30 April 2008

The Wright stuff

I want to point out this article by Salon.com editor Joan Walsh because it's such a textbook illustration of how liberals will cling to the doughy underbelly of American Exceptionalism as a sop to the Serious Establishment even as they try to keep from choking on the steady warm gusher of truth that's pouring out onto their faces. Walsh's piece analyzing Wright's appearance on Bill Moyers is littered with false equivalence, concern trollery, and flat-out lack of comprehension all in the service of singing "God Bless America" and waiting for a pony to arrive.

Let's start from the beginning. Walsh says about the now-infamous "God Damn America" sound bite:

Talking to Moyers, Wright argued that the famous "God damn America" sermon was a) only condemning bad American government actions, and b) using "damn" in a singular religious sense referring to how God treats those who've sinned horrendously (he went into hermeneutics to explain why most Americans can't understand him). But his explanation was unconvincing. Wright could probably have gotten away with "God damn Bush" for the bloody Iraq war if he wanted to, or "God damn Truman" for bombing the Japanese at the end of World War II, or even "God damn the American government!" for its many mistakes. But "God damn America" -- that's sweeping. It sounds like it's the idea of America, its fundamental principles, that he's rejecting.
It's helpful if you're going to analyze Wright's sermon which culminated in that remark to have actually seen or read most of it. Wright talked about it in more detail with Moyers, and the program aired some extended clips (you can hear the whole thing at the Anderson Cooper 360 blog.). In that sermon, Wright contrasts the nature of man. -made governments with the Christian God, and how the former will chronically lie, change, and fail. Had Walsh actually watched the sermon, she would know that "God damn the American government" is Wright's rather apparent meaning.

The second thing Walsh gets badly wrong is claiming Wright is somehow damning America's "fundamental principles." In fact, Wright's condemnation is clearly conditional. Hell, it's right there in the clip everyone has seen: "God damn America," Wright says, "for killing innocent people," "for treating her citizens as less than human," and "as long as she thinks she is supreme."

And Wright doesn't single out the American government for condemnation. He rolls out a long, though still incomplete, list of governments throughout history who failed and oppressed their citizens, from the ancient Romans, to the imperial British and Japanese among others. But this is, in many ways, a worse slight to the liberal exceptionalists, who believe in America as the transcendent apotheosis of the Enlightenment, able to surpass the petty prejudices of the dusty past.

And I'm on the left. I know huge chunks of it are true. But Wright casts his critique in such an extreme way that the possibility of redemption, the evidence that America can and has and will change for the better, is never considered.
Here comes the predictable Sensible concern trolling. Why don't you mean hippies ever talk about the good news in Iraq America? St. Barack has even said America is the last best hope for the planet; I suppose we need to listen to his message of change so we can become even more perfect!

This is why the liberal flavor of exceptionalism is often more dangerous than the conservative variety. At least the right-wingers will admit the true calling of America is to be a patriarchal white supremacist Christian empire. Liberals think America is just an abusive husband who's always sorry afterward, and they just can't wait to forgive him.

Walsh predictably plays the vapid righty "blame America first" card, then goes on to say.

The long excerpt from Wright's Sept. 16, 2001, sermon was maybe the most disturbing. He compared al-Qaida and Osama bin Laden to African slaves who led slave rebellions in the U.S. He linked the 9/11 hijackers with every decent kind of global freedom-fighter. He linked the killing of American civilians on 9/11 to Americans killing civilians from the Indians to Hiroshima to Bill Clinton's bombing of Sudan to retaliate against al-Qaida in 1998. I deplore all of those civilian killings as well, but 9/11 was indefensible. And to the extent that American foreign policy has played a role in the rise of al-Qaida, and it certainly has, anyone who wasn't a tone-deaf, tin-eared lefty opportunist looking for any chance to push their "analysis" of American evil knew that 9/16 wasn't the time to talk about it persuasively.
I'll give Walsh a little bit of credit here. At least she is reasonable enough not to buy the idea that 9/11 was a bolt out of the blue which no one could have predicted, instigated by fanatics who "hate us for our freedom." And she acknowledges that, before and since, the United States has been dealing out plenty of senseless civilian casualties which far eclipse the numbers of 9/11. But she waves them away with nary an explanation, suggesting that they are somehow "defensible," though she offers none.

Also, Walsh deserves some credit for dealing with some of Wright's most pointed analysis and not zeroed in solely on his beliefs about HIV/AIDS as most of her media colleagues have done. In Wright's sermon in which he claims the AIDS virus was a government conspiracy to commit genocide on black people, he includes it as just one of a number of other government conspiracies, including the Gulf of Tonkin, Iran/Contra, the Tuskogee experiments, phony Iraq intelligence and others, virtually all of which are now a matter of undisputed public record. Yet the press apparently believes the enormity of Wright's mistaken views about HIV envelopes and erases all of his other, correct, opinions we would rather not talk about. He isn't batting 1.000, but he's got a far better record than the press and the Decents would have you believe.

