The Real Humanists

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • cosmo
    Gold Gabber
    • Jun 2004
    • 583

    The Real Humanists

    November 19, 2004
    The Real Humanists
    Revolution from Afghanistan to Iraq.
    by Victor Davis Hanson
    National Review Online

    In September and early October 2001 we were warned that an invasion of Afghanistan was impossible ? peaks too high, winter and Ramadan on the way, weak and perfidious allies as bad as the Islamists ? and thus that the invasion would result in tens of thousands killed and millions of refugees. Where have all these subversive ankle-biters gone? Apparently into thin air ? or to the same refuge of silence as all the Reagan-haters of the 1980s who swore that a nuclear freeze was the only humane policy of dealing with Soviet expansionism.

    After the seven-week defeat of the Taliban, these deer-in-the-headlights critics paused, and then declared the victory hollow. They said the country had descended into rule by warlords, and called the very idea of scheduled voting a laughable notion. We endured them for almost two years. Yet after the recent and mostly smooth elections, Afghanistan has slowly disappeared from the maelstrom of domestic politics, as all those who felt our efforts were not merely impossible but absurd retreated to the shadows to gnash their teeth that Kabul is not yet Carmel. Western feminists, homosexual-rights advocates, and liberal reformists have never in any definitive way expressed appreciation for the Afghan revolution now ongoing in the lives of 26 million formerly captive people. They never will. Instead, Westerners simply now assume that there was never any controversy, but rather a general consensus that Afghanistan is a "good thing" ? as if the Taliban went into voluntarily exile due to occasional censure from The New York Review of Books.

    The more ambitious effort to achieve similar results in Iraq is following the same script, despite even more daunting challenges. Fascistic neighbors rightly see elections in Iraq as near fatal to their own bankrupt regimes. Some have oil; others have terrorists; still more, like Iran and Saudi Arabia, have both. Unlike Afghanistan, there is no neutral India or Russia nearby to keep Islamists wary, only the provinces of the ancient caliphate to supply plenty of jihadists to continue the work of September 11. Our mistakes in the reconstruction of Iraq were never properly critiqued as na?ve and too magnanimous, but rather they were decried by the Left as cruel and punitive ? as if being too lax was proof of being harsh.

    Yet, thanks to the brilliance of the U.S. military and despite the rocky reconstruction and our own election hysteria, there is a good chance that the January elections can begin a cycle similar to what we see in Afghanistan. And at that point things should get very, very interesting.

    Just as the breakdown of a few Communist Eastern European states led to a general collapse of Marxism in the east, or the military humiliation in colonial Africa and the Falklands led to democratic renaissance in Iberia and Argentina, or American military efforts in Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Panama City brought consensual government to Central America, a reformed Afghanistan and Iraq may prompt what decades of billions of dollars in wasted aid to Egypt, Jordan, and the Palestinians, the 1991 Gulf War, and 60 years of appeasement of Gulf petrol-sheiks could not: the end of the old sick calculus of Middle East tyrannies blackmailing the United States through past intrigue with the Soviet Union, then threats of oil embargos and rigged prices, and, most recently, both overt and stealthy support for fundamentalist killers.

    The similar effort to isolate Arafat, encourage the withdrawal from Gaza, and allow the Israelis to proceed with the fence have brought more opportunity to the Middle East than all of Dennis Ross's shuttles put together, noble and well-meant though his futile efforts were. The onus is on the Palestinians now either to turn Gaza into their own republic or give birth to another Lebanon ? their call before a globalized audience. They can hold elections and shame the Arab League by being the embryo of consensual government in the Middle East, or coronate yet another thug and terrorist in hopes that again the United States will play a Chamberlain to their once-elected Hitler.

    If someone wonders about the enormous task at hand in democratizing the Middle East, he could do no worse than ponder the last days of Yasser Arafat: the tawdry fight over his stolen millions; the charade of the First Lady of Palestine barking from a Paris salon; the unwillingness to disclose what really killed the "Tiger" of Ramallah; the gauche snub of obsequious Europeans hovering in the skies over Cairo, preening to pay homage to the late prince of peace; and, of course, the usual street theater of machine guns spraying the air and thousands of males crushing each other to touch the bier of the man who robbed them blind. Try bringing a constitution and open and fair elections to a mess like that.

