The White Peril 白禍

31 October 2006

F*tzepolitic
Not in the best mood this week, for a variety of reasons. Mostly giving myself over to music that makes me feel immersed in feelings without having to hear them articulated, if that makes sense.

Of course, there's no getting out of drawing some distinctions sharply. My absentee ballot got here, and while there's no point in not voting for the dumb-but-pretty congressman who replaced Pat Toomey two years ago, and I'm going Lynn Swann for governor, I'm...uh, what else? Oh, yeah: the senate race. The pandering communitarian or the pandering communitarian? Decisions, decisions.

On the upside, the PRC Ministry of Foreign Affairs has announced that it, the US, and the DPRK have agreed to restart the 6-party talks.
Posted by Sean on 2006-10-31 22:31:02 | 0 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: society

23 October 2006

Root causes
Rondi gets letters and finds that the ability to spell does not necessarily vary directly with the ability to think. She and I may disagree over the relative merits of Madonna (yay!) and The Sound of Music (KILL. ME. NOW.), but she's absolutely right about this:

It turns out that students in a Toronto-area high school class were asked to pick a newspaper column they disagreed with. At least 12 students picked mine. In groups of two or three, they explained why.

Explain they did ... and all I can say is, out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained defeatism. Rather than the adorable youthful conviction that war is not the answer, these teens seemed sure of two things: 1) The United States is to blame for the anger and actions of Islamofascists, for "creating more enemies," and 2) War may be the answer, but since Islamofascists will always be two steps ahead of us, we're bound to lose.

...

More student optimism: "As our technology becomes more advanced, so does Al Qaeda's. An example of this would be the liquid explosives disguised as Gatorade found in an airport in Great Britain this summer ... no matter how much we spend on precautions ... our lives will always be endangered...."

Ah, blithe spirits! Did your teacher happen to tell you about fighting on the beaches and landing grounds and never surrendering? Or did he at least, say, mention the intelligence that uncovered the liquid explosives plot and other information? If so, I'd be curious to know the spin he put on it, given these words from a pupil: "Our intelligence is useless today because they are always two steps ahead of us." Where can I order my burqa?


Of course, you don't have to go to Canada to hear such arguments made. Besides frequently being wrong in the particulars--if al-Qaeda were really always two steps ahead of us, life would have looked a lot different over the last five years--they seem to me to betray a more general misunderstanding of the way life works. Civilization doesn't just happen; human progress is produced by warring against other people's malevolence and nature's indifference. Societies that just kind of accept their surroundings and harmonize with them as a first principle tend not to get anywhere. Not every project the human imagination can dream up is practicable, no, but history certainly indicates that wars can be won. Of course, if you're not convinced that we deserve to win anyway, I suppose that doesn't make much difference.
Posted by Sean on 2006-10-23 13:03:18 | 4 Comments | 0 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: society

3 October 2006

Long Way 2 Go
Okay, I wasn't going to write anything more about Mark Foley--trying to keep the herbed chicken and ratatouille baguette down, you know?--but Michelle Malkin has a post that's full of links and has, I think, the best-pitched response I've seen so far to the whole thing:

What I am hearing from some conservatives inclined to pooh-pooh Foley's behavior and carry on about Barney Frank instead does not sit well with me. You can't possibly read Foley's communications with minors that have been disclosed so far--including his attempts to rendezvous with one--and dismiss them as merely "naughty e-mails."

...

At this point, I think the GOP is making a mistake banging the drum so hard over the apparent far left/MSM orchestration of the story. However long the other side sat on the e-mails and IMs, the fact is that Mark Foley--and Mark Foley alone--is responsible for giving his enemies something to spring upon his campaign in the first place.


It's interesting that so many of the same people who seem fond of referring to everyone under the age of thirty as "children" whose unworldliness must be preserved by any means necessary have taken, this weekend, to acting as if nothing short of "Lay me down and f**k me, stud!!!!" crossed the line into inappropriate sexual content. As Michael and one of the people Malkin cites say, whether Foley planned to close the deal isn't the only, or even the primary, issue. Flirtation from a powerful adult mentor, with recommendations and network access to offer or withhold, is not in the same category as flirtation from one's prom date.

And yet...and yet...calling this "child abuse" (as Malkin approves of) unsettles me. This is not an apologia for Foley, mind you; assuming things are as they appear, he's done nothing illegal, but he deserves a ruined reputation and an end to his political future. Yes, I know--I'm a childless gay guy who lives abroad and doesn't know what it's like for parents, et c. But it seems reasonable to expect people who are parents to know the difference between a Capitol Hill internship and church camp.

They should also know the individual adolescents they've been rearing for a decade and a half. Washington is an exploitative place in many ways, including plenty that are non-sexual. A teenager who is still psychologically a child shouldn't be permitted to spend a semester there away from parental supervision.

Added on 4 October: So Foley's team of handlers appears to be going for the Victimization Triple Crown--the Alkie Derby, Gayness, and the Molestation Stakes. It's a shame to have to be so cynical, and it's not the literal statements that make me suspicious. If it's true that Foley was molested as a child, it must indeed have been traumatizing, and it's certainly plausible that the pressures of his double life drove him to bona fide alcoholism. But the timing of these revelations (which Foley himself may have little to do with by this point) still smacks of responsibility-dodging, suggesting as they do that the man was simply overwhelmed by his inner demons. (And no, of course, I don't consider homosexuality a proper source of torment in and of itself, but there are plenty in the viewing audience who do.)

Added on 5 October: Thanks to Eric for the link and the (excessive) compliment. He has a lot of his own thoughts and more links to other people's, as usual; his focus is on the thought-policing angle:

Thus, the Foley scandal does what ordinary "outing" could not have possibly done. It emboldens those in the GOP for whom homo-loathing is a bread-and-butter issue, and if things go the way the activists want, maybe some of them will call for witch hunts. (According to the predictable meme of restoring morality or something.)

That'll teach the cowards in the closet who their friends are!

Whenever two apparent adversaries agree with each other, it worries me. Right now, I see agreement along the following lines:

RESOLVED: Gays do not belong in the Republican Party.

But there's still hope for these people who hate themselves. If they convert now, it's not too late.

Why, the libertarian apostates will welcome them with open arms! (Aren't they forgetting that former leftists who become libertarians are already apostates?)

Such condescension is a bit hard to take.

In my view, identity politics--especially the "self hatred" meme in conjunction with "outing"--makes non-conforming gay citizens afraid to voice what they think.

That's a first step towards not being allowed to think what they think.


Well, I do think that it's still people's own responsibility if they don't say what they think needs to be said. Still, it's sad that you can so readily come off as a brave non-conformist for being openly gay and republican (or Republican, or conservative, or libertarian).

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. Long Way 2 Go
  2. Control
Posted by Sean on 2006-10-03 19:31:08 | 6 Comments | 1 Trackbacks >>>>>>> Categories: society