The Economist Oxbridgers: ‘The Zionist Faschist State Must Fight On’!

Philosophical Apprentice offers acts of critical reductionism, as a self-defense.

Leaders | The Middle East

Why Israel must fight on

Israel’s bombardment of Gaza is taking a terrible toll. But unless Hamas’s power is broken, peace will remain out of reach

https://www.economist.com/leaders/2023/11/02/why-israel-must-fight-on

The opening paragraphs of this 2086 word , what to name it?

Israeli forces are entering a hellscape of their own making. One in ten buildings in Gaza has been pulverised by Israeli aircraft and artillery. Over 8,000 Palestinians have been killed, many of them children. Shortages of fuel, clean water and food, imposed by an Israeli blockade, pose a growing threat to the lives of many thousands more. 

Around the world the cry is going up for a ceasefire or for Israel to abandon its ground invasion. Hearing some Israeli politicians call for vengeance, including the discredited prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, many people conclude that Israel’s actions are disproportionate and immoral. Many of those arguing this believe in the need for a Jewish state, but fear for a Jewish state that seems to value Palestinian lives so cheaply. They worry that the slender hopes for peace in this age-old conflict will be buried under Gaza’s rubble. 

Those are powerful arguments, but they lead to the wrong conclusion. Israel is inflicting terrible civilian casualties. It must minimise them and be seen to do so. Palestinians are lacking essential humanitarian supplies. Israel must let a lot more aid pass into Gaza. However, even if Israel chooses to honour these responsibilities, the only path to peace lies in dramatically reducing Hamas’s capacity to use Gaza as a source of supplies and a base for its army. Tragically, that requires war. 

To grasp why, you have to understand what happened on October 7th. When Israelis talk about Hamas’s attack as an existential threat they mean it literally, not as a figure of speech. Because of pogroms and the Holocaust, Israel has a unique social contract: to create a land where Jews know they will not be killed or persecuted for being Jews. The state has long honoured that promise with a strategic doctrine that calls for deterrence, early warnings of an attack, protection on the home front and decisive Israeli victories. 

Over the past two decades Israel lost sight of the fact that Palestinians deserve a state, too. Mr Netanyahu boosted Hamas to sabotage Palestinian moderates—a cynical ploy to help him argue that Israel has no partner for peace. Instead, Palestinian suffering became something to manage, with a mix of financial inducements and deterrence, kept fresh by repeated short wars. 

On October 7th Hamas destroyed all this, including Mr Netanyahu’s brittle scheme. The terrorists ripped apart Israel’s social contract by shattering the security doctrine created to defend it. Deterrence proved empty, early warning of an attack was absent, home-front protection failed and Hamas murdered 1,400 people in Israeli communities. Far from enjoying victory, Israel’s soldiers and spies were humiliated.

The Reader can turn her attention to the final paragraphs:

And that leads back to the condition that makes all this possible: a war to degrade Hamas enough to enable something better to take its place. How Israel fights this war matters. It must live up to its pledge to honour international law. Not only is that the right thing to do, but Israel will be able to sustain broad support over the months of fighting and find backing to foster peace when the fighting stops only if it signals that it has changed. Right now, this means letting in a lot more humanitarian aid and creating real safe zones in southern Gaza, Egypt, or—as the best talisman of its sincerity—in the Negev inside Israel.

A ceasefire is the enemy of peace, because it would allow Hamas to continue to rule over Gaza by consent or by force with most of its weapons and fighters intact. The case for humanitarian pauses is stronger, but even they involve a trade-off. Repeated pauses would increase the likelihood that Hamas survives.

Nobody can know whether peace will come to Gaza. But for the sake of Israelis and Palestinians it deserves to have the best possible chance. A ceasefire removes that chance entirely.

Because The Economist is an active partner with Western Corporate Media in producing political/moral apologetics for its members : engaging in a critique of the core arguments, reduced to their essentials… the favorite strategy of the Neo-Cons is to both exhaust the patience and critical faculties of the Reader. An act critical reductionism is an act of self-defense:

The collapse of Israel’s security doctrine has unleashed a ferocious bombardment against the people of Gaza.

Israel wants its 200,000 or so evacuees to be able to return home.

Hamas has proved that it is undeterrable. 

The only way out of the cycle of violence is to destroy Hamas’s rule…

Suffocated by permanently tight Israeli security and killed as Hamas’s human shields in pre-emptive Israeli raids, Palestinians will be radicalised.

In Israel Mr Netanyahu will be forced from office because he was in power on October 7th, and because his reputation for being Israel’s staunchest defender is broken.

The Palestinians need moderate leaders with a democratic mandate. At the moment they have none.

Hence, the second condition for peace: a force to provide security in Gaza. Israel cannot supply it as an occupying power. Instead the strip needs an international coalition, possibly containing Arab countries that oppose Hamas and its backer, Iran.

And that leads back to the condition that makes all this possible: a war to degrade Hamas enough to enable something better to take its place. How Israel fights this war matters. It must live up to its pledge to honour international law.

Right now, this means letting in a lot more humanitarian aid and creating real safe zones in southern Gaza, Egypt, or—as the best talisman of its sincerity—in the Negev inside Israel. 

A ceasefire is the enemy of peace, because it would allow Hamas to continue to rule over Gaza by consent or by force with most of its weapons and fighters intact.

But for the sake of Israelis and Palestinians it deserves to have the best possible chance. A ceasefire removes that chance entirely. 

Around the world the cry is going up for a ceasefire or for Israel to abandon its ground invasion.

However, even if Israel chooses to honour these responsibilities, the only path to peace lies in dramatically reducing Hamas’s capacity to use Gaza as a source of supplies and a base for its army. Tragically, that requires war. 

Because of pogroms and the Holocaust, Israel has a unique social contract: to create a land where Jews know they will not be killed or persecuted for being Jews. The state has long honoured that promise with a strategic doctrine that calls for deterrence, early warnings of an attack, protection on the home front and decisive Israeli victories. 

Over the past two decades Israel lost sight of the fact that Palestinians deserve a state, too. Mr Netanyahu boosted Hamas to sabotage Palestinian moderates—a cynical ploy to help him argue that Israel has no partner for peace.

On October 7th Hamas destroyed all this, including Mr Netanyahu’s brittle scheme. The terrorists ripped apart Israel’s social contract by shattering the security doctrine created to defend it.

The collapse of Israel’s security doctrine has unleashed a ferocious bombardment against the people of Gaza. The reason is an attempt to restore that founding principle.

The only way out of the cycle of violence is to destroy Hamas’s rule—which means killing its senior leaders and smashing its military infrastructure.

Suffocated by permanently tight Israeli security and killed as Hamas’s human shields in pre-emptive Israeli raids, Palestinians will be radicalised.

That starts with new leadership for both sides.

The sooner he goes the better.

The Palestinians need moderate leaders with a democratic mandate.

The question is how to stop Hamas or its successor from seizing back control of Gaza before fresh leaders can emerge from fair elections. 

Hence, the second condition for peace: a force to provide security in Gaza. Israel cannot supply it as an occupying power.

And that leads back to the condition that makes all this possible: a war to degrade Hamas enough to enable something better to take its place. How Israel fights this war matters.