    But that is precisely what the United States was trying to do by removing the Taliban, putting Saddam Hussein on trial, and marginalizing Arafat. Such idealism has been caricatured with every type of slur ? from both the radical Left and the paleo-Right, ranging from alleged Likud conspiracies and neo-con pipe dreams to secret pipeline deals and plans for a new American imperium in the Middle East shepherded in by the Bush dynasts. In fact, the effort not just to strike back after September 11, but to alter the very landscape in which our enemies operated was the only choice we had if we wished to end the cruise-missile/bomb-'em-for-a-day cycle of the past 20 years, the ultimate logic of which had led to the crater at the World Trade Center.

    Oddly, our enemies understand the long-term strategic efforts of the United States far better than do our own dissidents. They know that oil is not under U.S. control but priced at all-time highs, and that America is not propping up despotism anymore, but is now the general foe of both theocracies and dictatorships ? and the thorn in the side of "moderate" autocracies. An America that is a force for democratic change is a very dangerous foe indeed. Most despots long for the old days of Jimmy Carter's pious homilies, appeasement of awful dictatorships gussied up as "concern" for "human rights," and the lure of a Nobel Prize to ensure nights in the Lincoln bedroom or hours waiting on a dictator's tarmac.

    In the struggle in Fallujah hinges not just the fate of the Sunni Triangle, or even Iraq, but rather of the entire Middle East ? and it will be decided on the bravery and skill of mostly 20-something American soldiers. If they are successful in crushing and humiliating the fascists there and extending the victory to other spots then the radical Islamists and their fascistic sponsors will erode away. But if they fail or are called off, then we will see Days of Sorrow that make September 11 look like child's play.

    We are living in historic times, as all the landmarks of the past half-century are in the midst of passing away. The old left-wing critique is in shambles ? as the United States is proving to be the most radical engine for world democratic change and liberalization of the age. A reactionary Old Europe, in concert with the ossified American leftist elite, unleashed everything within its ample cultural arsenal: novels, plays, and op-ed columns calling for the assassination of President Bush; propaganda documentaries reminiscent of the oeuvre of Pravda or Leni Riefenstahl; and transparent bias passed off as front-page news and lead-ins on the evening network news.

    Germany and France threw away their historic special relationships with America, while billions in Eastern Europe, India, Russia, China, and Japan either approved of our efforts or at least kept silent. Who would have believed 60 years ago that the great critics of democracy in the Middle East would now be American novelists and European utopians, while Indians, Poles, and Japanese were supporting those who just wanted the chance to vote? Who would have thought that a young Marine from the suburbs of Topeka battling the Dark Ages in Fallujah ? the real humanist ? was doing more to aid the planet than all the billions of the U.N.?

    Those on the left who are ignorant of history lectured the Bush administration that democracy has never come as a result of the threat of conflict or outright war ? apparently the creation of a democratic United States, Germany, Japan, Italy, Israel, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama, Serbia, and Afghanistan was proof of the power of mere talk. In contrast, the old realist Right warned that strongmen are our best bet to ensure stability ? as if Saudi Arabia and Egypt have been loyal allies with content and stable pro-American citizenries. In truth, George Bush's radical efforts to cleanse the world of the Taliban and Saddam Hussein, bring democracy to the heart of the Arab world, and isolate Yasser Arafat were the most risky and humane developments in the Middle East in a century ? old-fashioned idealism backed with force in a postmodern age of abject cynicism and nihilism.

    Quite literally, we are living in the strangest, most perilous, and unbelievable decade in modern memory.

    ?2004 Victor Davis Hanson
  • Marimba
    Getting Somewhere
    • Jun 2004
    • 237

    #2
    jus too much to read

    Comment

    • cosmo
      Gold Gabber
      • Jun 2004
      • 583

      #3
      Originally posted by Marimba
      jus too much to read

      Give me a break. It will take less than 5 mins to read.

      Comment

      • Yao
        DUDERZ get a life!!!
        • Jun 2004
        • 8167

        #4
        I'll prepare an essy for this guy, I've read his stuff before. He's too stupid to be true.

        Expect an answer soon.
        Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.

        There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -Hemingway

        Comment

        • cosmo
          Gold Gabber
          • Jun 2004
          • 583

          #5
          Originally posted by Yao
          I'll prepare an essy for this guy, I've read his stuff before. He's too stupid to be true.

          Expect an answer soon.



          Victor Davis Hanson teaches at Stanford and is a proud member of the Hoover Institution. He's a historian, classicist and has studied foreign policy and world battles for over 30 years.

