Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Yet Another Week

Sunday, August 3rd, 2003

This week we have a couple of issues to consider: First, we find another example of Reuters News Service treating the news as an opportunity to editorialize. Second, we learn how poorly and embarrassingly incompetent a peer-reviewed journal paper can be written and yet still be published.

It must have been exciting for Deanna Wrenn. Wren is a statehouse reporter for the Charleston Daily Mail. The Charleston Daily Mail is important in Charleston, West Virginia, but it does not enjoy the prestige of the New York Times or the Washington Post . Wrenn was reporting on the return of former POW Jessica Lynch to her home town in West Virginia after her release from Iraqi captivity and recovery in a military hospital. Wrenn was undoubtedly pleased when her story was picked up by the Reuters News Service and spread quickly around the Reuters global news network.

Wrenn originally wrote: “In this small county seat with just 995 residents, the girl everyone calls Jessi is a true heroine — even if reports vary about Pfc. Jessica Lynch and her ordeal in Iraq.” Certainly, this represents a positive view of the Jessica Lynch story, but probably accurately reports the sentiment of Lynch’s friends and neighbors in her home town.

After Reuters edited the story the words and the tone radically changed. According to Reuters: “Jessica Lynch, the wounded Army private whose ordeal in Iraq was hyped into a media fiction of US heroism, was set for an emotional homecoming on Tuesday … Media critics say the TV cameras will not show the return of an injured soldier so much as a reality-TV drama co-produced by US government propaganda and credulous reporters.” This represents such a negative spin on the story that Reuters should have run this statement as an editorial rather than as straight news.

News services edit stories all the time. For good or for ill, that is their right. What Reuters did that was particularly egregious was to keep Wrenn’s byline on the story. Wrenn’s story did not bear any significant resemblance to the story Reuters published. Wrenn was so embarrassed by the tone of the story that she asked “Reuters to remove my byline. They didn’t.”

A year ago, Reuters made it a formal policy to refrain from referring to any person as a “terrorist,” using the specious reasoning that one person’s terrorist is another person’s freedom fighter, as if there is no meaningful difference between a George Washington and an Osama Bin Laden. Presumably, Reuters did not believe its judgment is sufficiently discriminating to discern whether people are deliberately targeting civilians in actions that have no significant military value. If we extrapolate from Reuters actions with respect to the Wrenn story on Jessica Lynch, perhaps Reuters was correct in not trusting its own judgment

While Reuters was busy creatively editing news stories from West Virginia, researchers from the University of California at Berkeley decided to spread a little confusion as well. A study conducted by Professors Jack Glaser and Frank Sulloway of Berkeley, John Jost of Stanford University, and Arie Kruglanski of the University of Maryland at College Park concluded that political conservative generally shared some common character traits. These traits include “aggression,” “intolerance,” “uncertainty avoidance,” and the “need for cognitive closure.”

To reach these conclusions, the learned professors studied conservatives from Mussolini, Hitler, to Stalin, Khruschev and Castro. There is a reasoned case made by Frederick Hayek that Nazism and Fascism fall closer in the political spectrum to statist philosophies as opposed to those in favor of more limited government. However, classifying Mussolini and Hitler as conservatives conforms to conventional, if inaccurate usage. Inexplicably, the authors also include Castro and Nikita Kruschev as conservatives. This inclusion should certainly come as a surprise to a century of Leftists who have made careers as apologists for these Communist dictators. It does certainly seem that the authors were trying to contrive their assumptions to drive their conclusions in a certain direction.

However, even allowing for all these improbable assumptions, the authors are only able to demonstrate an incredibly low correlation between persons who are political conservatives and the traits they cite. Almost none of the natural human variability in personalities can be accounted for by the conservatism of the person. For most scientists, models with such low correlation would not be considered explanatory and would be categorically dismissed. But what do they know? These professors unlike conservatives and most scientists are “tolerant of ambiguity” and not unduly constrained by the week-minded need for “cognitive closure.”

Great To Be Home Again

Sunday, July 27th, 2003

One of the joys and pleasures of foreign travel is experiencing different ways of living and sharing different viewpoints. Such exchanges can grant greater perspective on typically American ways of doing things; what things can be improved upon and what things we should be grateful for. By and large, especially when visiting Europe, it is amazing to see how broadly and remarkably similar Western cultures are. The range of cultural differences between the US and among the countries of Europe is certainly smaller than it was a century ago. How different can places be when globalization permits us to watch the same movies, buy the same cars, and even eat at the same restaurant chains. However, it is still not clear whether the ability to buy beer at a McDonald’s in Europe compensates for the fact that in Europe McDonald’s charges for each individual package of ketchup.

Some of this homogenization is resented. France, ever desperate and fearful of its loss of cultural distinctiveness, recently decided that the term “e-mail” cannot be used in official French documents. The official term is “courrier electronique,” literally “electronic mail” or “courriel” for short. But we live in a democratic age. What is right is not is determined by linguistic heritage or consistency but by popular usage. The use of “courriel” will likely only remain a monument, as if another is needed, to French snobbishness.