I haven't seen and thus can't comment on any of Wright's appearances since Friday night's interview, but I have noticed a rash of liberals now calling him a narcissist and egomanical, the typical reaction of anyone who challenges them from the left.

29 April 2008

Bleah

Under the weather today, so no new posts. Hopefully it's nothing too serious, I wasn't terribly satisfied with the explanation I got from the doctor's office.

In the meantime, you can join Crooked Timber and Sadly, No in mocking Foreign Policy list of the top 100 "public intellectuals." (CT commenter: "What, no Arsène Wenger?"

28 April 2008

The circus is coming to town

The press is already starting to flow in to Indiana, which is the next scheduled Decisive Primary that will turn out to be nothing of the sort. Even the hosts of "Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me" were speculating on how the Hoosier state will be pandered to. (Charlie Pierce: "They're going to do what everyone in Indiana does; leave!")

Sadly I don't have any special insight on how the state will go. Demographically, it favors Clinton, but Obama has been faring well in other deep-red Midwestern states. Evan Bayh, the state's most popular Dem politician, is in the tank for Clinton. Polls suggest it's a toss-up. It may come down to who visits more often and plays to our desperate love of flattery. This is the biggest role Indiana will ever play in presidential politics under the current system in my lifetime, and frankly, we're holding out our tongues waiting for some sweet, sweet pandering to begin.

I haven't decided whether to employ my own hard-left sexist vote (or my hard-sex leftist vote) or even if I can (shows you how much attention I've been paying). Anyway, this should be the Greatest Week Ever, and I plan to fully enjoy the mud bath before taking a good long shower afterward.

ALSO: Adding to the sudden media infatuation with our state, the Supreme Court has upheld our Ain't No Poor People Votin' in My State Bill. Can a poll tax be far behind? (Oh dear, I fear I'm giving the fascists ideas.)

Monday morsels

You can watch Bill Moyers' interview with the Rev. Jeremiah Wright at the PBS site here. I'll have more to say about a bit later today.


Guillermo del Toro has signed on to direct two films based on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit to be produced by Peter Jackson. Like Andrew O'Hehir, I come down on the skeptical side here; not because I think del Toro won't give The Hobbit a fascinating treatment, but because I'd rather see him take up more of his own visionary projects, like the brilliant Pan's Labyrinth. Watch that film, then try to imagine the same directing taking a pass at The Hobbit (which is, contrary to The Lord of the Rings, a sprightly and whimsical children's book), and I think you'll see why this is a peculiar choice.



Is this your early favorite for 2008's top documentary?



I plugged the Google Analytics tool into this site just to see if perhaps I have a massive hidden fanbase out there. Well, I don't. And that's probably for the better; I'm not sure I really want anyone reading all the faux-autodidactic idiocy I vomit up on here.


On tap for this week:

24 April 2008

Video video

Here's Bernie Sanders on the Colbert Report

And here's Naomi Klein talking about her own bad self.

You can read a Buzzflash interview with Sanders here.


I didn't write about this earlier because I figured you didn't want to be bored by two motorsports notes in quick succession, but Danica Patrick became the first female winner of a major closed-circuit auto race on Sunday at Twin Ring Motegi in Japan. Patrick took the win by being able to conserve enough fuel to make the final stint without an extra pit stop.

I'll commit a heresy here by admitting that I kinda enjoy races decided on fuel strategy. I think it's more cerebral to follow who's going where and more tense counting down laps waiting to see who's executed--or gambled--to perfection. You can't get this through the thick heads of Indycar fans though. Any fuel mileage race just sends them into spasms of caterwauling, especially if it's on a road course, where ZOMG there's no passing! I for one enjoy the variety. Hell is 25 races a year on mile-and-a-half cookie cutter ovals. (Not coincidentally, this also describes NASCAR.) I enjoy the variety.

Besides being in Japan, the race was rained out by a day and then broadcast at 10 P.M. Eastern on ESPN 32 or some such, so there were only 6 people watching instead of the usual 12. Regardless, it's nice to be in the national headlines for something besides a fatality.



The Reds yesterday sacked GM Wayne Krivsky and replaced him with former Cardinals GM Walt Jocketty, who had been hired in the off-season as a special assistant.

There may be personal factors we're not hearing about, but this looks like a disappointing bit of micromanaging panic from new owner Bob Castellini, who hired Krivsky when he took over the club in 2006. Krivsky does have a mixed record; he made one disastrous trade and his roster management hasn't been the best, but he has overseen a huge leap forward for the Reds' impoverished farm system and generally improved the roster. This one leaves me scratching my head a bit.