          I suggest you do your homework before you degrade the mans character.

          Comment

          • cosmo
            Gold Gabber
            • Jun 2004
            • 583

            #6
            Here's to being too stupid to be true eh?



            Victor Davis Hanson is a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution.

            Hanson was a full-time farmer before joining California State University, Fresno, in 1984 to initiate a classics program. In 1991 he was awarded an American Philological Association Excellence in Teaching Award, which is given yearly to the country's top undergraduate teachers of Greek and Latin.

            Hanson was a National Endowment for the Humanities fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, California (1992?93), a visiting professor of classics at Stanford University (1991?92), a recipient of the Eric Breindel Award for opinion journalism (2002), and an Alexander Onassis Fellow (2001) and was named alumnus of the year of the University of California, Santa Cruz (2002). He was also the visiting Shifrin Chair of Military History at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland (2002?3).

            Hanson is the author of some 170 articles, book reviews, and newspaper editorials on Greek, agrarian, and military history and essays on contemporary culture. He has written or edited thirteen books, including Warfare and Agriculture in Classical Greece (1983; paperback ed. University of California Press, 199; The Western Way of War (Alfred Knopf, 1989; 2d paperback ed. University of California Press, 2000); Hoplites: The Ancient Greek Battle Experience (Routledge, 1991; paperback ed. 1992); The Other Greeks: The Family Farm and the Agrarian Roots of Western Civilization (Free Press, 1995; 2d paperback ed. University of California Press, 2000); Fields without Dreams: Defending the Agrarian Idea (Free Press, 1996; paperback ed. Touchstone, 1997); The Land Was Everything: Letters from an American Farmer (Free Press, 2000); The Wars of the Ancient Greeks (Cassell, 1999; paperback ed., 2001); The Soul of Battle (Free Press, 1999, paperback ed. Anchor/ Vintage, 2000); Carnage and Culture (Doubleday, 2001; Anchor/Vintage, 2002); An Autumn of War (Anchor/Vintage, 2002); and Mexifornia: A State of Becoming (Encounter, 2003). His new book, Ripples of Battle, will be published by Doubleday in autumn 2003.

            Hanson coauthored, with John Heath, Who Killed Homer? The Demise of Classical Education and the Recovery of Greek Wisdom (Free Press, 1998; paperback ed. Encounter Press, 2000) and, with Bruce Thornton and John Heath, Bonfire of the Humanities (ISI Books, 2001).

            Hanson has written essays, editorials, and reviews for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, the International Herald Tribune, the New York Post, the Claremont Review of Books, The New Republic, National Review, American Heritage, Policy Review, Commentary, National Review, the Wilson Quarterly, the Weekly Standard, Daily Telegraph, and Washington Times and has been interviewed often on National Public Radio, the PBS Newshour, and C-Span BookTV. Currently, he is a weekly columnist for the National Review Online and serves on the editorial board of Arion, the Military History Quarterly, and City Journal, as well as the board of the Claremont Institute.

            Hanson was educated at the University of California, Santa Cruz (B.A. 1975), the American School of Classical Studies (1978?79) and received his Ph.D. in classics from Stanford University in 1980.

            He currently lives and works with his family on their forty-acre tree and vine farm near Selma, California, where he was born in 1953.

            (2004)

            Comment

            • Yao
              DUDERZ get a life!!!
              • Jun 2004
              • 8167

              #7
              Like I said, I know his works. Visited his site before.

              Has the Military Lost Middle America VDH’s Blade of Perseus // Private Papers Traditionalist and conservative America once was the U.S. military’s greatest defender. Bipartisan conservatives in Congress ensured generous Pentagon budgets. Statistics of those killed in action, in both Afghanistan and Iraq, reveal that white males, especially those of the rural and middle classes, […]


              He's not a complete asshole, but I totally disagree with this paper of his. An extremely US-centered view. Not even the slightest attempt to consider any other viewpoints and the possibility of them also being true. I'm too tired now, but I'll explain aeverything tomorrow, ok?

              Not every "professor" is always right...
              Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.

              There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -Hemingway

              Comment

              • cosmo
                Gold Gabber
                • Jun 2004
                • 583

                #8
                Originally posted by Yao
                Like I said, I know his works. Visited his site before.

