Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Just When I Was Starting to Like W

In quiet moments over the past few weeks I have indulged in some fond reminisces of George W. Bush. Yes, I thought to myself, he had his faults, but he was generally decent. Decent in a way Mitt Romney is not. Bush went out of his way on September 17, 2011 to state that Islam is not the enemy of the United States and Muslims are welcome members of our society. Romney now embraces the purveyors of islamophobia in his party. Bush also ran two campaigns almost completely free of the taint of race-baiting. Romney continues to stand by his demonstrably false welfare attack ads, the only purpose of which is to exploit lingering racial resentment long associated with welfare.

Then I saw this.

Kurt Eichenwald, a reputable reporter, is asserting that the Bush administration knew much more about Bin Laden's plans well before the infamous August 6 daily intelligence brief. The people running his national security apparatus convinced themselves that this was just a clever hoax, a la Patton's fake army prior to the D-Day landings, to distract from the real threat: Saddam Hussein.

If this is true it should permanently destroy any lingering doubts about W's place in history. Disregarding evidence of Bin Laden's plans to continue focusing on evidence regarding Saddam Hussein that did not exist was gross negligence. This is not even a matter of hindsight being 20-20. This is what happens when policy is faith-based instead of evidence-based.

The opportunity costs of the war in Iraq haunt me regularly. If we had not fought that unnecessary war our national debt might be significantly lower. Or we might be well on our way to a functional high-speed rail system. Or we may have been able to finance massive upgrades in schools and public housing to increase energy efficiency and indirectly fight climate change. Or a combination of any of these or other worthy projects.

Now we need to consider the possibility that this obsession with Iraq may have prevented us from stopping the attacks of September 11, 2001.

Friday, September 07, 2012

God and Jerusalem and Party Platforms

A regular reader asked me what I thought about the brouhaha surrounding the Democratic Party re-inserting God and Jerusalem into the party platform. In short, it was politics at its silliest.

First, God. As Amy Sullivan points out, there was plenty of religiosity in the Democratic platform already and perhaps more than in 2008. As a firm believer in the separation of church and state, there was already too much of a Judeo-Christian God in the Democratic platform. Hindus and Buddhists are just as American as Christians and Jews. Ultimately, I don't care that much though. And the allegation that delegates were booing God is bogus. They were booing the party leaders forcing a change in the platform via voice vote. In fairness, Ron Paul supporters did the same thing at the RNC and were likely not booing Puerto Rico. If you believe this is a Christian nation where religious minorities are tolerated, but not real Americans, maybe the Democratic Party is not for you. But there is no reason to think that the party is a group of godless commmies.

Second, Jerusalem. Oy and vey. Every year, every party, all nonsense. Both parties platforms support moving the U.S. Embassy to Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Presidents of both parties don't actually do it. Why? Because it is not worth it. Yes, Jerusalem is the capital of Israel, but it is not worth getting every single Arab government violently angry at us by moving the Embassy there. Jeff Goldberg explains. For the same reason, the U.S. Government does not explicitly recognize the Armenian Genocide carried out by the Ottoman Empire during World War I. It happened. Everyone knows it happened. Turkey likes to pretend it did not happen. Turkey is an important ally on a whole range of issues. So the government does not make any loud proclamations about it.

God and Jerusalem. Both represent identity politics at their silliest. Neither will have any effect after this weekend.