At least it wasn't a war metaphor

This is time to measure things by their impact on the final score, like the way we measure a drive at the end of a football game. If Clinton's down 22 points with 4 minutes to go and she kicks a 50-yard field goal, that's not a successful drive. It doesn't matter that a 50-yard field goal is an impressive achievement. She needs touchdowns and two-point conversions (not to mention an onside kick or two) to win the game, and that's not what she got on that drive.
Of course, to complete the metaphor you need to have the Team Clinton players lobbying the officials to make a field goal worth 10 points in the fourth quarter.

This is a point that needs to be hammered home to the blogs and media trying to stay neutral here. It's not a 50-50 toss-up race, it's not a "pick one of them and get on with it." Obama has an insurmountable lead in pledge delegates, and will also very likely win the cumulative popular vote excluding the MI/FL straw polls. Barring an overrule of popular opinion by the party elders--the superdelegates--he's the nominee, and I'm worried that the talk of indifferent neutrality is priming the pump for just such an occurrence by presenting a rosier picture of Clinton's current state than she deserves.

22 April 2008

Equal pay for equal work

Fred Clark has one of his best posts ever this week, and that's high praise for me as he's long been my favorite writer on the web, although we're not exactly in the same boat politically.

However, I noticed this exchange in comments which touches on something I've been thinking about lately.

@Josh: Which liberals say to "shoot all the foreigners who take your jobs"? Because if they call themselves liberals, I'm not sure they know what the word means.

In a word, protectionists. They are mostly associated with the Democrats and American 'liberals'.

As an observer of the vicious HTML Mencken v. grampaw flamewars on Sadly, No as well as other places, I've noticed this is a common cudgel used by free-traders against anti-globalization activists. Because we oppose the latest trade deal du jour we're secretly-xenophobic "protectionists" who want starving, third-world children to die because we won't allow humane multinational businesses to swoop in and pay them pennies a day for a bowl of rice.

It is indisputably true that some labor activists do campaign with appeals to xenophobic anxiety. It's the cheap way out, and I wish they would take a more nuanced route rather than exploiting dangerous preexisting tendencies which, I should note, weren't put there by lefties.

Now I am admittedly an idealistic and quite Unserious fellow, but I believe in the principle of equal pay for equal work. If you want to move your widget factory from Indiana to Indonesia, that's fine with me. Provided, of course, that you pay your new workers the same as your old ones, and give them the same labor rights and occupational safety consideration as you would if they were in the West. If you want to hire despondent immigrants in the United States illegally as fruit-pickers, that's fine. Give them full citizenship rights and pay them a legal wage.

I don't think I'm a xenophobe. I don't see how it benefits Columbian workers when the U.S. government passes a free-trade agreement in their country where trade unionists can be shot cold dead for trying to organize. The global "labor market" is an inhumane sham, only barely more reputable than the slave trade which, of course, isn't fully dead either. Why do we stand for globetrotting of corporations seeking to trap a fresh batch of desperate people stuck in corrupt despotisms?

I realize the deck is so hopelessly stacked against us that resisting is of little use. The triumph of Capital is so complete that, whenever He whines about the untenability of His life without a diet of cheap labor to imbibe, we have no choice but to believe Him. It's alright, He moves in mysterious ways.

A jester in King Capital's court

Bessie the Yorkshire porker is checking the wind velocity, and Satan is queuing up a hot cocoa. What's the occasion? Thomas Frank himself has a column in the Wall Street Journal. Not only that, he'll be a weekly fixture starting in mid-May. Rupert doesn't know about this, right? Is it just coincidence that the former editor has just stepped down? Is this just a clever joke played by a disgruntled intern? Inquiring minds want to know.

I was just wondering a few days ago how Frank manages to get himself taken seriously by the Decents. But this is beyond even the Decents; this is the freakin' WSJ op-ed page. Apparently being really, really brilliant still has a sliver of worth in America.

How much will $3 trillion buy?


In These Times covers the throwdown at the Labor Notes conference between the SEIU and CNA. I've noticed a number of libbloggers running ads from both sides in the conflict, some simultaneously, though almost no one save leftist or labor bloggers has written about it. (Open Left is a rare exception). I'm sure they''re too busy to care right now, but they'll get back to you after the election. Right?

THIS JUST IN! He's buying Newsday!

21 April 2008

Monday Monday

As promised, Lugo wins in Paraguay as opponent concedes.



I knew the New York Times must still be useful for something beyond emergency toilet paper and packaging cushion for breakables. For example, Sunday's story on the Pentagon's stable of propagandists disguised as military experts.


Item #395379 that shouldn't surprise anyone this election season.