                Has the Military Lost Middle America VDH’s Blade of Perseus // Private Papers Traditionalist and conservative America once was the U.S. military’s greatest defender. Bipartisan conservatives in Congress ensured generous Pentagon budgets. Statistics of those killed in action, in both Afghanistan and Iraq, reveal that white males, especially those of the rural and middle classes, […]


                He's not a complete asshole, but I totally disagree with this paper of his. An extremely US-centered view. Not even the slightest attempt to consider any other viewpoints and the possibility of them also being true. I'm too tired now, but I'll explain aeverything tomorrow, ok?

                Not every "professor" is always right...

                US centered view?

                We are at war here. We need to think strategically in order to gain momentum. Of course it's centered around us. It's centered around our foreign policy goals. You can have a different view as it relates to solving problems, but the man isn't 'too stupid to be true'.

                Duh.

                Comment

                • davetlv
                  Platinum Poster
                  • Jun 2004
                  • 1205

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Yao
                  I'll prepare an essy for this guy, I've read his stuff before. He's too stupid to be true.
                  Yao, for some reason i expected a bit more from you! Just because he might not subscribe to your 'world view' there really is no reason to insult him. Its the sort of behaviour i expect from some of our other 'friends'. I do however look forward to reading your piece on him!

                  Originally posted by Yao
                  Like I said, I know his works. Visited his site before.

                  Has the Military Lost Middle America VDH’s Blade of Perseus // Private Papers Traditionalist and conservative America once was the U.S. military’s greatest defender. Bipartisan conservatives in Congress ensured generous Pentagon budgets. Statistics of those killed in action, in both Afghanistan and Iraq, reveal that white males, especially those of the rural and middle classes, […]


                  He's not a complete asshole, but I totally disagree with this paper of his. An extremely US-centered view. Not even the slightest attempt to consider any other viewpoints and the possibility of them also being true. I'm too tired now, but I'll explain aeverything tomorrow, ok?

                  Not every "professor" is always right...
                  Each of us, depepnding on our own personal politics, will find words of 'wisdom' in different academics. Personally speaking i have a problem with Chom**y, and your comments about Hanson not making even 'the slightest attempt to consider any other viewpoints and the possibility of them also being true' applies equally to him.

                  Historiography, by it very definition, is not an exact form of study!

                  Comment

                  • cosmo
                    Gold Gabber
                    • Jun 2004
                    • 583

                    #10
                    Hey dave, do you expect any progress in the roadmap to peace now that Arafat has died?

                    Is Abbas commited, you think?

                    Comment

                    • Yao
                      DUDERZ get a life!!!
                      • Jun 2004
                      • 8167

                      #11
                      Re: The Real Humanists

                      Well, here we go?

                      Originally posted by Hanson
                      After the seven-week defeat of the Taliban, these deer-in-the-headlights critics paused, and then declared the victory hollow. They said the country had descended into rule by warlords, and called the very idea of scheduled voting a laughable notion. We endured them for almost two years. Yet after the recent and mostly smooth elections, Afghanistan has slowly disappeared from the maelstrom of domestic politics, as all those who felt our efforts were not merely impossible but absurd retreated to the shadows to gnash their teeth that Kabul is not yet Carmel. Western feminists, homosexual-rights advocates, and liberal reformists have never in any definitive way expressed appreciation for the Afghan revolution now ongoing in the lives of 26 million formerly captive people. They never will. Instead, Westerners simply now assume that there was never any controversy, but rather a general consensus that Afghanistan is a "good thing" ? as if the Taliban went into voluntarily exile due to occasional censure from The New York Review of Books.
                      Interesting: I don?t know where Hanson gets his idea of a ?general consensus?, but I haven?t been able to find one on this side of the ocean. The only consensus here is that if Bin Laden was given refuge by the Taliban, it was morally justified to invade Afghanistan in order to find him and bring him to justice. That as a side-effect the Taliban were removed was quite convenient.
                      There is still confusion over the elections, but somehow it got pushed away really quickly, and now the journals here have switched to just describing the events after the elections. At first there was suspicion all over the place, now it looks like the media and the government are trying to make us forget there was ever a doubt about those elections.
                      Personally, I wouldn?t be surpised if they actually were fraudulous: Karzai is like a puppet in the hands of the West and the US. Wouldn?t it be a shame to see him go and get someone else in charge who really isn?t that keen on the Westerners in Afghanistan?
                      Scheduled voting is not a laughable notion, but Afghanistan is still being ruled by warlords. The main export product of this moment is drugs, and the warlords are getting rich over that stuff. Growing it, processing it, exporting it. BBC article] Link
                      The only area really under control until this date is the Capital, the rest of the country is still mainly under control of the warlords.
                      Elections can be smooth and still be rigged or fraudulous. It?s very easy, to give but one example (from practice in Ghana!), to exclude groups that are not likely to vote for a candidate. Ballot boxes can arrive very or too late for ?administrative? reasons in area?s where people are expected to vote for a candidate that isn?t wanted by (in this case) the ?liberators?.

