking over the drums slot. Not sure what producer Tae Meyulks
actually did, but there are various electronics undercurrents,
and that seems to be his bag. Minor groove pieces, various
ambiences, nothing dislikable or compelling.
B+(*)
JD Allen Trio: I Am I Am (2008, Sunnyside): Proof
that my eyes are shot to shit, although I could try blaming the
typography, which at worst is illegible and even at large sizes
sows confusion. But it doesn't reflect well on my brain either.
Since I got this I had it filed under unknown Jo Allen. Finally
it dawned on me that we're talking J.D. Allen. I should have
realized that immediately, or no later than when I played the
record. Allen's a tenor saxophonist, from Detroit, b. 1972 (AMG
sez 1974), broke in with Betty Carter, won some prizes for his
1996 debut, and has stood out everywhere he's played since then.
This is basic sax trio, riding on the leader's tone and dynamics,
which are classic. Hype sheet starts by comparing him with Joe
Henderson. That's a good start, although I wouldn't go on to
call him "the Tenor of our Time." But it was stupid
on my part to have forgotten about him.
B+(***)
Claudio Roditi: Impressions (2006 [2008], Sunnyside):
Trumpet player, from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, b. 1946, moved to US in
1970 to study at Berklee, on to New York in 1976. I tend to think of
him as a dependable sideman, but he has about 20 albums under his
own name, starting from 1984. Leans toward hard bop -- one of his
best regarded albums is a Lee Morgan tribute. Cut this in Rio with
a local band I don't recognize: Idriss Boudrioua on alto and soprano
sax, Dario Galante on piano, Sergio Barroso on bass, Pascoal Mereilles
on drums. The rhythm sways to the local beat, but the program is
straight out of jazz mainstream, including four Coltrane tunes.
B+(*)
John McNeil/Bill McHenry: Rediscovery (2007 [2008],
Sunnyside): McNeil is a veteran trumpet player; McHenry a relatively
young tenor saxophonist. Both mainline boppers, McNeil particularly
keyed to west coast cool. The rediscoveries are mostly bop era pieces,
1940s-1950s, including George Wallington, Wilbur Harden, Russ Freeman,
and Gerry Mulligan. Each contributes an original, McNeil to open,
McHenry to close.
B+(**) [May 6]
The Harry Allen-Joe Cohn Quartet: Stompin' the Blues
(2007 [2008], Arbors): Allen is one of my favorite tenor saxophonists,
and his collaboration with guitarist Cohn (Al Cohn's son) continues to
be fruitful. The medley of "It Might as Well Be Spring" and "Spring Is
Here" is especially delightful. Still, this record doesn't quite deliver
on its promise. One problem is that "special guest" Scott Hamilton, who
pretty much invented the "young fogey" genre, never seems to mesh well
with Allen: the two distinctive tones don't fit together nicely, and
when they trade lines Allen may be too deferential. Hamilton only
appears on three cuts here, but seems to influence more. Or maybe
it's a weakness in Allen's originals (4 of 10, more than usual),
including the title cut, which doesn't stomp nearly hard enough.
On the other hand, the other "special guest" is a solid contributor
throughout: trombonist John Allred.
B+(**)
Moss (2008, Sunnyside): Eponymous group album,
the group consisting of five vocalists: Theo Bleckmann, Peter
Eldridge, Lauren Kinhan, Kate McGarry, and Luciana Souza. Ben
Wittman produced, plays drums and some keyboards. Other musicians
include Keith Ganz and Ben Monder on guitar, Tim Lefebvre on bass,
and Eldridge on piano. Kinhan is best known from New York Voices.
The rest have solo catalogs that have never appealed to me, with
the exception of Bleckmann, whose sweet, angelic timbre has on
occasion been put to interesting ends (cf. Las Vegas Rhapsody:
The Night They Invented Champagne). As long as Bleckmann
reigns here the layering is oddly intriguing, and at least the
Neil Young and Joni Mitchell songs hold up to the treatment (the
Mitchell less so).
C+
Tom McDermott and Connie Jones: Creole Nocturne
(2007 [2008], Arbors): McDermott's an old timey pianist, b. 1957
in St. Louis, moved to New Orleans in 1984 and made himself at
home. Scattered discography includes a 1981 New Rags on
Stomp Off; 1995 Tom McDermott and His Jazz Hellions on
Jazzology; a a flurry of releases c. 2003 on STR Digital including
a foray into Brazilian called Choro do Norte and one on
Latin New Orleans called Danza, with Evan Christopher.
Jones is an older cornet player. Don't know much about him, but
there's a photo here of him on stage with Jack Teagarden and
Don Ewell in 1964, and he shows up later with McDermott's Jazz
Hellions and the Crescent City Jazz Band. Jones sings two songs
with a gravelly voice -- a McDermott original called "I Don't
Want Nuthin' for Christmas" is charmingly modest. Title cut is
Creolized Chopin. Closer is "King Porter Stomp." Sparse, as
duets tend to be -- bass and drums would fill out the sound
and move things along.
B+(*)
Shot x Shot: Let Nature Square (2007 [2008],
High Two): Trivia: type "shot x shot" into google and it returns:
1 shot x shot = 1.96783571 × 10-9 m6.
No idea what that means, but typographically the 'x' in the group
name is a multiplication sign, so I figure they're somehow related.
Philadelphia group: two saxes (Bryan Rogers on tenor, Dan Scofield
on alto), bass (Matt Engle), and drums (Dan Capecchi). Almost
everyone writes (Rogers missed out this time). Second album.
Free jazz, rocks abstractly. The two saxes don't diverge as much
as similar sax/trumpet groups, which may be why their stuff blurs
a bit. Two good solid albums. Someday a great one?
B+(***)
Alex Graham: Brand New (2007 [2008], Origin):
Alto saxophonist, based in Michigan (Music Director at the Grand
Hotel on Mackinac Island in the summer, Royal Oak in winter).
Sixth album since 1995, a sextet with Jim Rotondi (trumpet),
Steve Davis (trombone), David Hazeltine (piano), Rodney Whitaker
(bass), Carl Allen (drums), all well known names. Songs include
standards, originals, pop tunes from the Stylistics and Isleys.
The pieces vary in interest quite a bit. The postbop harmony is
something of a turnoff.
B
Dawn Clement: Break (2007 [2008], Origin):
Pianist, from Seattle, sings some, somewhat awkwardly, but
can be effective. Has a previous album, Hush, and
appears on albums with Julian Priester and Jane Ira Bloom.
Trio with Dean Johnson on bass and Matt Wilson on drums.
I'm unconvinced one way or another about the piano, which
strikes me as serious but studiously mainstream. Johnson
and Wilson offer dependable support.
B+(*)
And these are final grades/notes on records I put back for further
listening the first time around.
Bob Belden: Miles . . . From India (2007 [2008],
Times Square/4Q, 2CD): Got the final packaging, which is a nice
double fold-out thing with a 16-page booklet tucked away. No
artist name on spine, but front cover says "Produced by Bob
Belden" below the title and "A Celebration of the Music of Miles
Davis" above. Concept is to round up a bunch of Davis veterans,
mostly from the 1970s (although Jimmy Cobb and Ron Carter go
back further), mix in a bunch of Indian musicians (American
alto saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa is a plausible ringer;
Badal Roy and U. Srinivas are among the better known natives).
Of course, they needed a trumpet also, hence Wallace Roney.
Although the band is touring, the record itself was pieced
together in multiple sessions with various combinations. One
notable exception is John McLaughlin, who only appears on one
cut, the title track, the only one not from Davis. A mix of
good and bad but mostly obvious ideas -- I could have done
without the chants which hold it too close to India. Miles
always preferred to move on.
B+(**)
Unpacking:
- Jon Balke: Book of Velocities (ECM)
- Ketil Bjørnstad/Terje Rypdal: Life in Leipzig (ECM)
- Bill Dixon: 17 Musicians in Search of a Sound: Darfur (AUM Fidelity)
- Fieldwork: Door (Pi)
- Lori Freedman & Scott Thomson: Plumb (Barnyard)
- Amos Garrett: Get Way Back: A Tribute to Percy Mayfield (Stony Plain)
- Jean Martin/Colin Fisher: Little Man on the Boat (Barnyard)
- Jean Martin/Evan Shaw: Piano Music (Barnyard)
- Marilyn Mazur/Jan Garbarek: Elixir (ECM)
- Duke Robillard: A Swingin' Session With Duke Robillard (Stony Plain)
- Walter "Wolfman" Washington: Doin' the Funky Thing (Zoho Roots): June 10
- Eri Yamamoto: Duologue (AUM Fidelity)
- Jacob Young: Sideways (ECM)
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Browse Alert: Obama
The end of the Pennsylvania primary should have been pure relief,
but it turned out to be an unrelieved drag for all concerned -- even
McCain has to be wondering how the consensus nominee could muster no
more than three-fourths of the GOP vote. The Democratic split wound
little moved from where it started, the media coverage reduced to
nonsense, merely amplified by millions of dollars of advertising.
Even more disspiriting, the exit polls suggest that the race has
been reduced to little more than identity groups: blacks with Obama,
white women with Clinton, the older voters clinging to the Democratic
past, the younger hoping for a break. Neither candidate is completely
honest here. The game wouldn't permit that luxury, even if one felt
inclined to indulge it -- not that either Obama or Clinton, much
less McCain, would. As much as anything else, they're being judged
mostly on the basis of how well they avoid any of the trip wires
that mine the political fields.
This in turn is reflected in the pundits.
Paul Krugman: Self-Inflicted Confusion.
Another whine about Obama, ending with the trump card about how the
Democrats are increasingly likely to "snatch defeat from the jaws
of victory this fall."
Mrs. Clinton has been able to stay in the race, against heavy odds,
largely because her no-nonsense style, her obvious interest in the
wonkish details of policy, resonate with many voters in a way that
Mr. Obama's eloquence does not.
Yes, I know that there are lots of policy proposals on the Obama
campaign's Web site. But addressing the real concerns of working
Americans isn't the campaign's central theme.
I find this all very surreal. Both candidates are stuck in the
awkward position of having to simultaneously appeal to poor voters
and wealthy donors. The net effect is a mixed message, but both
are inevitably bound to produce mixed results. That may be why
who you believe depends so much on who you are. If Clinton is
able to make more class-based appeals, it may just be because
her hypocrisy is so much more firmly established. Obama, in turn,
has to be vaguer and more nuanced -- because of who he is, he
cannot afford rhetoric that could be flagged as radical. This
opens both doors to Clinton: it's not often that one can engage
in demagogic populism and at the same time tag your opponent as
part of the radical fringe.
In 1992 Bill Clinton could have started a movement toward the
left or to the right. It wasn't clear because he had elements of
both. Even in 2000 it might still have worked out: his move to
the right might be seen as setting the foundation toward a move
back to the left, especially as the economic boom was starting
to finally lift up the working class. However, his heir turned
out to be Bush rather than Gore, and eight years later Clinton
looks much more like the enabler of Bush. Maybe Hillary means
to correct that -- more likely with a strong Democratic wind at
her back, since about the only thing we can be sure of is that
the Clintons will go where the wind blows.
Joan Walsh: Why Jeremiah Wright is so wrong.
Walsh basically argues not only that Wright's oft-quoted critiques
of "America" are broad and wrong-headed, but that in even talking
to media like Bill Moyers he is actively working to undermine the
Obama campaign: "Watching Wright and Moyers I also couldn't help
thinking: Is Wright trying to ruin Obama?" I'm not in a position
to, let alone inclined to, defend Wright chapter and verse, but
I will say that Walsh is staking out a fastidious, self-righteous
politically correct jingoism that I find very offensive. I for
one have said things as rude and pointed about America as Wright
has, and almost every political thinker I respect has done the
same. Chopping us off deprives moderates like Walsh of support,
of ideas, and of the spirit to stand up to the real sources of
the problems that afflict us.
Friday, April 25, 2008
Browse Alert
Paul Krugman: Running Out of Planet to Exploit.
