Jesse Walker | June 14, 2005
Wondering how the Bush administration was going to come down on the Andijan massacre? Wonder no longer.
[Via Liberty & Power.]
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Just ONCE can we get an administration capable of learning from fucking history? Most of our problems with Islamic terrorists came from our policy of supporting any vile sonofabitch who was willing to say "I hate Communism;" now we're supporting any vile sonofabitch willing to say "I hate Islamic terrorism." Oh, no, THIS will never come back to bite us in the ass.
Where's the ol' neocon dogmatism? Is it possible that President
Bush could learn from his mistakes?
...Even if he has, and I sure hope he has, I don't see how
shielding these murderous thugs from international scrutiny helps
our cause.
Just ONCE can we get an administration capable of learning from
fucking history?
I think this is because of short term gratification. Simply put,
they only need to act for the immediate future - 4 to 8 years.
There is nothing pushing them to look further when it becomes
someone else's problem after they are out of office. Then when the
next administration gets blamed for some fiasco, they can pass the
blame to one of the previous administrations.
The only way out of it I can think of is to try previous
presidents/administrations for treason/criminal conduct if their
policies can be directly linked to funding for terrorist
organizations etc. I don't think it'll happen, but if it did, it'll
give these addhats pause before they go around messing in other
countries affairs.
"Wonder no longer."
If you are willing to accept the word of anonymous sources within
the State department who of course have no institutional biases or
axes to grind.
The State department and Defense are almost always at loggerheads
because they live in two separate worlds. The State department
functions in an environment where symbolism and public relations is
virtually everything. The link between their actions and concrete
reality is often quite tenous. The Defense department functions in
an environment of lethal immediacy. They work in the physical world
where mistakes kill. The State Department usually advocates taking
a symbolic action which they hope will have long term benefits
whereas the Defense department wants to take practical action to
head off short term physical harm.
The trade off in Uzbekistan is between symbolic action that will
pay off only in the long run (if at all) at the expense of the loss
of an airbase which will cause physical harm, perhaps even
significant loss of life in the immediate short-term.
If the Russians had already downchecked the investigation it may
have served no practical purpose for the US to push harder for a
mere symbolic gain. Moral poses loose their allure when people are
actually getting shot at.
Sorry to sound like a disciple of Noam Chomsky, but the lives of people who constitute "the other" just don't matter to our current overlords--no more than they did in the Reagan administration, when our Central American "allies" butchered tens of thousands. It was all "worth it" then, and it is "worth it" now.
"If the Russians had already downchecked the investigation
it may have served no practical purpose for the US to push harder
for a mere symbolic gain."
Making ourselves a symbolic enemy of the revolutionaries helps us
in what way Shannon? ...It is possible that the revolutionaries
could win, is it not? What a fine mess we'd be in then!
It seems to me that denouncing murderous thugs as murderous thugs
costs us nothing. We have as much leverage with the thugs in the
regime as we ever did--what are they going to do, insist that we
leave? ...On whose authority? Hiding the murderous thugs from the
eyes of the world is just as risky, I think.
Which is it, Shannon? Are the anonymous source in the State
Department lying, or did the U.S. do the right thing in quashing
the investigation?
Also, I thought the new Weekly Standard line was that the airbase
in Uzbekistan is no longer necessary. What happened to that?
"It seems to me that denouncing murderous thugs as murderous
thugs costs us nothing."
Well it could cost the immediate use of an airbase which is being
used to fight another group of murderous thugs as well as provide
humanitarian support to some rather desperate peoples. If your
analysis is based on the idea that there is no substantial short
term trade off to be made then I suggest you start over. Loss of
the airbase could cause people to die.
All real-world decsision involve a trade-off. There is
always a cost. As the article said:
"If there was tension, a senior defense official said, it was
between supporting "democracy in Uzbekistan" and "democracy in
Afghanistan."
The situation internal to Uzbekistan isn't clear cut. The conflict
isn't primarily between advocates of liberal democracy and corrupt
authoritarians but between corrupt authoritarians and Islamist.
With Russia backing the the authoritarians, it is not clear that
any diplomatic pose we might strike would have any concrete
effect.
The real question is: Do we sacrifice lives and risk the developing
democracy in Afghanistan for what will be only a symbolic stance
with only a possible long term pay off in improved American
PR?
My own inclination is to support democracy and let the chips fall
where they may but that is an easy choice for me to make because I
won't have to see or deal with the immediate bloody
consequnces.
The idea that this is an easy and obvious decision to make is just
simplistic the point of silliness.
No empire remains on top of the world totem pole forever, and there will come a day when Americans are the ones whose lives are deemed expendable by the leaders of the big important nations. I devoutly hope Shannon lives long enough to see that day, and if her eventual death is the result of a corrupt policymaker on the opposite side of the planet, then so much the better.
Dovetailing with Jennifer's comment, I've spent almost four years telling people to pay attention to who you're stepping on when you're going up the ladder because they'll be stepping on you when you're going back down. Any geopolitical theory that starts with the proposition, "The United States now has, and always will have, the world's greatest economy and world's greatest military and will always enjoy an unlimited scope of action," is NOT reality-based.
Tim Cavanaugh,
"Are the anonymous source in the State Department lying, or did
the U.S. do the right thing in quashing the
investigation?"
They don't have to be lying they just have to be in the grip of
their institutional biases. The State department will only see part
of the decision making process and they will have only a poor
understanding of Defenses concerns. I would say, however, that
anonymous sourcing is usually indicative of axe grinding when two
different departments have at each other in the press. I note that
most of the quotes from Defense where attributed.
"did the U.S. do the right thing in quashing the
investigation?"
I can't say with any certainty. First, there is the question of
whether the US did in fact quash the investigation or whether
Russia did. If Russia had already vetoed the investigation then
what practical purpose would be served by US making a purely
symbolic protest?
Implicit in the criticism of the decision that might or might not
have been made is the idea that airbase isn't really important and
that the loss of the base is not a really a matter of
concern.
Suppose I turn the question around: How many lives in Afghanistan
would you be willing to sacrifice in order to strike a symbolic
stance in Uzbekistan? What are the most probable real-world
benefits you see arising from such a sacrifice and in what time
frame?
