Reacting
to the Dazzling Day’s News
by
Tom White
by Tom White
I
am reduced to sheer impressionistic reaction to the day’s Internet
offerings. (I got up early this morning, not feeling very well,
and unwisely sat down at the computer at 5:00 a.m.)
Over
at Anti-war.com Justin Raimondo concentrates on Robert Novak’s revelations
(via leak) that Bush is planning to get the hell out of Iraq right
after the elections, either his own or Iraq’s as the case may be.
Can
it be breathstoppingly, heartshakingly true? Having come to love
our deep hate for G. W., do we suddenly about face and vote for
him as the peace candidate after all? Or stick by our guns and simply
not vote in this impossible farrago of an election campaign offered
us at home while we bomb and blast our way to true democracy in
the Middle East.
On
the LRC Blog: are Bill Buckley and Mark Helprin right, over at National
Review, that the only way out is through: keep going and knock
over the string: Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Egypt. Every American
boy (or girl) can grow up to be a Roman governor and tax-farmer
in a formerly Islamic land? That should involve an end to unemployment
at home and a spreading of our marvelous culture everywhere.
John
Kerry has at last gone sort of anti-war in his recent New York speech,
but he seems to be thinking of getting out of Iraq in, maybe, four
years. What’s the mighty rush, John?
Howard
Dean writes that Bush should come out and say he is not going to
ask for a draft if he is elected. But has Dean’s man Kerry so far
said that he wouldn’t? And what does it matter, anyway, what they
say now, in media campaignus? Wilson solemnly swore that
American boys were not going to war, while he connived to send them
to one; and FDR, in the grand two-party tradition, ditto.
We
have just sold 500 bunker busters to Israel, "of no use against
the Palestinians," but evidently of great potential use against
Iran. Iran, meanwhile, has said that it just might launch a preemptive
missile strike if it feels threatened past endurance. Against the
U.S.? That seems unlikely, rather, against Israel. Iran appears
to be taking lessons from G.W.B.
On
LRC Bill Kaufman rips apart Philip Roth’s new novel (I can’t remember
its name if you want to buy it, all you have to know is that
it is "Roth’s new novel"). It’s "the novel as retroactive
propaganda": the novel, as art form, has always been propaganda
of one sort or another, usually, or at least for a century or more,
in favor of easier, guilt-free sex. Now that is a reliable
theme. If I summarize correctly what Bill Kaufman is saying, this
novel is a tract against the west-of-the-Hudson boobus Americanus
ruralis, the fearful and hated Klan-loving, beer-drinking, red-necked,
anti-Semitic, bog-footed, anti-war Amurrican who is agin going to
the Middle East to die, damn him.
Bill
Bonner (again on LRC) is in deep do-do for having written out against
gay marriage. The theme his attackers whack him with is that gay
weddeds take on the uprearing of damaged children nobody else wants.
I know of such a case. It is indeed very moving: an overflow of
love and charity that is quite humbling to observe. But it makes
no worthwhile case in favor of gay marriage; it only suggests that
charity will cover a multitude of sins, which is not new news. (I
see that I have broken my own taboo: that I’m not going to get into
that.)
And
so on and so on and so on. Somebody (also on LRC somewhere) said
that politics is a disease. I guess I’ve got it. There may be a
homeopathic remedy for it. I need a dose. Back to bed.
September
23, 2004
Tom
White [send him mail]
writes from Odessa, Texas. He is the author of Bill
W., A Different Kind of Hero: The Story of Alcoholics Anonymous
(2003).
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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