"Moveon.org endorsed Obama -- which is like a gusher of money that never seems to slow down," Clinton said to a meeting of donors. "We have been less successful in caucuses because it brings out the activist base of the Democratic Party. MoveOn didn't even want us to go into Afghanistan. I mean, that's what we're dealing with. And you know they turn out in great numbers. And they are very driven by their view of our positions, and it's primarily national security and foreign policy that drives them. I don't agree with them. They know I don't agree with them. So they flood into these caucuses and dominate them and really intimidate people who actually show up to support me."
Oh, those hippies with the plaid and the patchouli and the not mass-murdering brown people! Can't live with 'em, can't (always) sucker 'em into backing your faux-populist imperial rights campaign. In the ranting, Clinton apparently couldn't be bothered to accurately portray MoveOn.org's position on Afghanistan (they didn't have one). These remarks are especially ironic considering the group takes its name from its genesis as an email activist list lobbying Congress to "move on" from the impeachment hearings of Bill Clinton 10 years ago.

I tells ya and I tells ya that this is the real side of Clinton/DLC politics. Now maybe you'll be a little more inclined to believe me.


Love this picture (h/t here from here)


Reminds me of another George Carlin quip on pro-lifers; "Conservatives want live babies so they can grow up to be dead soldiers."

19 April 2008

The weekender

Election news:

Paraguay could become the latest Latin American country to turn left this weekend if former Catholic bishop Fernando Lugo maintains his lead in the polls. If elected, he would end the 61-year rule of the Colorado party, the longest current one-party government in the world.

The Real News reports.

Will update when the results are in.

The ongoing battle in Nepal between the monarchy and Maoist rebels has reached a turning point, with the Maoists winning a large majority in parliamentary elections. The Asia Times reports on what this could mean for the future of democracy in this country. (Note the Travel Wisconsin ad in the middle of the story.)




The Lincoln-Douglas debate, as moderated by Charlie Gibson and George Stephanopoulos.



Jon Schwarz has the laff line of the day, from a right-winger responding to his article on the Newseum on MoJo online.
Big Business often adores regulation, because it raises the cost of entry into the market and suffocates scrappy but undercapitalized competitors. You think the steel industry, agribusiness, or banks want an economy that is more free, more capitalist, and more competitive than the one we have? You think Boeing wants a smaller, leaner federal government? Their actions suggest otherwise...
Well, I guess that explains the government-lobbyist-boardroom pipeline that appears during Republican administrations. I'd love someone to explain in which possible universe this makes any sense, otherwise I'll have to charitably conclude that Williamson is fucking nuts.


Saturday song: WHY? - The Hollows from SXSW 2008

18 April 2008

Quake News Central!

The U.S. Geological Survey has downgraded the initial Richter magnitude scale estimate, now scoring the quake at 5.2. Obviously, this is because the USGS is controlled by effete liberal bureaucrats trying to rob hard-working God-fearing Midwesterners of our hard-earned glory.

Here is the Indy Star's coverage. The epicenter was nearest to the town of West Salem, IL, about 60 miles from yours truly.

Also, we have a Wikipedia page, at least for now. Which is only fair, since the Brits got one for their wimpy fiver back in February.

In this area, we're fairly accustomed to having mine blasts, so the initial rumbling didn't immediately set off any alarms in my mind. It took about five seconds to realize that the length and magnitude of the shuddering was more severe and, besides, it was 5:30 A.M.

After that, my mind naturally went to the possible scale of the earthquake. The dormant New Madrid Seismic Zone lies along the Mississippi River in parts of the lower Midwest, and is thought by geologists to be due for a major quake in the near future. Had this quake occurred along that fault in southern Missouri or Arkansas, I realized it could well be a serious event. According to the news reports, however, it was the work not of New Madrid but the smaller Wabash Valley seismic zone. The beast remains asleep, at least for now.

Donkeyman is wrong; this is obviously God's punishment for this monstrosity.

The ground trembles!

Just had a minor earthquake here in the Midwest, 5.4 on the Richter scale centered about 40 miles NW of Evansville.

As the pros say, more details when they're available. Meanwhile, feel free to laugh your ass off as we scramble hysterically making a huge deal out of this. Whatever, California, just wait until it snows! Which, of course, it never will again. Rain, at least!

16 April 2008

Hump day news

Roy Edroso of alicublog summarizes the right-wing blogosphere in the Village Voice. Watch the results pour in!


At the whole world's only source for Giblets, the Giblets himself explains the American working class to Barack Obama.

These salt-of-the-earth folk don't need your condescending liberal elitism to tell them how they feel! They need Giblets's condescending conservative elitism to tell them how they feel! These people aren't "bitter." Far from it! America's impoverished working class are a chipper and cheerful lot, prancing and scampering about their foreclosed homes and crumbling industrial sectors with a spirit of adorable pluckiness, smiling and laughing through their unemployment and their black lung disease like a pack of hardscrabble leprechauns!
This would be funny if it weren't how the press and the neo-feudal manor lords actually believe about flyover country. Hell, it's funny anyway.

