"Blair's real concern was that there would be quote unquote 'a knee-jerk reaction' by the Americans ... they would go thundering off and nuke the shit out of the place without thinking straight," Mr Meyer reportedly told the documentary, according to the Mirror.
Anyone who still thinks McCain is the big contender in '08 is an idiot. He's not a maverick. He's not more reasonable than Bush. The fact that he served in Vietnam and spent five years in a POW camp hasn't made him any more circumspect about starting random wars. And he doesn't have much of a chance at winning the nomination. The gist of this article is basically that he has alienated everyone and is thus having a hell of a time fund raising. To which I say, ha fucking ha. It doesn't really matter though, because I have this sinking feeling that Fred "Buzz Windrip" Thompson will be US President-for-Life by mid-2009.
Taking On Big Donors, McCain Takes a Big Risk [NYT]
Bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran [YouTube]
You know, I'm liking this Mike Gravel character more and more.
Gravel Goes Out for the Gays [Queerty]
I have to say, I'm intrigued. If I met a guy who was willing to get one of these inserted I would marry him on the spot.
"Women in some cultures are not averse to beatings. They consider it as an expression of masculinity, and as a kind of control, which she herself desires. In other societies, it is the exact opposite. [...]Islam did not command us to be aggressive towards women […]But when Allah permitted wife-beating, He permitted it to the other side of culture, which considers it as one of the means to preserve the family, and as one of the means to preserve stability."
The ladies over at the Christian Domestic Discipline website agree:
"[W]e believe the Bible gives a husband the authority to use spanking as one tool in enforcing his authority in the home with or without his wife's permission[...]A Christian Domestic Discipline marriage is one that is set up according to Biblical standards; that is, the husband is the authority in the household. The wife is submissive to her husband as is fit in the Lord and her husband loves her as himself [...]"
Interesting...
Is this Islam's "true voice"? [Passport]
Rumors on the Internet [Wonkette]
Loving wife spanking in a Christian Marriage [ChristianDomesticDiscipline]
Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori believed that as robots become more and more human-like, people's empathy for the machine first increases rapidly and then turns to repulsion. Exhibit one: via Tokyo Times, we learn about an incredibly disturbing technological breakthrough: the human version of the robot dog, who is totally going to be a hot gynoid crimefighter when it grows up.
Uncanny Valley Hypothesis [Wikipedia]
Robotic Realism [Tokyo Times]
I bought myself one of those lavender American Apparel hoodies yesterday and I am feeling guilty. The truth is, I love it. The color is great, and as I was looking at myself in the mirror I felt just like a cool SF hipster. And therein lies the problem. If I had applied myself, I probably could have found something nearly identical for half the price. Instead, I spent $40 on a goddamn hoodie because I thought it would make me look cool.
Of course, Dov Charney
is a marketing genius. The brand first exploded here in California, where young and wealthy
The lesson here? Corporations never have consciences [and I am a chump.] They are inherently immoral. Just because a liquor company sponsors the Pride Parade, it doesn't mean it gives a damn about gay rights. And just because a beauty product company starts using plus-size models doesn't mean they have any problems with blatanly fucking with women's self esteem.
Indian Women Whiten Their Skin, Fight the Patriarchy [Jezebel]
Understanding American Apparel [knowmore.org]
A comment on my earlier post about Interventions sparked my polemic impulse:
"I believe the US works as a force of "we will help if it will is for
our own good" which can be said for all nations as far as I can see.
While this does not justify the way we, as a nation, act, it does make
it more acceptable, which is by far the most dangerous aspect of it.
But what is the answer? As you point out, getting more nations involved
through the UN will ultimately cultivate not only a fairer world, but a
just world. How do we do that?"
The short answer is that the UN should function more like the WTO. In other words, it should be a functional instrument for resolving intra-national disputes.The argument that the U.S. should function as a 'benevolent hegemon' enforcing order in the world rests on the assumption that international relations are inherently violent and chaotic. I would argue that this is not necessarily the case. Properly empowered international institutions--and I am talking here about the UN, the International Human Rights Court, and the International Criminal Court--can lessen the risk of war and provide mechanisms besides military intervention for preventing and punishing human rights abuses.
Powerful nations like the U.S. believe it is in their best interest to keep international bodies like the UN and the ICC weak and emasculated, because they do not want to see their power curtailed. By keeping these multilateral institutions impotent, they fulfill their self fulfilling prophecy: they justify military interventions and occupations on the grounds that they are the only ones strong enough to maintain order. They avoid making any significant legal concessions to international bodies on the grounds of national sovereignty.
I believe that national sovereignty is already becoming an illusion,
as a result of globalization. In the economic sphere, foreign sources
of capital, multinational corporations, and multilateral agreements
like the GATT have already encroached on national sovereignty. In the civil sphere, NGOs are doing the same thing. And in the military sphere, terrorism and even national resistance is now a global affair; groups are funded with money from expatriates and store their money in banks halfway across the world and buy their weapons on the international black market. The flaw in the current conventional wisdom about international relations is the disconnect between military issues and civil issues. Nothing illustrates this more than the American experience in Afghanistan and Iraq. Planners were largely disdainful of anything involving 'nation-building' and the result was civil chaos, symbolized by the riots and looting that followed the fall of Baghdad. Bush is now asking the international community for more support--ie peacekeeping--in Afghanistan, but it is now too late. If there had been international support from the start, things could have been better. The best way to cope with the changes globalization has brought about
is to embrace international law, because that is what is in our
long-term best interest.