A ceasefire is the enemy of peace, because it would allow Hamas to continue to rule over Gaza by consent or by force with most of its weapons and fighters intact. The case for humanitarian pauses is stronger, but even they involve a trade-off. Repeated pauses would increase the likelihood that Hamas survives. 

A ceasefire is the enemy of peace, because it would allow Hamas to continue to rule over Gaza by consent or by force with most of its weapons and fighters intact.

Nobody can know whether peace will come to Gaza. But for the sake of Israelis and Palestinians it deserves to have the best possible chance. A ceasefire removes that chance entirely. 

https://www.economist.com/leaders/2023/11/02/why-israel-must-fight-on?itm_source=parsely-api


November 5, 2023:

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@DLeonhardt warns against the continuing danger of ‘high-brow, progressive culture warriors’: will The New Democrats even listen?

Old Socialist contemplates…

The New Deal once defined The Democrats, until the political toxin of The Clintons and their epigones: the embrace of the Neo-Liberal Swindle, defined this party’s Neo-Reaganism. Mr. Leonhardt writes for the New York Times, and as such the very notion of placing the blame on ‘high-brow, progressive culture warriors’ is a political convenience.

As Leonhardt tells that story, he says the Democratic Party has made a politically risky leftward turn away from blue collar voters and toward high-brow, progressive culture warriors.

https://www.politico.com/news/2023/11/03/pbdd-david-leonhardt-book-labor-modern-economic-history-interview-00125053

The evidence is clear of that Neo-Reaganism: Joe Biden and his Crime Bill, and Hillary Clinton’s political echo of the danger of ‘Preditors’.

The End of The Welfare State, here Researcher Scott Winship, via Politico’s Danny Vinik, answers in the affirmative, in 2016.

Did welfare reform work?

Researcher Scott Winship says yes. Twenty years after passage of Bill Clinton’s controversial anti-poverty law, his major new report challenges its critics—and says it even offers a way forward.

https://www.politico.com/agenda/story/2016/08/welfare-reform-scott-winship-poverty-000189/

What might a citizen think/ponder about the Crisis of Hunger and Homelessness that afflicts this nation? The destruction of The Welfare State was the project of both the Republicans and New Democrats. David Leonhardt present to The Reader the ‘straw-man’ of ‘‘high-brow, progressive culture warriors’ as a possible reason/explanation for the New Democrats argued fixation: ‘warns Democrats are not paying close enough attention to the average American’s concerns about crime, immigration and economic progress’

David Leonhardt can’t quite confront the fact of the failure of the whole of America’s Political Class, and the Journalists, Propagandists who produce self-serving, yet fictitious narratives, that advance careers.

Old Socialist


Note: In my haste to publish, I had forgotten to add to the Crimes of The New Democrats :

Gramm-Leach-Bliley as the end of Glass-Stegall. As Glass-Stegall:

The Glass-Steagall Act, part of the Banking Act of 1933, was a landmark banking legislation that separated Wall Street from Main Street by offering protection to people who entrust their savings to commercial banks. Millions of Americans lost their jobs in the Great Depression, and one in four lost their life savings after more than 4,000 U.S. banks shut down between 1929 and 1933, leaving depositors with nearly $400 million in losses. The Glass-Steagall Act prohibited bankers from using depositors’ money to pursue high-risk investments, but the act was effectively undercut by looser restrictions in the deregulatory environment of the 1980s and 1990s.

https://www.history.com/topics/great-depression/glass-steagall-act

Obama’s chicken-shit ‘lets put this all behind us’ , as a de facto pardon of Wall Street Crooks, heavy contributors to the Obama Campaign

Not to forget Obama’s Simpson-Boles ‘Austerity’ that was dead on arrival.

In Mr. Leonhardt quest to find these ‘‘high-brow, progressive culture warriors’ he can’t be referring to The Squad nor Bernie Sanders, as they all vote a straight New Democratic Party Line.

Old Socialist

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Janan Ganesh plunges his Silver-Fork into the Crisis of The West.

Philosophical Apprentice comments.

Note that Janan Ganesh is part of the Silver Fork Tradition of writers, even though that might seem an odd qualification, for a Financial Times ‘expert/technocrat’ on ‘Geopolitics’ ?

Headline: Don’t flatter the west’s enemies as an ‘axis’

Sub-headline: Democracies should tease out the contradictions between Russia, China, Iran and North Korea

https://www.ft.com/content/1a8b3817-931e-45a9-ac34-e466a18b486a

First note the rhetorical diminution of ‘the west’ as if it were not an actual political thing/entity ? The first paragraphs are instructive of that stylistic approach to the Historical/Political questions of moment. For your attempt to parse this essay, think of Ganesh’s attempt, as a pastiche of the Novel, in its variousness of characters, drawn from a ‘western world’ : again the rhetorical diminution is central. I will highlight the characters as they appear – it will come easier, for the reader to catch the cadences of his methodology, eventually? it is ungainly and clumsy.

Whenever a dictator or ruling cleric attacks the honour of the western world, they are conceding a rather important point. There is something there to attack. The west is a coherent entity.

It is made up, for the most part, of Christian or post-Christian societies around the upper Atlantic. Most of them experienced, to various degrees and at different times, the Enlightenment. Each now practices some version of democratic capitalism.

If such abstract values aren’t enough as a binding agent, no matter. The west is held together with treaties and institutions, too, which predate several of the world’s nation states. Nato has been around since 1949, the European project for almost as long. Neither is just a forum for chatter: one commits its members to mutual defence, the other subjects domestic to supranational law. That is, western countries are willing to foot a bill — in membership feessovereign freedom and ultimately blood — for their geopolitical teamThe west isn’t just broad (and getting broader, as both Nato and the EU process applications to join). It is also deep.

Note: Character Development, in its inflated and diminutive iterations:


Its rival bloc is the first of these things, without question, but not the second. In fact, doesn’t “bloc”, or “axis”, give too much credit, too soon, to a grouping as loose and putative as Russia, China, Iran and North Korea? Since the present crisis in the Middle East began earlier this month, there has been some despair in democratic capitals about the bonhomie among these four states. So there should be. Better an excess of vigilance than an excess of nonchalance. But the west shouldn’t do its antagonists’ work for them by granting their claim to be an equal and opposite coalition.

What, after all, unites the four? The group includes secular communists and the world’s leading theocracy. The two largest members fell out with each other in the cold war. (Richard Nixon exploited, but did not invent, the Sino-Soviet split.) There are jabber-fests that bring most of the members together, such as the Brics-plus summit, but no Nato– or EU-grade institution that requires tangible sacrifices from those who belong. And what is their shared view of global economic governance? What is the “Moscow consensus”State sovereignty, at least, used to be the one shibboleth of autocrats. Since the invasion of Ukraine, and the tolerance of it in parts of the world, does even that still hold?

Note: ‘Complacent Liberal’ makes her/his appearance, as the Ganesh antagonist, held aloft by a History Made to Measure, with an over abundance of characters.

“Just wait, complacent liberal,” I’ll be told. It takes a while for states to congeal into an axis. But consider the last two times that democracies were under existential siege from an autocratic grouping. As the years passed, it was the tensions within that camp, not the unities, that stood out. In the second world war, the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact didn’t make it to its second anniversary. In the cold warMao and Khrushchev started to diverge over Marxist doctrine as soon as the 1950s. What is the most recent historical precedent for autocracies co-operating on a lasting basisThe Concert of Europe, perhaps, which kept the continent more or less at peace in the 19th century. And even that had liberal Britain as a sort of regulating half-member.