Despite the fact that people will determine their own practices and ideas, popular perception can be driven by media coverage and this coverage seems to differ between the US and Europe more than cuisine. It is, therefore, particularly disheartening, after a week in France, to see the persistent and almost maliciously negative coverage of the United States in the foreign press. In fairness, my French is not good enough to listen to French coverage with an ear attuned to subtleties, so my perceptions apply only to watching CNN (directed from their British offices) and the BBC.

Of course, all news is slanted by decisions on what to cover. The pursuit of those stories that editors and producers consider important can definitely affect the overall perspective the public receives. Within this context, CNN-Europe and the BCC do a credible job covering the straight news at the top of the hour. They report the latest news from Iraq and other news centers, the current levels of the stock market indices, and the worldwide weather.

However, during the intervening times, the news hosts discuss the news with guests and it is here than biases become even more apparent. Last week, the major news surrounded the killing of Saddam Hussein’s cruel and brutal sons Uday and Qusay, after a shoot out with American troops. On the first day of coverage, even before the details of the shoot out became clear, there was rather idle speculation about why the sons were not captured rather than killed. All this speculation came before it was known whether such a capture was even possible. It only came out later, that at least one of the sons probably committed suicide. Of course, if a delay in the siege of the building holding Uday and Ousay allowed the sons to escape, that too would have been viewed as an American failure.

The day after Uday and Qusay died, BBC rattled on about Iraqi incredulity about the deaths and how the US would have to provide proof that the sons were dead. As some have suggested, Iraqis were in the same positions as the Munchkins in the movie the Wizard of Oz, incredulous as to whether the their tormentor, was “morally, ethically … spiritually, physically … positively, absolutely … undeniably and reliably dead!” The BBC assured us that photographs confirming the death of the sons were necessary to assuage the Iraqi fear of retribution from the former regime.

The next day, CNN and BBC waited breathlessly for the release of photographs of Uday and Ousay and broadcast them as soon as they possibly could. Although the photographs were not particularly appealing, they were not in my judgment, as gruesome as CNN and BBC warned us. However, not twenty-four hours later CNN and the BCC were prattling on about how the US was violating its own rules in releasing the photographs. If there was something unethical or inhuman about showing those photographs, surely CNN and the BBC were complicit since they showed little reticence is displaying and regularly re-displaying those images.

Liberia was also an issue during the past week. CNN and the BBC relentlessly warned of the chaos and the need for US military intervention. One can be sure that following any such intervention CNN and BBC will be at the forefront showing problems with such an intervention without ever returning to the original context that they helped provide.

Finally, the BBC interviewed Senator Bob Graham from Florida, the Co-Chair of the Joint Inquiry on the 9/11 Terrorist Attacks who made some very critical remarks about the Bush Administration. While Graham is certainly a reasonable person with important contributions to make on issues of security, not bothering to mention that Graham was also running for the Democratic presidential nomination withheld from the viewers important if not crucial context for weighing Graham’s remarks.

In short, foreign news coverage made the US’s PBS look like Pat Robertson’s CBN. The only unifying theme of the foreign coverage was whatever the US government (and in particular the Bush Administration) did was wrong; even if the news coverage previously encouraged it. It was nice to return back to the US and watch Fox News coverage. I can now even appreciate CNN-US and MSNBC coverage. There is nothing like a trip to a foreign country to make one grateful for what one has at home.

Free Speech at Cal Poly

Sunday, July 13th, 2003

It doesn’t happen very much any more, but stories used to surface about some isolated school or school district, usually in the South, conducting formal collective prayers. Usually, some small town, where everyone attends a few local churches, doesn’t see the harm in a modest measure of collective religious instruction and ceremony, even in a public school context. Inevitably, a newcomer moves in and complains. If a school does not adjust its policies, the courts instruct the offending school to cease conducting prayers. While it is not possible to peer with a high degree of certainty into people’s hearts, it is usually the case that these small town schools did not deliberately set out to offend anyone. It is just by living in a religiously uniform environment they had not developed the habits of recognizing that others might believe differently.

By contrast, the last place one would expect to see intolerance and the inability to recognize the peaceful existence of alternative ideas ought to be a modern university. A college or university ought to be an intellectual free-fire zone. While all ideas may not be universally accepted and certainly do not all have the same merit, they all have the right to be expressed and examined in the crucible of thoughtful debate. Furthermore, one would expect that the administration of any university would be particularly careful to insure that the ethos of open inquiry is maintained, free of intimidation. Lately it appears that at some universities an environment of intimidation prevails for ideas that are not in current favor. One such place is California Polytechnic State University.

According to the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), on November 12, 2002, Steve Hinkle, a member of the Cal Poly College Republicans (CPCP) was going around campus posting fliers inviting students and faculty to a speech by the author of It’s OK to Leave the Plantation, by Mason Weaver. Mr. Weaver is a black man whose thesis is that the reliance of black Americans on government programs creates a dependency broadly analogous to slavery. Mr. Weaver’s speech was an officially sponsored campus activity.

Apparently, Hinkle committed the unforgivable sin of attempting to post a flier on a public bulletin board in an open student lounge in the Cal Poly Multicultural Center. Other students objected to the posting finding the flier (the flier listed the name of the speaker, the title of his book and the time and location of the speech) offensive. Intimidated, Hinkle left without posting the flier. This did not stop students from calling the campus police about “a suspicious white male passing out literature of an offensive racial nature.” The police arrived, but by that time Hinkle had left.