Starting to lean towards peak oil and other theories that posit
some significant problems in the near future due to our limits
at expanding and utilizing critical resources. Further note in
his blog here,
where he goes back to research he did in the 1970s: "But anyway,
while the Limits of Growth stuff of the 1970s was a mess, the
history of energy technology doesn't support extreme optimism,
either."
Andrew Leonard: Malthus is in the air.
Cites the Krugman column. Krugman's blog has a previous entry
on Malthus, and I don't think that's the only place I've run
across the name lately. Leonard has a later post called "Total
systematic breakdown, then and now," where he posits analogies
between 17th century China and the here and now.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Bookwatch
A recent trip to the library and bookstore, similar to my posts
back on March 15-16 (omitting titles found then).
Chitrita Banerji: Eating India: An Odyssey Into the Food
and Culture of the Land of Spices (2007, Bloomsbury):
Travel, history, culture, all introduced through food, which
is pretty much the way I learned whatever I know about India.
Maude Barlow: Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and
the Coming Battle for the Right to Water (2008, New Press):
Canadian antiglobalization activist, about dwindling fresh water
supplies and the politics surrounding them.
Jared Bernstein: Crunch: Why Do I Feel So Squeezed? (And
Other Unsolved Economic Mysteries) (2008, Berrett-Koehler):
Short book by an economist who doesn't toe the party line about
the gospel of economics. I ordered a copy, and will get to it
before long.
Timothy P Carney: The Big Ripoff: How Big Business and
Big Government Steal Your Money (2006, Wiley): Described
as a "small government conservative," at least he sees business
as no better than government. Imagine he has some examples.
Nicholas Carr: The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, From
Edison to Google (2008, WW Norton): Another big thinking
book about the internet. Not clear whether it's good thinking,
although the historical sketch might be useful.
Peter Chapman: Bananas!: How the United Fruit Company
Shaped the World (2008, Canongate): The force behind
the CIA in Guatemala, and so much more. Does feel like old news,
but that's history for you.
Stan Finkelstein/Peter Temin: Reasonable Rx: Solving the
Drug Price Crisis (2008, FT Press): Short book on drug
pricing and economics. Important subject. Don't know whether they
figured it out.
William A Fleckenstein: Greenspan's Bubbles: The Age of
Ignorance at the Federal Reserve (2008, McGraw-Hill):
Pretty harsh on Greenspan, but probably more accurate than
Woodward's book -- what was it called, Maestro? Note
that Peter Hartcher has a similar book, Bubble Man.
Bart Jones: ¡Hugo!: The Hugo Chavez Story From Mud Hut to
Perpetual Revolution (2007, Steerforth): Newsday reporter's
biography, 568 pages, regarded as well written and sympathetic. I
have no real interest in or feelings about Chavez, although in
general I'd rather see any leftist in power vs. any rightist.
Michael Kinsley: Please Don't Remain Calm: Provocations
and Commentaries (2008, WW Norton): Recycled columns,
some of possible interest, although I don't see why such recycled
goods don't go straight to paperback.
Heidi Squier Kraft: Rule Number Two: Lessons I Learned
in a Combat Hospital (2007, Little Brown): A clinical
psychologist goes to Iraq. There are hundreds of war memoirs by
now, but this is likely to be a little different.
Edward J Larson: A Magnificent Catastrophe: The Tumultuous
Election of 1800, America's First Presidential Campaign
(2007, Free Press): Not only the first properly partisan campaign,
the first serious emergence of treachery in high stakes political
activity. Checked this out to answer some questions raised by the
HBO John Adams series, poked around, wound up reading most of it.
Quil Lawrence: Invisible Nation: How the Kurds' Quest for
Statehood Is Shaping Iraq and the Middle East (2008, Walker
& Co): A history of the Kurds, or at least their nationalist
political struggle, semi-successful in Iraq as of late.
John Marks: Reasons to Believe: One Man's Journey Among
the Evangelicals and the Faith He Left Behind (2008, Ecco):
Journalist account, went searching for evangelicals and found some,
toyed with joining but ultimately didn't. Sounds sympathetic but
skeptical, a reasonable stance.
Stephen Marks: Confessions of a Political Hitman: My
Secret Life of Scandal, Corruption, Hypocrisy and Dirty Attacks
That Decide Who Gets Elected (and Who Doesn't) (2008,
Sourcebooks): Republican operative, worked for the likes of
Jesse Helms and Jeb Bush. Sounds like a sleaze bag, which no
doubt helps his credibility.
Matt Mason: The Pirate's Dilemma: How Youth Culture Is
Reinventing Capitalism (2008, Free Press): Business
manifesto, finding opportunities for innovation on the fringes
of intellectual property law.
Giles MacDonogh: After the Reich: The Brutal History
of the Allied Occupation (2007, Basic Books): 656 pages.
A deeper look into the final weeks of WWII and the subsequent
occupation of Germany, including the forced transfers of Germans
from Eastern Europe. This stuff rarely gets looked at, probably
because no one wants to offer sympathy that might be seen as
balancing or lightening Germany's own crimes. However, the
tendency to sweep such issues from memory allowed Americans
to remember their occupation of Germany (and Japan) as more
enlightened, setting a precedent for Iraq. Tony Judg covered
this ground briefly in Postwar.
Charles R Morris: The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy
Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash (2008,
Public Affairs): This looks like the basic background brief
on the current and coming economic crisis. I ordered Kevin
Phillips' Bad Money instead, but this book is getting
a lot of attention.
Ian Patterson: Guernica and Total War (2007,
Harvard University Press): The Spanish Civil War, specifically
the 1937 German air attack on the Basque town of Guernica,
immortalized in Picasso's painting. A case study in the
expansion of war to indiscriminate civilian slaughter -- a
powerful sign of what was to come.
Allen Raymond: How to Rig an Election: Confessions of
a Republican Operative (2008, Simon & Schuster):
Like Stephen Marks, another slimeball hawking a memoir as an
exposé. Or maybe he's just bragging.
Michael Reid: Forgotten Continent: The Battle for Latin
America's Soul (2008, Yale University Press): Survey of
Latin American political currents by writer for The Economist,
critical both of neoliberalism and leftism.
William Rosen: Justinian's Flea: Plague, Empire, and the
Birth of Europe (2007, Viking): Microbial history, on the
impact of disease on human events, specifically the plague epidemic
that hit Constantinople in 542 CE, helping to usher in the dark
ages.
Jeffrey D Sachs: Common Wealth: Economics for a Crowded
Planet (2008, Penguin Press): Bought but haven't read
Sachs' The End of Poverty, which has taken a beating from
critics like William Easterly. (Bought but haven't read one of
his books too.) A "sobering but optimistic manifesto."
Frank Schaeffer: Crazy for God: How I Grew Up as One of
the Elect, Helped Found the Religious Right, and Lived to Take
All (or Almost All) of It Back (2007, Da Capo Press):
Memoir. Parents were big-time evangelicals, and he followed in
the family business, mixing in politics along the way. Not sure
why he fell out, or what it means.
Jeremy Scahill: Blackwater: The Rise of the World's
Most Powerful Mercenary Army (2007, Nation Books):
Basic review/expose of one of the major mercenary companies
today, a principal beneficiary of the Iraq war. Amazon raters
are highly polarized politically.
Clay Shirky: Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing
Without Organizations (2008, Penguin): How social tools
based on the internet change the ways we interact and collaborate.
Shirky has writen a number of seminal papers on these subjects,
notably one on how the price of data always converges to zero.
I checked this out, read it, and will report further.
Neil Shubin: Your Inner Fish: A Journey Into the
3.5-Billion-Year History of the Human Body (2008,
Pantheon): Fish paleontologist, explores evolutionary links
preserved in human ontogeny.
Ronald H Spector: In the Ruins of Empire: The Japanese
Surrender and the Battle for Postwar Asia (2007, Random
House): Covers the political aftermath of WWII, especially in
China, Korea, Vietnam, Malaya and Indonesia, with US involvement
in most of those areas.
Clive Stafford Smith: Eight O'Clock Ferry to the
Windward Side: Seeking Justice in Guantánamo Bay (2007,
Nation Books): Lawyer involved in defending many Guantánamo cases.
No doubt has much to say. Not a subject I'm able to get agitated
about, although I don't doubt that there are plenty of horrors
to expose.
Michael Stephenson: Patriot Battles: How the War of
Independence Was fought (2007, Harper Collins): Fairly
detailed military history, factoring in viewpoints gained from
other anticolonial wars of national liberation.
Joseph E Stiglitz, Aaron S Edlin, J Bradford DeLong, eds.:
The Economists' Voice: Top Economists Take on Today's Problems
(2007, Columbia University Press): A bunch of essays, many look
quite interesting.
Richard H Thaler/Cass R Sunstein: Nudge: Improviding
Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness (2008,
Yale University Press): Economist and lawyer, respectively,
they expound a viewpoint they call "libertarian paternalism,"
which provides options for free choices but biases them in
ways deemed to be socially constructive. I gather that Thaler
is an influential Obama adviser.
William E Unrau: The Rise and Fall of Indian Country,
1825-1855 (2007, University Press of Kansas): Covers
the period from the designation of territory from the Louisiana
Purchase for "Indian country" to the partial dismemberment of
that territory as Kansas was carved off from what eventually
became Oklahoma.
Muhammad Yunus: Creating a World Without Poverty:
Social Business and the Future of Capitalism (2008,
Public Affairs): Won Noble Prize for his work in microcredit,
already detailed in his book Banker to the Poor.
Jonathan Zittrain: The Future of the Internet: And How
to Stop It (2008, Yale University Press): Favorable
plugs by Lawrence Lessig, Laurence Tribe, Cass Sunstein.
Presumably on how important it is to keep the internet free,
to escape lockdowns by big brother and/or moneyed interests.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Here Comes Everybody
Clay Shirky: Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing
Without Organizations (2008, Penguin Press)
Clay Shirky teaches at NYU's Interactive Telecommunications
Program. He's written a number of
essays on how the internet
has changed things, several of which are downright profound
(e.g., "Help, the Price of Information Has Fallen and It Can't
Get Up"). His book continues in that direction. The book is
based around a number of stories, which act as case examples,
some famous like Wikipedia and Linux, others obscure. The
quotes below focus on the generalizations from the stories.
Books starts off with a story of how someone lost an expensive cell
phone (a "Sidekick") but was able to recover it after a friend
organized a search over the web, eventually putting enough pressure in
the NYPD to arrest the person who found the phone and refused to
return it -- chapter title is "It Takes a Village to Find a Phone"
(pp. 18-20):
There are many small reasons for this, both technological and
social, but they all add up to one big change: forming groups has
gotten a lot easier. To put it in economic terms, the costs incurred
by creating a new group or joining an existing one have fallen in
recent years, and not just by a little bit. They have
collapsed. ("Cost" here is used in the economist's sense of anything
expended -- money, but also time, effort, or attention.) One of the
few uncontentious tenets of economics is that people respond to
incentives. If you give them more of a reason to do something, they
will do more of it, and if you make it easier to do more of something
they are already inclined to do, they will also do more of it.
Why do the economics matter, though? In theory, since humans have a
gift for mutually beneficial cooperation, we should be able to
assemble as needed to take on tasks too big for one person. If this
were true, anything that required shared effort -- whether policing,
road construction, or garbage collection -- would simply arise out of
the motivations of the individual members. In practice, the
difficulties of coordination prevent that from
happening. [ . . . ]
In a way, every institution lives in a kind of contradiction: it
exists to take advantage of group effort, but some of tis resources
are drained away by directing that effort. Call this the institutional
dilemma -- because an institution expends resources to manage
resources, there is a gap between what those institutions are capable
of in theory and in practice, and the larger the institution, the
greater those costs.