Note: has Ganesh’s pastiche of a Novel reached its end point? Ganesh resorts to the analytic, as that pastiche has lost it’s emotive power? He must now resort to actual argument? A selection of the remaining paragraphs .

Treating the west’s adversaries as a coherent bloc is not just analytically wrong. It is dangerous, to the extent that it becomes self-fulfilling.

There is a precedent for this kind of error. A generation has passed since George W Bush set the US against the “Axis of Evil”. At the time, the moral absolutism of the word “evil” aroused most of the liberal derision.

The mistake was of more than academic consequence. In conflating three such different entities, Bush didn’t consider that invading one might empower another.

Note: Final paragraph of this essay reminds this Reader of Ganesh’s arrogance, as if he were of the caliber of Walter Lippmann in his prime. As his Novelization has faded from the thought of the Reader, in the blinding political light, of his carefully cadenced notion of ‘the coming years more or less writes itself’, call it Hegelian rubble?

In its broad outlines, the foreign policy of the free world over the coming years more or less writes itself. It has to be a patient game of teasing out the contradictions within the autocratic world: between theologians and commissars, between closed economies and trading ones, between rising powers and fading ones, between states with extensive contact with the west and total outcasts. Instead, we have no less a personage than Mitch McConnell describing Russia, China, Iran and North Korea as the “axis of evil”. All four nations will blush at the flattery.

Philosophical Apprentice

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Alexander Mercouris & Simon Schama agree on Jewish Victimhood?

Queer Atheist confronts the bourgeois political chatter!

As a regular watcher of Mr. Mercouris’ commentaries, I was not just disappointed, to hear him quote and extol Simon Schama Financial Times essay. And that for all of his insights of the past, as valuable as they are, and have been, Mr. Mercouris shares with other Technocrats an attachment to political/moral conformity. Walter Lippmann was an advocate of ‘the expert’ i.e. Technocrat, as a check of too much democracy: Its a toxic tradition and Mr. Mercouris seems to have imbibed some of this political toxin.

Note: the headline and sub-headline of Schama’s essay:

Opinion Israel-Hamas war

Simon Schama: Let us be, to grieve, rage, weep

In the face of lethal peril, help for Jews has always been conditional

https://www.ft.com/content/95fc03c2-f11f-4c22-8a38-3e32046c5c78

Note: before The Reader gets to Schama’ recitation of Jewish Victimhood tropes, there is this confounding revelation:

Headline: For years, Netanyahu propped up Hamas. Now it’s blown up in our faces

Sub-headlineThe premier’s policy of treating the terror group as a partner, at the expense of Abbas and Palestinian statehood, has resulted in wounds that will take Israel years to heal from

By TAL SCHNEIDER 8 October 2023, 3:58 pm

https://www.timesofisrael.com/for-years-netanyahu-propped-up-hamas-now-its-blown-up-in-our-faces/

For years, the various governments led by Benjamin Netanyahu took an approach that divided power between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank — bringing Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to his knees while making moves that propped up the Hamas terror group.

The idea was to prevent Abbas — or anyone else in the Palestinian Authority’s West Bank government — from advancing toward the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Thus, amid this bid to impair Abbas, Hamas was upgraded from a mere terror group to an organization with which Israel held indirect negotiations via Egypt, and one that was allowed to receive infusions of cash from abroad.

Palestinians wave their national flag and celebrate by a destroyed Israeli tank at the Gaza Strip fence east of Khan Younis, Oct. 7, 2023. (AP Photo/Yousef Masoud)

For years, the various governments led by Benjamin Netanyahu took an approach that divided power between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank — bringing Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to his knees while making moves that propped up the Hamas terror group.

The idea was to prevent Abbas — or anyone else in the Palestinian Authority’s West Bank government — from advancing toward the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Thus, amid this bid to impair Abbas, Hamas was upgraded from a mere terror group to an organization with which Israel held indirect negotiations via Egypt, and one that was allowed to receive infusions of cash from abroad.

Hamas was also included in discussions about increasing the number of work permits Israel granted to Gazan laborers, which kept money flowing into Gaza, meaning food for families and the ability to purchase basic products.

Israeli officials said these permits, which allow Gazan laborers to earn higher salaries than they would in the enclave, were a powerful tool to help preserve calm.

Is Netanyahu complicit in the murders committed by Hamas, is how The New York Times might have phrased this, in another dimension of space/time. Reader do you have the patience for Schama’s intervention? Still riffing in that New York Times Time Dimension.

The opening paragraphs of Schama’s essay:


Confronted with enormity: murdered infants, abducted grandmothers, slaughtered villagers, lusty chants of “gas the Jews” at the Free Palestine demonstration in Sydney, mere words feel like weak carriers of so much horror and sorrow. Journalistic bloviation on the cause of this and the effect of that seems an indecency, at least until the bodies are gathered and returned to families. So context me no contexts, analyse me no analyses, suspend your partially informed diagnoses; leave off your strenuous efforts at even-handedness. Let us be, to grieve, rage, weep; say the mourners’ kaddish.

Perhaps images, then, not words? Of terrified young people who in a trice went from dancing to frantic running in a futile attempt to escape the spray of bullets; of a kibbutz dog shot as it emerged from a house (that must have helped Free Palestine); a young woman with bloody marks staining her sweatpants as she is bundled away by captors; a knife lying on a sofa in the kibbutz Be’eri, where 10 per cent of the population were killed; or visual evidence of “resistance” like the video of Mor Bayder’s murdered grandmother uploaded by her killers to Mor’s Facebook page.

https://www.ft.com/content/95fc03c2-f11f-4c22-8a38-3e32046c5c78

Note: Schama presents himself as an honest critic ? In sum Palestinians are incapable of moral/political agency, they are victims of ‘fanatical tyrants’ as if the Nakba, and 75 years of oppression and murder by Zionist ‘fanatical tyrants’ has not taught them lessons that can’t be forgotten?

There is, rightly, sympathy too for the Palestinians of Gaza who are also victims and prisoners of Hamas and do not deserve to be punished for the wickedness perpetrated by their fanatical tyrants, nor for the delusion that the deaths of Jewish families will make Israel disappear.

Note: Here is where Schama ends his essay, with a quote from Deuteronomy, 30. 19:

But Israel will survive, revive. If only because, even in this dreadful extremity, one text from Deuteronomy, 30. 19 lies at the indefatigably beating heart of Jewish history: I call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and death, a blessing and a curse: therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live.

’I call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and death, a blessing and a curse: therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live.’

Note: As a Queer I have no patience for the cobbled together Texts of the Bible, nor those who quote it as an expression of ‘Gospel’! I was exposed these ‘claims’ in Sunday School and Vacation Bible School: I’m not a child anymore!

At the Council of Hippo, held in north Africa in AD 393, a group of church leaders recognized a list of books that they believed to be scripture. Later, the Council of Carthage affirmed that decision in AD 397.

http://www.daleentwistle.co.uk/who-chose-the-books-of-the-bible/#:~:text=Eventually%2C%20the%20question%20was%20taken,that%20decision%20in%20AD%20397.


Queer Atheist

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The Financial Times on ‘Israel at war: an explosive moment in the Middle East’. It almost reads like political wisdom?

