Friday, March 29, 2013
Thursday, March 28, 2013
A Public Service Announcement
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Friday, March 22, 2013
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Meet the New Boss (same as the old boss)...
The problem that the U.S. government had with Saddam Hussein was not that he was a strongman, but that he wasn't "our" strongman. We never gave two sh*ts about the Iraqi people. And we still don't.
Maliki's Iraq: Rape, Executions and Torture
Maliki's Iraq: Rape, Executions and Torture
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Monday, March 18, 2013
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Decline of the West: Part 72
Does the Pope Matter? by Garry Wills | NYRblog | The New York Review of Books
The really fascinating aspect of the Papal election lies in the degree to which there appears to be an expectation that the world--Roman Catholic and non-Roman Catholic--should care about an office that is increasingly irrelevant (as Garry Wills points out) to its own constituents. One wonders what is behind the desire to make this transition matter. There is a quiet desperation at work here--and it has something to do with the loss of meaning in the modern world. Not just the loss of religious meaning, but cultural and even civilizational meaning. The popularity of the Lewis-Huntington "clash of civilizations" thesis is part and parcel of this sense of loss. Having constructed an entity called "The West," and vaunted it above "the rest," it is difficult--indeed traumatic--for those who have organized their identities around this fiction to catch sight of their beloved Emperor naked as the day he was born. But such is the situation in Europe and North America at the present time. An Argentinian Pope (it would be interesting, though equally irrelevant, if he were a liberation theologian) is yet another attempt to extend the "Western" reach--to assert its dominance. However, no Pope will be able to counter-act the steady entropic decline of a superannuated institution. Nor will a Reformation (that has been tried).
Good luck Pope Francis. Wear the red shoes. Don't forget to read your Spengler.
The really fascinating aspect of the Papal election lies in the degree to which there appears to be an expectation that the world--Roman Catholic and non-Roman Catholic--should care about an office that is increasingly irrelevant (as Garry Wills points out) to its own constituents. One wonders what is behind the desire to make this transition matter. There is a quiet desperation at work here--and it has something to do with the loss of meaning in the modern world. Not just the loss of religious meaning, but cultural and even civilizational meaning. The popularity of the Lewis-Huntington "clash of civilizations" thesis is part and parcel of this sense of loss. Having constructed an entity called "The West," and vaunted it above "the rest," it is difficult--indeed traumatic--for those who have organized their identities around this fiction to catch sight of their beloved Emperor naked as the day he was born. But such is the situation in Europe and North America at the present time. An Argentinian Pope (it would be interesting, though equally irrelevant, if he were a liberation theologian) is yet another attempt to extend the "Western" reach--to assert its dominance. However, no Pope will be able to counter-act the steady entropic decline of a superannuated institution. Nor will a Reformation (that has been tried).
Good luck Pope Francis. Wear the red shoes. Don't forget to read your Spengler.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Monday, March 11, 2013
Sunday, March 10, 2013
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