Now it is clear that Cal Poly could not sanction Hinkle for posting a flier, first it was perfectly appropriate and second he was prevented from posting it. Instead, the university out of fear of offending students at the Multicultural Center charged Hinkle with disrupting a college activity. The campus police did not report a disruption and there was not any official activity going on in the open student lounge. After the fact, students at the Multicultural Center said Hinkle was disrupting student Bible study. Everyone admits that Hinkle did not approach any students, but that students approached Hinkle. Further there was no sign indicating that a meeting was being conducted in the lounge. To all outward appearances, there were just some students in the lounge eating pizza.

Rather than sanctioning students for preventing someone from engaging in protected speech, the Cal Poly Administration held a hearing on whether to punish Hinkle. Though Hinkle had a faculty advisor, he was specifically forbidden from being represented by a private attorney at the hearing. At the hearing, Cornel Morton, vice president of student affairs said to Mr. Hinkle, “You are a white member of CPCR. To students of color, this may be a collision of experience. The chemistry has racial implications, and you are naïve not to acknowledge those.” In other words, there are certain places on campus where conservative whites should know better than to visit.

Imagine the opposite, though analogous situation. Imagine if a black student sought to post a flier for a campus-sponsored speech and if some white students had intimidated him into not posting the flier and called the campus police about a “suspicious black male.” Imagine further a college administrator who would condescendingly lecture the black student that he should know better than to post such a flier in an area frequented by white students. Everyone would be rightly indignant and my guess is that Mr. Morton would have led the charge to protect the rights of a student to post a flier on a public bulletin board.

Nonetheless, Hinkle has been found guilty of disrupting a student meeting and instructed to write an apology letter or face the possibility of expulsion. Hinkle has refused and no additional punishment has been meted out. The case has received national attention and the university is obviously not comfortable defending its actions. It is quietly hoping the issue will fade away. If not for the embarrassment of the public exposure of its attempt to permit and implicitly condone the intimidation of students, Hinkle would likely have received additional punishment. It is clear that the students at the Cal Poly Multicultural Center have won. It will take a very courageous student to again attempt to post a flier at the Multicultural Center for a conservative speaker.

In many ways, some colleges have become the most intolerant places to be. One would hate to live in a world ruled with the same arbitrary iron fists that some modern college campuses are governed. Unlike small town elementary schools, universities can not claim lack of sophistication as an excuse.

European Paradise and American Power

Sunday, June 22nd, 2003

Imagine a person armed with only knife alone in the woods with a dangerous bear, prone to attack, lurking somewhere nearby. This person’s wisest option would be to remain silent and hope for the best. Certainly, to go preemptively after the bear with only a knife entails an even greater risk. Imagine another person in a similar situation except armed with a high-powered rifle. It may prove to be less risky for this second individual to actually go after the bear to eliminate the threat. Waiting for a surprise attack may make the rifle less useful. Whatever decision either individual ultimately makes, it is clear that the level of personal power and armament affects the assessment of risk and strategy.

This metaphor is how Robert Kagan, of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, describes the central thesis of his short book Of Paradise and Power. The large and growing disparity between the United States and Europe in their ability to project military power drives the growing fracture between the American and European views of the world. What makes these differences more difficult is the fact that both views are also animated by a myth or story that persuades both Americans and Europeans that they are setting a moral example for the world.

The United States began over two hundred years ago as a consciously different state designed to avoid the tyranny and impoverishment of Europeans. American avoidance of European politics was rooted both in an abhorrence of power politics as conducted by the corrupt monarchies of Europe and the fact that America was so militarily impotent that its situation represented that of a lone person in a woods armed with only a knife. Nonetheless, the American political model has spread. Americans can justifiable claim that successful adoption of capitalistic constitutional democracies serves as a global model for freedom and affluence. In addition, over the past century, especially during World War I, World War II, and the Cold War, America saw its military power as necessary and decisive in the protection of freedom and democracy.

The recent European experience is quite different. Chastened by over a half a century of power politics and nationalism that resulted in the death of millions of Europeans, they have adopted an abiding belief that security can only be attained through multi-national agreements and negotiations. The way to deal with adversaries is to negotiate and negotiate, building larger agreements on the foundations of trust nurtured from previous smaller agreements. Europeans are justly proud of the application of this approach and the astonishing emergence of the European Union. Once implacable adversaries like France and Germany can now share a common currency. According to Kagan, the qualities that comprise the contemporary European strategic culture are an “emphasis on negotiation, diplomacy, on international law over the use of force, on seduction over coercion, on multilateralism over unilateralism.”

Europeans believe that they have mastered an important model for conflict resolution that might be applicable to other intractable conflicts like the one between the Israelis and Palestinian Arabs. This is why Europeans, from the American perspective, seem irrationally wedded to process and engagement. The European hope is that process and engagement substitute for military conflict and, in perhaps unforeseen ways, possibly decades in the future, will ultimately lead to some sort of reasonable resolution.

