The Fountainhead of Bedford Falls
Comparing George Bailey and Howard Roark
Merry Christmas.
Pacifism has occasioned many of my blog outbursts. Dennis Prager did one of his “Ultimate Issues” hours on this topic. Check it out:
A pacifist believes that killing is always wrong. Don’t confuse this doctrine for a love of peace… War is not the answer? Depends on the question, doesn’t it. It was the answer to the Nazis; it’s the answer to Al Qaeda.
Yes, yes, yes…it’s been like a year. I know. It just happens that my oldest is busily packing for a Boy Scout campout, the middle one is playing at a friend’s house and the youngest is happily playing in his crib after his nap. So I might have just a few minutes to type something.
First, McCain has never been exactly my first choice, but I’d rather have almost anyone right of center than almost anyone left of center in any sort of elected office. To be completely honest, the last few years I’ve been rather uninterested in politics. Sure, it’s fun to debate different issues and pick apart this bill or that speech. But the parties often blend into some sort of middle mush and the candidates are largely interchangeable.
I like Gov. Palin. Sorry, can’t help it. No, she’s not the most articulate person in the world. But she’s not just like all the others and she has pretty good conservative instincts. And I’m just in awe of a mom who has achieved as much as she has without obviously putting her family on hold. I couldn’t do it, but then I don’t want to.
And the fact that Sen. McCain chose her as his running mate is rather astounding. Look at the initial reaction to her from the party base and independents. The left’s response was rather predictable. After the first 48 hours of “Is she qualified?” they dove straight into their favorite characterization of conservatives, that they aren’t really all that bright. Somehow Sen. Biden is allowed to say all sorts of idiotic and inacurate things without being called stupid. I have no idea what Gov. Palin’s IQ is. But I’ll wager it’s at least as high as most candidates for office at all levels, Democrat or Republican.
Well, my time has run out. I had intended to comment on the presidential debate last night, the economy and education in this post, but I guess those issues will have to wait for another time. Two-thirds of my children are hovering behind me (one of them screaming) waiting for me to fix dinner. Hopefully we’ll keep the blog going at least through the election and not let another year get by us between posts.
Blessings.
Ok, perhaps this isn’t the best reason to vote for a candidate, but I can really relate to this woman.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Wal-Mart shoppers were at first surprised and then excited on Sunday to find a national political figure in their midst who was, just as they were, picking up a few things she needed. Accompanied by her youngest son Trig, security, staffers and a small pool of news media, Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin stepped off the “Straight Talk Express” bus to enter the store around 1:30 p.m., where she purchased a bag of Parents’ Choice brand disposable diapers and a toy.
I particularly like that she bought the cheap diapers.
Check out Ed Stoddard’s FaithWorld column:
The Huckabee machine included “homeschoolers” who volunteered for him in droves. The energy of those conservative Christians — who as their name suggests educate their children at home in part to shield them from the secular world — would be welcomed by the McCain camp.
Secular “reporters” who “write” about people they don’t understand often end up sounding rather silly.
This is overdue. Sorry Michael.
A friend of mine has started a blog focusing on Congressional legal issues. Since he was at the House Counsel’s Office for quite a while, he sometimes knows what he’s talking about. By the way, that’s the office that represents the U.S. House of Representatives in court, not the one that advises on the technicalities of drafting legislation.
So, behold: http://www.pointoforder.com. Check it out.
Somehow it doesn’t surprise me as much as I would have thought.
James Lipton, the host of U.S. talk show, Inside the Actors’ Studio, once worked as a pimp in Paris, France.
Debra Burlingame reminds us in her anniversary article today that it is important to look directly at the horror rather than blunting it with euphemisms:
Our fellow human beings were not “lost” in 1993 or on 9/11. They were torn to pieces. We must not give the enemy any quarter. We must confront the reality of their acts.We must refuse to be fooled by their propaganda, which is meant to appeal to our own moral vanity - the belief that we can appease them by responding to their outrageous demands for accommodation, their open threats and their hateful rhetoric with even more forbearance.
Several months after the Sept. 11 attacks, I was asked to look through a thick, three-ring binder put together by the FBI, a catalogue of objects - photographed and numbered - that were the unclaimed personal effects of the 184 victims who perished at the Pentagon. They included things such as buttons, uniform insignia, house and car keys, wedding rings, shoes, personalized coffee mugs and, saddest of all, a miniature, hot-pink luggage tag with a flowery design meant for a little girl’s travel bag.
These mundane objects, the commonplace detritus of lives cut short, were deeply moving to see, perhaps because they were not some grand eulogy or noble tribute, but simple reminders of the fact that people like you and me went to work or boarded those planes on that lovely Tuesday morning, never dreaming that this was the last clear blue sky they would ever see.
Perhaps it is human instinct to turn away from suffering that goes on too long. We should celebrate life rather than wallow in grief. But we should vigilantly guard against self-delusion and denial as a means of coping with the terrible reality that we all lived through six years ago. There was a reason that we felt unified then.