If you want to criticize the trade-offs that others make you must
make a coherent case that the trade-offs for the course of action
you advocate are better.
The first step, of course, is acknowledging that there are
trade-offs in the first place.
"Well it could cost the immediate use of an airbase which is
being used to fight another group of murderous thugs as well as
provide humanitarian support to some rather desperate
peoples."
If a revolution succeeds and we've made a symbolic enemy of
ourselves, it could cost us the permanent use of that same airbase.
Indeed, I think that's a bigger risk.
...I'm not suggesting we join the revolution. I just don't think we
should protect the Uzbek regime from international scrutiny.
Jennifer and SR,
I think you're missing Shannon's point. The case is NOT clear-cut,
and there is a choice to be made. Either choice involves a risk.
I'm sure you can see that.
Plenty of people (rightly) would likewise have come down on the
administration from the opposite angle if the decision had gone the
other way.
Howevermuch we may think that "more PR" will make people stop
wanting to kill Americans, there is no guarantee of that and it
often backfires.
Actually, I've changed my mind--I don't want SHANNON to die for realpolitik; I want her dearest loved one to do so. Why? Because I think it will be enjoyable to read the Hit and Run thread where she says, "You can't expect India to criticize President Jenna Bush for killing my one true love; after all, India NEEDS American raw materials to continue its military build-up against China! The situation isn't clear cut. The idea that this is an easy and obvious decision to make is just simplistic the point of silliness. Implicit in the criticism of the decision that might or might not have been made is the idea that raw materials aren't really important and that the loss of the materials is not a really a matter of concern. "
The first step, of course, is acknowledging that there are
trade-offs in the first place.
No one in this thread has denied the existence of trade-offs,
unless you count President Bush, who supplied the title.
"Howevermuch we may think that "more PR" will make people stop
wanting to kill Americans, there is no guarantee of that and it
often backfires. "
And this argument gets it entirely backwards. The issue is whether
we should intervene more or less often in other countries. Quite
clearly, the last century of interventionist policies hasn't made
us any safer - quite the opposite. We went from a country who had
no ability whatsoever to strike our mainland (WWI Germany) to an
enemy with a remote possibility to strike us in the distant future
(Nazi Germany - created by the lopsided terms the French were able
to impose after we tipped the scales in WWI) to an enemy that could
possibly annihilate our mainland (USSR, which we saved from the
Nazis, and, if you follow closely enough, we helped the Bolsheviks
into power by convincing the previous gov't to stay in WWI) to an
enemy that actually pulled off a strike on our mainland, killing
thousands (OBL, who we trained and encouraged in his fight against
the USSR).
All that non-interventionists ask is can we try to return to a time
when every backwater dictator wasn't supposedly vital to our
"interests" and instead focus purely on threats to our mainland? It
doesn't take a genius to see that our interventions in other
countries creates a popular backlash against us. If we just left
these people to their own devices after taking care of threats to
our security, we'd all be a lot safer.
And it has nothing to do with PR.
Jennifer,
I find it interesting that you assume that I have not paid some
personal price for my stances on US foreign policy.
A distant cousin of mine was killed in Iraq last year and my
daughter's high school sweetheart, a boy I have known for five
years, is currently in basic and has been told that there is a 90%
chance he will be Iraq by summers end. He is my hostage to fortune
in this matter.
Speaking more generally, it is the people who must pay the
immediate price who are more likely to support the realpolitik
solutions. They shy away from sacrificing lives in the here-and-now
for the mere chance of saving lives in the future. This is the kind
of thinking that dominates the Defense department. They are
responsible for people in the field who need the air support. If
they lose the base, the people they are responsible for will be put
at risk. Only people with nothing to lose can be caviler about
losing the airbase.
In any case, you have my argument backwards. It is you that would
sacrifice my one-true-love for a symbolic gesture. It is you that
advocates risking lives right now for a ephemeral payoff down the
road. Why are you so certain it is the right trade-off to make?
The State department functions in an environment where
symbolism and public relations is virtually everything. The link
between their actions and concrete reality is often quite tenous.
The Defense department functions in an environment of lethal
immediacy. They work in the physical world where mistakes
kill.
Which environment does Rumsfeld live in? The one where the Pentagon
tells him he needs 450,000 troops to do the job, or the one where
he believes 150K is enough?
It is you that advocates risking lives right now for a
ephemeral payoff down the road.
Whoa -- Jennifer supports the Iraq war?
it is the people who must pay the immediate price who are
more likely to support the realpolitik solutions
So you're saying that the families of the Uzbek dead are now saying
"Well, it sucks that my husband's gone, but at least America won't
hurt its chances of getting an airbase?"
And while I'm sorry about your cousin and your daughter's friend,
they at least CHOSE to go into the military and assume certain
risks. When did the Uzbeks sign up to help American foreign
policy?
Jesse-
Slander! Lies! There's not enough pot in all Canada to get me to
support this war.
Democracy is on the... oh, wait... Democracy is hiding under its bed, waiting until it's safe to come out.
Shannon Love writes: "the loss of an airbase which will cause
physical harm, perhaps even significant loss of life in the
immediate short-term"
Why, exactly, do we need this airbase?
Why do we not set one up in Afghanistan? Presumably, that'd be even
*more* useful. (Though such an expenditure would tend to belie the
administration's act that Afghanistan is a settled issue.)
Oh, dear. I have been banned for wishing that someone the
president cared about had been among the dead, so after making this
one last post under a fake address (assuming it goes through) I
won't be posting here any more. Which means I'll have to go back to
being productive in my spare time, I suppose. But I wanted to say
good-bye to everyone here; it's been a fun two years.
The one thing that really bugs me is knowing that I now have
something in common with Gary Gunnels.
Jennifer,
"When did the Uzbeks sign up to help American foreign
policy?"
They didn't but their deaths didn't have their genesis in US
policy. Do suppose somehow that if the US didn't have a base their
that Uzbeck authoritarians would have be less likely to kill their
opponents? The conflict local to Uzbekistan is driven by internal
dynamics that have only a passing relationship to external actors.