Political Cynic dissects the Political Propaganda.

Note: There is almost something Biblical about Hamas playing the role of David, and Israel playing the role of a sleeping Goliath in the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel. Or have I broken the rules of Western Decorum?

Headline: Israel at war: an explosive moment in the Middle East

Sub-headline: After the week’s horrors, friends of the country should help it by urging restraint.

https://www.ft.com/content/22c402fc-4c79-4b5f-8002-d46605bc4f0f

Like that other 19th Century Journalistic antique The Economist, The Financial Times, are not the last gasp of The British Empire, but are its Twin Ghosts. The first two paragraphs of this Editorial Boards Opinion:

Only in the days that followed was the true horror of last Saturday’s attack by Hamas on Israel laid bare. Women, children and elderly among the dead; 260 music festival-goers slaughtered; an 85-year-old woman among more than 100 Israelis hauled off to the cellars of Gaza. The death toll of at least 1,200 was the largest number of Jews killed in a single day since the Holocaust. The assault has been compared, in its human cost and trauma to Israel’s national psyche, to “a 9/11 and a Pearl Harbor wrapped into one”. The repercussions, after Israel on Friday gave 1.1mn Palestinians 24 hours to leave northern Gaza ahead of an expected invasion of the Hamas-ruled strip, threaten to be devastating. This is spiralling into a war whose like the Middle East has not seen for decades.

The state of Israel has the right to defend itself against a murderous assault, free its hostages and restore its people’s faith in their security. The impulse to crush Hamas and extract a price for Israelis’ suffering is powerful and comprehensible. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has nurtured an image as the guarantor of his nation’s safety, is under pressure to respond with maximum force.

Note: If all else fails in journalism, Political Melodrama will not just suffice, but is demanded! I’ve put in bold font a selection of this journalistic hyperbole. I could only stomach the first paragraph.

Note: Paragraph 3

Yet ordering half of Gaza’s population from their homes smacks of the forced displacement Palestinians have suffered since 1948. A siege denying water, food and power to the impoverished territory — followed by a ground offensive — looks like collective punishment of civilians, who mostly have little love for Hamas, for the crimes of an extremist group. At least 1,800 Palestinians have already died in Israel’s bombardment. That Hamas trampled on the rules of war with its barbarities would not make it right for Israel to do so.

Note: The above rhetoric softens a bit and adopts a moralizing tone. should The Reader be surprised?

Let me make more selective quotations:

Note: a bit of wisdom ?

Yet among the greatest help friends of Israel can give is to warn of the perils, for itself and for the wider Middle East, of a response that causes mass civilian casualties among Palestinians.

Note: The hyperbolic self-congratulation of Anthony Blinken via the declaration of ‘We democracies’.

As Antony Blinken, US secretary of state, declared in Tel Aviv: “We democracies distinguish ourselves from terrorists by striving for a different standard, even when it’s difficult.”

Note: This reads like deliberate political naivete!

Even as it fights to root out Hamas, Israel should do all it can to follow the principles of post-second world war humanitarian law: to distinguish between combatants and civilians, minimise harm to populations, and take only militarily necessary actions. In Gaza, whose 2.3mn people, nearly half of them children, have little means of escape, that will be exceptionally hard.


Note: more key sentences:

Appearing to do otherwise would jeopardise international support and sympathy for Israel and may fuel a catastrophic regional conflict.

Western capitals should maximise diplomatic efforts, with regional neighbours, to secure Israeli hostages’ release and ensure de-escalation. They must strive, too, to establish humanitarian corridors out of Gaza.

Note: The pressing question of the above quotation is where might those Palestinians go?

Israel deserves the world’s sympathy.

Note: The Intractable Problem, equal to Melodrama

In a land of two peoples locked in enduring conflict, ending the cycle of violence requires finding a viable way for Israelis and Palestinians to live side by side, in dignity.

Note: Final comments

Not one mention of what the Palestinians have endured since 1948? Or that Israel is the beneficiaries of The Belfour Declaration and Sykes-Picot, in sum European Colonialism. The Financial Times is sometimes proficient at writing History Made To Measure, yet here there are gaping holes, in its, for want of a better descriptor, arguments about Zionism’s prima facie virtues.

Political Cynic

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Neo-Con Folk Tales: Bret Stephens reproves The Anti-Israel Left.

Old Socialist comments.

Before you read Stephen’s polemic, or my comment, it might help the reader to view Brian Lamb’s revelatory interview of 2006 with Bret Stephens.


Q&A
Bret Stephens

Bret Stephens discussed how he became a member of the editorial board at the Wall Street Journal, his interest in political philosophy, his thoughts on the various opinions about the Iraq war, and other topics in the news.

Bret Stephens was interviewed in the studio at Pace University in New York City.

https://www.c-span.org/video/?194550-1/qa-bret-stephens


And this :

The Conscience of Bret Stephens
How one columnist’s wild family history explains an increasingly isolated school of conservatism

https://newrepublic.com/article/155144/conscience-bret-stephens


Headline: The Anti-Israel Left Needs to Take a Hard Look at Itself

Mr. Stephens is insufferably arrogant, I will save the word ‘hubris’ for its place in the critical evaluation of Greek Drama. Mr. Stephens is a propagandist, who was Editor of the Jerusalem Post, the propaganda arm of The Zionist State. And then a member of the Editorial Board for the Wall Street Journal. Then to the New York Times, where he demonstrated that talent for arrogance, by no longer posting at twitter. He was used too having that ego stroked- the unsparing, unvarnished critical evaluations of the lesser beings of Planet Earth, sent Mr. Stephens into a tizzy!

Note: The first three paragraphs of Bret Stephen’s … where he walks among ‘The Great Unwashed’:

On Saturday morning in southern Israel, Hamas murdered hundreds of people at a music festival and kidnapped others at gunpoint to serve as human shields in Gaza. On Sunday afternoon in Midtown Manhattan, a speaker at a rally of pro-Palestinian and left-wing groups celebrated that atrocity — one of thousands suffered by Israelis over the past few days, which we later learned included the killing of babies and toddlers.

“As you might have seen, there was some sort of rave or desert party where they were having a great time, until the resistance came in electrified hang gliders and took at least several dozen hipsters,” a speaker said. “But I’m sure they’re doing very fine despite what The New York Post says.” He was met with cheers.

I went to see the rally for myself: Would there be even perfunctory condemnation of Hamas’s methods? A brief nod of sympathy to Israel’s anguish? Some banal nod to the cause of peace and nonviolence? Not that I heard. What I saw was giddiness and gloating, as if someone’s team had won the World Cup. Hamas had perpetrated the largest single-day massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, and the crowd was euphoric.

Before you read Stephen’s polemic, or my comment, it might help the reader to view Brian Lamb’s revelatory interview of 2006 with Bret Stephens.


Q&A
Bret Stephens

Bret Stephens discussed how he became a member of the editorial board at the Wall Street Journal, his interest in political philosophy, his thoughts on the various opinions about the Iraq war, and other topics in the news.