What's left in the world to see? How about a Christian racing team? In order to comply with the requisite profile of other Christian entertainment ventures, they'll be forced to use five-year old equipment and follow a more established team around the track, which would seem to make success in racing quite difficult.

This immediately reminded me of the late Doug Shierson, who owned a fairly successful Indycar team in the 1980's. After winning the Indy 500 in 1990 with Arie Luyendyk, Shierson abruptly quit the sport after the season and was never heard from again until his death in 2004. His teams were always sponsored by Domino's Pizza, which was founded by Tom Monaghan, a fundamentalist Catholic who's gone on to build his own combination Catholic university-burg on a swamp in Florida (covered here by Mother Jones). Whether this was a connection or mere coincidence I'm not sure, anyway, I don't believe there was any explicit proselytizing agenda.


Got food riots? Let them eat ethanol!

15 April 2008

Teh Rupert owns everything, part eleventy-thousand

Jonathan Schwarz covers the museum dedicated to Our Sensible Media, the Newseum, for Mother Jones.

What would it look like if Fox News produced a segment about bias in the media? Certainly it would follow the standard Fox format: conservative activists such as Accuracy in Media's Cliff Kincaid "balanced" by middle of the road corporate journalists like Clarence Page, along with Fox anchor Brit Hume and Fox contributor Juan Williams. After due deliberation, they would gravely agree that the media, sadly, has an obvious liberal tilt.

Such a segment on media bias does exist. It's not on Fox, though; it's at the Newseum, America's "Interactive Museum of News" in Washington, D.C. The Newseum reopened last Friday amid great hoopla after a move to a giant new building near the Smithsonian and an extremely expensive redesign.

Where can he be...he's lurking in the woods..he's coming out to...

Where did the Newseum get this Fox ethos? Perhaps it's a bizarre coincidence. Or perhaps it's that the video is part of an exhibit funded by $10 million from Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation.
Oh, there he is! Sadly, this "New Republic to Free Republic" spectrum is hardly limited to Rupert's enterprises anymore, as Kristol's posting at the Times aptly demonstrates. Surely, there must be a lefty less embarrassing than a man functionally incapable of ever being right about anything, but Kristol stays because he is within the window of acceptable mainstream ideas. Wisdom and general acuity has nothing to do with it.

ALSO: Now's a great time to revisit Schwarz's uncovering the lost Kristol tapes.

14 April 2008

What's eating Bill Kristol?

Don't lose hope, my young friends. Every American boy can grow up to be President, or an op-ed columnist for the New York Times. If the current shape of either of these institutions is any indication, this maxim is more true than ever. For example, let's try a Shorter William Kristol, from Monday's edition.

  • Obama's claim that the economically disenfranchised turn to religion and guns for relief sounds vaguely like something Karl Marx would have said. OOOGA BOOGA Americans! Did you hear me? Karl Marx!
That's it, Billy? Sadly, it appears so.

Obama's thoughts that touched off this latest round of pundit wankery are not new to people who follow the American political scene. Thomas Frank said something similar in What's the Matter with Kansas, which was discussed quite widely in the mainstream press. Obama may have worded it poorly, but a similar principle underlies his remarks.

But the political/media establishment has jutted forth its beak and declared Obama an elitist for supposedly calling hard-workin' salt-of-the-earth "Muricans insincere. Oh, curious peasants! They go to church and eat apple pie and care not for lost wages and insecure financial futures. What ruling class could invent such good and faithful servants as those which exist in the heads of our own political class! Why, I'll bet they'd actually support neoliberal economics anyway! As indeed some doubtless do; feudalism produces a vocal minority of viceroys to rule the serfs, after all.

It's true that Obama may not be highly credible here; part of the awkwardness in his handling the manufactured controversy comes from the knowledge that he will only be a mild reformer at best. But what's especially delicious, and proof of the meaningless train of fate of American politics, is that Hillary Clinton has been milking this "gaffe" for all it's worth. That's Hillary Clinton, whose husband's administration played no small part in creating the paradigm Democrats are currently trying to escape.

Let's finish with Billy Kristol wrapping things up in a bow.
What does this mean for Obama’s presidential prospects? He’s disdainful of small-town America — one might say, of bourgeois America.

You wonder why Billy isn't teaching those Marx classes anymore.

10 April 2008

I want my Edwards haircut news!

Last week Greenwald posted some rather alarming statistics on the American news media's oft-lamented preference for fluff stories over, shall we say, more pressing issues concerning the viability of our democracy. Megan McArdle, the Atlantic's Sensible Libertarian, responded (in a post Gavin M. riffs on lyrically) saying, in more words, Da Market Hath Spoken, and it wants more video of Obama bowling.

People who follow journalism are very familiar with this contemporary paradox. Does the press cover vapid celebrity (political or not) stories because it is all the market will sustain, or do people follow the tabloid news because they have no other alternative? I've vacillated on this through the years but more recently I've come down quite firmly in the latter camp.

