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The New Neo

A blog about political change, among other things

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Pope Benedict XVI

The New Neo Posted on April 19, 2005 by neoAugust 28, 2009

Just in–a new pope has been elected. He’s Benedict XVI (formerly Cardinal Ratzinger from Germany), considered a hard-line conservative.

I think it’s interesting, in light of my previous post about cardinals over 80 not being allowed to vote for pope, that the new pope is 78 years old. So we came very close to that speculative scenario in which the new pope would be considered too old be part of the selection process, but not too old to serve as pope.

Other biographical facts about this pope that caught my eye, from the Wikipedia article I linked to: he deserted from the German army during WWII (a move punishable by death), and was briefly held by the Americans as a prisoner of war. Also, he was a university professor for a while, but “was confirmed in his traditionalist views by the liberal atmosphere of Té¼bingen and the Marxist leanings of the student movement of the 1960s.” Hmmm.

It seems that the cardinals aren’t interested in any change right now from the conservative doctrines of John Paul II (although I’m not a Catholic, I’d hoped for someone less conservative). But, by choosing an older man, they also don’t seem to want to lock this up for a long time.

I wish him well in dealing with the problems within the church and the world, and in following in the large footsteps of the charismatic John Paul II.

Posted in People of interest | 7 Replies

Bloggers in person

The New Neo Posted on April 19, 2005 by neoMarch 4, 2007

I’m here in New York, with the unbelievably lovely weather and the daffodils all in bloom. It feels like the tropics to me. Big celebration tonight for a major birthday of my brother–which one? I’ll never tell.

But last night I managed to meet up with a bunch of bloggers for a drink, dinner, and conversation. Present were the illustrious Cara and Jeremy from Who Knew, Norm Geras of Normblog (visiting from England and doing the tourist thing in NY), Mary of exit zero (and presently guesting, with Jeremy, at Michael Totten’s), and Judith of Kesher Talk.

See, you have dinner with me, you get a link–just like that!

One of the many beauties of the event is that I don’t have to write about it much, because I imagine the others will. But I did want to say a couple of things. The first one is that, as you might imagine to be the case, bloggers can talk. Even bereft of our computers, no problem at all.

Secondly, I think there might be a future in some sort of twelve-step program for bloggers. It does have a fairly addictive quality. Those bloggers among you, you probably know what I mean.

Thirdly (although I know it’s hard to believe), we are all even more fascinating and charming in person than in print.

Posted in Blogging and bloggers | 3 Replies

Timeless Orwell

The New Neo Posted on April 19, 2005 by neoMarch 4, 2007

George Orwell was certainly one for the pithy saying with a lot of punch, short and to the point. I came across a web page specializing in Orwelliana, and was struck by the number of comments that seemed to be remarkable encapsulations of powerful truths, as topical today (if not more so) as the day he wrote them.

Some of my favorites:

The high sentiments always win in the end, the leaders who offer blood, toil, tears, and sweat always get more out of their followers than those who offer safety and a good time. When it comes to the pinch, human beings are heroic.

To see what is in front of one’s nose requires a constant struggle.

No advance in wealth, no softening of manners, no reform or revolution has ever brought human equality a millimeter nearer.

Whoever is winning at the moment will always seem to be invincible.

There is hardly such a thing as a war in which it makes no difference who wins. Nearly always one side stands more or less for progress, the other side more or less for reaction.

Early in life I had noticed that no event is ever correctly reported in a newspaper.

So much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don’t even know that fire is hot.

And this, from another website

War is evil, but it is often the lesser evil.

Posted in Historical figures, Literature and writing | 11 Replies

Going out in style

The New Neo Posted on April 19, 2005 by neoApril 19, 2005

Viewed at Roger Simon’s–the following headstone seems to have inspired me to poetry. Please forgive me; I must obey my muse.

Technology gallops apace,
Computers, hybrids, men in space.
So, now there’s a headstone
That’s shaped like a cellphone
To “phone home” from the other place.

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Replies

Anti-Japan protests in China: what’s wrong with this picture?

The New Neo Posted on April 18, 2005 by neoApril 18, 2005

What’s wrong with this picture (anti-Japan protests in China, via the NY Times)?

It still seems strange to see mass protests in China at all, post-Tiananmen–even ones such as this, apparently organized by the government for its own murky purposes.

What’s stranger still is that these protests are ostensibly over the interpretation of history–although of course that’s not what they are really about.

But strangest of all is that here we have massive demonstrations by people in one nation protesting the acts of another nation–and the target of the protests is neither the US nor Israel. Now, that’s surpassingly strange.

Posted in Uncategorized | 11 Replies

Lost and found–the Oxyrhynchus Papyri

The New Neo Posted on April 18, 2005 by neoAugust 28, 2009

There are few things more satisfying than finding something thought to be irretrievably lost. In my own life, this usually ends up being something as mundane as an earring or a glove. I seem to specialize in losing a singleton of things that come in pairs.