Bret Stephens was interviewed in the studio at Pace University in New York City.

https://www.c-span.org/video/?194550-1/qa-bret-stephens


And this :

The Conscience of Bret Stephens
How one columnist’s wild family history explains an increasingly isolated school of conservatism

https://newrepublic.com/article/155144/conscience-bret-stephens


Headline: The Anti-Israel Left Needs to Take a Hard Look at Itself

Mr. Stephens is insufferably arrogant, I will save the word ‘hubris’ for its place in the critical evaluation of Greek Drama. Mr. Stephens is a propagandist, who was Editor of the Jerusalem Post, the propaganda arm of The Zionist State. And then a member of the Editorial Board for the Wall Street Journal. Then to the New York Times, where he demonstrated that talent for arrogance, by no longer posting at twitter. He was used too having that ego stroked- the unsparing, unvarnished critical evaluations of the lesser beings of Planet Earth, sent Mr. Stephens into a tizzy!

Note: The first three paragraphs of Bret Stephen’s … where he walks among ‘The Great Unwashed’:

On Saturday morning in southern Israel, Hamas murdered hundreds of people at a music festival and kidnapped others at gunpoint to serve as human shields in Gaza. On Sunday afternoon in Midtown Manhattan, a speaker at a rally of pro-Palestinian and left-wing groups celebrated that atrocity — one of thousands suffered by Israelis over the past few days, which we later learned included the killing of babies and toddlers.

“As you might have seen, there was some sort of rave or desert party where they were having a great time, until the resistance came in electrified hang gliders and took at least several dozen hipsters,” a speaker said. “But I’m sure they’re doing very fine despite what The New York Post says.” He was met with cheers.

I went to see the rally for myself: Would there be even perfunctory condemnation of Hamas’s methods? A brief nod of sympathy to Israel’s anguish? Some banal nod to the cause of peace and nonviolence? Not that I heard. What I saw was giddiness and gloating, as if someone’s team had won the World Cup. Hamas had perpetrated the largest single-day massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, and the crowd was euphoric.

Note: It doesn’t quite reach Stephens’ consciousness, whatever that might be? that cell phone recordings of Israeli Soldiers kidnapping children, attacking Palestinian worshipers, Israelis Invading and desecrating al-Aqsa Mosque, shooting to death Palestinians in the street, and letting them die, denying them lifesaving Medical Aid, settlers eviting Palestinians from their homes, and myriad other Crimes against other human beings- this collection of savagery goes against the deeply held beliefs of human beings across the World! Should it surprise that a propagandist, Stephens is unable to connect, to that singular belief in the dignity of the person, as the sine qua non of the Human Endeavor? And that the Story of a Victory of The Slaves, over their Masters is a part of the Jewish, Christian and Islamic religious traditions. That Slave/Master dialectic is even an intergyral part of Hegel’s Phenomenology of The Spirit.

Stephen’s favorite role is to play victim, yet as David Klion points out, he is a child of privelidge,

Conservative pundit tropes weren’t the only thing young Bret absorbed while growing up in Mexico City. Speaking at an interfaith conference in Jerusalem in 2003, Bret recalled being raised by secular Jewish parents and receiving no religious education or Bar Mitzvah, but nonetheless confronting “a hostile environment for Jews.” This, at least, was how Bret justified what to me reads as contempt for the vast majority of Mexicans. According to Israel Insider, “Stephens saw Catholicism as practiced in Mexico with its heavy pagan influences as ‘primitive.’” He changed his mind when he left Mexico for university and met American Christians.     

“It was a revelation to me that you could be a sincere Christian and not be a peasant,” he said. According to Israel Insider, “As he became more committed to Israel, it was hard not to notice […] that it was Christian conservatives who were amongst the most supportive of Israel.” 

In other words, Bret came around on Christians after he met some who were white (and pro-Israel). But while Bret’s views on Christianity may have evolved, his subsequent publicly expressed opinions of Arabs and Muslims seem to echo his earlier attitude toward the “primitive” Mexican “peasants.”

Bret spent most of the first 14 years of his life in Mexico, but then attended an elite boarding school in Massachusetts, followed by the University of Chicago. He initially hoped to major in anthropology (he wanted to be Indiana Jones) but found his first course in the discipline “kind of grim and political and tedious.” He therefore opted for political philosophy, which allowed him to stay comfortably within the Western canon under the mentorship of the neoconservative scholar Leon Kass, who would eventually become known for advising George W. Bush to ban stem-cell research.

https://newrepublic.com/article/155144/conscience-bret-stephens

Old Socialist

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New York Times Public Intellectual @nytdavidbrooks opines on Senile Old Joe. In a terse 3,368 words!

Political Cynic comments, and contemplates the toxic Legacy of Leo Strauss.

The New York Times has become the Official Newspaper of The American National Security State. David Brooks is one its many apologists on the ‘Editorial Page’. Yet nothing quite prepares The Reader for this maladroit political kitsch:

Headline: Can We Talk About Joe Biden? Oct. 6, 2023

Where might The Reader begin her political archology of Brooks’ 3368 word political hagiography of Biden? Recalling that the Neo-Conservative/Straussian propaganda strategy, is to exhaust the patience, in tandem with the critical faculty of The Reader, with an avalanche of words, ideas, speculations, and worshipful commentary, not to mention a Cast of Characters almost worthy of that Hollywood Hack, Cecil B, DeMille.

These paragraphs is what Raymond Chandler would have called ‘Hollywood Vomit’, adhering to the ‘Hollywood Theme’ :

Nearly two decades ago, I tried to write a group biography about the senators whose offices happened to be on the second floor of the Russell Office Building on Capitol Hill. The group included John McCain, Joe Biden, Lindsey Graham and Chuck Hagel. I got to know and study each of those senators during that long-ago-abandoned project.

The more I covered Biden, the more I came to feel affection and respect for him. Then, as now, he could be a tough boss, occasionally angry and hard on his staff. But throughout his life, Biden has usually been on the side of the underdog. I’ve rarely met a politician so rooted in the unpretentious middle-class ethos of the neighborhood he grew up in. He has a seemingly instinctive ability to bond with those who are hurting.

Our politics have gotten rougher over the ensuing years but that hasn’t dampened Biden’s basic humanity. When he was vice president, I remember a searing meeting with him shortly after his son Beau died, his grief raw and on the surface. And like many, I’ve felt the beam of his empathy and care myself. A year and a half ago, the day after my oldest friend fell victim to suicide, Biden heard about it and called me to offer comfort. He just let me talk about my friend and through his words and tone of voice joined me in the suffering. I experienced the solace of being seen.

He has his faults — the tendency to talk too much, the chip on his shoulder about those who think they are smarter than he is, the gaffes, that episode of plagiarism and the moments of confusion — but I’ve always thought: Give me a leader who identifies with those who feel looked down upon. Give me a leader whose moral compass generally sends him in the right direction.

The video from 1993 contradicts Brook’s apologetic, from the mouth of Biden!

Joe Biden Warns Of “Predators On Our Streets” Who Were “Beyond The Pale” In 1993 Crime Speech demonstrates that Biden expressed unapologetic racism! This highlighted sentence is rendered, not juts moot, but is a self-serving lie:

Give me a leader who identifies with those who feel looked down upon.

Identify this paragraph as what? The Powerful comforting each other? And Brooks’ ‘experienced the solace of being seen’, more moralizing chatter. Think of Mitt Romney’s sons hurt looks, in their eyes, as another teachable moment in the Moral Awakening of Brooks, through the ‘camera’ of his opinion column.