(pp. 30-31):
This ability of the traditional management structure to simplify
coordination helps answer one of the most famous questions in all of
economics: If markets are such a good idea, why do we have
organizations at all? Why can't all exchanges of value happen in the
market? This question originally was posed by Ronald Coase in 1937 in
his famous paper "The Nature of the Firm," wherein he also offered the
first coherent explanation of the value of hierarchical
organization. Coase realized that workers could simply contract with
one another, selling their labor, and buying the labor of others in
turn, in a market, without needing any managerial oversight. However,
a completely open market for labor, reasoned Coase, would underperform
labor in firms because of the transaction costs, and in particular the
costs of discovering the options and making and enforcing agreements
among the participating parties. The more people are involved in a
given task, the more potential agreements need to be negotiated to do
anything, and the greater the transaction costs, as in the movie
example above.
A firm is successful when the costs of directing employee effort
are lower than the potential gain from directing. It's tempting to
assume that central control is better than markets for arranging all
sorts of group effort. (Indeed, during the twentieth century much of
the world lived under governments that made that assumption.) But
there is a strong limiting factor to this directed management, and
that is the cost of management itself. [ . . . ]
Activities whose costs are higher than the potential value for both
firms and markets simply don't happen. Here is the institutional
dilemma again: because the minimum costs of being an organization
in the first place are relatively high, certain activities may have
some value but not enough to make them worth pursuing in any organized
way. New social tools are altering this equation by lowering the costs
of coordinating group action. The easiest place to see this change is
in activities that are too difficult to be pursued with traditional
management but that have become possible with new forms of
coordination.
Shirky then introduces an example from Flickr, which lets people
share their photographs and associate them by shared tags. He cites a
Mermaid Parade, which was comprehensively documented despite no one
making any managerial effort to do so. He then looks beyond simple
sharing (pp. 49-51):
Cooperation is the next rung on the ladder. Cooperating is harder
than simply sharing, because it involves changing your behavior to
synchronize with people who are changing their behavior to synchronize
with you. Unlike sharing, where the group is mainly an aggregate of
participants, cooperating creates group identity -- you know who you
are cooperating with. One simple form of cooperation, almost universal
with social tools, is conversation; when people are in one another's
company, even virtually, they like to talk. Sometimes the conversation
is with words, as with e-mail, IM, or text messaging, and sometimes it
is with other media: YouTube, the video sharing site, allows users to
post new videos in response to videos they've seen on the
site. Conversation creates more of a sense of community than sharing
does, but it also introduces new problems. It is famously difficult to
keep online conversations from devolving into either name-calling or
blather, much less to keep them on topic. Some groups are perfectly
happy with those effects (indeed, there are communities on the
internet that revel in puerile or fatuous conversation), but for any
group determined to maintain a set of communal standards some
mechanism of enforcement must exist.
Collaborative production is a more involved form of cooperation, as
it increases the tension between individual and group goals. The
litmus test for collaborative production is simple: no one person can
take credit for what gets created, and the project could not come into
being without the participation of many. Structurally, the biggest
difference between information sharing and collaborative production is
that in collaborative production at least some collective decisions
have to be made. The back-and-forth talking and editing that makes
Wikipedia work results in a single page on a particular subject
(albeit one that changes over time). Collaboration is not an absolute
good -- many tools work by reducing the amount of required
coordination, as Flickr does in aggregating photos. Collaborative
production can also be valuable, but it is harder to get right than
sharing, because anything that has to be negotiated about, like a
Wikipedia article, takes more energy than things that can just be
accreted, like a group of Flickr photos.
Collective action, the third rung, is the hardest kind of group
effort, as it requires a group of people to commit themselves to
undertaking a particular effort together, and to do so in a way that
makes the decision of the group binding on the individual members. All
group structures create dilemmas, but these dilemmas are hardest when
it comes to collective action, because the cohesion of the group
becomes critical to its success. Information sharing produces shared
awareness among the participants, and collaborative production relies
on shared creation, but collective action creates shared
responsibility, by tying the user's identity to the identity of the
group. In historical terms, a potluck dinner or a barn raising is
collaborative production (the members work together to create
something), while a union or a government engages in collective
action, action that is undertaken in the name of the members meant to
change something out in the world, often in opposition to other groups
committed to different outcomes.
He follows this up with a discussion of the "Tragedy of the
Commons" ("the commonest collective action problem"). Next chapter
is "Everyone Is a Media Outlet" (pp. 59-60):
In any profession, particularly one that has existed long enough
that no one can remember a time when it didn't exist, members have a
tendency to equate provisional solutions to particular problems with
deep truths about the world. This is true of newspapers today and of
the media generally. The media industries have suffered first and most
from the recent collapse in communications costs. It used to be hard
to move words, images, and sounds from creator to consumer, and most
media businesses involve expensive and complex management of that
pipeline problem, whether running a printing press or a record
label. In return for helping overcome these problems, media businesses
got to exert considerable control over the media and extract
considerable revenues from the public. The commercial viability of
most media businesses involves providing those solutions, so
preservation of the original problems became an economic
imperative. Now, though, the problems of production, reproduction, and
distribution are much less serious. As a consequence, control over the
media is less completely in the hands of the professionals.
As new capabilities go, unlimited perfect copyability is a lulu,
and that capability now exists in the hands of everyone who owns a
computer. Digital means of distributing words and images have robbed
newspapers of the coherence they formerly had, revealing the physical
object of the newspaper as a merely provisional solution; now every
article is its own section. The permanently important question is how
society will be informed of the news of the day. The newspaper used to
be a pretty good answer to that question, but like all such answers,
it was dependent on what other solutions were available. Television
and radio obviously changed the landscape in which the newspaper
operated, but even then printed news had a monopoly on the written
word -- until the Web came along. The Web didn't introduce a new
competitor into the old ecosystem, as USA Today had done. The
Web created a new ecosystem.
Next he introduces blogs, starting with the story of Trent Lott's
toast to Strom Thurmond's segregationist presidential campaign, which
no news media outlet considered newsworthy, but gained wide exposure
through blogs. (p. 79):
In a world where publishing is effortless, the decision to publish
something isn't terribly momentous. Just as movable type raised the
value of being able to read and write even as it destroyed the scribal
tradition, globally free publishing is making public speech and action
more valuable, even as its absolute abundance diminishes the
specialness of professional publishing. For a generation that is
growing up without the scarcity that made publishing such a
serious-minded pursuit, the written word has no special value in and
of itself. Adam Smith, in The Wealth of Nations, pointed out
that although water is far more important than diamonds to human life,
diamonds are far more expensive, because they are rare. The entire
basis on which the scribes earned their keep vanished not when
reading and writing vanished but when reading and writing became
ubiquitous. If everyone can do something, it is no longer rare enough
to pay for, even if it is vital.
(p. 91):
The Web makes interactivity technologically possible, but what
technology giveth, social factors taketh away. In the case of the
famous, any potential interactivity is squashed, because fame isn't an
attitude, and it isn't technological artifact. Fame is simply an
imbalance between inbound and outbound attention, more arrows pointing
in than out. Two things have to happen for someone to be famous,
neither of them related to technology. The first is scale: he or she
has to have some minimum amount of attention, an audience in the
thousands or more. (This is why the internet version of the Warhol
quote -- "In the future everyone will be famous to fifteen people" --
is appealing but wrong.) Second, he or she has to be unable to
reciprocate. We know this pattern from television; audiences for the
most popular shows are huge, and reciprocal attention is
technologically impossible. We believed (often because we wanted to
believe) that technical limits caused this imbalance in
attention. When weblogs and other forms of interactive media began to
spread, they enabled direct, unfiltered conversation among all parties
and removed the structural imbalances of fame. This removal of the
technological limits has exposed a second set of social ones.
(pp. 120-122):
Wikis avoid the institutional dilemma. Because contributors aren't
employees, a wiki can take a staggering amount of input with a minimum
of overhead. This is key to its success: it does not need to make sure
its contributors are competent, or producing steadily, or even showing
up. Mandated specialization of talent and consistency of effort,
seemingly the hallmarks of large-scale work, actually have little to
do with division of labor itself. A business needs employee A and
employee B to put in the same effort if they are doing the same job,
because it needs interchangeability and because it needs to reduce
friction between energetic and lazy workers. By this measure, most
contributors to Wikipedia are lazy. The majority of contributors edit
only one article, once, while the majority of the effort comes from a
much smaller and more active group. (The two asphalt articles, with a
quarter of the work coming from six contributors, are a microcosm of
this general phenomenon.) Since no one is being paid, the energetic
and occasional contributors happily coexist in the same ecosystem.
The freedom of contributors to jump from article to article and
from task to task makes the work on any given article unpredictable,
but since there are no shareholders or managers or even customers,
predictability of that sort doesn't matter. Furthermore, since anyone
can act, the ability of the people in charge to kill initiatives
through inaction is destroyed. This is what befell Nupedia: because
everyone working on that project understood that only experts were to
write articles, no one would even begin an article they knew little
about, and as long as the experts did nothing (which, on Nupedia, is
mostly what they did), nothing happened. In an expert-driven system,
an article on asphalt that read "Asphalt is a material used for road
coverings" would never appear, even as a stub. So short! So
uninformative! Why, anyone could have written that! Which, of course,
is one of the principal advantages of Wikipedia.
In a system where anyone is free to get something started, however
badly, a short, uninformative article can be the anchor for the good
article that will eventually appear. Its very inadequacy motivates
people to improve it; many more people are willing to make a bad
article better than are willing to start a good article from
scratch. In 1991 Richard Gabriel, a software engineer at Sun
Microsystems, wrote an essay that included a section called "Worse Is
Better," describing this effect. He contrasted two programming
languages, one elegant but complex versus another that was awkward but
simple. The belief at the time was that the elegant solution would
eventually triumph; Gabriel instead predicted, correctly, that the
language that was simpler would spread faster, and as a result, more
people would come to care about improving the simple language than
improving the complex one. The early successes of a simple model
created exactly the incentives (attention, the desire to see your work
spread) needed to create serious improvements. These kinds of
incentives help ensure that, despite the day-to-day chaos, a
predictable pattern emerges over time: readers continue to read, some
of them become contributors, Wikipedia continues to grow, and articles
continue to improve. The process is more like creating a coral reef,
the sum of millions of individual actions, than creating a car. And
the key to creating those individual actions is to hand as much
freedom as possible to the average user.
(p. 134):
In one well-known experiment, called the Ultimatum Game, two people
divide ten dollars between them. The first person is given the money
and can then divide it between the two of them in any way he likes;
the only freedom the second person has is to take or leave the deal
for both of them. Pure economic rationality would suggest that the
second person would accept any split of the money, down to a
$9.99-to-$.01 division, because taking even a penny would make him
better off then before. In practice, though, the recipient would
refuse to accept a division that was seen as too unequal (less than a
$7-to-$3 split, in practice) even though this meant that neither
person received any cash at all. Contrary to classical economic
theory, in other words, we have a willingness to punish those who are
treating us unfairly, even at personal cost, or, to put it another
way, a preference for fairness that is more emotional than
rational. This in turn suggests that relying on nonfinancial
motivations may actually make systems more tolerant of variable
participation.
(pp. 192-193):
When Robert Putnam, a Harvard sociologist, published Bowling
Alone in 2000, it was an immediate sensation. His account of the
weakening of community in the United States, based on a huge number of
indicators from the decline of picnicking to the abandonment of league
bowling, offered two provocative observations. First, much of the
success of the United States as a nation has had to do with its
ability to generate social capital, that mysterious but critical set
of characteristics of functioning communities. When your neighbor
walks your dog while you are ill, or the guy behind the counter trusts
you to pay him next time, social capital is at work. It is the shadow
of the future on a societal scale. Individuals in groups with more
social capital (which is to say, more habits of cooperation) are
better off on a large number of metrics, from health and happiness to
earning potential, than those in groups with less social
capital. Societies characterized by a high store of social capital
overall do better than societies with low social capital on a
similarly wide range of measurements, from crime rate to the costs of
doing business to economic growth.