The situation is filled with ironies. In truth, Americans would also prefer a world governed by the rule of law between liberal democracies linked by the cordial bonds of free trade. However, because the United States is the dominant superpower, it has duties it believes requires the occasional application of force and doesn’t much like being overly criticized by those unwilling to make the economic and political commitment to a military large enough to deal with threats. “Americans, as good children of the Enlightenment … retain hope for the perfectibility of the World. But remain realists in the limited sense that they still believe in the necessity of power in a world that remains far from perfection.”

On the other side, the “paradise” of law, reason, agreements, and trade that exist in Europe was made possible during the Cold War because of the protection afforded by American power. Even after the Cold War, Europeans have embarrassingly realized that they needed American power to deal with the ethnic cleansing by Serbian dictator Slobodan Milosevic within the European continent. Europeans are hardly likely to project power around the world, when they cannot manage to do so even locally. Without US power, European negotiation would not have significantly abated the cruelty in the Balkans.

Moreover, it was nudging by the United States that persuaded England and France to acquiesce to German unification at the end of the Cold War, an event that contributed to the current success of the European Union.

The divergence of American and European perspectives is likely to grow larger. Given economic difficulties, Europe is not likely to significantly increase military spending. The US feels more threatened by international terrorism and will continue to increase military spending in real terms. Even more ominous for the Europeans, their populations are rapidly aging. According to Kagan, by the middle of this century the median age of a European with rise to 52.7 from 37.7 years, while immigration will keep the US’s median age in the mid 30’s, at 36.2 from its current 35.5 years. European economies will consequently be struggling under a much greater relative burden to care for their elderly. Also by mid century, disparate economic growth rates will result in an American economy twice as large as Europe’s. In the latter half of this century, the odds are Europe will unfortunately be economically, militarily and consequently politically far less relevant.

This is not a cause for smugness or joy, as tempting as the French sometimes make it to indulge in such emotions. The West including the US and Europe will face a much more populous and more powerful China later this century. If we are fortunate, economic liberalization will attenuate any Chinese threat, but this scenario is not a certainty. Kagan hopes that an understanding of the political, economic, and military dynamics that are driving America and Europe apart will serve to increase empathy on both sides. America may be getting large and powerful enough to “go it alone,” but it is not in its best interest to do so.

Kagan concludes that the United States should not be overly concerned with pulling Europeans into international decisions. “Rather than viewing the United States as a Gulliver tied down by Lilliputian threads, American leaders should realize that they are hardly constrained at all, that Europe is not really capable of constraining the United States.” This “generosity of spirit” would assuage European sentiment. Kagan, in essence, is arguing for international leadership through psychotherapy. Voluntarily engage Europeans so that they continue to feel good about themselves and will consequently be predisposed to think well of us.

Re-Living History

Sunday, June 15th, 2003

David McCullough has recently written the definitive popular biography of John Adams. Drawing upon Adams’s prolific collection of letters to his wife Abigail and his erstwhile political ally and adversary Thomas Jefferson, McCullough was able to recreate both the character and political genius of the thoughtful, honest and sometimes pompous and sanctimonious founding father. As McCullough explains it, his original intention was “doing a dual biography of Adams and Jefferson and their intertwining lives.” However, while McCullough had depth of both personal and political material with which to explore Adams, there was a wall hiding Jefferson the man. For example, Jefferson destroyed all the letters to and from his wife he could find. Moreover, listening to McCullough, one gets the impression that he simply likes spending time in the ethereal presence of Adams. Life is short and although it is impossible to study Adams without coming to an understanding of Jefferson as well, McCullough apparently would rather spend more of his time with Adams than Jefferson.

Invoking the same privilege as a reader, not an author, I beg forgiveness for not spending 576 pages with Hillary Clinton’s new book Living History. It is not that she is uninteresting. If I could gain an important insight into her political philosophy, perhaps I might be persuaded to live with her mind for a short period. I remain unpersuaded.

There are partisans who will parse the book and undoubtedly find passages of dubious credibility and Mrs. Clinton’s defenders who defend her veracity immune to the evidence. I fear the book will prove to be a long and tedious Rorschach inkblot test. The impression one has of Mrs. Clinton only be reinforced by the book. Mrs. Clinton’s detractors will find additional evidence to confirm their distaste, while her puppy-eyed followers will lap up her auto-hagiography. Book reviews will say more about the reviewer than about the New York Senator. I know myself well enough to not need to see my own reflection in Ms. Clinton’s ghost-written words.

Perhaps, Matt Lambash’s review had it right when he said that Living History is one long exercise in resume writing. Mrs. Clinton is using the book as a start to a long job interview with the American public to become president. There is a considerable history of political candidates writing books to kick off elections runs. Remember, Jimmy Carter’s book that asked “Why Not the Best?” Most people answered the question in the affirmative in 1980 by voting for Ronald Reagan.

Despite the history of pre-campaign books, do we really need to know about Mrs. Clinton’s appointment as co-captain of the school safety patrol? Anyone who would look back at that experience and conclude, “my new status provided me my first lesson in the strange ways some people respond to electoral politics” has a prism on the world that only allows the political component through. Perhaps a question that Americans will be forced to answer in a future Hillary Clinton presidential bid is whether they would like to be governed by someone who is still concerned enough about a school safety patrol election to write about it decades later. By way of contrast, Ronald Reagan eschewed school safety patrol politics and was a lifeguard who saved dozens of lives.