When he was vice president, I remember a searing meeting with him shortly after his son Beau died, his grief raw and on the surface. And like many, I’ve felt the beam of his empathy and care myself. A year and a half ago, the day after my oldest friend fell victim to suicide, Biden heard about it and called me to offer comfort. He just let me talk about my friend and through his words and tone of voice joined me in the suffering. I experienced the solace of being seen.

Yet The Reader has just reached 311 words, of this 3,370 word, what to name it?

Might a list of the Cast of Characters of this Political Melodrama be instructive as to the intent of Brooks?

John McCain, Joe Biden, Lindsey Graham and Chuck Hagel

Beau Biden

my oldest friend fell victim to suicide,

Donald Trump

Democrats

ABC poll

three-quarters of American voters

Democrats under 30

a Trumpian Götterdämmerung.

The Conversation over and over again

Some Democrats

Nevada, New Hampshire, Michigan, California

Ted Kennedy weakened Jimmy Carter in 1980

Pat Buchanan hurt George H.W. Bush in 1992.

rank-and-file Democrats

Gov. Phil Murphy of New Jersey

Note: Brooks political moralizing:

I’ve tried to set aside my affection for the man and look anew at the question of Biden and 2024: Should we really do this?

Note: Biden’s age

he’s like a pitcher who used to throw 94 miles an hour who now throws 87.

he is more crisp and focused than he used to be

Biden is fit, does not smoke or drink alcohol

both men could qualify as “super-agers”

public anxieties on this front will diminish.

Note: Bidens accomplishments:

Biden’s domestic legislative accomplishments are as impressive as any other president’s in my adult life.

Biden’s team overlearned the lessons of the Obama years.

Anger about inflation is ripping across the world,

Note: Approval Ratings:

Biden’s 40 percent approval rating may look bad

Justin Trudeau 36 , Olaf Scholz29,Rishi Sunak 28, Emmanuel Macron 23, Japan Fumio Kishida 23.

Trump 38 on leaving office, Today, 48 percent.

Americans now trust Trump

Inflation: American Jaundice.

Note: The American Mood

Bitterness, cynicism and distrust pervade the body politic.

At 3.8 percent, America’s unemployment rate is objectively low, but 57 percent of voters say that the unemployment rate is “not so good” or “poor.” 

The nation’s bitter state of mind is a self-perpetuating negativity machine.

The bracing reality is that Trump’s cynicism and fury match the national mood more than Biden’s faithful optimism.

“They seem hell bent on nominating the one Democrat who would lose to Donald Trump,” Karl Rove told me recently.

Note: A return to Politics

“They seem hell bent on nominating the one Democrat who would lose to Donald Trump,” Karl Rove told me recently.

First, there is the Kamala Harris problem

People can make an all-star wish list of other Democratic nominees, but in the real world there is simply no easy way to push Harris aside.

As a former Obama administration official, Dan Pfeiffer, has pointed out, Biden has higher favorability ratings among Democrats than Trump does among Republicans

Finally, and most important, when you really start to imagine what it would look like if the Democrats didn’t nominate Biden, one whopping issue becomes clear. 

Note: Brooks puts The New Democrats and Republicans on The Couch?

A lot of the dump-Biden conversations are based on a false premise

But Biden is not the sole or even primary problem here.

…it’s the Democratic Party as a whole that’s ailing

…Morning Consult poll, Americans rate the Democratic Party as a whole as the more ideologically extreme party by a nine-point margin. 

In a recent Gallup poll 53 percent of Americans say Republicans will do a better job of keeping America prosperous over the short term while only 39 percent thought that of the Democrats.

Note: Performative Narcissist

Here are the hard, unpleasant facts: The Republicans have a likely nominee who is facing 91 charges. The Republicans in Congress are so controlled by a group of performative narcissists the whole House has been reduced to chaos. And yet they are still leading the Democrats in these sorts of polling measures.

Note: Political Nostalgia appears:

When I think back to the glory days of the Democratic Party, the days of the New Deal and the Great Society, even to the days when Joe Biden was a young senator being mentored by the likes of Hubert Humphrey, the Democratic Party was at its core a working- and middle-class party. Over the last half century, the Democrats have become increasingly the party of the well-educated metropolitan class

Note: ‘The well-educated metropolitan class’ is another way of saying the obvious, that Brooks hasn’t the balls to make, that The New Democrats, in the Persons of the Clintons, betrayed the New Deal Tradition, and became full fledged partners in The Neo-Liberal Swindle: that Crashed with a thud in 2008.

Note: The political watershed of The New Democrats:

It is not news that the Democrats have been losing white working-class voters ever since the emergence of the Reagan Democrats. But today, the party is bleeding working-class voters of all varieties.

Note: The New Democrats on the Couch again, with a nauseating dose of Brooks’ Old Time Political Religion

But Democrats are losing something arguably more important than a reliable base of supporters. The party is in danger of letting go of an ethos, a heritage, a tradition. The working-class heart and soul the Democrats cultivated through the Roosevelt, Truman and Kennedy years rooted Democratic progressivism in a set of values that emphasized hard work, neighborhood, faith, family and flag. Being connected to Americans’ everyday experiences kept the party pinioned to the mainstream

Note: The Patient Reader is near the end of this -diatribe is the wrong word , as Brooks mimes the journalistic ethos, while writing unconvincing political propaganda. He was the political protégé of William Buckley Jr. whose very politics were steeped in mendacity. Reader your are close to the end’ so let me clear away the underbrush?


As the party became dominated by the more educated activist and media sectors, it lost touch with some of what can be called its psychological and emotional power sources.


This is what happened in 2020. There were moments in that campaign when it looked as if Bernie Sanders was going to run away with the race, sending the party into uncharted ideological waters. Most of the other candidates sprinted leftward.


Joe Biden was nominated in 2020 because he was the cure to this malady. He was the guy most plainly with roots in the working and middle class. He was the guy who didn’t engage in the culture war and identity politics theatrics.


And that is the fact I keep returning to. Biden is not what ails the party. As things stand, he is the Democrats’ best shot at curing what ails the party. 


There is no other potential nominee who is so credibly steeped in knowing what life is like for working- and middle-class people, just as there was no other potential nominee in 2020. After watching him for a quarter century, I think he is genuinely most comfortable when he is hanging around the kinds of people he grew up with.


These cultural and spiritual roots give him not just a style but a governing agenda. He has used the presidency to direct resources to those who live in the parts of the country where wages are lower, where education levels are lower, where opportunities are skimpier. Biden’s ethos harks back to the ethos of the New Deal Democratic Party, but it also harks forward to something — to a form of center-left politics that is culturally moderate and economically aggressive. Aggressive in investing resources in the left-behind places, aggressive in using industrial policy to revive manufacturing, green tech and other industries, aggressive in using federal largess to bolster the care economy. His administration has put racial justice at the top of the agenda. It has moved the party beyond the technocratic centrism of the Clinton-Obama years.


 But I also find myself arriving foursquare at the conclusion that rejecting the president now would be, in the first place, a mistake. He offers the most plausible route toward winning the working- and middle-class groups the Democrats need, the most plausible route toward building a broad-based majority party. 

But it would be worse than a mistake. It would be a renunciation of the living stream of people, ideas and values that flow at the living depths of the party, a stream that propelled its past glories and still points toward future ones. 


Political Cynic

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Janan Ganesh reads an Economist map…

Political Observer wonders at this political intervention.