An important point, which has been made in various quarters of the web, is that the declining medias (the evening news, daily newspapers) have become increasingly dependent on advertisers, and advertisers prefer to chase a certain market of the impulsively consumerist. It is not so much that Old Media couldn't pull in the same audience doing harder news but rather that they would need to pull in a much larger audience of the type that style of journalism is more likely to attract in order to make up the difference to their advertisers.

I'm a downer fatalist about this, though. As long as news remains a profit-driven enterprise, this fundamental problem will remain, and in the days of neoliberal orthodoxy, that reality isn't going to change. Like all market-driven institutions, it will always be subject to the whims and waverings of those with the most capital to influence it.

EXTRAS: Greenwald responds to McCardle and Drezner. Roy E at alicublog.

07 April 2008

Shorter Sean Wilentz

Why Hillary Clinton should be winning.

  • Hillary Clinton would be leading the race if the Democratic primary were even more arbitrary and anti-democratic than it already is.
Don't be too hard on me, I'm just getting the hang of this.

The King and us, part II

Richard Estes of American Leftist ends his post on the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. with a more concrete exploration of the theme I was poking blindly at yesterday. He points to this article by Michael Eric Dyson, whose book on King is on my To Read Someday list. Dyson writes:

King's skepticism and anger were often muted when he spoke to white America, but they routinely resonated in black sanctuaries and meeting halls across the land. Nothing highlights that split -- or white America's ignorance of it and the prophetic black church King inspired -- more than recalling King's post-1965 odyssey, as he grappled bravely with poverty, war and entrenched racism. That is the King who emerges as we recall the meaning of his death. After the grand victories of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the 1965 Voting Rights Act, King turned his attention to poverty, economic injustice and class inequality. King argued that those "legislative and judicial victories did very little to improve" Northern ghettos or to "penetrate the lower depths of Negro deprivation." In a frank assessment of the civil rights movement, King said the changes that came about from 1955 to 1965 "were at best surface changes" that were "limited mainly to the Negro middle class." In seeking to end black poverty, King told his staff in 1966 that blacks "are now making demands that will cost the nation something. ... You're really tampering and getting on dangerous ground because you are messing with folk then."

King's conclusion? "There must be a better distribution of wealth, and maybe America must move toward a democratic socialism." He didn't say this in the mainstream but to his black colleagues.

Similarly, although King spoke famously against the Vietnam War before a largely white audience at Riverside Church in New York in 1967, exactly a year before he died, he reserved some of his strongest antiwar language for his sermons before black congregations. In his own pulpit at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, two months before his death, King raged against America's "bitter, colossal contest for supremacy." He argued that God "didn't call America to do what she's doing in the world today," preaching that "we are criminals in that war" and that we "have committed more war crimes almost than any nation in the world." King insisted that God "has a way of saying, as the God of the Old Testament used to say to the Hebrews, 'Don't play with me, Israel. Don't play with me, Babylon. Be still and know that I'm God. And if you don't stop your reckless course, I'll rise up and break the backbone of your power.' "
Richard adds:
Sounds familiar, doesn't it? If King were alive today, Barack Obama would find himself criticized for attending one of his services, but, one suspects, there would be a different rule for whites. The curious aspect is that the fundamental subject of King's sermons, much like the ones of Jeremiah Wright that were publicized recently, was not the Vietnam War (in Wright's case, the Iraq one) or the predations of US foreign policy, but rather, the primacy of the Christian God over nations on earth created by men.

We are not exposed to punishment and degradation because of what we create these nations to do. Instead, we are exposed to it because we believe that the nation state is superior to the word of God. Accordingly, there is a hubris associated with such a belief that invariably culminates in brutality. Naturally, at a time in which Christian evangelicalism is ascendant, no one objected to this aspect of Wright's sermons. Liberals act as if this aspect of King's activism never existed.

I understand the point, I think, but I'm not sure I'm all the way there regarding the influence of Christian evangelicalism as a whole on the reaction to Wright's sermons. After all, it was Wright having the audacity to declare "God damn America" that had the chattering classes most ostensibly appalled. The same scrutiny is seldom given to conservative white preachers who declare various catastrophes to be God's punishment for our permissive culture. Presumably, this is because the latter group sees no special conflict between the two. Being a part of the powerful class themselves in many cases, they are more than willing to syncretize the Christian God with American supremacy.

06 April 2008

The King and us

On Friday, the world noted the 40th anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination. I'm sure I've posted it several times before, but this gave me the opportunity to revisit one of King's last major speeches, "Beyond Vietnam." Here's an audio-only version on YouTube.



