So long, Mr. Vonnegut

As happens when someone I admire passes away, I am at a loss for words, but I emphatically second the thoughts expressed here and especially here:

With luck, Vonnegut’s ideas and words may live on to influence a new generation of young people who can follow his example of the artist who encapsulated the feeling of pessimism of the intellect with an optimism of the will. Vonnegut’s love for the human species, while hating the violence humans inflict upon each other, sets a high standard for all of us to follow.

I had the fortune of hearing Kurt Vonnegut speak at the 1998 Rice University commencement ceremony. I can say this much: the world is a lot less salty now, and a lot less bitter, and that’s too bad.

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So that’s how they’re using their freedoms

On the occasion of the fourth anniversary of the fall of Baghdad, this happened:

Tens of thousands of Shi’ites — a sea of women in black abayas and men waving Iraqi flags — rallied Monday to demand that U.S. forces leave their country. Some ripped apart American flags and tromped across a Stars and Stripes rug.

It is truly heartwarming to see the march of freedom in Iraq, particularly the freedom to “desecrate” the American flag, something quite a few people in Washington feel a need to stop.

Of course, the White House sees this as progress:

Iraq, four years on, is now a place where people can freely gather and express their opinions. And that was something they could not do under Saddam. And while we have much more progress ahead of us — the United States, the coalition and Iraqis have much more to do — this is a country that has come a long way from the tyranny of Saddam Hussein.

I suppose this is a great step forward for Iraq, but also for irony–we have given them the freedom to demand that we leave. Good enough for me.

What do you have to say about flags, transvestite British comedian Eddie Izzard?

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I guess Newt ain’t packin’, either

In keeping with my pontifications regarding neoconservatives (I still like the term “conserfascists”) and their self-perceived, uh, inadequacies, here’s a bit from Newt Gingrich, via Hugh Hewitt, via Glenn Greenwald:

HH: Now let’s get to the first major issue of the day, which is Iran. Mr. Speaker, if the United Kingdom feels obliged to use force, if diplomacy fails to get their people back, will you applaud?

NG: I think there are two very simple steps that should be taken. The first is to use a covert operation, or a special forces operation to knock out the only gasoline producing refinery in Iran. There’s only one. And the second is to simply intercede by Naval force, and block any tankers from bringing gasoline to Iran

HH: So how long would you give them, to give them that ultimatum, the Iranians?

NG: I would literally do that. I would say to them, I would right now say to them privately, within the next week, your refinery will no longer work. And within the following week, there will be no tankers arriving. Now if you would like to avoid being humiliated publicly, we recommend you calmly and quietly give them back now. But frankly, if you’d prefer to show the planet that you’re tiny and we’re not, we’re prepared to simply cut off your economy, and allow you to go back to walking and using oxen to pull carts, because you will have no gasoline left.

HH: I agree with that 100%.

Emphasis added.

Now, to be fair to the former Speaker, I suppose it is worth considering what it means by “you’re tiny and we’re not.”

Compared to America, Iran is quite tiny in terms of land area. I mean, the U.S. ranks 3rd or 4th with its 9,629,091 square kilometers, compared to Iran at #18 (1,648,195 square km? Ha! Even Greenland is bigger!)

In population, the good ol’ U.S. of A’s 301,600,000 people (we’re number 3!) easily trounces Iran’s 70,049,262 (again, they’re number 18 somehow). Iran has a whole lot more Muslims, for what it’s worth.

In terms of age, though, Iran has us beat, if you count from the original formation of the Persian Empire as a political entity around 500 BC. Next to that, what’s 1776 got to offer?

Anyway, I somehow doubt Speaker Gingrich is addressing the issue of land area, population size, or longevity. I think he’s looking at something more, ahem, substantial when he says “you’re tiny and we’re not.” Maybe the thought of having to actually talk to the Iranians instead of blowing them up, just like in Halo, causes an unfortunate Freudian response.

Seriously, though, is our country really being run (I know Newt isn’t in charge of anything at the moment, but he seems to be the favorite of many who are) by people who are willing to bomb various others into oblivion to prove they aren’t hung like light switches? Not to belabor a point, but this is pretty damn scary. Maybe what we need is more blowjobs in the Oval Office and halls of Congress. Think about it (preferably without a visual, ew.)