This is the shadow of the future at work: direct reciprocity
assumes that if you do someone a favor today, that person will do you
a favor tomorrow. Indirect reciprocity is even more remarkable -- it
assumes that if you do something in your community a favor today,
someone in your community will be around to do you a favor tomorrow,
even if it isn't the same person. The set of norms and behaviors that
instantiates the shadow of the future is social capital, a set of
norms that facilitate cooperation within or among groups.
It was Putnam's second observation, however, that generated the
real reaction. Across a remarkably broad range of measures,
participation in group activities, the vehicle for creating and
sustaining social capital, was on the decline in the United
States. Putting the two observations together, he concluded that one
of the greatest assets in the growth and stability of the United
States was ebbing away. One cause of the decline in social capital was
a simple increase in the difficulty of people getting together -- an
increase in transaction costs, to use Coase's term. When an activity
becomes more expensive, either in direct costs or increased hassle,
people do less of it, and several effects of the last fifty years --
including smaller households, delayed marriage, two-worker families,
the spread of television, and suburbanization -- have increased the
transaction costs for coordinating group activities outside work.
(pp. 236-237):
Failure is free, high-quality research, offering direct evidence of
what works and what doesn't. Groups that people want to join are
sorted from groups that people don't want to join, every day. By
dispensing with the right to direct what its users try to create,
Meetup sheds the costs and distorting effects of managing each
individual effort. Trial and error, in a system like Meetup, has both
a lower cost and a higher value than in traditional institutions,
where failure often comes with someone's name attached. From a
conventional business perspective, Meetup has no quality control, but
from another perspective Meetup is all quality control. All
that's required to take advantage of this sort of market are passionate
users and an appetite for repeated public failure.
(pp. 239-242):
The number of people who are willing to start something is smaller,
much smaller, than the number of people who are willing to contribute
once someone else starts something. This pattern is the same as in the
creation of Wikipedia articles, where a simple seven-word entry on
asphalt can, through repeated improvement, become a pair of detailed
and informative articles. Similarly, enough people have volunteered to
help improve Linux that it has gone from a hobby project to an
essential piece of digital infrastructure and also has helped propel
the idea of collaboratively created (or "open source") software in the
world.
Open source software has been one of the great successes of the
digital age. The phrase refers to source code, the set of computer
instructions written by programmers that then gets turned into
software. Because software exists as source code first, anyone
distributing software has to decide whether to distribute the source
code as well, in order to allow users to read and modify it. The
alternate choice, of course, is to distribute only the software
itself, without the source code, thus keeping the ability to read and
modify the code with the original creators.
Prior to the 1980s, software was something that generally came free
with a computer, and much of it was distributed with the source
code. As software sales become a business on its own, however, the
economic logic shifted, and companies began distributing only the
software. One of the first people to recognize this shift was Richard
Stallman. In 1980 Stallman was working in an MIT lab that had access
to Xerox's first-ever laser printer, the 9700. The lab wanted to
modify the printer to send a message to users when their document had
finished printing. Xerox, however, had not sent the source code for
the 9700, so no one at MIT could make the improvement. Recognizing a
broader trend in the industry, Stallman started advocating for free
software ("free as in speech," as he puts it). He founded the Free
Software Foundation (FSF) in 1983, with a twofold mission. First, he
wanted to produce high-quality free software that was compatible with
an operating system called Unix. (This was playfully named GNU, for
"GNU's Not Unix.") The second part of the FSF mission was to create a
legal framework for ensuring that software stayed free. (This effort
led to the GNU Public License, or GPL, which Torvalds was to adopt
almost a decade later.)
The year 1983 was a bad time to be arguing for this kind of
freedom, as the big computing news was the advent of the personal
computer, which was distributed under the "no source code included"
model. In the first decade of its existence, FSF seemed to be fighting
a losing battle. GPL-licensed software made up an insignificant
fraction of the total software in the world, and all of it was used in
small and technically adept user communities rather than in the
rapidly growing population of home and business users. By the late
1980s it looked like the free software movement was going to be
limited to a tiny niche.
That didn't happen, to put it mildly, because the GPL proved useful
for holding together much looser groups of collaborators than had ever
worked together before, groups like the global tribe now working on
Linux. Almost a decade passed between the founding of the FSF and
Torvalds's original message. Why did Stallman's vision not spread
earlier? And why, after a decade of marginal adoption, did it become a
global phenomenon in the 1990s? In that time not much about either
software or arguments in favor of freedom had changed. What did change
was that programmers had been given a global medium to communicate
in. Linux is Exhibit A. When Torvalds announced the effort to build a
tiny operating system, he received immediate responses from Austria,
Iceland, the United States, Finland, and the U.K., a global collection
of potential contributors assembled in twenty-four hours. Within
months a simple version of the operating system was up and running,
and by then conversations about Linux (as it came to be called)
included people in Brazil, Canada, Australia, Germany, and the
Netherlands. This had simply been less possible in the 1980s; while
there were people online from all those places, they weren't
numerous. More is different, and the increased density of people using
the internet made the early 1990s a much more fertile time for free
software than any previous era.
(p. 246):
The open source movement makes neither kind of mistake, because it
doesn't have employees, it doesn't make investments, it doesn't even
make decisions. It is not an organization, it is an ecosystem, and one
that is remarkably tolerant of failure. Open source doesn't reduce the
likelihood of failure, it reduces the cost of failure; it essentially
gets failure for free. This reversal, where the cost of deciding what
to try is higher than the cost of actually trying them, is true of
open systems generally. As with the mass amateurization of media, open
source relies on the "publish-then-filter" pattern. In traditional
organizations, trying anything is expensive, even if just in staff
time to discuss the idea, so someone must make some attempt to filter
the successes from the failures in advance. In open systems, the cost
of trying something is so low that handicapping the likelihood of
success is often an unnecessary distraction. Even in a firm committed
to experimentation, considerable work goes into reducing the
likelihood of failure. This doesn't mean that open source communities
don't discuss -- on the contrary, they have more discussions than in
managed production, because no one is in a position to compel work on
a particular project. Open systems, by reducing the cost of failure,
enable their participants to fail like crazy, building on the
successes as they go.
(p. 252):
The open source movement introduced this way of working, but the
pattern of aggregating individual contributions into something more
valuable has become general. One example of the expansion into other
domains is Groklaw, a site for discussing legal issues related to the
digital realm. When the Santa Cruz Organization (SCO), a software
publisher, threatened a patent lawsuit against IBM, claiming that
IBM's offering Linux to its customers violated SCO's patents, SCO
clearly expected that IBM wouldn't want to face either the cost of
fighting the suit or the chance of losing and would either pay to
license the patents or simply buy SCO outright. Instead, IBM took SCO
to court and set about the complex process of uncovering and
aggregating what was known about SCO's patents and legal
arguments. What SCO hadn't counted on was that Groklaw, a site run by
a paralegal named Pamela Jones, would become a kind of third party in
the fight. When IBM called SCO's bluff and the threatened suit went
forward, Groklaw would post and then explain all the various legal
documents being filed. This in turn made Groklaw required reading for
everyone interested in the case. The knowledgeable audience that Jones
assembled began to post comments related to the case, including, most
damningly, comments from former SCO engineers that explicitly
contradicted the version of events that SCO was alleging in the
trial. Groklaw functioned as a kind of distributed and free
friend-of-the-court brief, uncovering material that would have been
too difficult and too expensive for IBM to get any other way. The
normal course for such a lawsuit would have been that SOC and IBM
fought the case in court, while the open source community looked
on. What Groklaw did was assemble that community in a way that
actually changed the landscape of the case.
(pp. 260-263):
Every story in this book relies on a successful fusion of a
plausible promise, an effective tool, and an acceptable bargain with
the users. The promise is the basic "why" for anyone to join or
contribute to a group. The tool helps with the "how" -- how will the
difficulties of coordination be overcome, or at least be held to
manageable levels? And the bargain sets the rules of the road: if you
are interested in the promise and adopt the tools, what can you expect,
and what will be expected of you? [ . . . ]
The order of promise, tool, and bargain is also the order in which
they matter to the success of any given group. Creating a promise
that enough people believe in is the basic requirement. The promise
creates the basic desire to participate. Then come the tools. After
getting the promise right (or right enough), th next hurdle is
figuring out which tools will best help people approach the promise
together. Wikis make arriving at shared judgment easier than hosting a
discussion, while e-mail has the opposite set of characteristics, so
getting the tools right matters to the kind of interactions the group
will rely on. Then comes the bargain. Tools don't completely determine
behavior; different mailing lists have different cultures, for
example, and these cultures are a result of an often implicit bargain
among the users. One possible bargain for a mailing list is: "We
expect politeness of one another,a nd we rebuke the impolite."
Another, very different bargain is: "Anything goes." You can see how
these bargains would lead to very different cultures, even among
groups using the same tools, yet both patterns exist in abundance. A
successful bargain among users must be a good fit for both the promise
and the tools used. Taken together, these three characteristics are
useful for understanding both successes and failures of groups relying
on social tools.
The promise is the essential piece, the thing that convinces a
potential user to become an actual user. Everyone already has enough
to do, every day, and no matter what you think of those choices ("I
would never watch that much TV," "Why are they at work at ten p.m.?"),
those choices are theirs to make. Any new claim on someone's time must
obviously offer some value, but more important, it must offer some
value higher than something else she already does, and she won't free
up the time. The promise has to hit a sweet spot among several
extremes. The original promise of Voice of the Faithful was neither
too mundane ("Let's blow off some steam about abusive priests") nor
too disrespectful ("Let's demolish the Church"). Instead, its message
balanced loyalty with anger -- "Keep the faith, change the church."
Just right, at least for purposes of recruiting. Similarly, the
original message inviting people to work on the Linux operating system
was neither too provisional ("Let's try to see if we can come up with
something together") nor too sweeping ("Let's create a world-changing
operating system"). Instead, Linus's proposal was modest but
interesting -- a new but small operating system, undertaken
principally as a way to learn together. Just right.
[ . . . ]
The problem of getting the promise right is unlike traditional
marketing, because most marketing involves selling something that will
be made for the listeners rather than by them. "Buy
Cheesy Poofs" is a different message from "Join us, and we will invent
Cheesy Poofs together." This second kind of message is more
complicated, because of something called the paradox of groups. The
paradox is simple -- there can be no group without members
(obviously), but there can also be no members without a group, because
what would they be members of? Single-user tools, from word-processing
software to Tetris, have a simple message for the potential user: if
you use this, you will find it satisfying or effective or both. With
social tools, the group is the user, so you need to convince
individuals not just that they will find the group satisfying and
effective but that others will find it so as well; no matter how
appealing the promise, there's no point in being the only user of a
social tool. As a result, users of social tools are making two related
judgments: Will I like using this tool or participating in this group?
Will enough other people feel as I do to make it take off?
(p. 303):
One reason many of the stories in this book seem to be populated
with young people is that those of us born before 1980 remember a time
before any tools supported group communication well. For us, no matter
how deeply we immerse ourselves in new technology, it will always have
a certain provisional quality. Those of us with considerable
real-world experience are often at an advantage relative to young
people, who are comparative novices in the way the world works. The
mistakes that novices make come from lack of experience. They
overestimate mere fads, seeing revolution everywhere, and they make
this kind of mistake a thousand times before they learn better. But in
times of revolution, the experienced among us make the opposite
mistake. When a real once-in-a-lifetime change comes along, we are at
risk of regarding it as a fad. [ . . . ]
I'm old enough to know a lot of things just from life experience. I
know that newspapers are where you get your political news and how you
look for a job. I know that music comes from stores. I know that if
you want to have a conversation with someone, you call them on the
phone. I know that complicated things like software and encyclopedias
have to be created by professionals. In the last fifteen years I've
had to unlearn every one of those things and a million others, because
they have stopped being true. I've become like the grown-ups arguing
in my local paper about calculators; just as it took them a long time
to realize that calculators were never going away, those of us old
enough to remember a time before social tools became widely available
are constantly playing catch-up. Meanwhile my students, many of whom
are fifteen years younger than I am, don't have to unlearn those
things, because they never had to learn them in the first place.