The horror of what we experienced, individually and together, stripped away all the things that divide us today. We clung to each other, forgave each other, and were kind to each other, knowing that, in the end, we would only persevere together. Today of all days, that is something we should never forget.
MSNBC is re-airing their real-time coverage from that day. All the cable stations should do that every year.
Below are links to accounts of our own memories of that day.
BACKGROUND: Five Years Later | Four Years Later
That cracking sound you hear is the foundation of liberal academia at Boston College beginning to crumble under the weight of truth spoken by Dinesh D’Souza.
I’d love to see the video of D’Souza taking apart the “star professor” and head of the religion center at BC, Alan Wolfe. Then we could see for ourselves whether D’Souza’s account of the debate is accurate:
During the cross-examination, I asked Wolfe a series of simple questions about the Muslim world. What percentage of Muslims around the globe live in a democracy? He had no idea. Which is the largest Muslim country in the world? He answered, “India,” which is not a Muslim country at all. (The correct answer is Indonesia, which also happens to be a democracy.) I then asked him to name the world’s second largest Muslim democracy? Once again Wolfe ventured, “India?” (The correct answer is Bangladesh.) And on it went. I looked into the audience and saw many students, including Wolfe’s fans, with their mouths open. They couldn’t believe that one of their college’s most distinguished professors had been exposed as a complete ignoramus.
Sounds like it would be fun to watch. I’ve read D’Souza’s books: What’s so Great About America and The Enemy at Home. I thought he gave too much credit to the “they-hate-us-because-we’re-immoral” argument in The Enemy at Home. Islamic extremists are less pious and pure than they are cracked-up to be. The 9/11 hijackers at the strip club in Florida is one example among many. Still, his books are thought-provoking and well-written. He certainly knows what he’s talking about, more so than Alan Wolfe does.
So why is BC afraid to release the video? Not because it doesn’t meet their academic standards, but because they’re embarrassed that Wolfe doesn’t.
The irony of this familiar discussion about Christian pacifism is interesting. Much of what opponents of the American presence in Iraq would halt by forcing an early pull-out has nothing to do with the use of force. For a fascinating portrait of all the complex ways that the U.S. military seeks to establish order through soft power as well as traditional force, read Robert Kaplan’s eye-opening book, Imperial Grunts (here’s an excerpt). For some specifics on what’s going on in Iraq more recently, there’s a great video essay on Hot Air:
But [Army. Captain Stacy] Bare’s mission here is complex and subtle. He takes territory from the insurgents and militias a neighborhood at a time, by asking questions and fulfilling promises rather than by applying direct force. In the Al Salam neighborhood a mile or so from [Forward Operating Base (FOB)] Justice, in fact, the use of force in what the military calls “kinetic activity” has become counterproductive according to Bare’s commander, LTC Steve Miska.
* * *
Setting aside the weapon and body armor is one of many signals that Bare and his troops give to show their Iraqi hosts that they have come for peaceful reasons and that they trust their hosts. Today he’s here to meet with the NAC, or Neighborhood Advisory Council, a group of local citizens who have come together over time to make life in their community better by asking the Americans for help, and by helping the Americans when asked. Similar groups all over Baghdad meet with American troops weekly, but Al Salam’s NAC is one of the most successful to date in turning their neighborhood around.
* * *
Though Al Salam and Haifa Street aren’t far apart geographically, they might as well be in separate countries. Masked insurgent gunmen fire on Coalition forces from every imaginable sniper nest on Haifa; in Al Salam, the American Army rides in to a friendly reception. If there are hostile forces in Al Salam, they are nowhere to be seen today and haven’t caused much trouble in a month or so.
* * *
Through his terp, Armyspeak for interpreter, Bare first delivers two boxes that represent promises made and promises kept. Local women have decided that they want to learn sewing in order to find work. The boxes contain two brand new Brother sewing machines. Fatima, the council’s lone woman member present, smiles broadly and says “shukra”–”thank you” in Arabic. Local women will learn to sew, find work, and help make their families and their community stronger. And they will remember that the Americans made it possible.
* * *
CPT Bare, who has been working on several issues with leaders of local elementary schools, suggests dropping those floundering projects in favor of finding contractors to bid on providing meals for a school breakfast and lunch program. Surely a shop in Al Salam can fulfill the contract. The NAC agrees. A little bit of Head Start comes to Baghdad. If only the liberals back home knew what the Army’s finest were up to over here.
* * *
It’s much less about firepower than it is about the power of basic services to bring about peace. It’s about bringing “good government” and civil liberties and human rights to war torn Baghdad, a city that has seen none of those things in decades, if ever. At least half the war’s most vital action takes place in meetings like this one in Al Salam to discuss works projects, school re-buildings and urban renewal. It’s all part of the complex mission in Iraq, a mission that morphed from the defeat of an entrenched dictatorship to one focused on building a civil society that will survive after the Americans leave. CPT Bare and the rest of the US military are trying to build a nation that Saddam Hussein broke, both by keeping the Iraqi people under his boot heel for 35 years and by leading it into needless wars to establish himself as a latter-day Nebuchadnezzar.
Sewing machines and elementary schools. Come on! How can you be against that?