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Neoconservatives are ashamed of their small cocks

I am going to defer to the more artful rhetoric of Glenn Greenwald in his discussion of the “Second Iranian Hostage Crisis.” He references a National Review article lamenting the fact that Britain’s negotiation of a release “looks like a victory for the Islamic Republic.”

By committing an act of war, Iran has simultaneously made itself look peaceful and made the West look impotent.

That paradox is the apparent outcome of the crisis that began when Iran kidnapped 15 British sailors and marines on March 23. Today, Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced that the 15 had been “pardoned” — their supposed offense having been to trespass on Iranian coastal waters — and would be sent home. We don’t know exactly what, if anything, Britain did to bring about the release. But, at least for now, the resolution looks like a victory for the Islamic Republic.

According to eyewitness accounts and GPS data, the Britons were never in Iranian waters. Their treatment after being kidnapped was a violation of the Geneva Conventions: They were videotaped making confessions (almost certainly under duress) and otherwise humiliated. If Britain still acted like the great power it once was, it would have made clear on Day One that this was an act of war and would be viewed as such. That would not have required an immediate military response, or barred the possibility of negotiations with Iran. But it would have required telling Iran’s rulers that, unless they released the hostages immediately, they would pay an unbearable cost. The threat need not have been spelled out specifically, but could have included, among other things, an economic embargo, a naval blockade, or eventual military strikes. That message should have been delivered in public and in private. (If Britain did threaten Iran privately, it should tell the world so now.) With respect to Theodore Roosevelt, this occasion called for walking loudly and carrying a big stick.

I’m beginning to think that the time has come to say the things that people like Glenn Greenwald are too polite to say–that the folks at the National Review, above all else, need the world to know that their dicks are bigger than the Iranians’. Look at the language: “made the West look impotent,” “carrying a big stick.” It matters not that the Brits were released without a shot fired, having been subjected to treatment that, it would seem, Guantanamo detainees could only dream of. This is about something much, uh, bigger.

This is not, in any way whatsoever, an effort to defend Iran. Their initial actions in seizing the British sailors makes no sense except as an act of provocation, and the Brits were smart not to take the bait. The Times of London makes some very good points:

It is difficult to conclude that Iran’s actions were other than premeditated. The incident underlines the pride and prickliness in Tehran, the sense of encirclement and the willingness to make ruthless use of Iranian influence in Iraq to thwart the West, especially over Iran’s nuclear policy. Tehran has, however, been forced to climb down.

In some ways, Tehran tipped its hand–it is concerned about Western presence in the Gulf (duh), but it is smart enough not to set itself up deliberately for annihilation. This must be frustrating for the neocons. Without much overt prodding, Tehran released the sailors with everything but a bit of pride intact, without any “economic embargo, a naval blockade, or eventual military strikes,” as the folks at the National Review seemed to lust after. Really, how was this not a setback for Iran? A “victory for the Islamic Republic” (to quote NR again) would have been a public trial in Tehran, with London pleading to allow their own barristers in to assist. Instead, we have Iran saying “never mind.”

Instead of moaning and wailing about how Britain’s totally lame tendency to negotiate prevents them from getting to blow shit up, perhaps they should remember what one of their own once said (allegedly and anonymously) to Ron Suskind:

The aide said that guys like me were “in what we call the reality-based community,” which he defined as people who “believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.” I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. “That’s not the way the world really works anymore,” he continued. “We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality — judiciously, as you will — we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”

So here is my recommendation to you neocons with your sudden coitus interruptus feelings about not getting to bomb Iran:

1. Just call this a freakin’ victory already, if you really believe you create your own reality.
2. Think of it this way–Iran backed down in the face of pencil-necked Brits carrying briefcases full of Geneva Convention transcripts. No bombs or guns even necessary!
3. You don’t need massive explosions and carnage to feel better about your penis size–all you need is confidence in yourself. And stop watching gay porn.

As a final note, isn’t it a little ironic that some of the same people who called the Geneva Conventions “quaint” now demand that Iran follow them to the letter? Personally, I think everyone should follow them. Just sayin’

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Least compelling caption ever

From the geniuses at Yahoo! News comes this photo and this caption:

Photo

A video grab from footage shown on Iranian television on April 1, 2007, shows a man in a khaki uniform standing in front of a map while speaking. (Al-Alam via Reuters Tv/Reuters)

Lest there be any doubt as to what you’re looking at.