It is especially interesting to review King's speech in light of the recent furor over Barack Obama's former pastor Jeremiah Wright. Wright, of course, has been tsk-tsked throughout the Sensible press for his supposedly divisive "anti-American" remarks, yet here is King, who can no longer be opposed in polite company and who even many right-wingers naively believe would be on their side today were he still alive, joining the crusade against Muslims, gays and abortions while telling the whiny Negroes to shut up already. (Though we should not spare our dear generation of Sensibles, who will spare no effort in flowery remembrances of King but are among the most enthusiastic finger-waggers at Wright.)

This is high delusion. If King in 2008 had said "the greatest purveyer of violence in the world today [is] my own government," the same roars of outrage would have poured out of the same squealing outlets which erupted with condemnation for Wright's sermons. These anniversaries give those who should be embarrassed by history a chance to whitewash their involvement. Perhaps no one could be made to confess their disdain for an American saint like King, but no thinking person should believe that none yet exists. Any hard look at King's life and where his ministry was going when it was tragically ended will reaffirm that he would have continued to be a thorn in the side of the powerful white elite.

MLK isn't the only dead radical to have his or her life sanitized for contemporary Sensibility. Mark Twain wrote some of his most vicious satire of his life against imperialism in the Spanish-American War, which would today have him thrown to the curb as "reflexively anti-American." Helen Keller's adult life fighting for socialism and later women's and disability rights is almost completely forgotten or covered up with the great newspaper euphemism "social activism." That Albert Einstein published an essay entitled "Why Socialism?" in the premiere issue of Monthly Review is hardly known to anyone at all. The list goes on forever.

I hear Einstein appears on the cover of Eric Alterman's new book "Why We're Liberals." I've heard an old truism that goes "conservatives are people that worship dead liberals." Perhaps there should be an update. "Liberals are people who worship dead leftists." We've got to stop them stealing our people.

EXTRAS:

In the current issue of Socialist Worker, Brian Jones covers King's final battle supporting the striking sanitation workers of Memphis in the days before his death.

03 April 2008

Crazy Christians: At least they're not beheading anyone

Allow me to jump on the Doughy Pantload bandwagon, by which I mean, allow me to join in the fun of taking a whack at some of Jonah's low-hanging fruit. In his LA Times column, the Pantload turns back the clock to the late 90's to whine about the insidious threat to America of...people who put Darwin fishes on their car.

I find Darwin fish offensive. First, there's the smugness. The undeniable message: Those Jesus fish people are less evolved, less sophisticated than we Darwin fishers.
I'm not going to wade into the lameness of bumper-sticker wars, but, as I'm sure nearly everyone is screaming at this point, that's rather the point. The "Darwin fish" evolved* as a response to the ostentatious displays of piety on SUVs around the country. You could put it more charitably, but it seems to me little more than an equivalent display of self-righteousness. But Jonah's lopsided sense of equivalence is only beginning.

As an aside, Goldberg's assertion that the Icthus fish is a "cherished symbol" is fairly ludicrous. It is ancient, and was once used for the purpose he describes, but had gone mostly forgotten before some Christian industry marketing whiz uncovered it and decided it would be a great way for a certain kind of bubble evangelical to purchase their public separation from the rest of the heathens.

The Darwin fish ostensibly symbolizes the superiority of progressive-minded science over backward-looking faith. I think this is a false juxtaposition, but I would have a lot more respect for the folks who believe it if they aimed their brave contempt for religion at those who might behead them for it.**
Doughload here emits a variation on the common right-wing trope. Sure, our religious nuts are a bit crazy but OMG TEH MOOSLIMS!! would totally kill ya if you said the same unkind things about them. This is the NABA-NABA principle at its finest, but I'd previously underestimated how central it is to the right-wing justification for their warmongering.

What I'm wondering is if there isn't a way in which the wingnuts view every conflict through a dualist lens. Between any two opposing forces there has to be a "good" side and an "evil" side, and we have to weigh their relative merits with the good guys having all of their faults forgiven and the evildoers punted beyond the realms of empathy and rationality. NABA-NABA doesn't register as a concern, because "less bad" is enough reason to inspire unquestioning enthusiasm.

Pandagon has a similar example: How could you possibly be concerned about patriarchal forces in the Western world when Muslim oppression of women is SO MUCH WORSE! And this is the case in every instance; how could you write even once about such lesser worries when there are worse things in the world?

See also, IOZ, Orcinus.

*Lame, but I couldn't resist it

**Doughy's huffy bravado is just all wet here. In many parts of the United States (if not most), you're far more likely to be harmed in some way for showing contempt for fundamentalist Christianity than Islam. They may not chopping heads off yet, but there are other ways to injure a person's life, liberty and prosperity.

02 April 2008

Book news

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz won The Morning News 2008 Tournament of Books. A pre-show favorite, Diaz rolled to victory over Tom McCarthy's Remainder in the final.


Several bloggers have books on the way. The prodigious Glenn Greenwald's third book in as many years Great American Hypocrites releases on April 15th. Verso Press will be publishing two books on liberal colonialist apologia: Richard Seymour's (Lenin's Tomb) The Liberal Defense of Murder and Savage Mules by Dennis Perrin.