The advantage of youth, however, is relative, not absolute. Just as
everyone eventually came to treat the calculator as a ubiquitous and
invisible tool, we are all coming to take our social tools for granted
as well. Our social tools are dramatically improving our ability to
share, cooperate, and act together. As everyone from working
biologists to angry air passengers adopts those tools, it is leading
to an epochal change.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Beyond the Green Zone
Dahr Jamail: Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded
Journalist in Occupied Iraq (2007, Haymarket Books)
Along with Nir Rosen and Patrick Cockburn, Jamail has been one
of the few reporters who have covered the invasion and occupation
of Iraq from outside the confines of the US "safety net" -- not
just the Green Zone but the US propaganda mission that seeks to
control how we view what has happened in Iraq. I picked this up
from the library, and unfortunately didn't get very far into it --
too many other distractions, too little time. The following are
a few quotes. With more time I'm sure I could have found more.
Some day I will.
(pp. 37-38):
Some of the men we spoke with in the fuel line were aware of the
fact that Halliburton subsidiary KBR had just been caught by the
Pentagon for grossly overcharging them by importing gasoline into Iraq
from Kuwait at $2.65 per gallon. Iraqi concerns were able to do the
job for just under one dollar per gallon. Halliburton, which had Dick
Cheney as its chairman and CEO from 1995 to 2000 before he
relinquished his position in order to become vice president of the
United States, was unabashedly looting the Pentagon. By this time,
Cheney's old company, which he still had financial ties with, had
obtained billions of dollars of contracts in Iraq. (No one knows
exactly how much money has been contracted in total, but as of the
time of this writing, Halliburton's overall contracts for LOGCAP and
oil infrastructure rebuilding have totaled approximately $20 billion
in Iraq. Total expenditures on U.S. corporations operations in Iraq on
reconstruction and other services is about $50 billion. LOGCAP is a
Logistics Civil Augmentation Program with the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, which is Halliburton's largest government contract. Under
this contract, Halliburton is responsible for providing supplies and
services to the military on a global basis. Services include
construction of military housing for troops, transporting food and
supplies to bases, and serving food.
It's worth noting that it was Dick Cheney, as defense secretary in
1992, who spearheaded the movement to privatize most of the military's
civil logistics activities. Under Cheney's direction, $9 million was
paid by the Pentagon to KBR to conduct a study to determine whether
private companies like KBR should handle all the military's civil
logistics. KBR's classified study conveniently concluded that greater
privatization of logistics was in the government's best
interest. Shortly thereafter, on August 3, 1992, Secretary Cheney
awarded the first comprehensive LOGCAP contract to KBR. The
Washington Post reported, "The Pentagon chose [KBR] to carry
out the study and subsequently selected the company to implement its
own plan." Three years later Cheney became CEO of Halliburton.
(pp. 44-45):
I had met [translator] Harb [al-Mukhtar] a few days before this
second trip to Ramadi. At that time, he had been finishing up his work
with a depleted uranium (DU) study team from Japan. He'd taken them
all over southern Iraq with their Geiger counters to measure what he
said were extremely high levels of radiation in particular
locations. DU munitions are used during combat because they are
extremely effective. Made of radioactive heavy metals that can
effortlessly cut through armor, they leave a radioactive dust upon
impact that filters through the air, water, and ground, contaminating
everything it touches.
Uranium is a heavy metal and a radioactive poison whose toxicity is
not debatable, even according to the director of the U.S. Army
Environmental Policy Institute, who stated in a report mandated by
Congress, "No available technology can significantly change the
inherent chemical and radiological toxicity of DU. These are intrinsic
properties of uranium." In fact, even the primary U.S. Army training
manual stated, "NOTE: (Depleted Uranium) Contamination will make food
and water unsafe for consumptions." Nevertheless, hundreds of tons of
DU munitions were used in the prior Gulf War, and the Pentagon
admitted to using much more during this war. The effects on the Iraqi
people had already been shown to be devastating.
(p. 60):
Things were already going poorly for the occupiers. According to
the Department of Defense, by December 2003, U.S. soldiers reported to
be sick, injured, or dead from the invasion/occupation numbered over
ten thousand, a figure that kept rising, alarmingly, by the
day. Resistance attacks on Americans were averaging over thirty per
day, which amounted to an average over over 1.3 soldiers killed per
day.
But, it was far worse for Iraqis. One of the doctors I interviewed
at the Baghdad medical center informed me that the number of Iraqi
children dying from malnutrition and disease had doubled sine the
invasion, and natal mortality among women had tripled. Fear of
kidnappings led to most children being kept at home. Women faced a
constant threat of rape and abduction from criminal gangs on the
rampage. Gunfire at all hours of the night and day had become familiar
and commonplace in most areas of Baghdad.
It was gut-wrenching to witness the heavy toll that a dictatorial
regime, multiple wars, sanctions, and now the occupation had taken on
this ancient land. Environmentally, Iraq was a disaster area. Most
people I knew, including myself, had the "Baghdad cough" from the
impossibly high levels of pollution in the capital city. Many areas in
southern Iraq were uninhabitable due to the presence of contaminated
soil and water from the use of depleted uranium munitions by the
U.S. military during the 1991 Gulf War. The scars of war were visible
everywhere: on the buildings, the landscape, and the people.
Monday, April 21, 2008
Music: Current count 14403 [14377] rated (+26), 750 [754] unrated (-0).
Rough week. Looks like the start of many more to come.
- Marvin Gaye: Here My Dear (1978, Motown): Thought
I'd listen to the new "Deluxe Edition" but Rhapsody didn't have the
full package -- didn't even come close. On the other hand, they did
have the original album, which I missed at the time, and is a good
place to start. Consistently applies Gaye's soft shuffle groove.
Lyrics pick and pinch a bit -- a fallen love story wrapped up as
a divorce present.
A- [Rhapsody]
Jazz Prospecting (CG #17, Part 1)
No news on Jazz CG #16. Presumably the Voice's JIT staff will
snap to attention sometime this week and get it out on the 30th
as planned. I'll believe it when I see it. Meanwhile, Jazz
Prospecting for the next round starts out with a bunch of
oldies. These used to invariably reappear in Recycled Goods,
but that's on hiatus, so read about 'em here.
I expect the next 3-4 weeks to be especially chaotic. I'll
be out of town for much of that period, trying to deal with
a family health crisis that looks grim. Simply being away cuts
into what I can do, and that's the least of it. At least I'm
driving, so I can pack relatively heavy. Should be able to
take most of the 100+ unplayed CDs on my shelf, but don't
know how easy it will be to get to them, write about them,
and post the writing. On the plus side, I should be able to
get some reading done, and finally work a bit on the book,
which has proven difficult interleaved with music criticism.
Louis Armstrong All Stars: Live in Zurich, Switzerland
18.10.1949 (1949 [2007], TCB): Previously unreleased,
presumably a live concert recording, pretty much the usual set,
jumpin' those good ol' good 'uns. All Stars indeed: Jack Teagarden
(trombone, vocals), Barney Bigard (clarinet), Earl Hines (piano),
Arvell Shaw (bass), Cozy Cole (drums), Velma Middleton (vocals).
Two vocals each by Teagarden and Middleton. Hines get a long intro
to "Honeysuckle Rose" and holds court for "Fine and Dandy." Bigard
gets a feature on "High Society." Pops MC's, sings a few, and plays
his usual spectacular trumpet. Nothing new if you've heard The
Complete Town Hall Concert (1947) or the All Stars' half of
The California Concerts -- 4 CDs from 1951-55 that are
never less than magnificent.
B+(***)
Duke Ellington and His Orchestra: Live in Zurich, Switzerland
2.5.1950 (1950 [2007], TCB): Another newly released live shot,
picking up Ellington's Orchestra at what is generally considered to be
a relatively low point. Relatively is the key word there. The trumpet
section strikes me as nearly no-name (at one point Ellington introduces
"one of the world's great trumpet players": Ernie Royal; Ray Nance --
misspelled Roy -- isn't the only one I've heard of, but is the only
one I'd think of for an all-time Ellington list), and Lawrence Brown
is the only standard on trombone (where's Juan Tizol?). On the other
hand, kudos for filling the vacant tenor sax chair with Don Byas,
whose feature here is a high point. And Johnny Hodges, whose split
from Ellington during this period is often seen as critical, made
the trip, along with Jimmy Hamilton, Russell Procope, and dependable
Harry Carney. Mixed bag of songs, with more covers than expected --
"How High the Moon" (featuring Byas), "St. Louis Blues" (sung by
Nance), "S'wonderful," and a retooling of "Frankie & Johnnie"
(credited to Ellington). Kay Davis takes the wordless vocal to
"Creole Love Call." Set closes with "The Jeep Is Jumpin'," with
Hodges resplendent. Sound is so-so; kind of hard to get it right
with this group. Not a lot of live Ellington from this period, so
it has some historical interest, and sometimes transcends even
that.
B+(***)
The Cannonball Adderley Sextet: In New York (Keepnews
Collection) (1962 [2008], Riverside): Starts with the
leader explaining that they've made a bunch of live records in
San Francisco, but hadn't done one in New York before because
they didn't think the audience was hip enough. However, now it
turns out that the matinee audience passed muster, so they
figure they'll give it a try. The sextet swings effortlessly,
but their slickness leaves a greasy aftertaste, and tenor sax
man Yusef Lateef's forays into exotica, including bits on oboe
and flute, seem out of place.
B
Bill Evans: Portrait in Jazz (Keepnews Collection)
(1959 [2008], Riverside): The first flash of one of the most
famous piano trios in jazz, matching Evans with bassist Scott
LaFaro and drummer Paul Motian. I always find Evans difficult --
well, except for Sunday at the Village Vanguard -- so I
may be going with the consensus too readily, but LaFaro's bass
lines sing, and Motian putters inventively.
A-
Milt Jackson/Wes Montgomery: Bags Meets Wes! (Keenpews
Collection) (1961 [2008], Riverside): With Wynton Kelly,
Sam Jones, and Philly Joe Jones. Jackson swings as always, but
Montgomery and Kelly rarely break out of the background, subtle
moves that set up the vibes but never upstage them.
B+(**)
Blue Mitchell: Blue Soul (Keepnews Collection)
(1959 [2008], Riverside): Trumpet player, made ends meet in R&B
groups from Earl Bostic to Ray Charles, played hard bop with a
soulful polish, both on his own records and with Horace Silver;
a classy sextet with Curtis Fuller on trombone, Jimmy Heath on
tenor sax, and Wynton Kelly on piano, they can cook, but shine
even more on the slow ones.
A-
Thelonious Monk: Brilliant Corners (Keepnews Collection)
(1956 [2008], Riverside): The title cut was so unconventional none
of 25 studio takes nailed it, so the record was famously pieced
together after the fact; you can still sense the fear and awe the
band, including young Sonny Rollins, felt in facing Monk's tunes --
a solo piano cover of "I Surrender Dear" comes as blessed relief,
but turns out every bit as brilliant.
A
Paul Bley: Closer (1965 [2008], ESP-Disk): Not
sure exactly where this fits in the marital chronology, but this
is built on first wife Carla Bley's compositions (7 of 10), and
ends with second wife Annette Peacock's "Cartoon," with one of the
pianist's ("Figfoot") and one by Ornette Coleman ("Crossroads").
Adding to the incestuousness is bassist Steve Swallow, who if
memory serves wound up as Carla Bley's third husband. As far as
I know, percussionist Barry Altschul has no further involvement.
One of the high points in Bley's distinguished discography: deft,
light, almost jaunty, largely attributable to the songs but all
three players pull it off. He returned to Carla Bley's songs
several times in the future, and recorded whole Annette Peacock
albums as well, but none match this first menage à trois.
A-
Bob James Trio: Explosions (1965 [2008], ESP-Disk):
Some years ago when I was just starting to get systematic about jazz
history, one of the most useful guides I found was The Gramophone
Jazz Good CD Guide (I'm referring back to the 1995 edition).