As much I or other Conservatives may wish to avert their gaze, Clinton’s star will glow for a long time, extinguished only when she is definitively defeated electorally. There was a time when some Democrats looked wistfully at Edward Kennedy as a president that could bring back the heady days of John Kennedy’s Camelot. Seeing weakness in President Jimmy Carter’s re-election bid, Edward Kennedy challenged Carter for the Democratic nomination. Democrats looked at Kennedy and balked. Since then, Kennedy has been confined to the Senate. Unencumbered by realistic presidential aspirations, he moved left to his natural and comfortable position in the political spectrum. Will this be Clinton’s fate? Perhaps Clinton will be defeated for re-election to the Senate by Rudy Giulliani. Perhaps she will be defeated in 2008 in a presidential bid. Perhaps she will be successful in a presidential run. However, only an electoral loss will stop this famous co-captain of the school safety patrol.

There you see evidence of my original proposition that Living History is merely a Rorschach test. I have not read Living History and I already have had my preconceptions about Mrs. Clinton definitively confirmed.

William Bennett’s Hypocrisy

Sunday, June 1st, 2003

“Hypocrisy is the homage vice pays to virtue.” — Francois, duc de La Rochefoucauld. “For I delight in the law of God after the inward man. But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members.” — Romans 7:22-23.

To the chagrin of some and the delight of others, Joshua Green recently revealed in the Washington Monthly that the compiler of The Book of Virtues, William Bennett, is a high-stakes gambler who has lost millions in casinos over the years. Since Bennett has spent much of the last decade stressing the importance of living up to ethical and moral responsibilities, this now conspicuous indulgence reeks of hypocrisy. Though Bennett spared us the specific moral condemnation of legal gambling and thus avoided direct insincerity, there can be no doubt that Bennett’s excessive gambling constituted hypocrisy. The very first virtue listed in The Book of Virtues, is “self-discipline.” Clearly, the extent of Bennett’s gambling fell far outside even generous boundaries of moderation. Moreover, Bennett is a director of the non-profit advocacy organization, Empower America. Empower America has argued against the extension of legal gambling.

However, some of Bennett’s critics, who have derived guilty pleasure at Bennett’s predicament, have revealed an obvious hypocrisy on their own part. Those who opposed Bennett in the past have argued that the private lives of public figures are not legitimate areas of inquiry lest a private problem spills into the public. However, we were not made aware of Bennett’s gambling problems because of illegal activity, a lawsuit, or a bankruptcy. They did not spill unbidden into the public. Bennett was outed by gleeful and zealous investigative reporting. The investigation of Bennett is reminiscent of the actions of those who believed that the best way to prevent Judge Robert Bork’s view of privacy rights from the Supreme Court was to acquire a list of Bork’s private video rentals hoping to find embarrassing titles.

Liberal columnist and television commentator Michael Kinsley argues that private issues become fair game when they reveal hypocrisy. Apparently, knowledge of the disconnect between private and public persona justifies private intrusion. It is unlikely that Kinsley would have subscribed to his own argument if someone had suggested that the contradiction between President Clinton’s private exploitation of women and his supposed support for the Liberal vision of women’s issues justified exposure of Clinton’s personal activities. By logical extension, Kinsley’s use of inconsistency dissolves the private in the solvent of human imperfection. Is it not true that we all publicly affirm ideals we aspire to but can never in reality completely achieve?

It is inevitable that those that demand the most from us are and ought to be judged by higher standards. Nonetheless, we must not confuse the message with the messenger. Intemperance by Bennett is not a refutation of temperance. The easiest way to steer clear of the flaw of hypocrisy is to affirm no values or standards against which one can be harshly judged. The more noble the aspirations, the more difficult it is to avoid hypocrisy.

One important measure of character and integrity is one’s response when confronted with a personal problem. Does one blame others for the fault or assume personal responsibility? Does one engage in denial or prevarication? Bennett has dealt with the charge of excessive gambling with a twinge of denial, not quite admitting to having a problem. Bennett at first excused his gambling by saying that he had not lost the “milk money.” However, having avoided bankruptcy is more a measure of the depth of Bennett’s resources then the shallowness of his problem. After greater consideration, Bennett has conceded that he has “done too much gambling” and promised that his “gambling days are over.” We hope for the sake of his family that he can keep his promise

Compare Bennett’s reactions to that of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s. Kennedy rants against the use of sports utility vehicles and high gas consumption by Americans, but considers inquiries as to what he drives and his use of private planes an invasion of privacy. While we ought not expect perfection from those in public, they must recognize that their persuasiveness, their moral authority, is proportional to the perception of their adherence to the values they profess.

American Empire

Sunday, May 25th, 2003

“We have it in our power to begin the world anew. It is the opportunity to bring forward a new system of government in which the rights of all men should be preserved, that gives value to independence. O ye that love mankind! Ye that dares oppose not only the tyranny but the tyrant, stand forth! America shall make a stand, not for herself alone, but for the world.” — Thomas Paine, Common Sense.