The fact that the US had a base their may have emboldened to
pro-democracy forces to act because the worlds eyes would be more
likely to be on them but that is the only way I can see that the US
presence influenced events there.
More importantly, the Uzbecks are already dead. The question now
is: which course of action will save more lives in the future? Do
we place lives at risk in Afghanistan short term while hoping that
doing so will save lives in Uzbekistan at some future point or do
protect lives in Afghanistan and hope doing so doesn't boomerang in
Uzbekistan or elsewhere?
You offered nothing concrete to support your contention that the
choice is simple and obvious. You haven't explained how supporting
an "investigation" that the Russians have already vetoed will save
lives anywhere.
"Do we place lives at risk in Afghanistan short term"
Little late for that, eh?
Anyway, why should we stay in Uzbekistan when we've supposedly got
a free, democratic state right next door in Afghanistan? Isn't that
the kind of people we should be allied with?
They work in the physical world where mistakes kill.
oh fuck me. does anyone really believe that DoD is anything but
another interminable bureaucracy run out of control? what rank
bullshit.
ms love, that's the kind of dreamy commentary that people issue
when they're in love with the idea of killing people to make ideas
happen.
They didn't but their deaths didn't have their genesis in US
policy.
au contraire. usaid and freedom house have been extremely active in
uzbekistan. they incited the riot, just like they did in georgia,
ukraine, belarus and lebanon -- all across this supposedly
"spontaneous" movement for "freedom" in the third world -- only
this time, they miscalculated the reaction of the ruling regime and
people got killed.
i'm sure you'll now go on to tell us all about how virtuous usaid
and their minions are, and how they're not funded wholly by the
united states government.
"Whoa -- Jennifer supports the Iraq war?"
Jesse, beat me to it.
This is the thing about the eternal warriors - they always get
tripped up on their own justifications.
Just to make it clear, Shannon - our entire Iraq fiasco is about
paying the price in terms of current lives for a truly conjectural
future benefit. Note that we're quickly coming to the point where
(if we're only measuring in American lives), we'll have had to have
prevented another 9/11 just to justify the lives we've already
spent over there. And since to this date noone has provided
anything close to meaningful evidence that Saddam was involved in
supporting terrorist attacks against the U.S., we're talking about
smoke dreams when we talk about the "lives we've saved by invading
Iraq."
Somehow, I truly doubt that you see the Iraq war in the same terms
that you see this airbase flap.
Wow. I think that's the first time I've seen gaius swear.
If our opposition would have been purely symbolic, why didn't we
just abstain? Since the Russians would've blocked it, give me the
benefits of actually saying that we oppose the investigation of the
massacre? What is the downside of abstaining? It's the baby way
out, but it still shows more stones than throwing in with
murderers.
Opposing revolutionaries never hurt us before. Well, there was that
time we sided with the French vs. the Vietnamese, but it all turned
out ok in the end.
Is Jenny Jennifer?
I think we're looking at some false dichotomies here. ...The
choice isn't between joining the Uzbek revolution and protecting
the murderous thugs in Uzbekistan just as the choice wasn't between
regime change in Iraq and supporting Saddam Hussein.
The question is, what's in the long term interest of the United
States? My answer to that question is having an air base in
Uzbekistan. Indeed, for proximity to Pakistan and Iran alone, I
suspect that base may become our single most important strategic
base. Anything that puts that base in jeopardy seems to me that
it's bad for the United States.
...Joining the revolution then is bad for the United States.
Protecting the murderous thugs from international scrutiny and
making ourselves an apparent enemy of the would be revolutionaries
is bad for the United States.
I'm not privy to communications between the Bush Administration and
the thugs in Uzbekistan, but considering the apparent lack of
domestic support, if the regime made our continued presence there
contingent on our running interference with the international
community, I'd find that requirement undoable (...and maybe
impeachable.)
We should leave if the people of Uzbekistan don't want us there, of
course; however, wouldn't the regime in Uzbekistan risk what
legitimacy it still has if it publicly demanded a U.S. withdrawal
and we tentatively refused?
...Won't you concede, Shannon, that the risk of losing the base to
a successful revolutionary government is at least as significant as
the risk of losing the base to the present government?
"The question is, what's in the long term interest of the United
States? My answer to that question is having an air base in
Uzbekistan."
But why stay in an undemocratic country when we have access to a
friendly democracy right next door?
Why stay in Uzbekistan when we could be in Afghanistan? We don't
need Uzbekistan anymore.
I think that's the first time I've seen gaius swear.
it's rarely appropriate, mr mo, and perhaps wasn't even there. but
ms love (so ironic a name) and her jingoistic militarism certainly
merit denunciation in the strongest possible terms.
Jennifer, Jenny,
The suspension thing is only temporary. I'm not sure exactly how
long it lasts, but as I recall, when I got nailed, it only lasted
for a few days.
...Please come back when it's over. : )
this is where rhetoric was supposed to meet the road, but it
didn't even touch base :D
cheers!
Jennifer,
You have first hand experience from your teaching days to know that
public authoritarians will always support other public
authoritarians until it actually does bite them in the ass. Until
terrorists attack the US airstrip in Uzbekistan, it isn't an
ass-biting.
Viet Nam, Saddam, Israel, The House of Saud, the Taliban... Being a
public authoritarian means never having to say you're sorry.
"Opposing revolutionaries never hurt us before. Well, there
was that time we sided with the French vs. the Vietnamese, but it
all turned out ok in the end."
...and there was Iran, which may turn out even better than Vietnam.
; )
Creating cover for the barbarity of regimes that our government favors-What a shame. This neocon foreign policy has got our government behaving like the old Soviet Union.
Uzbek exurity forces killed hudreds of protesters, shooting them
down in the square, and chasing them into side streets to finish
the job.
Here is the first statement from the White House, spoken by Scott
McClellan:
"We are concerned about the outbreak of violence, particularly by
some members of a terrorist organization that were freed from
prison."