Most of its choices are unimpeachable. A few of the surprises, like
Willis Jackson's Bar Wars, are wonderful. One of the few
idiosyncratic choices I never bothered tracking down was this record.
James moved into pop jazz shortly after this early effort, making
scads of records under his own name and as part of Four Play. I've
heard very few of them -- at best them give the impression of a more
or less talented guy slumming. This sounds more like the work of the
session's bassist, Barre Phillips, who acquits himself particularly
well with some austere arco bass, among other things. The drummer is
Robert Pozar, and two tracks have mixed tape sounds which Gordon
Mumma and Robert Ashley (copy says "Bob Ashley") contributed to.
Not all that explosive, but curiously abstract, oddly interesting.
Not a masterpiece; just one of those odd cult items good for a
conversation piece.
B+(***)
Steve Lacy: The Forest and the Zoo (1966 [2008],
ESP-Disk): Two 20-minute pieces, "Forest" and "Zoo," cut live in
Buenos Aires with South Africans Johnny Dyani and Louis Moholo
on bass and drums; the soprano sax great is in classic squeaky
form, but the real jolt to the memory here is trumpeter Enrico
Rava -- genteel and laconic of late, he snatches these pieces
like a pit bull and never lets go.
A-
New York Art Quartet (1964 [2008], ESP-Disk):
One-shot avant-garde group, at least until they reunited for a
35th Reunion record, but an important item in trombonist
Roswell Rudd's discography -- he dominates the rough interplay
with alto saxist John Tchicai, while percussionist Milford
Graves is at least as sparkling; the sole artiness is the cut
that frames a poem, but it too is a signpost of the times,
"Black Dada Nihilismus," by Amiri Baraka.
A-
Wynton Marsalis: Standards & Ballads (1983-98
[2008], Columbia/Legacy): Not just standards, given one original
from Citi Movement. Not all ballads either, though mostly
sluggish; only 8 of 14 tracks come from his generally excellent
Standard Time series, so not really a sampler thereof --
in fact, nothing from Vol. 6: Mr. Jelly Lord. One vocal
track is incongruous here, but organic to the Tune In Tomorrow
soundtrack, the rest of which is better than anything here, possibly
excepting the lovely "Flamingo."
B
Paul West/Mark Brown: Words & Music (2007 [2008],
OA2): Two guys with common names and short, uncertain paper trails.
Both play piano, write and sing songs. Based in Seattle. Both sport
gray hair, although West looks to be a score older -- something in
here about his 70th birthday. Wikipedia has an entry on a poet Paul
West (b. 1930) who has 16 fiction titles, 4 poetry collections, and
a pile of nonfiction, mostly lit stuff from Byron to Robert Penn
Warren. Probably not the same guy. AMG lists 18 Mark Browns. The
one in bold is an English choral music producer, most certainly not
the same guy. West has a couple of previous albums on Origin/OA2.
Haven't figured out which voice is which, but they are distinct,
albeit loosely associated in the Mose Allison/Bob Dorough vein. A
couple of lyrics to jazz classics like "Groovin' High." Originals
lead off with "Laugh to Keep From Cryin' Blues," which is typical,
although they can get soft and sentimental as well.
B+(**)
Doug Munro: Big Boss Bossa Nova 2.0 (2007 [2008],
Chase Music Group): Guitarist, based in New York, claims 10 albums
since 1987 (AMG knows about 7 of them). I looked at this and filed
it under pop jazz, which is unfair. At least I didn't misfile it
under Brazilian -- he'll never be confused with Charlie Byrd, let
alone Luis Bonfa or Baden Powell or Ricardo Silveira. Trios with
bass and drums, very straightforward. Four originals, six covers --
mostly bop-era (Monk, Rollins, Shorter, Hubbard, Corea). Has some
Spanish licks; fairly dense, clean sound, good beat.
B+(*)
Jason Stein's Locksmith Isidore: A Calculus of Loss
(2006 [2008], Clean Feed): Stein is 31, plays bass clarinet, studied
at Michigan-Ann Arbor, is based in Chicago, has appeared on Keefe
Jackson's Project Project and Bridge 61 (a Ken Vandermark group).
Trio here, with Kevin Davis on cello, Mike Pride on percussion.
Free jazz. The instruments tend to soften the edges, so you're
left with more form than fury. Band named for Stein's grandfather,
a New York locksmith known as Izzy.
B+(*)
Scott Fields Freetet: Bitter Love Songs (2007
[2008], Clean Feed): Guitarist, sort of Chicago's answer to
Derek Bailey, although I wouldn't swear on that, since for me
one of the main things they have in common is that I've never
made much sense out of either. This is a trio, recorded in
Germany, with Sebastian Gramss on double bass and João Lobo
on drums. Title isn't obviously reflected in the music, but
it sure is in the song titles: "Yea, sure, we can still be
friends, whatever"; "Go ahead, take the furniture, at least
you helped pick it out"; "My love is love, your love is hate";
"Your parents must be just ecstatic now"; "I was good enough
for you until your friends butted in"; "You used to say I
love you but so what now." Liner notes hit even harder. Not
sure where the music comes from -- sublimated anger? -- but
it seems uncommonly focused, for once.
[A-]
Dick Hyman/Chris Hopkins: Teddy Wilson in 4 Hands
(2006 [2007], Victoria): Hyman's been around forever, but while
most jazz musicians try to establish their own sound, he's a
scholar and a chameleon, the guy you'd go to if you wanted to
sound just like any stride pianist you can name. The notes here
say that he's soon coming out with "an encyclopedic CD-ROM"
called Dick Hyman's 100 Years of Jazz Piano. He's the
obvious choice to do it all. Also mentions that he has three
duo-piano albums with Ray Kennedy, Bernd Lhotzky, and Chris
Hopkins. The only one I've heard is the one Hopkins sent me.
Hopkins was born in 1972 in Princeton, NJ, but grew up and
lives in Germany (Bochum, near Düsseldorf; American father,
German mother). Another swing kid, he cites a stellar list of
influences from James P. Johnson to Johnny Guarnieri (Waller,
Smith, Basie, Stacy, Hines, Wilson, "many others"; Ellington
must be among the latter, but I don't hear much that reminds
me of Tatum). Five cuts are solos, twelve duets. Normally I
react to solo piano as too sparse, and to duo piano as too
much of too sparse, but these pieces are utterly charming.
The secret, of course, is Wilson. I wonder how many younger
jazz fans even recognize the name compared to other names on
the influences list. Part of the problem is that a big chunk
of Wilson's discography is now routinely reissued under his
singer's name, Billie Holiday, but his trios and solos have
lapsed into obscurity as well. This record brings Wilson's
abundant charms back into focus.
A-
The Spencer Katzman Threeo: 5 Is the New 3
(2006 [2008], 6V6): Guitarist, based in New York, first album,
a trio with Keith Witty on bass and Dave Sharma on drums and
tabla. Studied with Bill Frisell, Dave Fiuczynski, others.
Covers include Brendan Benson and Neutral Milk Hotel. Nice
sound, well thought out, enjoyable; not sure how far to go
beyond that.
B+(**)
And these are final grades/notes on records I put back for further
listening the first time around.
Lee Konitz-Ohad Talmor Big Band: Portology
(2006 [2007], Omnitone): Cover shows three dozen or so doors
of various sizes, shapes, and designs -- portals, each of
which presumably leads to a distinct space. Don't know what,
if anything, that has to do with the music. Aside from the
featured alto saxophonist, the group is Portugal's Orquestra
Jazz de Matosinhos. The compositions are credited to Konitz
and Talmor; the arrangements to Talmor. Intriguing music,
but there are spots that sound a bit off.
B+(**) [advance]
Unpacking:
- Jorge Albuquerque/Marcos Amorim/Rafael Barata: Revolving Landscapes (Adventure Music)
- Jamie Baum Septet: Solace (Sunnyside)
- Bob Belden: Miles From India (Times Square/4Q, 2CD)
- Marilyn Crispell: Vignettes (ECM)
- Taylor Eigsti: Let It Come to You (Concord)
- Forgetting Sarah Marshall (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (Verve Forecast)
- Laszlo Gardony: Dig Deep (Sunnyside)
- Fernando Huergo: Provinciano (Sunnyside)
- Industrial Jazz Group: Leef (Evander Music)
- Andy Pratt: Masters of War (It's About Music)
- The Stein Brothers Quintet: Quixotic (Jazzed Media)
- Welcome to artistShare: Q2 2008 Sampler (ArtistShare): project previews, promo only
- Shea Breaux Wells: A Blind Date (Ultimate)
- Yellowjackets: Lifesycle (Heads Up): May 20
Sunday, April 20, 2008
A Magnificent Catastrophe
Edward J Larson: A Magnificent Catastrophe: The Tumultuous
Election of 1800, America's First Presidential Campaign (2007,
Free Press)
I picked Larson's book out of the library on a whim, mostly to
check up on details unclear or missing from HBO's John Adams
series, which I have been watching. I didn't read it through so
much as pick through the index for topics I was curious about:
more background on Aaron Burr, the bizarre presidential electoral
system, the scheming of Alexander Hamilton and his followers.
Later I thumbed through the book looking for quotes, and read
quite a bit more. While it's a truism that history reflects the
present as much as the past, there is quite a bit here that is
recognizable today: even in its origins, the machinations of
the political parties and their distorting effects on discourse
and statesmanship are more than evident; the Federalists' focus
on a strong executive and their eagerness to police their power
through their Alien and Sedition Acts anticipates Bush by a long
ways, as does their willingness to risk war for political gain,
and their fancy for an extended empire. On the other hand, I
have to wonder whether Jefferson's ability to translate radical
political ideas into middle American platitudes, partly through
his eloquence and partly through his pragmatism, isn't key to
Obama's promise.
(pp. 18-19):
The differences dividing Adams and Jefferson reflected a deepening
ideological rift that divided mainstream Americans into factions. As
the nascent government took shape under the Constitution, the people
and their chosen representatives vigorously debated various issues
regarding the authority of the national government and the balance of
power among its branches and between it and the states. Whether the
national government could charter a bank and thus create a national
banking system became especially heated, for example. Many doubted if
the new national government would long survive. Adams and those
calling themselves Federalists saw a strong central government led by
a powerful president as vital for a prosperous, secure
nation. Extremists in this camp, like Alexander Hamilton, who favored
transferring virtually all power to the national government and
consolidating it in a strong executive and aristocratic Senate, became
known as the ultra or High Federalists. At the Constitutional
Convention, Hamilton had unabashedly depicted the monarchical British
government as "the best in the world" and famously proposed life
tenure for the United States President and senators.
Jefferson and his emerging Republican faction viewed such thinking
as inimical to freedom. A devotee of enlightenment science, which
emphasized reason and natural law over revelation and authoritarian
regimes, Jefferson trusted popular rule and distrusted elite
institutions. Indeed, like the French philosopher Jean Jacques
Rousseau, Jefferson instinctively revered man in nature. "Those who
labor in the earth," such as farmers and frontiersmen, possess
"substantial and genuine virtue," he wrote in his 1787 book, Notes
on the State of Virginia. "The will of the majority, the natural
law of every society, is the only sure guardian of the rights of men,"
Jefferson affirmed three years later. He instinctively favored the
people over any institution.
(p. 19):
Although more moderate in his Federalism than Hamilton, but still
unlike the Republican Jefferson, Adams thought that every nation
needed a single, strong leader who could rise above and control
self-interested factions of all classes and types. Neither an
aristocratic Senate nor a democratic House of Representatives would
safeguard individual rights, he believed. Indeed, Adams once
complained to Jefferson about "the avarice, the unbounded ambition,
[and] the unfeeling cruelty of a majority of those (in all nations)
who are allowed an aristocratic influence; and . . . the stupidity
with which the more numerous multitude not only become their dupes but
even love to be taken in by their tricks." Only a disinterested chief
executive -- the fabled philosopher-king of old -- would protect
liberty and justice for all. Adams thus combined a Calvinist view of
humanity's innate sinfulness with an Old Testament faith that a
Moses-like leader could guide even such a fallen people through the
wilderness into the promised land of freedom.