Recall the ascent and reign of Janan Ganesh, of another timeThose apt quotations from an obscure L.A. restaurant critic ? Or even a quote from American Silver-Fork gargoyle Tom Wolfe? In his latest essay he resorts to a map, from that 19th Century Antique, The Economist. This is his framing device for a convoluted apologetic for the Tory leaders: Cameron, May, Johnson, Truss, Sunak as not ‘hard right’. Should a report on the malign incompetence, of these political actors be forth coming? Certainly not from Mr. Ganesh, whose desperate search leads to a critique of ‘hard right’ , ‘Populist-governed’, ‘Rassemblement National’, ‘Alternative for Germany’.

‘Europe Since 1989’ offers an invaluable history of Europe, and the long term political toxin of Neo-Liberalism.

Philipp Ther—a firsthand witness to many of the transformations, from Czechoslovakia during the Velvet Revolution to postcommunist Poland and Ukraine—offers a sweeping narrative filled with vivid details and memorable stories. He describes how liberalization, deregulation, and privatization had catastrophic effects on former Soviet Bloc countries. He refutes the idea that this economic “shock therapy” was the basis of later growth, arguing that human capital and the “transformation from below” determined economic success or failure. Most important, he shows how the capitalist West’s effort to reshape Eastern Europe in its own likeness ended up reshaping Western Europe as well, in part by accelerating the pace and scope of neoliberal reforms in the West, particularly in reunified Germany. Finally, bringing the story up to the present, Ther compares events in Eastern and Southern Europe leading up to and following the 2008–9 global financial crisis.

See Chapter 4 : Getting on the Neo-Liberal Bandwagon, and Chapter 5: Second -Wave Neo-Liberalism, for the toxic legacy of Neo-Liberalism, in the former satellites of the Soviet Union.

The opening of the Ganesh’s essay:

I am looking at a map of Europe from a recent edition of The Economist. Each country is rendered in a shade of red according to its level of public support for the hard right: the higher, the darker. Populist-governed Italy is Ferrari-red. So are Poland and Hungary. France, where the Rassemblement National might win the next presidential election, and Germany, where the Alternative for Germany is polling second, are a sort of trout-fillet colour. Spain, Portugal and most of Scandinavia are one shade lighter.

Britain? Barely as pink as this newspaper. Only Ireland, Iceland, Lithuania and Malta (combined population 9mn) are paler still. If we define the hard right as a force outside, and more extreme than, a nation’s traditional centre-right party, then Britain hasn’t got a hard right to reckon with. One MP out of the 650 represents a movement of that description, and he is a Conservative defector who has never won election under his new banner. In the local elections of 2022 and 2023, extremists got almost nowhere. Make fun of the UK’s unbuilt train lines. Despair of its featherweight politicians. Just give the country its due as Europe’s haven of moderation.

A selection of Ganeshisms:

But conflating it with Viktor Orbán, or Giorgia Meloni, is whataboutery at its sour and desperate worst. Which hard-right party in Europe would fill three of the great offices of state with non-white descendants of immigrants?


It shouldn’t be a liberal taboo to say that Britain outdoes the continent at some things, including, for now, the containment of extremists. Or to ask how the country has done it.

Those in the UK who campaign for proportional representation should view contemporary Europe as a warning, not a template.


We could go into the yet deeper past to explain the failure of the UK’s hard right. The nation has for centuries had a relatively weak church. (French, Italian and Polish populists are often tied up with a certain kind of Catholicism.) Then there is the capacious nature of Britishness itself. Because of the creation in 1707 of that single state, from the kingdoms of England and Scotland, the country had early exposure to the idea that nationhood needn’t be grounded on common ethnic stock. Throw in sheer geographic distance from the “east”, and Britain is unpromising soil for a faith-and-flag, Russia-smitten, Orbán-style movement.

Well, the spread of plausible outcomes at the next UK election is a centre-right government or a centre-left one. It shouldn’t feel as transgressive as it does to say that Europe’s other democracies should be so lucky.


As a measure of the misrule/ incompetence of the reign of the Tories: Here is an issue that would never occur to Janan Ganesh!

Headline: One in seven Britons faced hunger in 2022, says food bank charity

By James Davey

June 27, 20235:48 PM PDT Updated 3 months ago

  • Summary
  • Companies
  • 11.3 mln Britons faced hunger in 2022
  • 3 mln food parcels provided by Trussell Trust in 2022/23 year
  • Ineffective social security system blamed

LONDON, June 28 (Reuters) – One in seven people in the United Kingdom faced hunger last year because they did not have enough money, according to a report published on Wednesday by food bank charity the Trussell Trust.

It said this equates to 11.3 million people, more than double the population of Scotland, and blamed a dysfunctional social security system, as well as a cost of living crisis that is showing little sign of easing.

Britain is the world’s sixth-biggest economy but its citizens have been pressured for more than a year by high inflation which has outstripped pay growth for almost all workers.

Government forecasters estimate UK households are in the midst of the biggest two-year squeeze in living standards since comparable records started in the 1950s.

The Trussell Trust’s network of 1,300 food bank centres across the UK provided a record 3 million food parcels in the year to March, up 37% and more than double the amount provided five years ago.

“This consistent upward trajectory exposes that it is weaknesses in the social security system that are driving food bank need, rather than just the pandemic or cost of living crisis,” it said.

The charity said that 7% of the UK population was supported by charitable food support, including food banks, yet 71% of people facing hunger had not yet accessed any form of charitable food support.

It also noted that one in five people forced to turn to food banks in its network are in a working household and called on the UK government to ensure the benefits system covers essential costs.

Political Observer

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@gideonrachman and the toxic myth of ‘The West’.

Philosophical Apprentice comments

Headline: Why the west cannot turn a blind eye to a murder in Canada

Sub-headline: Ignoring the possible role of foreign governments in assassinations would pose major risks to national security and social stability

https://www.ft.com/content/b42ce1d7-ed04-4e91-8465-fc618d01c557

In the Political/Moral Universe of Gideon Rachman ‘The West’ is a place holder for the American Hegemon, and its imperial self-delusions- yet the record of the utter incompetence of this hegemon is instructive: Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq, and this latest debacle in Ukraine! The watershed of America’s ‘War On Terror’ was catastrophic:

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/08/magazine/displaced-war-on-terror.html#:~:text=At%20least%2037%20million%20people%20have%20been%20displaced%20as%20a,exception%20of%20World%20War%20II.

This paragraph, my or may not place my thought, about Rachman’s attachment to The West/American Hegemon, in doubt?

But this argument misses a vital point. The US killed dangerous enemies, such as Osama bin Laden, when they were in countries where it was regarded as futile to try and use the local justice system. But the Americans do not kill alleged terrorists when they are on the territory of allied democracies. Even the Israelis are not believed to have assassinated anybody in the west since a killing in Paris more than 30 years ago

I have put in bold font the final sentence of the above paragraph. Rachman has missed and or avoided these revelatory reports? The West does not include Iran? Since Iran is beyond the pale, in that ‘rules based order’ ?