Remember that - the White House has taken to referring to armed
attacks by government security forces on protesters as "the
outbreak of violence," accusing the dead of belonging to terrorist
organizations, and considering the most "concerning" aspect of such
episodes the actions of the protesters.
But, you know, only foreign governments. Of course.
Ken Shultz,
"Won't you concede, Shannon, that the risk of losing the base
to a successful revolutionary government is at least as significant
as the risk of losing the base to the present
government?"
Well no actually. Sadly, I don't think the democratic movement has
much a chance short term regardless of the support we give them.
The internal dynamics aren't favorable and the Russians are the big
external players. Russia has no interest in a democracy
there.
A democratic government would be best for us because it would be at
odds with Russia and would need our support and goodwill more than
the current regime. I don't think they would hold our supposed veto
of already dead investigation against us especially since they
would have their own Islamist problem to worry about.
I really think you assign this matter a tremendously exaggerated
importance, especially since the only info we have comes from
anonymous sources within the State department. It looks to me that
(1) the investigation wasn't going to happen without Russian
consent and (2) even if it happen it would have zero impact. I see
only a symbolic gain here and I haven't seen anything to suggest
that such a symbolic gain offsets the very real short-term
cost.
"The situation internal to Uzbekistan isn't clear cut. The
conflict isn't primarily between advocates of liberal democracy and
corrupt authoritarians but between corrupt authoritarians and
Islamist."
As opposed to Afghanistan, where General Dotsum is actually a
misuderstood Jeffersonian.
Our Afghan allies became "advocates of liberal democracy" the day
the first Green Berets told them to be. I have no doubt there is a
very nice, genuinely liberal, Uzbek version of Hamid Karzai
currently serving as the Director of the Chamber of Commerce in
whatever American city has the biggest Uzbek population, who we
could fly when we felt like it.
Talk about getting tripped up by her own justification, we're
supposed to believe that the Uzbek protesters are dirty for us to
lie down with, and accept that as an excuse why we should be
running interference for Islam Karimov.
A democratic government would be best for us because it
would be at odds with Russia and would need our support and
goodwill more than the current regime.
i'm glad to hear you say it, at least, ms love. some poor schmoes
actually have the idea that this isn't even partially about ringing
russia and china with client states of our empire as a means of
containment.
but i would warn you against this old imperial game of balancing
powers and spheres of influence. it will be harder
than you jingoists think, ms love -- it brought down the old
order of europe, and it can
destroy the united states just as easily.
Do people really get banned? H and R is hardly what one would
call vitriolic. Spirited but only very rarely vitriolic.
Am I missing something about the etiquette of H and R?
QFMC cos. V
am i missing something about the difference between thoughts and actions? so much for being the web home of freethinking and libertarianism.
The master banned Jennifer because you can get in trouble with
the Secret Service for letting people threaten the President on
your website.
So let's hear about H&R's history with the feds.
Some of you may recall the obvious FBI agent trolling for
pedophiles that kept popping up a few months back - "I may only be
a thirteen year old boy with a perfectly hairless body, but that
doesn't mean I don't want to spend long hours talking about
libertarianism with a grown up."
He pretty much gotted mocked into cyber-oblivion.
Any other juicy tidbits.
Some of you may recall the obvious FBI agent trolling for
pedophiles that kept popping up a few months back - "I may only be
a thirteen year old boy with a perfectly hairless body, but that
doesn't mean I don't want to spend long hours talking about
libertarianism with a grown up."
How did I miss that? Damn!!! I always miss the hillarious narc
posts.
Technically, she didn't threaten the President or his family; she said she wished a family member had been among the dead so that the President would realize that their lives mattered.
You think losing a loved one suddenly makes a person think
rationally?
(sorry for stepping on gaius' territory there.)
Jennifer/anonymous,
Russ D is right. Speaking from the experience of spending and
watching all of 9-11 with a guy whose best friend was a firefighter
that died in the towers, the loss of a loved one is only likely to
make people react more illogically. His response for what our first
action should be was "We should bomb Iraq, Saudi Arabia and whoever
the fuck else might be guilty of this!" He didn't feel much
differently a couple weeks later when the initial shock was
over.
Damn, Mo. Sounds like Jennifer went and got herself banned for nothing, then. On the other hand, at least the Prez wouldn't be cozying up to the Uzbek leader if that had happened.
Jennifer-
It sucks to lose you on this forum.
Shannon-
It may very well be that there was nothing the US could do to get a
condemnation of Uzbekistan from that meeting of NATO and
Russia.
However, meetings with NATO and Russia are not the only venue in
which the US can criticize foreign government. The silence on
Uzbekistan has been deafening.
Ken-
Air bases in Central Asia are indeed important to our national
security. However, I seem to recall US military forces seizing
control of large parts of Afghanistan.
"The one thing that really bugs me is knowing that I now have
something in common with Gary Gunnels."
what happened?
drf
drf-
Gunnels was banned a few months ago.
Jennifer/Anon/Jenny/whoever-
I don't see anything in this thread where you wished ill on Bush or
his relatives. You hoped that Shannon Love loses a loved
one...
...unless Shannon is a Bush relative? :)
Shannon-
Your return to this forum convinces me that you aren't another
alias for Gunnels.
thoreau - really?
what happened? what was the thread?
do people really get banned from H&R? i thought that one
internet tough guy from last winter who claimed to have gotten
banned was just a computer glitch...
jeez - i feel like han solo: i'm out of it for a little while and
everybody got delusions of grandeur...
thanks,
drf
If I'm gathering the pieces correctly.... while there seems to be some mild rational for the apparent banning, Hit and Run without Jennifer is like summer without sunshine.
thoreau,
I'm guessing Jennifer said something that Tim deleted. Which
actually covered both of their asses, when you think about it.
drf,
Gary got banned during a thread where he made a disparaging post
about Tim Cavanaugh. I think thread had something to do with
christian soldiers, or maybe JPII. His banning was more like rules
that he couldn't break.
If true, I'll miss Jennifer's posts.
"Sadly, I don't think the democratic movement has much a
chance short term regardless of the support we give them. The
internal dynamics aren't favorable and the Russians are the big
external players. Russia has no interest in a democracy
there."
