Dave Lindorff signed up as a volunteer for the new spy-on-your-neighbor anti-terrorist brigade — but when he tried to call in a tip, he found that the government is routing such calls through Fox’s “America’s Most Wanted” TV program. No joke. Read all about it in Salon Premium. Is the War on Terrorism really just a proxy for the War for Ratings?
Archives for August 2002
Salon Blog watch
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James Robinson (Bangpathology) blames Al Gore’s policies for the privatization of the Internet and suggests that only government can be trusted to do a decent job at building reliable infrastructure. |
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On filchyboy: a journal of madness and survival, “John the Maiden” is writing deeply personal letters to his daughter — about his breakup with her mother, his anger at his father-in-law, and other family conflicts — in public. “I am intensely private yet believe the only way to be honestly responsible is through a sacrifice of the private.” Is it true confessions, or a literary game? No way I could say for sure, but it’s more proof that blogging’s not just about arguing over Iraq. |
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Miguel Octavio is blogging from Venezuela with thoughts on the phrase “Banana Republic” and on Argentina’s economic woes. |
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Andrew Bayer reviews David Bowie, on tour again. |
The Janis Ian solution
Everyone’s linking to it, and with good reason — Janis Ian’s proposal for breaking out of the online music logjam: “All the record companies get together and build a single giant website, with everything in their catalogues that’s currently out of print available on it, and agree to experiment for one year.” Charge a reasonable fee per download. See what happens.
Of course, it’s hard to imagine the record companies collaborating like this. But if even two got together and started down this road it could snowball. Somehow antitrust objections would have to be overcome. Still, it’s a great dream. Maybe there are still some dreamers in the music industry.
Al-Qaida roads not taken
History never moves as neatly as first reports suggest. After 9/11, conventional wisdom coalesced around the notion that the Clinton administration had botched its response to Osama bin Laden’s terror threat in its 1998 missile attack on bin Laden’s Khost training camp, a response to U.S. embassy bombings in Africa. If only Clinton had done a better job of retaliating then, the thinking was, maybe we wouldn’t have faced the disaster of the al-Qaida attacks.
But a fascinating in-depth report in Time suggests that responsibility for the failure to act against al-Qaida ought to be at least equally shared with — if not mostly borne by — the Bush administration. It seems that the Clinton national security team handed its Bush-named successors detailed plans to dismember al-Qaida in Jan. 2001. But the proposals “became a victim of the transition process, turf wars and time spent on the pet policies of new top officials.” Read and weep. (Joe Conason offers more detailed comment here.)
Meanwhile, Friday’s Wall Street Journal offered a piece about the state of al-Qaida’s relationship with the Taliban through the late ’90s that challenges our view of events from a different direction. The Journal, which last year lucked upon a laptop computer filled with al-Qaida files that it has been mining for stories ever since, reports that, from the time of bin-Laden’s arrival in Afghanistan through 1998, the al-Qaida Arabs and the Taliban Afghans disliked and distrusted each other: bin Laden’s people looked down their noses at the Taliban hicks, and Mullah Omar’s people thought bin Laden was a publicity-hungry grandstander abusing their hospitality. On the eve of the Khost attack, in fact, the Taliban seem to have been preparing to evict bin Laden’s gang. Once the U.S. missiles landed, however, bin Laden became a folk hero — the Islamic leader who’d stood up to the Americans — and the Afghan-Arab alliance was fortified.
Does this mean Clinton goofed by not hitting al-Qaida harder? On one level, sure, that’s obvious. But “hitting harder” without actually killing bin Laden would probably not have made a difference in the long run to 9/11. Unless one of those cruise missiles lobbed at Afghanistan had actually taken bin Laden out — or unless the U.S. had geared up for a much more extensive assault on bin Laden’s entire organization, which in those Monica-mad times would have been viewed as a gigantic “Wag the Dog” exercise — it’s hard to see how anything would have changed.
A few killers more
In response to this weekend’s suicide bombing in Israel — ostensibly a retaliation for the Israeli army’s missile attack that killed a Hamas leader and nine children, and the latest bloody act in a cycle of violence with no exit in sight — President Bush had this to say: “There are a few killers who want to stop the peace process that we have started, and we must not let them.”
Now, if the problem were “a few killers,” the solution would be simple, and it would be Ariel Sharon’s solution: Peace would be a straightforward matter of, in Bushanese, smoking ’em out and hunting ’em down. But Sharon and the Israeli army have been doing that for months now, and for all their effort, the bombings continue.
Perhaps at one time Israel was at war with a handful of militants, but it seems increasingly plain that what the Israelis now face is a mass movement, radicalized by years of privation, hopelessness, bad leadership and propaganda. Any plan to end the bombings and move towards peace that fails to take this reality into account seems doomed to me.
