Ross Douthat echos Lennon and McCartney by Political Observer

I could quote that old hymn, Jesus loves me:
Jesus loves me—this I know,
For the Bible tells me so;
Little ones to him belong,—
They are weak, but he is strong.
(Anna Bartlett Warner)
Mr. Douthat in his latest essay All the Lonely People, an essay based on a defense of the old fashioned virtue of social conformity, as a defense against the growing number of suicides in American. Also, he connects  it to declining religious affiliations, modern America as godless wasteland. How can a country that disrespects prenatal life etc. is here implicit. He mentions those connections that a vigorously cultivated religious life can offer and celebrates small town virtues, although the reality is that most Americans  live in cities or their suburbs. But his political romanticism is not subject to anything like a check against reality. Continue reading

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My Kierkegaard by Queer Atheist

Is it possible to write an essay on Kierkegaard without the mention of the ethical/philosophical monstrosity of the ‘teleological suspension of the ethical’? Mr. Jeffrey Frank benignly characterizes it as ‘ a dazzling thought experiment’ with ‘somewhat frightening, especially when you consider its extreme, all-too-familiar modern-day applications’ . Might we call it by it’s real name? The rationale or philosophical permission of the religious zealot and or mass murderer? Or does that strain the bounds of respectable bourgeois intellectual/political discourse? Continue reading

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American Political Melodrama, Episode CCCI: Ross Douthat on lack of a Republican alternative to Obamacare? by Political Cynic

What can one say about the self-serving and purposefully obtuse Mr. Douthat? The fact that Obamacare is the product of The Heritage Foundation? The premier think tank of the, once, most reactionary strata of the Party. The New Democrats took that plan and made it their own. The Republican Party calls it ‘Socialized Medicine’ and other such epithets, yet it is not single payer, but wedded to the welfare of insurance providers and drug manufactures. The Republicans have no real alternative because Obamacare is their own. Continue reading

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David Brooks as Cassandra by Political Cynic

By now, everybody involved seems to be in a state of anxiety. Insurance companies are trying to put out new products, but they don’t know what federal parameters they have to meet. Small businesses are angry because the provisions that benefited them have been put on the back burner. Health care systems are highly frustrated. They can’t plan without a road map. Senator Max Baucus, one of the authors of the law, says he sees a “huge train wreck” coming. Continue reading

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Triumphalism before the fact? David Brooks on ‘Health Chaos Ahead’ by Political Observer

How many times can David Brooks use the terms chaos and catastrophe in the opening paragraphs of his essay aptly titled ‘Health Chaos Ahead‘? And then beat to death the word cascade,in his gleeful policy fantasy about the coming failure of ‘Obamacare’,that un-enlightened,now, bastard child of The Heritage Foundation? The New Democratic agenda will be defeated by a concatenation of the failures of implementation; the Republicans will maintain control of the House and re-gain the Senate on demonstrable voter discontent. Mr. Brooks can’t seem to master his triumphalism before the fact! Or should we call it the most aggressive expression of  hope?

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Response to Europe Facing More Pressure to Reconsider Cuts as a Cure in NYT by Political Observer

We have traveled a long road from Thatcher/Reagan to the world wide economic collapse of 2008. That Free Market failed, it was the intellectual mirage of political romantics masquerading as economists, succeeded by an equally failed Austerity. Continue reading

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Matt Miller: Apocalypse on the Installment Plan by Political Observer

Quite adroitly in his essay titledBoston — and what hasn’t happened since 9/11′Mr. Matt Miller lets the recollected writing of Mr. Richard Clark do his work of fear mongering for him, masquerading as awed speculation in the face of the bombings in Boston. All of it resembles the film genre of apocalyptic science fiction, set not in the future but in the very dangerous present of the ascendant American Empire and it’s collection of enemies. The reader is gripped in the scenarios that Mr. Miller recounts, but one eventually asks the question, following a repentant Scrooge’s inquiry to the Ghost of Christmas Future, something like, can this future be changed?

America’s Enemies have the money and organizational abilities that can confound,indeed neutralize, the most militarized and technically advanced nation in the world. Is the psychological strategy to imagine the worst case to inoculate ones self against the potential reality?

Do we as readers need to recall the bombings of Atlanta of 1996? And the investigation that followed, featuring the case of Mr. Richard Jewell? Certainly a high point in the annals of American Justice? Or are we history-less pawns of near hysterical pundit chatter?

 

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David Brooks on Mrs. Thatcher by Political Cynic

Here is David Brooks in The New York Times,opining on the death of Mrs. Thatcher, whose opening paragraph gives away the game of this Conservative chatterer:
‘The 1990 Tory coup against Margaret Thatcher was the most intense political event I’ve covered. The Conservative politicians who were trying to remove her from party leadership and the prime minister’s office knew they were toppling a person who was their political and moral superior. They knew she had earned the right to face the country in an election one last time, rather than be deposed by the supposed lieutenants in her own party. They sensed there would be some Shakespearean retribution for the act of disloyalty they were engaged in. They went around rubbing their hands like Lady Macbeth trying to expunge the sin even as they were committing it.’
Mr. Brooks plays it rhetorically at the melodramatic dénouement of the career of Mrs.Thatcher. How perfect to play it back as witness to the regicide of our heroine, so as to avoid anything but praise for her morality,steadfastness etc., in the face of the Socialist perfidy, and the betrayal by her own party: et tu Brute? Mrs. Thatcher as the exemplar of the ‘culture of rectitude’ vs the ‘culture of narcissism’. Does any narrative produced by Mr. Brooks ever vary from his  Conservative obsession and/or fantasy of decline?
‘She championed a certain sort of individual, one who possessed what the writer Shirley Robin Letwin called the Vigorous Virtues: “upright, self-sufficient, energetic, adventurous, independent-minded, loyal to friends and robust against foes.” ‘
Mr. Brooks’ rhetorical strategy pays off quite handsomely, he is disburdened of any real responsibility to discuss with any candor Mrs. T’s Hayekian faith in the Free Market and it’s failures. That we live with every day, as the inheritors of her policy initiatives. The Economic collapse in 2008 and it’s successor idea and practice of Austerity are her living monument.

Political Cynic

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