Recently, Russian backed strong men haven't fared well in the
former Soviet republics, so I wouldn't count the revolutionaries
out on that basis. Admittedly, other movements have enjoyed greater
press freedom, relatively speaking, and relatively freer elections.
...And, admittedly, I can't tell when a former Soviet republic
achieves critical mass. I just know what the trend is, and,
from the looks of it, the Uzbek regime has a serious legitimacy
problem.
thanks, David.
(from one David to another)
greetings from Chicago.
cheers,
drf
"I have been banned for wishing that someone the president cared
about had been among the dead"
"Technically, she didn't threaten the President or his family; she
said she wished a family member had been among the dead so that the
President would realize that their lives mattered."
I'm confused. All Jennifer said, as far as I can tell, is "I don't
want SHANNON to die for realpolitik; I want her dearest loved one
to do so." So does the ban mean that Shannon is actually President
Bush? If not, the banning is an outrage. (Actually, it's an outrage
in any event, but if Shannon is not Pres. Bush, it's fucking
*stupid* as well as an outrage.)
"Your return to this forum convinces me that you aren't
another alias for Gunnels."
What's next? ...do you think we'll hear from Mona?
Um...
I'm speaking as someone who was once suspended, as opposed to
"banned", and I have to say that it's not all that bad. I mean, you
can't post under your regular name for a few days. They don't sue
you or anything.
Now I was never really sure of what I was suspended for, and that
was kinda a bummer. It may have been for calling some torture
apologist a "dolt" or somethin', or it may have been for ridiculing
the persistent posts of a certain commenter about the awesome power
of music videos, etc. to topple, well you know. I don't know 'cause
I did them both at kinda the same time.
...Except then I see another regular commenter juke the same poster
about the same thing, you know, A Bridge Too Far reference
and all, so I don't think that was it.
Anyway, I think it's, you know, Hit & Run's site, and they
should be able to let who they want on the site whenever they want.
I was ticked off for a few days when I got suspended too, but then
I thought, you know, it's their site, and they want a certain level
of decorum, and I was gettin' pretty hot under the collar with
those torture apologist, Republican propaganda victims, and they
just don't want that kinda heat on the site. So I came back, posted
a comment and found that I wasn't suspended anymore.
...Anyway, having said all that, I sure hope Jennifer comes back.
...soon. The place wouldn't be the same without her. ...and
although I've been as big a fan of Gunnels as anyone, (assuming he
was merely suspended rather than banned) shame on him for lettin'
somethin' like a little suspension get in the way of doin'
somethin' that he obviously enjoyed in a place he obviously liked
doin' it. I hope Jennifer doesn't do that.
Sure, H&R has the right to manage its site however it wants,
but that doesn't mean that however it wants to manage its site is
right. I'm more outraged by the ban of Jennifer from H&R than I
would be by a similar ban at Lucianne.com for the same reason I'm
more apt to denounce torture at Abu Ghraib than the beheading of
American and European hostages by Zawahiri's henchmen--because I
expect better of H&R (and the United States). Jennifer has been
a valuable contributor to H&R. In this instance, she wasn't
personally abusive, nor did she incite to riot, or call for the
assassination of the president, or for the overthrow of the United
States government by force or violence, or offer to sell child
pornography or medical marijuana. I'm at a loss to see how she
deserved banning. Until someone convinces me that she did, I'm
likely to be pretty testy on the subject.
I'd advise Jennifer to pick another nom de plume (nom
d'ordinateur?) and post under her new persona.
Well, I think I'm clear on the etiquette.
Don't call people dolts, morons, etc.
Don't curse ... at least not very often.
Don't threaten people with bodily injury, or obliquely mention
anything bad happening to bigwigs, especially those who employ
police forces and/or lwayers.
Dank u well.
QFMC cos. V
If I was an oddsmaker, and I was takin' bets on who was most
likely to get suspended, I would have given really high odds that
it would be Jennifer.
...and I'm not sayin' that Jennifer should have been suspended. To
the contrary!
I'm sayin' that now that it's happened, I hope she comes back
ASAP.
Fabius Maximus,
In context, the "dolt" comment was worse than I can relate here. In
context, even as I hit the post button, I knew it was wrong. I was
being unfairly brutal.
I suspect that's the big difference between my post and Jennifer's.
I wanted to crush that guy, but I doubt Jennifer's meant to harm
anyone ever.
...Although if it weren't for thoreau and Mo, the people of
California, apparently, would have to suffer the destructive power
of her apocalyptic fantasies.
Oh, and I've never noticed anyone getting in trouble specifically
for using profanity. I think a pissed off Samuel L. Jackson would
feel perfectly at home on this site.
Jennifer explained to me that the statement which got her banned
has, in fact, been deleted; as mentioned here before, she wished
that one of the murdered protesters had been a Presidential family
member so that the President himself would realize that the
protestors' lives were not, in fact, expendible. Though she still
does not see how that constitutes an actual threat or anything
close to it, she does concede that the First Daughter is an
incredibly intelligent and insightful young woman who has in her
lifetime accomplished a great deal on her own merit, and thus the
word 'bimbo' in reference to her was unfounded. Jennifer further
concedes that the First Daughter is most likely one-hundred-percent
in control of her drinking, so the syllables 'alcoholic' were also
uncalled for in reference to this upstanding example of young
American womanhood.
And yes, Jennifer is fully aware that she could simply continue
posting with a different Internet browser, as she theoretically
could have done today and right now; but Jennifer, whatever her
other shortcomings may be, is enough of a lady to never crash a
party or elbow her way in where she is not welcomed by her host.
Jennifer is also afraid that she might develop a habit of referring
to herself in the third person, which could get quite obnoxious
after awhile.
At any rate, Jennifer wants to say thanks for the good times she's
had here, and give an especial thanks to those posters and
occasional lurkers who have had various enjoyable e-mail
correspondences with her.
"If I was an oddsmaker, and I was takin' bets on who was
most likely to get suspended, I would have given really high odds
that it would be Jennifer."