                      Don?t let all these stories about ?free? elections fool you. Remember the controversy in the US about excluding groups from voting? If it?s possible in your country, it?s certainly possible in Afghanistan.

                      Originally posted by Hanson
                      Just as the breakdown of a few Communist Eastern European states led to a general collapse of Marxism in the east, or the military humiliation in colonial Africa and the Falklands led to democratic renaissance in Iberia and Argentina, or American military efforts in Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Panama City brought consensual government to Central America, a reformed Afghanistan and Iraq may prompt what decades of billions of dollars in wasted aid to Egypt, Jordan, and the Palestinians, the 1991 Gulf War, and 60 years of appeasement of Gulf petrol-sheiks could not: the end of the old sick calculus of Middle East tyrannies blackmailing the United States through past intrigue with the Soviet Union, then threats of oil embargos and rigged prices, and, most recently, both overt and stealthy support for fundamentalist killers.
                      American military efforts have in fact broken down democratic regimes in Nicaragua and El Salvador. Try a search on the political history of the ?Sandinistas? in El Salvador, and you?ll see.
                      You know why? They were socialist democracies.
                      Parallel with this, the US and Europe have supported many dictatorial and authoritarian regimes in Latin-America and Africa, for the single reason that they could extract the natural resources from these countries and only had to pay the ?Big Man? for it. He got rich, and they took it away practically for free.
                      Victor Hanson appears to be forgetting the other side of the story here, and neglects the fact that invasions have never ever occurred out of compassion: there is always a motive, be it political or economical.

                      Look up something about Geostrategy. This is inherent to international politics, and the international policies of every country. The main question in here is: what is the position of my country in the international context, and how can I improve it?

                      The ?domino-effect? of Iraq becoming a democracy is not quite true here I think. Iraq was already politically isolated: it wasn?t an integral part of Middle East politics anymore, although there were still many connections, also unofficial ones. Also, the cases of Argentina and Iberia (Portugal & Spain) are different: those countries had an ?extension? to their countries, which required financial and material input from the motherland to sustain, and generated income through export of natural resources and the provision of lcheap abour forces.
                      The collapse of those extensions was like cutting off a limb, a big one. Maybe even like decapitation.
                      Iraq is one political body, not part of a colonial structure, and therefore it?s fall is not likely to affect the surrounding countries as much as this paper would have you believe.

                      Originally posted by Hanson
                      But that is precisely what the United States was trying to do by removing the Taliban, putting Saddam Hussein on trial, and marginalizing Arafat. Such idealism has been caricatured with every type of slur ? from both the radical Left and the paleo-Right, ranging from alleged Likud conspiracies and neo-con pipe dreams to secret pipeline deals and plans for a new American imperium in the Middle East shepherded in by the Bush dynasts. In fact, the effort not just to strike back after September 11, but to alter the very landscape in which our enemies operated was the only choice we had if we wished to end the cruise-missile/bomb-'em-for-a-day cycle of the past 20 years, the ultimate logic of which had led to the crater at the World Trade Center.
                      And here we go again, Linking Saddam with Al-Qu?aida. Osama has clearly pointed out that Afghanistan and later on, Palestine were his main inspirators, Not Saddam.
                      Altering the very landscape in which the enemies of the US operated: creating a situation in which the US has a military and strategic advantage over the Muslim states and Northern Korea, alltogether considered to be only out for the destruction of the US.
                      Maybe, just very maybe, these states just want to be granted the freedom to do things the way they like. I don?t believe for a second that their sole purpose of being is the destruction and annihilation of the good ?ole US of A.
                      Iran and Korea trying to develop Nukes is a reaction to the threats being made of an invasion in those countries. They didn?t start doing that until at some point the possibility of military actions had been mentioned. It?s a self-fulfilling prohpecy like this.
                      How do you scare off a superpower? Not by waving an AK-47?you?ll have to come up with something bigger.

                      Osama has already proven that underground actions are way more effective than building nukes to hit a big country like yours. Terrorism to kill, nukes to scare.