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Chocolate salty Jesus

Please please please PLEASE someone tell me this guy does not speak for the majority of Christians out there (I’m referring to Bill Donohue, of course). I almost feel sorry for Donohue in the clip of him on Anderson Cooper–he can’t seem to get the artist, Cosmo Cavallaro, to sink to his level. “You’re talking like a 5-year old.”

The artist has a right to create art as he sees fit, and Donohue has a right to make an ass of himself. I have a right to wonder why on earth someone would want to make a Jesus out of chocolate and why someone would think it is somehow blasphemous. I mean, leaving aside issues of free speech and such, what is the big deal here? Is it the chocolate? What’s wrong with chocolate? Is it that he’s nude and anatomically correct? I can’t quite figure it out (I also haven’t been to church lately, so maybe they’ve changed some things.) I know that we’re supposed to be ashamed of our genitalia, so it could stand to reason that we should pretend Jesus didn’t have any. I don’t recall a Biblical proscription on chocolate–had it even been invented when Leviticus was written? Anyway, Donohue is a dick.

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While you’re at it, lay off of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

The latest from the United Nations:

Islamic countries pushed through a resolution at the U.N. Human Rights Council on Friday urging a global prohibition on the public defamation of religion _ a response largely to the furor last year over caricatures published in a Danish newspaper of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad.

That’s a great idea. I assume, of course, that the final global prohibition will prevent anyone from defaming any religious belief. Will Muslims be encouraged to stop calling non-Muslims “infidels”? Will Christians be encouraged to stop using the word “crusade”? Will everyone be encouraged to stop using “godless” as a synonym for “evil”? If the whole world is required to respect (or at least not defame) all other religions, the same must apply to the lack thereof. I’d better not hear anyone making fun of Zeus and Apollo. No more calling Thor a “homo” either.

This really is a great idea. How will the UN enforce this–economic sanctions? Canadian peacekeeping forces to prevent further insult-hurling? Perhaps a joint Malaysian and Ghanaian peacekeeping force could be deployed to Copenhagen to prevent further newspaper cartoons. Could a UN-backed global prohibition be all we really need to put an end to sectarian violence once and for all? And would it mean and end to quality programming like this:

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Live action anime!!!

I know it’s not nice to pick on kids, but I think there’s an exception if they are also Paris runway models (and yes, I realize this is my second post today about fashion models–it’s not becoming a trend.) Anyway, I found this here, via Cruel.com. Apparently these are really her eyes:

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Check out the original site. It’s disquieting. Just thought I’d share.

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No they didn’t…

Truth be told, I have never seen a single episode of America’s Next Top Model, and before reading about this today, I already would have said I never will. Now I’m too dumbfounded to even find the TV remote.

Ain’t nothin’ hotter than a dead girl. That’s the take-away message from this week’s episode of America’s Next Top Model, in which Tyra “I care so much about my girls” Banks & co. created the most brazen bit of ad-industry misogyny ever to grace the reality TV genre: an entire episode presenting a gaggle of underfed model wannabes as the mutilated, mangled and murdered epitome of beauty.

The story has a link to the pictures, along with comments from the show’s judges about how beautiful the girls look pretending to be dead and mutilated (several also have fake bruises–in the sense that the bruising probably caused the death.)

As I have stated before, I do not have a problem with people doing what they want, so long as there is informed consent all around and no one gets hurt. I will assume, for the sake of argument, that all models depicted herein consented to have fake blood and brain matter splashed on the wall behind them and so forth. I’m more troubled by the fact that this is considered “beautiful” or “entertaining” at all. I have my doubts that this little presentation is any more likely to lead to more violence against women than the average episode of CSI (dead showgirl of the week). This is more like a slightly-higher-concept Friday the 13th–array a bunch of hotties, provide little emotinal connection, then knock them off in a series of unoriginal and dramatically unsatisfying ways. How many people genuinely find this entertaining?

I am somewhat reminded of the Coliseum scenes in Gladiator (“Are you not entertained?”)–after the film I recall remarking to a friend that our culture is still in decent shape, at least compared to what Romans found entertaining. I’m less sure now.

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