...Just for clarity's sake, that means that I'd have thought it was
like a thousand to one shot that the suspension gods would drop a
bolt on Jennifer.
I really should have been banned a couple days ago. Just for
losing my cool.
...Just a little Maoist self-criticism from the liberal.
Unless a post got deleted, I didn't see any comments that
Jennifer made that I thought were out of line. The idea that some
support a particular course of action because they lack a true
awareness of the human cost is such a common conceit of the
psuedo-intellectual that it shouldn't raise eyebrows.
The actually difference is not between those that understand the
cost in human suffering and those that don't but instead it is
between those believe that there is always a cost and those that
believe that there is almost always some utopian costless solution.
Once a person believes that tradeoffs are not necessary they then
regard those who do believe in tradeoffs as brutes who needlessly
impose suffering on others. Unable to comprehend why anybody would
inflict such suffering they then conclude that the person making
the tradeoff must not truly grasp the harm they are causing.
Empirically, it is easy to demonstrate that the subset of the
population that has the most direct experience with war and cost,
i.e. members of the military and their families are also those most
likely to believe the cost is justified. It is those with the least
experience with war and its cost, like sheltered academics, who
think it unjustified.
Empirically, it is easy to demonstrate that the subset of
the population that has the most direct experience with war and
cost, i.e. members of the military and their families are also
those most likely to believe the cost is justified. It is those
with the least experience with war and its cost, like sheltered
academics, who think it unjustified.
There is undoubtedly some truth in that, but it's worth noting that
some of the most enthusiastic backers of the war were veterans of
think tanks. Paul Wolfowitz did grim duty in the battle over office
space, and led a daring raid to claim the coffee room for his
working group before administrators could assign the space to a
different research group.
Oh...While we're banning people.
I've got this ex-girlfriend, maybe some of you have seen one of her
posts, and we broke up like more than five years ago, but her
flying monkeys, apparently, still have me on their list. So they
direct her here occasionally, which is about as much fun for me as
a root canal.
So, anyway, if you wanna ban my ex-girlfriend from the site, well I
think that'd be just great! In fact, can't we just throw her into
the ol' Hit & Run volcano instead of Jennifer? Take my word for
it, you're givin' up nothin' but trouble--it would be a completely
justified, preemptive strike.
The name's spelled B-R-...
Empirically, it is easy to demonstrate that the subset of
the population that has the most direct experience with war and
cost, i.e. members of the military and their families are also
those most likely to believe the cost is justified. It is those
with the least experience with war and its cost, like sheltered
academics, who think it unjustified.
You'd think the states most at risk for terrorist attacks would be
the most enthusiatic supporters of the PATRIOT Act and the rest of
the administrations anti-terror policies, especially those that saw
the horrors of 9-11 firsthand. However, it was also the case that
these states/metropolitan areas voted for Kerry (the decorated
veteran) over Bush (who never finished his domestic service). One
would also think the areas most at risk would get outsized federal
anti-terror funds. That also is not true.
When I said Zawahiri, I should have said Zarkawi. (Can't tell the jihadists without a scorecard, you know.)
Good job with the 4:20 post, thoreau!
Speaking of which... Why is it ok to advocate pot, a federally
banned substance, and not get blocked from this message area. But
saying something that is also a federal offense, which is then
DELETED so that the poster doesn't even have to face Gitmo, results
in expulsion? What about a warning?
I know, I know, sole discretion, ownership, blah blah. I wonder if
you realize how much free marketing you received from Jennifer's
presence. Such is the way of irony.
All that non-interventionists ask is can we try to return to
a time when every backwater dictator wasn't supposedly vital to our
"interests" and instead focus purely on threats to our mainland? It
doesn't take a genius to see that our interventions in other
countries creates a popular backlash against us. If we just left
these people to their own devices after taking care of threats to
our security, we'd all be a lot safer.
Point of Order....
What happens in the case of Rwanda, where the U.S. doesn't step in
when it could have? Then the international community and the
Rwandans blame the US for doing nothing. Please note that I'm not
focusing specifically on Rwanda here, I'm just bring to light an
example of where the opposite is true.
Either way the US takes the heat.
"Paul Wolfowitz did grim duty in the battle over office space,
and led a daring raid to claim the coffee room for his working
group before administrators could assign the space to a different
research group."
Now that's humor. Kind of like Paul Fussell's jibe at an anti-atom
bomber, "Indeed, when the bombs were dropped he was going on eight
months old, in danger only of falling out of his pram."
"Empirically, it is easy to demonstrate that the subset of
the population that has the most direct experience with war and
cost, i.e. members of the military and their families are also
those most likely to believe the cost is justified."
My uncle was pre-med and super ambitious when he went to Vietnam.
When he got back, all he wanted to do was be a minister; so he went
to seminary, and that's what he became. He only had a few tiny
churches in the backwoods, but, to make a long story short, he made
a huge difference to a lot of people. He was an amazing guy.
...All of a sudden he came down with some kind of leukemia or
lymphoma--I was just a kid and the family still doesn't talk about
it much--but it was a nasty disease. It killed him quick. There
didn't seem to be much question as to the cause.
He had two daughters, and, to make a long story short, things
would've gone a lot better for 'em if he'd been around. Yup, the
world would be a better place than it is now, especially for his
immediate family.
Personally, I'm not sure that what we got in Vietnam was
worth the price we paid, using the value of his life alone
on the cost side of the equation. ...add the lives of other
servicemen, the guys who came back maimed and emotionally scarred,
all the civilians, and the cost/benefit analysis just gets
worse.
I think you're right about families closest to loss being more
likely to support the war in question. When I talk to people in the
family, they're just sure that what we were fighting for in Vietnam
was worth it--it just had to be! Otherwise, my uncle died in...
...That's an appeal to pity, isn't it? It shouldn't surprise anyone
to hear that military families who've lost loved ones can be just
as irrational as the rest of us.
Dear Somebody Else Who's Never Posted Here Before:
If you should happen to correspond with Jennifer in the future,
please tell her that she will be much missed, and implore her to
continue posting under her regular name whenever the period of her
suspension is over.