                      Bush wants to set the conditions for the war he thinks is going to be fought, but he?s already at war, and so the conditions are already set. A dead argument.

                      Originally posted by Hanson
                      Oddly, our enemies understand the long-term strategic efforts of the United States far better than do our own dissidents. They know that oil is not under U.S. control but priced at all-time highs, and that America is not propping up despotism anymore, but is now the general foe of both theocracies and dictatorships ? and the thorn in the side of "moderate" autocracies. An America that is a force for democratic change is a very dangerous foe indeed. Most despots long for the old days of Jimmy Carter's pious homilies, appeasement of awful dictatorships gussied up as "concern" for "human rights," and the lure of a Nobel Prize to ensure nights in the Lincoln bedroom or hours waiting on a dictator's tarmac.
                      Dissidents? Well well, I hadn?t noticed that the US had become a one-party / one-ideology state? Hanson should be very careful about his choice of words here. This would implicate that anyone that is against the war in Iraq, or doesn?t agree with they things are handled now would be a traitor to the US, an enemy of the state. Last time I remember it was China dealing with ?dissidents? , not the US. That was supposed to be a free country.
                      For my fellow democratic or anti Iraq-war US forum dwellers: this guy thinks you?re very unpatriotic. Very.

                      ?America is not propping up despotism anymore??yes it is Mr. Hanson. As long as the US has an economical advantage by doing so, they will. Know ya history.
                      If you really want to remove all dictatorships, theocracies and moderate autocracies (not-so-bad dictatorships or illiberal democracies), you?ll have quite some work laying ahead of you. What a fantasy?the only ones that will be removed are the ones that pose a direct threat to America?s political or economical interests. And don?t give me that bullshit about WWII: the US saw Hitler as a threat, both military and economically. Imagine the Third Reich as Hitler saw it: that would be an economical and military giant, unstoppable.

                      Carter is indeed a na?eve, good-willing man. His presence is more symbolical than effective, wherever he goes.

                      Originally posted by Hanson
                      In the struggle in Fallujah hinges not just the fate of the Sunni Triangle, or even Iraq, but rather of the entire Middle East ? and it will be decided on the bravery and skill of mostly 20-something American soldiers. If they are successful in crushing and humiliating the fascists there and extending the victory to other spots then the radical Islamists and their fascistic sponsors will erode away. But if they fail or are called off, then we will see Days of Sorrow that make September 11 look like child's play.
                      By all that Mr. Hanson has said before, supporting the thought that the US should tell countries what the right way of governing is (democracy) and go into countries he considers a threat to his way of life to teach them the ropes, he himself qualifies as a fascist himself. He is no better than the Muslim extremists he dispises so.

                      This battle is not decided by the bravery and skills of 20-something American soldiers: your technological advantage will guarantee the outcome.
                      And yes, towards the soldiers (boys younger than I am sometimes) this is an arrogant statement: I do not dare to question their zeal, their efforts to bring to the Iraqi?s what they think is right. I just dissaprove of the ideology they advocate.
                      I hope that someday I?ll have the courage to go to places like that to find out myself what the real story is and bring it to people out here.

                      Originally posted by Hanson
                      We are living in historic times, as all the landmarks of the past half-century are in the midst of passing away. The old left-wing critique is in shambles ? as the United States is proving to be the most radical engine for world democratic change and liberalization of the age. A reactionary Old Europe, in concert with the ossified American leftist elite, unleashed everything within its ample cultural arsenal: novels, plays, and op-ed columns calling for the assassination of President Bush; propaganda documentaries reminiscent of the oeuvre of Pravda or Leni Riefenstahl; and transparent bias passed off as front-page news and lead-ins on the evening network news.
                      America as the new, young good force in the world, with a fresh view that is unquestionably right, and Europe as the old lady that doesn?t accept her beauty of bygone days has faded away? That is put too bluntly, although the UN could certainly use some more ?American spirit? in it.
                      Phantom Menace once called it ?a Euro cocktail with a splash of balls?.