After a few months of doing surprisingly well (for me, at least), I've slacked off on my reading again. So while I don't have a list to stack up to the Donkeyman's, I do have a few I'm especially hoping to knock off

The Complex - Nick Turse
U.S.! - Chris Bachelder
So Wrong for So Long - Greg Mitchell
War is a Force that Gives Us Meaning & What Every Person Should Know About War - Chris Hedges
The Road - Cornac McCarthy (read it before the movie comes out!)
The Yiddish Policeman's Union - Michael Chabon (likewise)
A People's History of Sports - Dave Zirin (this year, Dave!)
Overthrow - Stephen Kinser
The Trial of Socrates - I.F. Stone

...plus everything listed above.

The list goes on and on of things I'll never get to, but at least there is a list, so that's a step in the right direction.

I'll post another edition of Short, Incompetent Reviews (SIRs) soon.

And the heavens sang "hallelujah!"

It lives!

01 April 2008

2008 Reds preview (extended)

OK, I really had meant to write a more extensive preview than the one-line post you saw yesterday. Call it a pique of frustration. The good news, for what it's worth, is that, for the first time in a long time, it's may actually be worthwhile for a Reds fan to be frustrated rather than resigned with Corey Patterson and his sub-.300 on-base percentage batting leadoff on opening day.

Yes, we can be carefully optimistic that hope is on the horizon. After years of perpetual neglect in the Schott era, the Reds farm system has finally blossomed and boasts four of the top prospects in baseball in outfielder Jay Bruce, first baseman Joey Votto, and pitchers Johnny Cueto and Homer Bailey. Throw in Edison Volquez, acquired in the Josh Hamilton trade, and you could forgive Reds fans for daydreaming of the Three Right Arms of Doom. And don't get Bruce lost in the shuffle; he enters the year as the undisputed top prospect in the world, though he'll begin the season in Louisville while Patterson's cool breezes keep the Great American Ball Park crowd relieved in the summer heat.

If the youngsters emerge in time and the Reds continue to get the reliably productive performance from Aaron Harang and Adam Dunn, then contending in the still-weak NL Central isn't out of the question in 2008. Ken Griffey, Jr., slowed by age and infamously recurring injuries, is still the team's second-best bat. Second baseman Brandon Phillips, a failed prospect picked up for chump change in 2006, has been a great surprise the past two season but could return to normalcy at any moment. Edwin Encarnacion may finally have started to fulfill his own promise during the second half of last season, but he's still a terrible defender whose future is probably at first base. That's where Votto begins the year backing up Scott Hatteburg, who's not been as terrible as you'd think but is still well below the expected production for a first-sacker.

The Reds new ownership has shown an increasing willingness to spend money, though whether GM Wayne Krivsky will spend it wisely is yet to be judged. Krivsky opened the checkbook for ex-Brewers closer Francisco Cordero to shore up the Reds abysmal relief corps, making Cordero the highest-paid of an already overvalued position. Then there's the matter of free agent-to-be Adam Dunn. Dunn has been the club's most valuable offensive player for the past five seasons, but has been the target of endless scolding and ridicule from the Cincy press for his unorthodox statistical profile. If management capitulates and lowballs Dunn, or lets him walk completely, it would be a disastrous blow to the club's chances of contention in the immediate future.

In defense of Krivsky's tenure, he's shown a deft touch for reclamation projects, recalling the heady days of Jim Bowden's term in the mid-90s. Phillips, Hamilton and shortstop Jeff Keppinger were all failed ex-prospects acquired for peanuts, and the club is doubtless hoping Patterson fits the same profile. Even the desperate 2006 trade deadline deal of Felipe Lopez and Austin Kearns that left Reds fans dumbfounded hasn't turned out as bad as it might have.

To anchor the brave new era by the Ohio River, the Reds brought in celebrity manager Dusty Baker to stop the revolving door in the dugout. Baker, last seen running the Cubs into the ground, is perhaps best known for destroying the young arms of Kerry Wood and Mark Prior during the 2003 pennant race. With that in mind, it may be a blessing in disguise for the Reds to fall out of contention early, lest Baker be tempted to repeat this process with Cueto, Volquez and Bailey.

The Reds are in a state of flux and, for once, that's a positive thing. After 10 years of drudgery and hopelessness, the promise, however volatile, of a bright future looks worth the risk for Reds fans. However, it appears 2008 will be a placeholder year. Cueto is the only one of the Fab Five who begins the season as a starter, though the other four should be phased in by mid-season. If Dunn is re-signed and Harang continues at borderline-Cy Young form, the Reds should be Central contenders in 2009. The goal this year, though, should be .500 ball.

Prediction: 79-83, 3rd in Central.