Ask her to please remember that these are odd times, when even a
rhetorical, non-serious death wish directed at a member of the
First Family can bring unwanted attention by guys in dark suits and
dark glasses, and even the [looks around furtively, whispers] IRS.
I think the action by H&R was excesssive (could have been a
warning first), but it's sort of understandable.
Please return after things have cooled off.
Some of you may recall the obvious FBI agent trolling for
pedophiles that kept popping up a few months back - "I may only be
a thirteen year old boy with a perfectly hairless body, but that
doesn't mean I don't want to spend long hours talking about
libertarianism with a grown up."
Did he like movies about gladiators?
Ditto Stevo's 8:26 comment and on on his 8:29 comment, I only
have this to say:
Was he ever in a Turkish prison?
Speaking of CNN and senior administration official's children
inadvertently causing major legal problems for regular people and
Stevo and Mo's one in three chance of being arrested for flirting
with an FBI agent online, did anybody catch the "Not What I Meant",
Act 1: "Froggy Goes A-Courtin'" part of that recent This
American Life episode? ...dated 05/06/05 on their
website?
http://www.thislife.org/
That was one of the most frightening true stories I've ever heard.
It sounded like Louis XIV sending people to the Bastille on the
whim of one of his courtiers! ...and it happened right here in
America! ...recently!
"Speaking of CNN and senior administration official's
children inadvertently causing major legal problems..."
I think CNN was playing in the background when I was typing--I have
no other explanation.
The comment should read, "Speaking of senior administration
official's..."
joe writes: "Remember that - the White House has taken to
referring to armed attacks by government security forces on
protesters as "the outbreak of violence," accusing the dead of
belonging to terrorist organizations, and considering the most
"concerning" aspect of such episodes the actions of the
protesters."
Hm. That might be a good reason to keep the Gitmo prisoners at
Gitmo, rather than bringing them onto the mainland.
Wouldn't want to give Bush an excuse to shoot up some civilians,
claiming they were "escaped terrorists".
Any thoughtful person knows that life contains costs and choices
-- and no one in this thread has denied that it does, though
Shannon keeps beating that strawman as though it were trying to mug
her. As I mentioned earlier, the person pretending there's no
trade-off here is the president, who keeps insisting that his
foreign policy is advancing both U.S. interests and the spread of
liberty even in cases, like this one, where he obviously feels he
needs to choose between them.
Libertarians understand the importance of trade-offs -- after all,
they're central to any appreciation of the market -- but they
generally distrust the folks who spend their time thinking up grand
plans to trade off other people's lives and liberty. If Stalin had
grown up half-digesting the op-eds of Thomas Sowell, he might have
used the word "trade-offs" himself as he delivered his lectures on
making omelettes and breaking eggs. Perhaps he shed a tear or two
for his victims, spent some moments pondering the regrettable costs
of his tragic but necessary choices, then spent the night patting
himself on the back for taking on such a weighty burden. If he
didn't, I'm sure his apologists did.
Until Jennifer is invited back to Hit and Run, I'm going to boycott Reason. Oh, I'll read the website. I might even comment here occasionally. However, I will not give Reason any more business. I will neither renew my subscription nor purchase the magazine at the newsstand. I will not click through to any of the advertisements on the website. Finally, I will no longer recommend Reason to my friends and acquaintances. Who else is with me?
I've been in touch with Jennifer, and I understand the
circumstances of her ban, and Tim's reasons are reasonable. I won't
say more, lest I divulge things that one or more participants in
the affair might want to keep private.
Oh, I will say that I'll miss Jennifer's presence. If she's invited
back that would be nice.
Oh, stop making an ass of yourself, Jason.
Speaking of which... Why is it ok to advocate pot, a federally
banned substance, and not get blocked from this message area. But
saying something that is also a federal offense, which is then
DELETED so that the poster doesn't even have to face Gitmo, results
in expulsion? What about a warning?
Jennifer did get a warning after the first, deleted post, which
pretty clearly expressed approval of the idea of a certain person's
being killed. After that warning, she posted the comment about
Shannon Love or his/her relative being killed, at which point I
blocked her IP. She then compounded her error by informing all and
sundry of her situation rather than handling the matter
quietly.
Jennifer says that she did not see the warning until after she had
made the second comment, and I have no cause to doubt her. Also,
unlike another longtime commenter in a similar situation a few
months back, she has been gracious and patient in discussing this
matter with me. I will lift the IP block when I hear back from her,
and I welcome her input at Reason.
My objection to comments like the one at issue has nothing to do
with federal laws or threats. Do not make comments that threaten,
speculate about, express approval of, show idle curiosity
regarding, counterfactually fantasize about, or in any other way
entertain the idea of death or bodily injury against any other
person. That goes for public figures, fellow commenters, Reason
staffers, and any other individual.
As I have said before, there are no official rules around what's
approved and what's not-though I am considering a general ban on
anybody who bellyaches about Reason's comments-editing policy.
Exercise common sense and discretion, avoid doing anything that
will require me to do any extra work, and above all avoid the
occasions of sin, and you'll be in the clear.
...USSR, which we saved from the Nazis
This was posted like 3 days ago up above, but I'd like to comment
about how bad our history classes have gotten if somebody thinks
this is true. Russia saved US from the Nazis. They lost many more
people the U.S. and most of their country (the inhabitable parts
anyway) was destroyed. Russia was the deciding factor in WWII, not
the U.S. We came in and mopped up just like in WWI. Disparage them
for being Commies or enablers of Stalin, but do not discredit what
they did in WWII. And people wonder why the rest of the world
thinks we're arrogant.
Tim sez:
You know, I was afraid I was going to see Jennifer with the secret
service on the 11 o'clock news. I think it was a noble thing to
delete the post so quickly, and it's what I would have done. You
also gave her a warning, which is also exactly what I would have
done.
The fact that you're willing to reconsider the matter is quite
generous of you, and I think it's another example of why Reason is
a first class organization. Lesser individuals would have refused
to budge.
I have no problem with your editing policy, in fact I applaud it. I
was curious about whether Jennifer had been warned of a impending
ban, and clearly she was. That you explained yourself here in the
comments section is exemplary, and more than reasonable. Thank
you.