                      There is one thing Hanson overlooks: Europe is not weak in it?s view on things, but it has a political, and more important, a colonial history that is way older than the US. In fact, the US doesn?t have a real colonial history: the US has never been a colonizer. But this part of history influences the way of dealing with and looking at other cultures. I don?t know how to make this clear to you, but over here people are raised and tought a bit different when it comes to other cultures. This does not mean I think that Americans don?t know shit about other cultures and aren?t tolerant.
                      I?m talking about politics here: our political systems are drenched with the legacies of former colonies, and this chapter in our history has forced us to develop view and policies on a different basis thatn countries that do not have such a history. The colonizers have learned the hard way that blunt imposing of norms and values on another culture is a no-go. We?ve had our asses kicked over that about half a century ago. And we?re still dealing with it.
                      It?s hard to explain, but I hope you get my point.

                      Originally posted by Hanson
                      Germany and France threw away their historic special relationships with America, while billions in Eastern Europe, India, Russia, China, and Japan either approved of our efforts or at least kept silent. Who would have believed 60 years ago that the great critics of democracy in the Middle East would now be American novelists and European utopians, while Indians, Poles, and Japanese were supporting those who just wanted the chance to vote? Who would have thought that a young Marine from the suburbs of Topeka battling the Dark Ages in Fallujah ? the real humanist ? was doing more to aid the planet than all the billions of the U.N.?
                      Great rhetorics. Go work for the Bush Campaign team. Germany and France are getting more Euro-centered, which is a good thing. As soon as the US president is willing to listen again to European argument, then we can talk again. The relationship Hanson is talking about had turned into one in which the US president wanted to invade Iraq, and Germany, France and the rest of Europe to go fuck themselves if they didn?t agree. What kind of relationship is that?

                      The young Marine from the suburbs uses his gun to fight for what he thinks is good, I use my brains. Am I less than him for not picking up a weapon to defend my ideology?
                      The young Muslim warrior with his AK-47 killing Americans thinks he?s doing the planet a favour, too. I he less than him, for defending his own ideology?
                      Fuck man?I?ve said this before: try to place youself in the mind of your enemy. Try to understand his logic, and when you manage to do this, respect is not far away. The disagreement will stay.

                      Originally posted by Hanson
                      Those on the left who are ignorant of history lectured the Bush administration that democracy has never come as a result of the threat of conflict or outright war ? apparently the creation of a democratic United States, Germany, Japan, Italy, Israel, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama, Serbia, and Afghanistan was proof of the power of mere talk. In contrast, the old realist Right warned that strongmen are our best bet to ensure stability ? as if Saudi Arabia and Egypt have been loyal allies with content and stable pro-American citizenries. In truth, George Bush's radical efforts to cleanse the world of the Taliban and Saddam Hussein, bring democracy to the heart of the Arab world, and isolate Yasser Arafat were the most risky and humane developments in the Middle East in a century ? old-fashioned idealism backed with force in a postmodern age of abject cynicism and nihilism.
                      The truth is in the middle (my middle name), but Mr. Hanson immediately discards himself by:
                      • 1.Putting the USA, Germany, Japan, Italy, Israel, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama, Serbia, and Afghanistan in one folder. This is too embarassing to be true, he is a senior lecturer for christ?s sake!
                        The US became a democracy through an internal struggle, the civil war.
                        Germany, Japan and Italy got shot to shit and lost a war.
                        Israel didn?t even exist in it?s present form until after WWII.
                        El Salvador and Nicaragua have had regime changes in which the overthrowing party was severely backed by the CIA. Financially and materially. They?ve actually overthrown democratic regimes over there.
                        Serbia is not to be called a democracy yet. It is still in a transition stage, and far from stable.
                        For Afghanistan, the same. Karzai is but one of many political players over there, though more neutral than most out there. Backed by the US and the UN it was easy for him to finance his campaign, and he had the infrastructural means to reach people.

                        2.Mixing intention with outcome: Bush went into Afghanistan because they gave refuge to Osama, not to destroy the Taliban in the first place. He went into Iraq because it was supposed to be a threat, not to just install a democracy there.

                        3.Believing that cleansing the world of the Taliban and Saddam Hussein, bringing democracy to the heart of the Arab world, and isolating Yasser Arafat were the most risky and humane developments in the Middle East in a century.

                        Risky, yes, but humane? How is destroying the way of life from another people humane? How is discarding their belief, their heritage, their culture humane?
                        And Saddam, the Taliban and Arafat each had their own interests and reasons for their actions. Not all equally well intended, but not all equally malign intended.
                        4.?Old-fashioned idealism backed with force in a postmodern age of abject cynicism and nihilism?.
                        This is scary stuff. So reason and logic replaced by idealism is for the good? In the past it has been proven otherwise?