(pp. 20-21):
The differences between Adams and Jefferson became clear in their
responses to Shays's Rebellion, a widely publicized antigovernment
protest in Adams's home state of Massachusetts. In 1786, hundreds of
western Massachusetts farmers led by Revolutionary War officer Daniel
Shays briefly took arms against high taxes and strict foreclosure laws
during the economic recession that followed the American
Revolution. Massive deflation threatened these protesters with the
loss of their property and jobs, while the state government only made
matters worse for them by raising taxes to repay bondholders for
Revolutionary Era debts.
When news of the uprising reached him in Paris, Jefferson used a
metaphor from science to convey his reaction in a letter to Abigail
Adams, who was then in London with her husband. "I like a little
revolution now and then. It is like a storm in the atmosphere,"
Jefferson wrote. She was horrified. Speaking for herself and probably
her husband, she told Jefferson her views on Shays's Rebellion in no
uncertain terms: "Ignorant, restless desperados, without conscience or
principles, have led a deluded multitude to follow their standard
under pretense of grievances which have no existence but in their
indignations."
Jefferson came to see the episode as significant. From his post in
London, John Adams did not sufficiently appreciate the protesters'
dire plight, Jefferson later wrote. He feared that Adams took the
uprising to mean that even "the absence of want and oppression was not
a sufficient guarantee of order" against popular revolts stirred by a
demagogue. This disagreement over Shays's Rebellion, however mild it
seemed at the time, begin to fray the relationship between Jefferson
and the Adamses; it was a foretaste of the bitter divisions to
come.
On the original electoral college scheme for electing the president
(pp. 41-42):
The Framers' vision of how the process would work now seems quaint:
independent electors meeting in collegiate settings and using their
own judgment in casting their ballots for two individuals whom they
deemed best qualified to lead the nation. But the process actually
operated much as the Framers intended in 1789 and 1792, when
Washington was the clear favorite among all the electors. Aside from
Franklin, who died in 1790, Washington was America's only truly
national hero: the one indispensable person in forming the new
government. No party nominated him for President and he never
campaigned for the office. Every elector cast one vote for him on both
occasions, and he tried to assemble a nonpartisan administration. In
both of those elections, John Adams obtained the second-highest number
of electoral votes -- despite Hamilton's efforts to suppress votes for
him in 1789 -- giving him the vice presidency.
In 1796, Adams and Jefferson continued the tradition of non
campaigning for President, but much else changed. The nation's two
ideological factions had been evolving steadily into more organized
political parties, and their leaders were working ever more
assiduously to induce electors aligned with their party to vote for
what amounted to a partisan "ticket" of two candidates designated by
the party's caucus in Congress. Presumably, electors would cast their
"first" vote for the party's preferred presidential candidate and
their "second" vote for its suggested vice presidential pick, even
though they could not designate their votes as such. In 1796, the
Federalists had agreed on Adams for President and South Carolinian
Thomas Pinckney for Vice President. In their caucus, the Republicans
in Congress, while uniformly for Jefferson as President, apparently
discussed four candidates for Vice President without settling on one
of them for the post.
The Federalist electors wound up, contrary to Hamilton's scheme,
splitting their votes, with enough voting for either Oliver Ellsworth
or John Jay to drop Pinckney to third place, giving Jefferson second
place and the vice presidency. This system broke down in 1800, when
Jefferson and his Republican vice presidential candidate Aaron Burr
got the same number of votes, throwing the election to the House of
Representatives, which the Federalists deadlocked by voting for Burr.
After thirty-some ballots a couple of Federalists abstained, enough
to tilt the election to Jefferson. The constitution was amended after
that so that electors could specify votes for president and vice
president.
Following the French Revolution, war broke out between England
and France, which threatened to drag the US in. The High Federalists
around Hamilton favored England, while the Jefferson's Republicans
favored France. Washington and Adams tried to steer a neutral course,
but in response to a treaty negotiated by John Jay with the English,
France interfered with US shipping, threatening war. An Adams peace
mission to France was rebuffed in what was called the XYZ Affair.
Federalists wanted to prepare for war with France, toward which
(over Adams' objections) they passed legislation establishing what
was called the Additional Army (p. 53):
Privately, Washington agreed with Adams's assessment of the military
situation but nevertheless accepted the commission as the Army's
leader. He insisted on appointing his own officers corps and, over
Adams's strenuous objections, named Hamilton as his Inspector General,
the second in command. Two other Federalist politicians with wartime
experience, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and Henry Lee, became major
generals, but Hamilton largely organized and led the troops while
Washington remained at home.
Republicans had vehemently criticized the domestic military buildup
-- fearing with some justification that Hamilton might turn the new
Army against them. Jefferson in particular worried about a military
coup to maintain Federalist hegemony. Even Adams became concerned
about Hamilton's intentions when shown private letters from the
Inspector General suggesting that he might use the Army to suppress
antigovernment "resistance" in Virginia and "take possession" of
Florida and Louisiana from France's ally, Spain. "This man is stark
mad or I am," Adams later claimed to have said about Hamilton upon
reading these and other confidential letters outlining his plans.
After Washington died, the Additional Army under Hamilton, was
increasingly attacked by the Republicans, until in May 1800 Adams
ordered it disbanded, much to Hamilton's chagrin. During the war
crisis with France the Federalists also passed (and Adams signed)
the Alien and Sedition Acts (pp. 74-75):
Each of these three [Republican] papers had become the subject of
multiple prosecutions under the Sedition Act or related laws. In all,
federal attorneys brought at least seventeen indictments against
Republican newspapers between 1798 and 1800, with most of these cases
intended to shut down presses during the run-up to critical
elections. Some succeeded in that objective, but new Republican papers
quickly replaced shuttered ones. "The most vigorous and undisguised
efforts are making to crush the republican presses, and stifle enquiry
as it may respect the ensuing election," one Republican senator
privately advised Madison in April 1800.
With Adams's full knowledge, Secretary of State Timothy Pickering
coordinated the legal assault. According to Pickering, the Sedition
Act could not possibly violate the Constitution because it punished
only "pests of society and disturbers of order." Partisan attacks on
the Additional Army particularly incensed Pickering, Hamilton
loyalist.
Simply referring to the federal troops as a "standing army" could
serve as grounds for an indictment. To the Revolutionary War
generation in the United States, including both Federalists and
Republicans, the term carried a sinister meaning. Under popular rule,
Americans then commonly believed that citizen soldiers would turn out
in sufficient numbers to defend their country in times of foreign
invasion or domestic insurrection, and then return home after the
danger passed. State militias acted in this manner and provided the
bulk of American forces at the time. The citizen-soldier ideal was
personified by George Washington. In contrast, Americans saw foreign
tyrants using professional "standing armies" to usurp or maintain
power against the popular will. In this respect, among the despotic
"abuses and usurpations" of power listed to justify the American
Revolution, the Declaration of Independence specifically charged
George III with having "kept among us in times of peace standing
armies." Even if not used to subdue popular rule, Americans at the
time tended to view soldiers in a peacetime standing army as armed and
potentially dangerous idle young men living well at taxpayer
expense.
The Republicans picked Aaron Burr as Jefferson's running mate in
hopes of carrying Burr's home state of New York (p. 98):
Burr laid the foundation for victory in 1799 when, as a state
legislator, he had secured the charter for the Manhattan Company,
which broke the Federalist banking monopoly in New York City. By the
spring of 1800, artisans and owners of small businesses could openly
support Republican candidates without fear of losing access to
credit. Indeed, bank records suggest that the Manhattan Company
significantly stepped up operations to coincide with the
election. "The [Federalist] bank influence is now totally
destroyed," Burr protégé Matthew Davis boasted in a preelection letter
to Republican congressional leader Albert Gallatin, "the Manhattan
Company will, in all probability, operate much in our favor." Other
partisans made similar comments at the time, and some later historians
have seen the bank's role in the city election as decisive.
Burr was able to beat Hamilton's slate in New York, a major turn
in the slowly unfolding 1800 election. Hamilton, meanwhile was still
scheming against Adams, as he had in past elections. The idea was to
saddle Adams with a running mate loyal to Hamilton, then short Adams'
votes in the electoral college, throwing the presidency to the vice
presidential candidate (pp. 121-122):
The scheme might succeed in 1800 where it had failed in 1796,
Hamilton reasoned, because Adams had lost so much High Federalist
support by then due to the resumption of peace negotiations with
France. Although moderates within the party welcomed the peace
mission, High Federalists hated it. Enough electors from New England
might now knowingly go along with his scheme for it to work, in
contrast to those who had scuttled it last time. "It is therefore
essential that the Federalists should not separate without coming to a
distinct and solemn concert to pursue this course bona fide,"
he wrote to Sedgwick.
The strategy behind the caucus agreement was clear to all astute
political observers. Jefferson immediately dubbed it a "hocus-pocus
maneuver," presumably referring to the substitution of the popular
candidate, Adams, by the High Federalists' choice, Pinckney. Adams
guessed Hamilton's game as soon as he heard what the caucus had done,
and he was livid.
Adams responded by purging two Hamilton loyalists, James McHenry
and Timothy Pickering, from his cabinet. (Adams retained a third,
Oliver Walcott, whom he regarded as more competent.) Adams went on
to discharge Hamilton's Additional Army (p. 152):
Making the most of the short time remaining in his tenure as
Inspector General of the Additional Army, Hamilton set out in June to
bolster Pinckney and undermine Adams among potential Federalist
electors in New England during a four-state tour ostensibly designed
to bid farewell to the disbanding troops. Traveling in full military
regalia, Hamilton planned to meet with Federalist leaders throughout
the region. Surely they still deferred to him, he believed, even if
Adams did not.
Any military purposes for Hamilton's trip took a backseat to
political ones. "The General did not come to disband the troops,"
Abigail Adams explained in a letter to her son, Thomas. "His visit was
merely an electioneering business, to feel the pulse of the New
England states, and to impress those upon whom he could have any
influence to vote for Pinckney and bring him on as president." Her
husband had heard as much from several of those subjected to
Hamilton's pleas.
During the campaign Jefferson was repeatedly attacked for his
insufficient religion (pp. 172-173):
In their public attacks, Christian critics drew on evidence from
Jefferson's private and public life to complete their picture of him
as an infidel. Jefferson rarely attended church services, they
noted. He desecrated the Sabbath by working and entertaining on
Sunday. He did not invoke biblical authority or acknowledge Christ in
the Declaration of Independence. When a foreign visitor to Virginia
commented on the shabby condition of local churches, Jefferson
reportedly replied, "It is good enough for him that was born in a
manger!" Federalists eagerly repeated the visitor's conclusion: "Such
a contemptuous fling at the blessed Jesus could issue from the lips of
no other than a deadly foe to his name and his glory."
A campaign tract addressed to Delaware voters by a self-proclaimed
"Christian Federalist" put the issue in blunt terms. "If Jefferson is
elected and the Jacobins get into authority," it declared, "those
morals which protect our lives from the knife of the assassin, which
guard the chastity of our wives and daughters from seduction and
violence, defend our property from plunder and devaluation, and shield
our religion from contempt and profanation, will be trampled upon and
exploded." With Republicans in power, this Christian warned, America
would follow France into the moral and political abyss where the
people turned "more ferocious than savages, more bloody than tigers,
more impious than demons."
(p. 199):
Despite their partisan wrangling over the causes and handling of
the Virginia slave conspiracy, during the campaign of 1800, neither
Federalists nor Republicans spoke substantively to the underlying
issue of slavery. Even though most northern states had abolished
slavery by 1800, it remained deeply entrenched in the South. Neither
party could hope to win the presidency if it took a strong stand on
slavery, so they both equivocated on what was already emerging as the
most divisive topic in American politics.