My sister is totally embarrassed by this whole thing, and has
received many very nice e-mails from posters showing their support.
Thing is, she's not even embarrassed for herself so much as she
feels bad about the way she cast Tim in an undeservedly
unflattering light. Anyway, she promised Tim she wouldn't post
again unless the ban on her IP was lifted, but she asked me to copy
and paste the text of an e-mail she sent to one poster explaining
the situation. So here goes:
Hi there, [name deleted]. This whole thing has been a mess (and I
find it ironic that, for all that I'm a lil' pothead, it's a
comment I made while perfectly clear-headed and sober that should
ultimately cause me trouble). The problem was all a case of lousy
timing, both on my part and Tim Cavanaugh's. Although you've
probably divined most of the details from the thread, here's what
happened:
I had a super-slow day at work, with literally nothing to do but
surf the Net. I posted that comment about the President's daughter.
Tim apparently sent me a warning then, but I did not see it, since
I'm not in the habit of regularly checking this address. (When I
was teaching this was the address I gave my students; now I really
only use it for posting on H&R, and registration-required news
sites.) I visited more Websites, went back and posted the comments
about Shannon, had a coffee-cigarette break, read still more
Websites, and then, for lack of anything else to do, checked my
Hotmail. Tim's warning was there; I wrote back with a brief
apology, but in the meanwhile he'd already gone and blocked my IP
on the assumption that I'd seen his warning and disregarded it. So
I assumed I was banned, and posted my good-bye on the thread.
Now, of course, Tim was furious, since from his perspective he sent
me a friendly warning, which I disregarded in a very assholish
fashion before going on to make him look like a ban-happy martinet.
Meanwhile, I'm cheesed since from my perspective I was banned
without warning for a comment which, while not the world's most
insightful, certainly wasn't ban-worthy. That's where matters stood
until Tim sent me another e-mail explaining things from his view,
to which I responded with an explanation from my view, so I guess
the whole thing will be smoothed over soon.
You know, it's really not surprising that I was unpopular in high
school, is it? Anyway, I wanted to thank you for your support,
which sounds like a cliche in this instance but is, in fact, true;
it's just that I'm not very good with words at 8 a.m. on a cold and
foggy morning. Thanks again, and once the IP ban is lifted I
suppose we'll be chatting again soon. I'll be having another slow
day today; hopefully Hit and Run will post a thread on "What's
wrong with public schools" or "Why science fiction rocks" or some
other topic that I can really sink my teeth into.
Jennifer
Do not make comments that threaten, speculate about, express
approval of, show idle curiosity regarding, counterfactually
fantasize about, or in any other way entertain the idea of death or
bodily injury against any other person. That goes for public
figures, fellow commenters, Reason staffers, and any other
individual.
Very sound, Tim, and having learned in this thread that H&R
does "discipline" commenters who cross civilized lines, I may
return to commenting here nearly as abundantly as once I did.
Truly, when I read the post hoping that Shannon would die at the
hands of some despot, or that one of her loved ones would die, I
was thinking: "this is why I don't participate here anymore." That
feeling was only reinforced as I continued reading and saw no one
objecting to those sentiments.
The other party who apparently was banned, GG, greatly contributed
to my not finding much pleasure in commenting here. (Some of this
had to do with unwanted email communications from that person, but
I won't elaborate since he is not here to "defend" himself.) When
the tenor and tone of the H&R comments section gets taken over
by vicious offerings, some will move on. And allowing such a
cesspool to develop will not reflect well on either Reason
in particular, or libertarians in general.
That all said, and tho I totally disagree with Jennifer on foreign
policy, I do hope she comes back. She has become a favorite
personality around here, and most usually offers pith and wit.
Empirically, it is easy to demonstrate that the subset of
the population that has the most direct experience with war and
cost, i.e. members of the military and their families are also
those most likely to believe the cost is justified. It is those
with the least experience with war and its cost, like sheltered
academics, who think it unjustified.
I would think a citizen of the area where the fighting takes place
has more direct experience with the war and cost than even the
military. But the military outranks them, I guess.
joe writes: They stuck you with the email tag
"Monaho?
Is that not just crazy? This is what happened. I signed up for
PeoplePC by fone a few months ago, after moving. They asked me to
pick an email handle, and I chose MonaH. The friendly Customer
Service Agent starts processing accordingly, and then advises me
that I need one more letter or number in my handle. Well, I did not
want to use my full last name, and so he suggested I just add the
next letter, which I did -- but this was over the fone and I was
not looking at it. "Ho" is the first two letters of my
surname.
So...I start sending friends my new email address, and posting at
my usual haunt, and my in-box becomes flooded with guffaws and
astonishment at my handle; I truly had not realized this at the
time I chose it.
I don't want to change it again, but since I'm about to start
sending out resumes, I'll have to sign up for a separate hotmail
account for that endeavor. (sigh)
hi Mona!
haven't seen you in a while. one thing with hotmail and other
web-based accounts is that you can have the account only accept
those names in your addressbook. for resumes, you can have the
business domain in your book or something like that. i have a
hotmail resume account, and although there are extra steps
involved, it does work.
good luck.
and sorry about the guffaws - the church giggles via email can be
annoying to receive :)
cheers,
drf
Mona, your plight reminds me of an old Dilbert cartoon, where a
female employee is trying to get the stupid pointy-haired boss to
change her work e-mail address.
The boss says, "Our policy is to form your e-mail address by
combining your first initial with your full last name. If I make an
exception for you I'd have to do it for anyone and we'd have
chaos."
The employee storms out and the boss says, "Boy, that Brenda
Utthead sure is touchy."
------------
Hey, that just reminded me of a real life story. I once had a
client whose name was something like Elizabeth Biggs. Her
employer's policy on work e-mail address was to follow this style:
last name + first initial + middle initial @ company.com. But she
didn't have a middle initial, so they just subsituted an X. So her
work e-mail was biggsex@company.com. Eventually she got them to
change it.
"stop making an ass of yourself"
Sound advice from the ass who brought us "Nearly Headless Nick"
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