In the fictionalized novel Exodus, Leon Uris described the emergence of the state of Israel. In the first chapter set in 1946, a too earnest (earnestness being a congenital American trait) young American journalist, Mark Parker, is hectoring a smug British Major, Fred Caldwell. Parker insisted that the British Empire was crumbling. “You are going to lose the whole shooting match,” Parker tells Caldwell. “… first it is going to be India, then Africa, then the Middle East. I’ll be there to watch you lose the Palestine mandate. They’re going to boot you out of even Suez and Transjordan. The sun is setting on the empire.”

While the British Empire was crumbling, the American Empire was in ascendance. However, this was quite a different empire. Rather than soldiers seizing lands across the world, dollar bills were the agents of American influence.

Does American ascendancy really constitute an empire?   Webster defines “empire” as a “political unit having an extensive territory or comprising a number of territories or nations and ruled by a single supreme authority.” In this conventional sense, there is no American Empire.   There are no lands acquired for permanent rule reminiscent of the British or Roman Empires. There is no central governing political authority dominating imperial vassal states. Americans are too preoccupied with personal acquisition and self-improvement to care much about the deliberate domination of others.

However, more than physical control or authority over other peoples characterize empires. A sense of destiny and importance animate them. The expansion of empires requires psychic as well as physical energy. This energy is supplied by a system of values, a mythology, or a story that explain the importance of empire and why it is inevitable.

Even if base motives like greed or brutality motivate conquest at root, they are justified by a voice of more noble aspirations. Whether it is the Romans fighting for their gods and the glory of the emperor; Napoleon Bonaparte of France justifying his empire as a way to reward “merit regardless of birth or wealth;” or the British, who in the words of Rudyard Kipling, found it necessary to “send forth the best ye breed” to “take up the White Man’s burden;” empires believe themselves to embody righteous goals.

The American Empire, if it can be said there is one, is animated by the conviction that the American Revolution and the American experience have illuminated certain principles that are universally applicable to all people. Indeed, American founding documents found these truths to be “self-evident.” Americans believe in government by the assent of the governed, in representative institutions, in individual liberty, in economic freedom, and in religious tolerance. These principles have been so largely accepted around the world, that even those places that do not live by them usually pay them lip service. A tyrant may have once run Iraq, but that regime at least felt compelled by the ethos of republican democracy to go through the charade of elections. With democratic institutions comes moral legitimacy. The American Empire is an empire of ideas that have overwhelmed the world.

There are times when the American Empire has spread through war, even if the goal of the war was not one of conquest. At the conclusion of World War II, Germany, Japan, and Italy all became constitutional democracies. However, the uniqueness of the American Empire is that afterwards these countries assumed their own sovereignty. The American Empire is not composed of vassal states, but of trading partners and friends.

Radical Islamists represent one of the few ideologies that have not yet subscribed to the principles that constitute the binding force of the American Empire. Though the governments of the West are sometimes referred to as Crusaders, the US in particular is called the “Great Satan.” Satan does not acquire by conquest, but by temptation. Radical Islamists fear the United States, because they fear if left to their own devices, people in their countries might very well reject a theocracy, embrace freedom, and demand representative government. They fear lure of American freedom and its consequent affluence more than the America’s military might, as they indeed should.

Political versus Parlimentary Tactics

Sunday, May 18th, 2003

It is a common observation that people often assume the attributes of their adversaries. This is not surprising, since adversaries compete in the same environment under a similar set of constraints. Successful strategies by one side are likely to be emulated by the other. However, it is possible that the adoption of the tactics of one’s adversaries may subtly undermine one’s integrity. During the Cold War, the defeat of Communism seemed so laudable that tactics that might otherwise be eschewed are ironically embraced. Though Americans never came close to duplicating the abusive policies of the Soviet block, we may have strayed further from our ideals than necessary. In a similar way, the competition for appointment of federal judges has threatened to force Republicans, the supposed conservatives, into compromising respect for traditional legislative institutions to match the tactics of Democrats.

If the Constitution and laws were interpreted properly to begin with, the stakes over judicial confirmations would be much smaller and the consequent animosity attenuated. Judges would sort out legal ambiguities in a way that arises organically from legal precedent. However, since the beginning of the last century, Liberals have used the courts to win victories by judicial fiat that could not be won in the court of public opinion. From the 1960s on, Democrats largely controlled the legislature and the courts. Without much judicial restraint, the country lurched to the Left. Since the Reagan Revolution, Democratic electoral power has ebbed. Both the legislative and executive branches of government are now under Republican control. Liberals are now the reactionaries, hoping the courts can maintain political victories that have been electorally defeated. The stakes have thus been raised.

After Ronald Reagan appointed Sandra Day O’Connor and Antonin Scalia to the high court, the Left panicked when Reagan had yet another opportunity for a judicial appointment to the US Supreme Court. Hence, when Judge Robert Bork was nominated, he was viciously opposed by the Left who even went so far as to check on his video rentals hoping to find compromising information. In the 1980s, we still indulged the illusion that judges were not overtly political appointees. Presidential nominations for the federal courts were generally accepted lest they lacked the appropriate legal credentials or were soiled by ethical problems. Bork’s academic and legal background was impeccable and no particular ethical problems surfaced. Therefore, Democrats tried to paint Bork as an “extremist” that was too far outside the legal mainstream to be accepted, a charged most knew was, at best, an exaggeration. They succeeded in keeping Bork off the Supreme Court, but ignited a couple of decades of fireworks over judicial nominees.