Both parties were deeply split by the issue. Slavery disgusted
Adams -- he once called it "an evil of colossal magnitude" -- yet, he
included three slave owners in his five-member cabinet, and his hope
for reelection rode on winning electoral votes from three slave
states: Maryland, Delaware, and South Carolina. Many Northern High
Federalists opposed slavery on moral or religious grounds, yet their
faction's favored candidate for President, Charles Cotesworth
Pinckney, possessed vast slave plantations and, as a delegate to the
Constitutional Convention, led the successful effort to ensure that
the Constitution protected the right of states to maintain slavery. If
the Constitution "should fail to insure some security to the southern
states against an emancipation of slaves," Pinckney told his fellow
delegates, he "would be bound by this duty to his state to vote
against [it]."
The Republican Party encompassed a similar diversity of views on
slavery, from the ardent support for it expressed by many party
leaders in the Deep South through Jefferson's tortured acquiescence of
the practice to the fevered abolitionism of such prominent Northern
Republicans as Albert Gallatin. "Slavery is inconsistent with every
principle of humanity, justice, and right," Gallatin had written in a
1793 legislative report, yet he served as Jefferson's point man in
Congress during the 1800 election.
Hamilton wrote a vicious broadside attacking Adams, presumably
meant to be closely held in confidence by the Federalists it was
addressed to, but a copy was quickly leaked (pp. 219-221):
As news of Hamilton's letter and its contents spread across the
country, it became a factor in the presidential campaign. The public
now knew that the once unified Federalists were rent into factions
with its best-known leaders locked in mortal combat. People seemed
less interested in debating the merits of the letter's charges than in
speculating about who came off worse in the episode, Hamilton or
Adams. While the contents of the letter gave new currency to old
doubts about Adams's leadership, its style, substance, and timing
raised even graver misgivings about Hamilton's
judgment. [ . . . ]
Adams's supporters rallied to his defense in pamphlets and
published letters. Federalist lexicographer Noah Webster took the lead
in a widely reprinted open letter to Hamilton. "Admitting all your
charges against Mr. Adams, they amount to too small a sum to balance
the immense hazard of the game you are playing," Webster wrote of
Hamilton's scheme to elect Pinckney. "It avails little that you accuse
the President of vanity for as to this . . . were it an issue
between Mr. Adams and yourself, which has the most, you could not rely
on an unanimous verdict in your favor," he charged. "That the
President is unmanageable is, in a degree true: that is, you
and your supporters can not manage him; but this will not pass in this
country as a crime. That he is unstable is alleged -- pray sir
. . . did he waver during the Revolutionary War?"
Occasional ill humor and hasty declarations do not equal lunacy,
Webster argued. Adams was neither mad nor mentally unfit for
office. Webster admonished Hamilton that, by asserting otherwise about
the party's candidate for President on the even of a critical
election, "Your conduct on this occasion will be deemed little short
of insanity." Given the risk that the letter would either divide the
Federalist Party or destroy it. Webster asked, "Will not Federal men,
as well as anti-Federal, believe that your ambition, pride, and
overbearing temper have destined you to be the evil genius of this
country?"
The election was won by the Republican ticket, but with votes
for president and vice president undistinguished, the result was
a tie between Jefferson and Burr. (The Federalists, had they won,
would have avoided this problem as one elector voted for John Jay
instead of Pinckney, giving Adams a one vote margin over his vice
presidential running mate -- the opposite of Hamilton's scheme.)
The tie threw the election to the House of Representatives, where
Federalists could influence the outcome by picking between the
two Republicans (pp. 248-249):
Virtually all Federalists in Congress viewed Burr as grasping,
selfish, and unprincipled. "A profligate without character and without
property -- a bankrupt in both," Sedgwick called him at the
time. These very traits made him all the more likely, though, to
cooperate with them in maintaining a strong national government,
Federalists believed. "By persons friendly to Mr. Burr, it is
distinctly stated that he is willing to consider the Federalists as
his friends and to accept the office of President as their gift,"
Delaware Representative James A. Bayard asserted on the basis of some
contacts apparently not authorized by Burr. "He must lean on those who
bring him to the chair, or he must fall to never rise again," Virginia
Congressman Henry Lee added. In short, by electing him President,
Federalists hoped to turn Burr into their creature. "I believe,"
Maryland Representative William Hindman noted, "that he would support
the Federal[ist] cause as the Jeffersonians would become his bitter
implacable enemies."
On the positive side, Federalists also viewed Burr as more vigorous
and pragmatic than Jefferson, whom they scorned as a cowardly,
misguided visionary. Hindman wrote to Burr, "He is a soldier and a man
of energy and decision." "To courage he joins generosity," New York
Senator Gouverneur Morris added. "If Mr. Burr succeeds, we may flatter
ourselves that he will not suffer the executive power to be frittered
into insignificance," James McHenry stated. "Either will be bad,"
Connecticut Senator Uriah Tracy conceded, but "I am . . . in favor of
Burr principally because I think a paralytic complaint is most to be
shunned by a popular government." Federalists also anticipated that
Burr, as a New York commercial lawyer, would support Federalist
business interests more than Jefferson, a Virginia agrarian. "His very
selfishness," Sedgwick wryly noted about Burr and the business
interests, "will afford some security that he will not only patronize
their support but their invigoration." [ . . . ]
By some manner of twisted reasoning, by the beginning of 1801, Burr
had become the Federalists' white knight. No solid evidence exists
that he ever promised anything in exchange for their support. Faced
with the prospect of losing power for the first time, they simply gave
it to him on faith.
The House remained deadlocked through 35 ballots before a couple
of Federalists backed off and abstained, ceding the election to
Jefferson. Many Federalists blamed Adams for cooling the war fever
against France (p. 250):
Many Federalists blamed Adams for the party's losses. By "sending
the last mission to France," McHenry observed in words that gave voice
to the party line, "Mr. Adams had taken . . . a course which has lost
to him the presidency and led to his utter debasement." Pickering soon
added, "The President, I am told, is in a state of deep dejection. His
feelings are not to be envied. To his UNADVISED (to use a mild
term) measures are traced the evils with which the whole of our
country is now perplexed and depressed." The truth is, though, that
although he lost the election, Adams did better than his party as a
whole. Outside New York, he received more electoral votes in 1800 than
in 1796, when he won. The Republicans' narrow victory in the New York
City elections had indeed turned the
tide. [ . . . ] Meanwhile, Federalists lost
control of Congress for the first time in the nation's history,
dropping more than ten seats in the Senate and more than twice that
number in the House.
Inauguration day, which found Adams slipping away from the White
House on the 4AM stage for Baltimore (pp. 271-273):
Thomas Jefferson surely rose before the sun that day too; he always
did. He still roomed in a small suite at Conrad and McMunn's
boardinghouse near the Capitol, and would stay there for two more
weeks as work progressed on the Executive Mansion. After other
boarders got up and dressed, Jefferson ate breakfast with them at the
common table and reportedly declined their invitation to sit at its
head. Escorted by soldiers of the Virginia militia and flanked by
various members of Congress and other dignitaries, Jefferson then
walked to the Senate chamber for his inauguration. His predecessors
had ridden in a coach with liveried attendants on such
occasions. Jefferson wore a plain suit and, unlike Washington and
Adams at their inaugurals, he neither powdered his hair nor carried a
sword. He wanted to set a democratic tone for his administration, and
continued doing so by curtailing official levees, accepting a
handshake rather than a bow, and otherwise introducing an informal
style to state functions. A better writer than speaker, Jefferson sent
his messages to Congress rather than deliver them to assembled
lawmakers. Before taking the oath of office, however, in a shy, small
voice all but lost in the ornate, crowded Senate chamber, Jefferson
gave the greatest speech of his political career. He beautifully
crafted it to claim the middle ground after the bitter, divisive
campaign. Newspapers carried it to the nation.
"During the contest of opinion through which we have passed, the
animation of discussion and of exertions has sometimes worn an aspect
which might impose on strangers unused to think freely," Jefferson
began. "But this being now decided by the voice of the people
. . . let us restore to social intercourse that harmony and affection
without which liberty, and even life itself, are but dreary things."
Among the causes of these differences, he stressed the divided opinion
"as to measures of safety" against the widening European war. "Every
difference of opinion is not a difference of principle," Jefferson
cautioned in a statement calculated to reach out to moderates. "We are
all Republicans: We are all Federalists. If there be any among us who
would wish to dissolve this Union, or to challenge its republican
form, let them stand undisturbed as monuments of the safety with which
error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free." He then
restated his political principles in centrist terms: neutrality
abroad, the freedom of religion and the press at home, full payment of
the national debt, and equal justice with impartial juries. No
Federalist could have expected more from a Republican; many expected
much less from Jefferson. In an apparent answer to those who
questioned his belief in God, he closed with a prayer: "May that
Infinite Power which rules the destines of the universe lead our
councils to what is best, and give them a favorable issue for your
peace and prosperity."
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Browse Alert: Politicking
Steve Benen: McCain releases tax returns -- at least, some of them.
Another way McCain is the new Kerry: his wife holds almost all of the
money. Maybe not as much as Teresa Heinz Kerry, but something on the
order of $100 million. Kerry initially tried to get by with only
releasing his own tax returns, and got slammed by the Republicans
for the slight. Not sure of all the ins and outs, but McCain's wife
is his second, after he dumped his first for a younger, richer model.
Steve Benen: Debating the debate, complaining about complaining.
More fallout from the last Pennsylvania debate. Key quote:
Yesterday afternoon, Bill Clinton suggested Obama was "whining,"
adding, "If you don't want to play, keep your uniform off."
The first level of inanity here is to treat running for president
as a game. The higher level is to treat the media's framework of
gotcha trivia as the proper set of rules for the game. Maybe the
Clintons are so satisfied with the mere idea of being president
that they're willing to forego any serious issues and cater to the
media's whims, but let's say you had a hypothetical candidate who
felt like running because he or she thought that real issues matter.
What should such a candidate do? The campaign path is already like
a potato sack race, where all the candidates are made to make fools
of themselves in order to get taken seriously. Is it any wonder
that campaigns like this result in winners like we have had?
Friday, April 18, 2008
Forgetting War
Tony Judt: What Have We Learned, If Anything?
A non-review essay in the May 1, 2008 New York Review of Books.
I suspect it's actually a piece in Judt's new essay collection,
Reappraisals: Reflections on the Forgotten Twentieth Century
(2008, Penguin Books). The whole essay is worth reading, but
several paragraphs stand out.
After talking about the tendency to remember the century either
as triumph or tragedy (p. 16):
The expansion of communication offers a case in point. Until the
last decades of the twentieth century most people in the world had
limited access to information; but -- thanks to national education,
state-controlled radio and television, and a common print culture --
within any one state or nation or community people were all likely to
know many of the same things. Today, the opposite applies. Most people
in the world outside of sub-Saharan Africa have access to a near
infinity of data. But in the absence of any common culture beyond a
small elite, and not always even there, the fragmented information and
ideas that people select or encounter are determined by a multiplicity
of tastes, affinities, and interests. As the years pass, each one of
us has less in common with the fast-multiplying worlds of our
contemporaries, not to speak of the world of our forebears.
All of this is surely true -- and it has disturbing implications
for the future of democratic governance. Nevertheless, disruptive
change, even global transformation, is not in itself
unprecedented. The economic "globalization" of the late nineteenth
century was no less turbulent, except that its implications were
initially felt and understood by far fewer people. What is significant
about the present age of transformations is the unique insouciance
with which we have abandoned not merely the practices of the past but
their very memory. A world just recently lost is already half
forgotten.
For me, the most glaring example of what has been hastily forgotten
is class struggle and the inherent limits of capitalism, which have
quickly been swept under the rug with the failure of the Soviet Union.
But Judt is thinking more of war (p. 18):
War was not just a catastrophe in its own right; it brought other
horrors in its wake. World War I led to an unprecedented
militarization of society, the worship of violence, and a cult of
death that long outlasted the war itself and prepared the ground for
the political disasters that followed. States and societies seized
during and after World War II by Hitler or Stalin (or by both, in
sequence) experienced not just occupation and exploitation but
degradation and corrosion of the laws and norms of ci |