They Never Seem to Learn
On his revitalized web site, Jeff Gannon calls himself “A voice of the new media.” Yet his is only up to his old tricks. Gannon was always a good argument for a little… Continue reading
On his revitalized web site, Jeff Gannon calls himself “A voice of the new media.” Yet his is only up to his old tricks. Gannon was always a good argument for a little… Continue reading
In Nature, Ralph Waldo Emerson writes: I am not solitary whilst I read and write, though nobody is with me. Right you are, Ralphie. Why is it, then, that so many so often… Continue reading
I am going to be re-posting some of my old blogs from 2001 here, as well as my recent ones from dKos. As you may see, I stopped blogging soon after 9/11, starting… Continue reading
In The Federalist No. 10, James Madison wrote: By a faction I understand a number of citizens, whether amounting to a majority or minority of the whole, who are united and actuated by… Continue reading
In Citizen Soldiers, his book on the US Army in Europe in 1944 and 1945, Stephen Ambrose wrote: The U.S. Army in its treatment of POWs compiled a record of decency and efficiency… Continue reading
From the Introduction to the report: Our starting point was the recognition that Africa must drive its own development. Rich nations should support that… Right… and if Africa is ever going to stand… Continue reading
Not a big one, but emblematic: Yesterday, during an interview with Mel Gibson, James Dobson referred scathingly to critics of Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ who spoke without having first seen the… Continue reading
A number of things Guckert said in relation to Counterbias’s softball questions make comment almost too easy: What would liberal bloggers do next that they could have any influence on? Character assassination and… Continue reading
Listening to so many who opposed the Iraq war, like NPR’s Daniel Schorr, now saying that Bush may have been right, that his invasion of Iraq may have opened the door to democracy… Continue reading
This may be old hat to most of you, but it bears repeating: From Plato to Leo Strauss and his neo-con children, the idea of the ‘noble lie’ has had a terrible fascination… Continue reading