Not too many years later, Charles Schumer, Democratic Senator from New York, argued that Democrats should drop the charade of hiding their political opposition to candidates. Schumer believes that presidents deserve little deference with respect to judicial nominees. Potential judges can be opposed based solely on political differences. Under the Schumer doctrine, legal competence and ethical fitness were no longer sufficient qualifications.

Since then, Democrats and Republicans have battled in the Senate refusing to confirm some of each other’s court nominees. Most recently, Senate Democrats have conjured up a new tactic. No longer a majority party in the Senate, Democrats are not able to bottle up nominees in the Judiciary Committee, preventing even a vote on a nominee. Such a tactic was a way to impede presidential judicial nominations without the political costs of open opposition in the Senate. Indeed, there were times when nominations were stopped in committee that would have succeeded if brought to a floor vote.

Now that the Democrats do not control the Senate, they cannot bottle up judicial nominees in committee. Instead, they are filibustering to keep nominees from coming to a vote. Stopping a filibuster requires 60 votes, so Democrats can prevent nominees from coming to a vote even if a majority favors a nominee. In effect, they have exploited the rules of the Senate to require a super majority to approve judicial nominees. This technique is now being used against Miguel Estrada’s nomination to the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit. Democrats oppose the nomination primarily because Estrada is a conservative Hispanic. If advanced to the Circuit Court, Estrada’s Hispanic background would make it difficult for Democrats to oppose him publicly were he to be nominated for the US Supreme Court.

Republicans indignantly argue that such an exploitation of the rules is a circumvention of the Constitutional requirement of only a simple majority for judicial nominations. While the Republicans are correct that the Democrats are violating the spirit of the Constitution, they really do not have a legal case. No court would rule in favor of the Republicans given the fact that the Constitution also gives each chamber of Congress the right to make its own rules.

There is a Republican idea to use a parliamentary trick to circumvent the Democratic filibuster. However, the use of such a device is not only disingenuous but would weaken the filibuster, an important legislative institution. In the future, Republicans may well need the filibuster to stop Democrats from plunging the country head on into a socialist state. Weakening the filibuster rule would be myopic. Republicans would compromise the moral authority to criticize Democrats for their abuse of Senate rules once they embark on the same practice.

President George Bush needs to make a political not a parliamentary defense of his nominees. He needs to speak forcefully on behalf of his nominees. He needs to campaign directly against the more moderate Senators who might be persuaded to abandon a filibuster. The Republican Party needs to push hard in the next Senate elections to extend their numerical lead in the Senate, making it more difficult to sustain a filibuster. Democratic reactionaries will be forced to resort to parliamentary stalling techniques, while Republicans are making the political case to the public. Republicans should embrace the Democratic filibuster as an opportunity to explain their own philosophy of jurisprudence and Constitutional law. The cynical exploitation of Senate rules to undermine presidential prerogatives could serve as a metaphor for the Democratic lack of respect for the rule of law and Constitutional restraints. It will become progressively more difficult for Democrats to argue that they oppose Republican judicial nominees as extremists when they themselves engage in extreme tactics to satisfy a lust for political power.

Are Political Parties Growing Apart?

Sunday, May 11th, 2003

Applying mathematics to study trends in politics bears a resemblance to predicting weather and climate. There are so many unknown and unspecified variables, that at best it is only possible to make statistical guesses about the future.

There have been a number of models to predict presidential election outcomes, models that are generally driven by economic data. These models predicted a sweeping victory by Vice-President Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election. Many in 2000 thought that such models represented political destiny and did not appreciate that the models predict a statistical result. All other things being equal, one would have expected a Gore landslide victory, but all other things are never quite equal.

Nonetheless, political models and mathematical descriptors of political situations, as long as they are swallowed with a suitably large block of salt, can illuminate important and interesting trends.

Jordan Ellenberg in Slate magazine [1] recently called attention to work done by Keith Poole of the University of Houston and Howard Rosenthal of Princeton University who have tried to track the political polarization between the parties using roll call votes from 1879 to the present [2].

If we presume political affiliations are like grapes, people with similar views bunch together, we should be able to find a set of orthogonal axes in an ideological space revealing where Democrats and Republicans cluster. If the parties become more polarized, the distance between clusters of Democrats and Republicans in this space should increase. When polarization decreases, the clusters should begin to overlap. For example, one could find a few Republicans that are closer in their votes to the center of the Democratic cluster of votes than a few Democrats and visa versa.

Poole and Rosenthal found that the most explanatory geometric description of roll call votes rested on two dominant ideological axes. The first axis separating Democrats from Republicans was the traditional split based on belief on the appropriate extent of government involvement in the economy. On the left extreme of the axis would be economic Socialists and on the right extreme would be economic Libertarians. The second axis rested on differences in voting patterns on racial issues. While Republicans were generally on the side of more racial neutrality in government policies, Democrats through much of the twentieth century, were split along a North-South division. Northern Democrats and Republicans resembled each other in voting patterns racial matters, while Southern Democrats generally voted to maintain the social structures separating the races. As a consequence, the net polarization between the parties was smaller.