                      I promised an essay, well, here it is. It has taken me a few hours at least, so if you are answering on this, it better be good. Back it up. Furthermore: I am criticizing Mr. Hanson here, not you Cosmo. I would greatly appreciate an effort by you of bringing your own arguments to me for a little discussion, not someone else?s.

                      Dave: I may have been a bit harsh last night, I read my posts back, and all I can say is: man, I must have been really tired to put things like that?

                      Hanson may be smart, but his argumentation is weak and he is more into using rhetorics than fact-based arguments. Given his status at Stanford University this paper is a disgrace to political sciences.
                      I am but a student, but if I?d pass this on to any senior political scientist this paper would be flamed.

                      Respect though to anyone trying to make an effort to understand the chaos that is at present ruling global politics?I don?t understand shit of it for one. :wink:
                      Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.

                      There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -Hemingway

                      Comment

                      • cosmo
                        Gold Gabber
                        • Jun 2004
                        • 583

                        #12
                        Re: The Real Humanists

                        Interesting: I don?t know where Hanson gets his idea of a ?general consensus?, but I haven?t been able to find one on this side of the ocean. The only consensus here is that if Bin Laden was given refuge by the Taliban, it was morally justified to invade Afghanistan in order to find him and bring him to justice. That as a side-effect the Taliban were removed was quite convenient.
                        There is still confusion over the elections, but somehow it got pushed away really quickly, and now the journals here have switched to just describing the events after the elections. At first there was suspicion all over the place, now it looks like the media and the government are trying to make us forget there was ever a doubt about those elections.
                        Personally, I wouldn?t be surpised if they actually were fraudulous: Karzai is like a puppet in the hands of the West and the US. Wouldn?t it be a shame to see him go and get someone else in charge who really isn?t that keen on the Westerners in Afghanistan?

                        I am going to stop right here, because it's a waste of time and I have learned that you cannot argue with an irrational opponent that doesn't a) will not seek the truth b) wont accept reality. So I will not go any further than where I am now.

                        The elections were successful with little opposition at the polls. The opponents of Karzai have ceded that it was a clear win.

                        So, again, how is Karzai a puppet, when the huge majority voted for him?

                        What world are you living in?

                        Man, I see irrationality all through your dialogue. Unbelievable.

                        Comment

                        • Yao
                          DUDERZ get a life!!!
                          • Jun 2004
                          • 8167

                          #13
                          The opponents have conceded, but have NOT withdrawn their accusations of irregularities my friend. In fact, one of them (I'll look it up for you) has said that, despite his suspicions of fraudm he concedes in the interest of the country.

                          Read your news man, don't call me irrational because you have been misinformed.

                          I'm done with this, I expected a little more.
                          Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.

                          There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -Hemingway

                          Comment

                          • cosmo
                            Gold Gabber
                            • Jun 2004
                            • 583

                            #14
                            I have to rebut my earlier statement. I am so livid in regards to your ignorance on why things have happened in the past that I have GOT to respond, so it will take a while. I will be back later.

                            Comment

                            • davetlv
                              Platinum Poster
                              • Jun 2004
                              • 1205

                              #15
                              Re: The Real Humanists

                              Hey Cosmo, nice to see you back with us!

                              The thing with the road map is that is promised an independant viable Palestinian state by 2005, free from Israeli occupation. However, to achieve this the PA had one main goal, disband the terror organisations in both the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Thats it. Thats all they had to do.

                              Israel had other requirements placed upon it in the framework of the Roadmap, some of these things she achieved and some she didn't.

                              Naturally Israel refused to meet all its criteria until the PA and Arafat started work on the one thing they had to do. Maybe Arafat couldn't break up terror organisations, or more likely didn't want to, either way both parties neglected the Roadmap and it should now be thrown in the trash with all the other dead plans!

                              I do blame Arafat for the Roadmap failing. I blame Arafat for our two countries still being at loggerheads, I blame Arafat for throwing away the chance for peace that Barak made, and most of all I blame Arafat for enabling Ariel Sharon to be elected Prime Minister of my country.

                              That said, if Sharon keeps to his word, like it looks like he will, and withdraws from all of the Gaza Strip and some of the West Bank, then the intentions of the Roadmap can still be achieved.

                              As for Abbas; As he is not tainted with blood like Arafat, as he is a realist unlike Arafat and as it seems he cares more about his people then lining the his own pockets, I am prepared to take him on face value and hope finally we might have a partner for peace!

                              Comment

                              Working...