More valuable than most conventional journalism on this subject, I think, was this weekend’s heartbreaking reporting on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict on NPR’s This American Life (Available soon at the show’s Web site).
Salon Blog watch
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On Radio Free Blogistan, Christian Crumlish writes of MSNBC’s new blog initiative, “I suppose Salon Blogs are to Table Talk as this new MSNBC blogspace will be to their bulletin boards.” Big differences: (1) MSNBC is shutting down their bulletin boards, whereas Salon has kept Table Talk open; (2) As far as I can tell, all MSNBC plans to do is start a big index of blogs run by its own pundits (there are a half dozen of these) and other people across the Web. If they are planning a “start your own blog” hosting scheme as Salon has, that hasn’t been in any of the accounts to date. We’ll see soon enough. |
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Chris McMahon offers a punk-rock aesthetic, and some good advice, for newbie bloggers: It is indeed all about “doing it ourselves.” |
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Douglas Anders (The Agora) likes Robert Reich’s new book, “I’ll Be Short.” |
Enron to Bush: fly me
While we are still digesting the unsurprising but still flabbergasting report about the Bush campaign’s use of Enron and Halliburton corporate jets during the Florida recount fracas, Al Gore comes out punching — finally — in a Times op-ed today. Looks like Gore is mad about comments from Joe Lieberman and others that he was wrong to play the populist card in 2000. My only question is what took the once and presumably future candidate so long to enter the fray. Meanwhile, Democratic National Committee spokesman Bill Buck wins the soundbite prize: “The Bush-Cheney administration literally flew into power in Enron’s and Halliburton’s corporate jets.”
A Dowd-y view of indie film
New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd has her fans, but I am not one of them. Her pieces usually read to me like a series of drafts of alternate leads: She keeps trying out one-liners and fine-tuning her jokes, but seems uninterested in actually building an argument. Often she has her finger on the pulse of a narrow spectrum of Beltway (and, lately, Hollwood) insiders; she aggressively distances herself from her subjects via a barricade of wisecracks, but they seem to be the only stratum of society she is actually interested in.
Her piece
today on Soderbergh’s new “Full Frontal” (which I have not seen, but Stephanie Zacharek reviews here) is actually somewhat more linear than the norm for her; this time, the problem is that her argument — that “indie” does not necessarily equal “good,” or, as she says, “just because something is grainy doesn’t mean it’s cooler” — is about 30 years old. There is nothing novel or innovative in pointing out that being low-budget crude, or art-house obscure, does not in itself render a movie worthy of one’s attention or ticket dollar.
Pauline Kael established this essential critical stance early on in her career, and several generations of critics — myself very much included — grew up accepting it as a given. Cheap movies succeed or fail artistically in much the same ratio as expensive ones. There is no correlation between budget size and quality (or virtue). About the only indictment of big Hollywood movies that does not apply equally to small indie movies is that they squander huge sums of money and cultural attention. When an indie flops, the waste is less egregious.
Lee Felsenstein’s blog
Lee Felsenstein is blogging at Lee Felsenstein Ad Seriatim.
Subtitle: “Thoughts of an Industry Character who’s been around since Year
Minus One.” Lee was a pioneer of the dawn of the personal-computer era; I
learned to program assembly language (or was it machine language? I
certainly can’t remember, and it was the only time in my life I’ve ever
done so!) in 1978 on one of the Sol
computers he created. This weekend he offers a memoriam to
Bob Bickford.
Party of the pocketbook
As the latest Bush recession heads into its second dip, it’s washing away one of the oldest truisms in American politics.
When I was growing up in the ’60s and ’70s, conventional wisdom about our political parties was clear: Democrats stuck up for working people and minorities, but you couldn’t trust them with your money. For that, you wanted a Republican. This reached a head in the late ’70s, as Jimmy Carter faced runaway inflation, oil shocks and unemployment, and couldn’t seem to make headway against them. Reagan’s election brought a recession, a tax cut and a deepening federal deficit — but one way or another he got credit in the national mythology for dispelling the Carter malaise and putting the economy right.
Since Reagan, though, a new pattern has emerged, not just in the reality of the economy’s numbers but in the shorthand of the popular mind. Bush I: Recession. Clinton: Economic growth. Bush II: Recession.
Circumstance and luck play a huge part in all this, to be sure. But patterns like these are what build popular myths. If Bush doesn’t begin improving the fumbling performance of his economic team, or break free of his “tax cut or die” ideology, he could inherit a cruel variation on James Carville’s mantra from the 1992 election — as “It’s the economy, stupid” gets transformed in the popular mind to “It’s stupid’s economy.”