In recent years, racial issues have tended to show a less obvious divide, at least as represented on roll call votes. Some disputes on racial issues may have been subsumed into economic ones. The split between the parties has come to rest more squarely on issues of how involved the government is in the economy and along these issues, the parties have drifted further apart.

One explanation of this drift a part could be growing economic inequality. Economic inequality in the US was at is lowest point in 1968. Since then it has increased, though in recent years it has leveled off. There are a number of proposed explanations for the change in income distribution including greater rates of immigration increasing the number of low-paid workers, changes in the American social structure producing both more single-parent families and two income families, and the increased premium the economy puts on education. Whatever the cause, a recent paper by McCarty, Poole, and Rosenthal correlate political polarization and income inequality [3]. Although the correlation is not surprising, it is surprising that effect of income inequality on polarization is not has high as one might have expected. Perhaps those who are not as well off economically aspire to be so in the future. Social mobility decreases potential animosity between economic classes.

It remains to be seen, but it appears that attitudes on national security issues may come to split Democrats as much as racial issues did earlier in the century. Since World War II, Republicans have grown to be as hawkish on national security issues as Democrats used to be. Since Vietnam, Republicans have been more consistently hawkish on national security issues, especially since Patrick Buchanan has left the Republicans. However, the Democrats seem split between the Senator Joseph Lieberman-wing of the party who supported the Iraq War and the Vermont Governor Howard Dean-wing [4] wing of the party. Either the parties will become more polarized as Democrats trim away the Lieberman wing, or less polarized as the consensus on national security issues grow.

It will take a few election cycles to determine the direction the Democrats take. Poole and Rosenthal found that ideological distributions in the Congress and Senate did not change as a consequence of current elected officials changing the positions so much as by replacement of those elected representatives by elections.

  1. Ellenberg, J., “Growing apart,” Slate, December 26, 2001.
  2. Poole, K. and H. Rosenthal, Congress: A Political-Economic History of Roll Call Voting, New York, Oxford University Press, September 2000.
  3. McCarty, N., K. Poole, and H. Rosenthal, “Political Polarization and Income Inequality,” 27 January 2003.
  4. Alternatively called the “Democratic wing of the Democratic Party” or more derisively the “French wing of the Democratic Party.”

Charging General Franks with War Crimes

Sunday, May 4th, 2003

The United Nations Security Council was not always so fractured as it was in the weeks leading up to the Coalition liberation of Iraq. The council was united in 1994 when the Security Council failed to act in Rwanda. According to Alison Des Forges of the Humans Rights Watch, “The Americans were interested in saving money, the Belgians were interested in saving face, and the French were interested in saving their ally, the genocidal government.” The result was comity in the council and 800,000 dead Rwandans.

Since then, at least this American administration has concluded that sometimes it is necessary to act when the UN Security Council cannot summon the will or courage to do so. The French have remained stubbornly consistent supporting genocidal regimes when convenient. The Belgians decided to do what impotent, self-important little governments do, they passed a law.

Belgium withdrew in Rwanda after 10 Belgium peacekeepers were killed. Retreating bravely the Belgians enacted a law bring crimes against humanity under explicit Belgium jurisdiction. The US, that is often caricatured as arrogant, has not yet been so bold to assert the power to enact laws with “universal jurisdiction.”

Of course, to bring war criminals into custody usually requires decisive military action. Passing universally applicable and unenforceable legislation only requires arrogance.

War crimes can generally be tried on an ad hoc basis with tribunals convened after victories much as was done with the Nuremberg trials after WWII. War criminals were prosecuted at Nuremberg without the assistance of the Belgian legislature. Standing forums are not necessary and provide a podium for political posturing.

Though the Belgian law has been used to prosecute a handful of Rwandans, it has not managed to illicit much trepidation on the part of tyrants. Until charges were recently dropped by a Belgian Court, the most conspicuous application of the law was against Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Sharon was charged with neglecting to intervene when he should have known that a massacre was likely to take place. This criticism seems uncannily similar to actions by the UN Security Council with regard to Rwanda, but no one on that council will be charged.

You will never see Saddam Hussein, Osama Bin Laden or Yasser Arafat charged with war crimes. You will never see French, German, or Russian officials charged for complicity in supplying military equipment to Iraq. Those actions were a direct violation of UN sanctions that served to support Hussein’s Islamofacist regime — a regime documented as having deliberately murdered as many as two million Iraqis. In short, the Belgian law is purely hortatory and political.

A Belgian lawyer is now seeking to have US General Tommy Franks charged with war crimes in the liberation of Iraq. The US military has just redefined the concept of warfare by devising a scheme to topple a brutal regime with an unprecedentedly small number of civilian casualties (less than 2000). Trying to bring charges against Franks for what by any objective and dispassionate consideration was the most morally prosecuted war in human history is willful and aggressive hypocrisy. It also a deliberate insult to those American soldiers who died because of tactics designed to minimize civilian casualties.

Attempts to charge General Franks illustrates the wisdom of the US refusal to join and endorse the International Criminal Court (ICC). In all likelihood, the ICC would be even less constrained and more irresponsible than the Belgian courts. At least the Belgian courts are ultimately answerable to an elected government.