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I was struck by something in one of the papers the other day. It had to do with those Americans downed in Colombia. Two people were immediately executed. Said Bush, to Telemundo, They had shots to the back of the head that show they were assassinated in cold blood. Bush is going to get em. Oh, yes he is. And thats not a bad thing.
Folks, all I can think to do is joke: Arent you surprised that the Saudi foreign minister is a royal, and not some bloke from a diplomatic institute or something? And his name Saud is so similar to that of the country! Life is full of coincidences.
Thomas added that she had seen many things in her time, but I never saw a country fall under the spell of 19th-century imperialism like the United States under Bush now has. And most of those seeking the killing fields, seeking the war, have never been on the battlefield. Yup, thats Bush, Cheney, Condi, Colin, Rummy, Blair, Aznar, Havel, and all the rest: seeking the killing fields. This is one of the most respected women in America, mind you, honored everywhere.
Heres how she talks: For some time now, the inequalities that are embedded in the American system have bothered me. As they are becoming progressively worse, and it is clear that the governments priorities are not on bettering the quality of life for all of its people, but rather on expanding its own power, I can no longer, in good conscience, salute the flag. The war America will soon be entering in has reinforced my beliefs. She also likes this old chestnut: It will be a great day when our schools get all the money they need and the military has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber. (I used to see that on bumper stickers in Ann Arbor and Cambridge.) The president of the college is bursting with pride, telling the New York Post, I hugged her and told her I supported her and that I would protect her right to express her views. Well, idn that sweet. But wouldnt it be a greater service to this child and shes apparently still a child, mentally to teach her about America, to tell her about its place among nations, so she wont be babbling stupidities like the bake sale thing? Instead of patting her on the back and telling her how wonderful she is, couldnt the school give her a sense of history, of perspective of reality?
Check out ol Joe (no, not Stalin): By pulling out of the Kyoto global-warming treaty, arms-control treaties, and other international pacts, and by issuing an unnecessary and divisive policy of military preemption, George W. Bush has separated us from most of the rest of the world and weakened our alliances . . . Do a little analysis. So, Sen. Lieberman thinks the United States should enter the Kyoto treaty? Didnt the Senate vote against it unanimously? How odd. Does Lieberman think that Bush blundered in giving Moscow notice and withdrawing from the ABM treaty antiquated and signed with the Soviet Union, which no longer exists? Odd again. And the doctrine of military preemption is divisive meaning . . . that not everyone supports it? That it divides supporters from opponents? Of what important doctrine or idea is this not true? And does the senator think that the United States should wait until Saddam Hussein strikes before disarming him? The man is a dunce. Or trying to act like one, to please Democratic audiences. One or the other.
You know how some white liberals (and others) condescend to black people by describing them as articulate long a kind of codeword? Thats what I thought of in reading Lockes remarks: She speaks up, and she has incredibly good questions! Between Gary Locke and John Locke, theres a world of difference, sports fans.
From the Telegraphs mouth to Gods ear.
Vladimir Ashkenazy, the Russian pianist and conductor, gave a concert with the Czech Philharmonic, of which he is music director. It was an unusual program, consisting of film music that Prokofiev and Shostakovich were forced to write, and music that Shostakovich wrote of his own free will. Ashkenazy wanted to teach a kind of lesson. In a little opening speech, the conductor told a joke, which Id like to share with you all. As he explained, it was a joke frequently told in the USSR but only very, very privately. Karl Marx comes back to life. He surveys Russia, Eastern Europe, and so on, noting the economic, intellectual, and spiritual bankruptcy (Ashkenazys words). And he says, Im so sorry. It was just an idea! Anyway . . .
Good thing Israels opponents can dismiss it as Zionist propaganda.
He was asked the other day whether Carol Moseley-Braun would hurt his black vote. He quipped, Im worried about whether Joe Lieberman is going to hurt my Jewish vote. What makes him stand out in the Democratic field is not his demagoguery, for the others have that too, in abundance but his charm. The others are totally charmless (though Lieberman has a smidgeon of it); Sharpton has loads of it. Pity.
Bravo lui, as they say in Italy.
Sorry, but I can be of no help here. People simply started to say I could care less to mean the reverse, and it stuck and its here. It used to irritate me, but I have now accepted it as an idiosyncrasy of the language (which is full of them). Its a solecism for our times. Years ago, I worked with a girl who was one of the brightest people I have ever known. She said I could care less all the time. (Me: Do you know what I think of your Bill and Hillary Clinton? Her: I could care less.) The fact that plenty of bright people say this should provide one clue that this is an expression whose meaning is clear and whose peculiar usage we should swallow. We are not to be literalist about it. You know whats weird, in our language? To be rid of something is to be without something. But a neighborhood that is crime-ridden is full of crime, not blessedly devoid of it. A room is ridden with mice wouldnt it be nice to be rid of the mice? Weird.
I read your mention of the nun in Kenya and what the person next to her said about wishing he had been on the plane that exploded into the WTC towers. Well, I am now living in Madrid, Spain, for a semester and have to say that this sentiment is rampant. This is my fourth time being in Europe, and I dont remember being accosted so often for being an American. In Portugal I was walking down the street and a person in a stopped car proceeded to yell at me, calling me and my friends (obvious Americans) bitches while giving us the finger as we were walking by a sign that said Uncle Sam Wants Your Oil and a huge billboard that said The Great American Disaster. I guess we should have aspired to be like the Portuguese! Then there are the repeated anti-Bush and anti-Republican comments made in some of my classes. Gets old hearing people ask, So who voted for Bush anyway? Its like I have three eyes when I say I did. Then I love it when the other American students pander to the European students and try to explain why the U.S. is so messed up and wrong all the time. Never seen such a**-kissing in my life. I just loved that last line (in part because it reminded me of my Love on the Arno). Loved it. Thats exactly what liberal American students do in Europe its their specialty. Buys them respect and slack. (Plus they believe it.) Dear Jay: I am an American living in Warsaw. In your recent article, you mentioned that some Americans would like to pass off as Canadians. My wife and I were in Berlin this last weekend, and were not ashamed or frightened of being American. We were at an Internet café checking our e-mails and speaking American. The fellow at the computer next to ours leaned over and asked (with a heavy German accent, but excellent English) whether we were American. We said yes, wondering what was going to come next. He responded: I just became a United States citizen a couple of months ago I am back here visiting family. His pride in being an American citizen was obvious. Hey, Jay: I spent last week on vacation in beautiful Rio de Janeiro. The only television channel broadcast in my hotel was CNN World. And I thought plain ol CNN reporting was tainted! No Iraq report could go for more than two minutes without mentioning the possibility of the United States taking unilateral action. Arrgghh. If our news abroad is so biased against intervention, its no wonder the rest of the world looks at us so skeptically. On a much more upbeat note, however, I did find myself in a bar with a Scotsman who is a member of Her Majestys Special Forces. He had recently returned from Afghanistan and was preparing to leave for Baghdad. He said he hadnt seen his wife and kids for six months. I wished him the best of luck and said, Were with you. He got a very serious look on his face and said, No, WE are with YOU. Spine-tingling! Finally, here is a letter from heaven. From a Canadian. You will adore it. My wife and I will be renting a house in France next September. Yes, I know, I feel like I should make some sort of effort to boycott the French, but using that logic, given the attitude of the Canadian government, I would have to boycott Canada as well. By the way, the people from whom we are renting are English, so I dont feel that bad. Anyway, Ill make sure to tell those who ask that, although Im a Canadian, Im an American at heart. Screw em. Bless im. |
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