Part 1: Leading Iran Nuclear Scientist Killed

https://iranprimer.usip.org/index.php/blog/2020/nov/30/part-1-leading-iran-nuclear-scientist-killed

December 1, 2020


Part 2: Iran on Nuclear Scientist’s Assassination

https://iranprimer.usip.org/blog/2020/dec/01/part-3-world-nuclear-scientist%E2%80%99s-assassination

December 15, 2020


Part 3: World on Nuclear Scientist’s Assassination

https://iranprimer.usip.org/blog/2020/dec/01/part-3-world-nuclear-scientist%E2%80%99s-assassination

December 7, 2020


Part 4: Iran Media on Scientist’s Assassination

https://iranprimer.usip.org/blog/2020/dec/01/part-4-iran-media-scientists-assassination

December 1, 2020


Part 5: Assassinations of Iran Nuclear Scientists

https://iranprimer.usip.org/blog/2020/dec/02/part-5-assassinations-iran-nuclear-scientists

December 2, 2020


Part 6: Timeline and Fallout from a Scientist’s Assassination

https://iranprimer.usip.org/blog/2020/dec/02/part-6-timeline-and-fallout-scientist%E2%80%99s-assassination

December 9, 2020


This final sentence of Rachman’s demonstrates his deep attachment to the passé mythology, of that hallowed ‘order’.

The “rules-based order” may turn out to have some meaning, after all.

Final thoughts: Rachman’s tepid critique of Narendra Modi, reminds this Reader of Isaiah Berlin’s test of a person, a male, was weather he was ‘clubbable’… this is the political territory that fellow Oxbridger Rachman- the thin ice that he skates over. In the process the Reader is not reminded of the Pogram’s committed against Muslims in India , nor the punishment/shaming of Muslim children in Indian schools!

Philosophical Apprentice

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The death of Dianne Feinstein & Political Kitsch: Political Observer shares the orations of a trio of political scribblers!

1:

Headline: A look at the legacy of Dianne Feinstein

Sub-headline: Before her long stint in the Senate, she led San Francisco through a healing period after horrific political violence.

https://www.politico.com/news/2023/09/29/dianne-feinstein-senator-mayor-00006007

Some excerpts from The Politico obituary byDavid Cohen;

She actually had come close to giving up politics in 1978, convinced she was never going to be elected mayor of San Francisco. Instead, she was thrust into the position that November when Mayor George Moscone and fellow City Supervisor Harvey Milk, the city’s first openly gay elected official, were shot to death in City Hall by a fellow politician. After that horrifying event, she would lend a healing calm to her city — and then guide it through the AIDS crisis that followed.

“She turned out to be the right leader for the time,” David Talbot wrote years later in “Season of the Witch,” a chronicle of those harrowing days.

“The hatred was so big,” Feinstein said years later, “we really had to bring the bricks of the city together again, and it was difficult.”

Editor: 1978 Political Melodrama doesn’t age well, but in the care and maintenance of Politico, it blossoms in to an ersatz hagiography.

The trail-blazing Feinstein

“Toughness doesn’t have to come in a pinstripe suit,”

Feinstein “got shit done by working with people on both sides of the aisle and refusing to get caught up in unnecessary nonsense,” John Burton, a former California Democratic Party chair, said when Feinstein had announced her intention to retire from the Senate on Feb. 14, 2023.

“As a woman who stormed into the male world of city and national politics when it was an actual boys’ club, she’s had to put up with more rudeness and bullying than many of us can imagine,” The Atlantic’s Caitlin Flanagan wrote in 2019.

Progressives in California didn’t always find her sufficiently liberal, but her work ethic was widely praised. Feinstein strove to be seen as a consequential senator who passed legislation.

P.O. Not one word about Feinstein Iraq War vote.

Headline: War brings business to Feinstein spouse / Blum’s firms win multimillion-dollar defense contracts in Iraq, Afghanistan

By Phillip Matier, Andrew Ross April 27, 2003

https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/matier-ross/article/war-brings-business-to-feinstein-spouse-blum-s-2652085.php

2:

DiFi, Breaking Into the Boys’ Club

Maureen Dowd

WASHINGTON — I’ve always said that the Washington Monument is an apt symbol, a Freudian obelisk redolent of all the male egos that have shaped our capital.

To appreciate what Dianne Feinstein accomplished, you need to know how male this city was in 1992, when she was swept into Congress in the “Year of the Woman” as the 18th female senator in history.

That wave was buoyed by women’s anger at the vicious Republicans and inept Democrats on the white male Judiciary Committee overseeing the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings. A sexual harasser lied his way onto the Supreme Court, and now he is doing his best to corrupt it.

These women arrived on the Hill, home to historic man caves, as the journalist Jackie Calmes called the hideaways where male pols horse-traded, sipped whisky and played poker. When one new lawmaker stepped into the House elevator, the female operator said icily, “This elevator is for members only.”

Several years ago, Senator Feinstein invited me to her house one evening for a drink. I was very excited. I’d watched male columnists play golf with presidents and go drinking with male lawmakers for a long time, and now at last I was going to be ushered into an inner sanctum.

The very proper senator sat with a small dog on her lap in her elegant living room as we had a glass of wine. She didn’t want to spin me on anything or break news. She just wanted to chat. It turned out that DiFi, as she was known, regularly organized dinners with female journalists and mentored women in Congress; she often said that Washington could be a lonely, hard and mean place, especially for women breaking barriers.

P.O. Not one word about Feinstein Iraq War vote.

Headline: War brings business to Feinstein spouse / Blum’s firms win multimillion-dollar defense contracts in Iraq, Afghanistan

By Phillip Matier, Andrew Ross April 27, 2003

https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/matier-ross/article/war-brings-business-to-feinstein-spouse-blum-s-2652085.php

3:

Dianne Feinstein, the ‘Lioness of the US Senate,’ has died

ByCorine Lesnes (San Francisco (United States) correspondent)

https://www.lemonde.fr/en/international/article/2023/10/01/dianne-feinstein-the-lioness-of-the-us-senate-has-died_6142260_4.html

P.O. After Ted Kennedy Death, he was dubbed ‘The Lion of the Senate’, its not a honorific, but an expression of political kitsch!

This historic figure of the Democratic Party and dean of the US Senate died on Thursday, at the age of 90. In 1978, she became the first woman to become mayor of San Francisco, before serving as a California senator for over 30 years.

A few hours before her death, after a final vote shortly before 2 pm, she had received her former colleague Jane Harman, elected like her in 1992, known as ‘the year of women’ due to the number of women entering Congress. An emotional Harman showed what is probably the last photo of the California senator. She is seen standing, thinner, but with glasses in hand and adorned with her customary string of pearls: at work. On Friday morning, a bouquet of white roses was placed on her desk in the Senate. “We look at that desk and we know what we’ve lost,” said Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader in the upper chamber, her colleague of 30 years. “Today, there are 25 women serving in this chamber,” he said. “And every one of them would admit they stand on Dianne’s shoulders.”

P.O. Jane Harman was a notorious Neo-Con War Monger, ‘the year of women’ proved that Women, can be as corrupt and malfeasant as any man. Note that Feinstein had to be coached to say ‘ay’ to a vote, in her finale days. The Reader is rewarded in the remainder of this Funeral Oration chock-a-block with personal/political melodrama. Not one mention of :

Headline: War brings business to Feinstein spouse / Blum’s firms win multimillion-dollar defense contracts in Iraq, Afghanistan

By Phillip Matier, Andrew Ross April 27, 2003

https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/matier-ross/article/war-brings-business-to-feinstein-spouse-blum-s-2652085.php

Political Observer

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