As long as the missing one remains on the lam, there’s always something there to remind me–the lonely survivor, staring up at me in mute reminder of my carelessness. But when the lost object surfaces–as they sometimes do, in some closet or pocket, or under my bed or dresser–there’s a joyous leap of the heart that parodies “Amazing Grace”: it was lost, but now it’s found.

To go from the loss of the trivial (glove, earring) to the sublime: I have always grieved the burning of the library of Alexandria–that is, ever since I first heard about it in a history class. Now, I know it happened a long time ago, but I’m a bookish sort, and the notion of all those works of antiquity lost forever, and by a human agency at that, fills me with regret and even a bit of anger. After all, this wasn’t just carelessness or the passage of time, it was wanton destruction.

I’ve loved the plays of Sophocles ever since I studied them in high school. They had initially sounded so dry and boring, and I was dreading reading them, so their poetry and emotion were a real revelation. I later heard that there is evidence that Sophocles wrote one hundred and twenty plays, the bulk of which are lost, since only seven complete texts survive. I wished there were a magic wand to rediscover those lost texts, that time could be turned back and they could be retrieved and saved. But of course a thing is impossible, except in science fiction.

Or, is it? I just learned, in this article by Dr. Sanity, that modern science may have come to the rescue–literally.

Here’s the gist of it:
The original papyrus documents, discovered in an ancient rubbish dump in central Egypt, are often meaningless to the naked eye – decayed, worm-eaten and blackened by the passage of time. But scientists using the new photographic technique, developed from satellite imaging, are bringing the original writing back into view. Academics have hailed it as a development which could lead to a 20 per cent increase in the number of great Greek and Roman works in existence.

I had always consoled myself with the idea that the works that have survived are probably the best, the creme of the crop. Perhaps that’s true; but, wonderfully, we may now be able to find out, by comparing them to others. Apparently, there’s something for everyone:

Their operation is likely to increase the number of great literary works fully or partially surviving from the ancient Greek world by up to a fifth. It could easily double the surviving body of lesser work – the pulp fiction and sitcoms of the day.

And Sophocles? He’s in there, too; a portion of one of his tragedies is part of the find and is being deciphered.

It’s only a fraction of the lost works, but perhaps further finds, and further advances in technology, will help us to recover even more. Modern science is a double-edged sword, giving us dilemmas and problems along with its advances, but this particular application of modern science to ancient literature can only be considered wonderful, stupendous, glorious. It touches the heart and spirit as well as the mind–a graphic demonstration that even that which had once seemed lost forever can sometimes be found.

Posted in Getting philosophical: life, love, the universe, Literature and writing | 1 Reply

Amtrak came through

The New Neo Posted on April 18, 2005 by neoApril 18, 2005

Well, I’m here in NY, at my brother’s. And I’m happy to report that Amtrak is much improved, despite the lack of fancy high-speed Acelas. The milk train doesn’t stop anywhere anymore; even the slower train wasn’t so very slow, and the seats were actually rather comfortable. The air-conditioning worked, which was extremely important, since summer decided to arrive rather precipitously (as it often does in this part of the country), bypassing spring almost entirely. My only complaint was the cafe car (the less said the better), and the fact that I was on the sunny side of the train and there are no window shades.

Oh, and the train was ten minutes early (that’s not a complaint, by the way).

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Replies

I’m not taking it personally,but…

The New Neo Posted on April 17, 2005 by neoApril 17, 2005

…why, oh why, did this have to happen on the weekend I was planning to take the Acela to NY for the very first time?

Amtrak, oh Amtrak. I keep hoping it will be improved from the last time I tried it, before the Acela was even a gleam in some Amtrak executive’s eye. But I figure it’s got to be better than when I took the Boston to NY train over Thanksgiving vacation during the Carter-era oil crisis, when there were twice as many people on the train as there were seats. It can’t be that bad, right? Right?

So, today is a travel day. Please wish me luck (the good kind)!

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

He’s back!

The New Neo Posted on April 17, 2005 by neoApril 17, 2005

I’ve been checking every now and then, hoping to see a new post–and, sure enough, Vietpundit‘s back! None the worse for wear, I trust. One of my first blogger friends/helpers, Vietpundit has an unusual and interesting history and perspective. You might want to take a look.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a reply

Experts for life

The New Neo Posted on April 16, 2005 by neoMarch 4, 2007

A reader, as well as Roger Simon, alerted me to this article by Victor Davis Hanson. It makes some excellent points, as usual, and is well-written, as usual. If you’re not familiar with his work, you might want to put him on your reading list. The article is about the failure of many “experts”–on both sides–to predict recent events.

One thing I don’t understand: is being an expert like being “President for life?” That is, once you are anointed, appointed, elected, whatever, to “expert” status, is there nothing that can impeach you? Like, maybe, being wrong; like maybe, over and over and over again?

I have noticed that a bad track record on analyzing or predicting events is brushed over and ignored, and that experts keep on prognosticating and experticizing (yes, I know it’s not a word, but I think it should be). They are rarely, if ever, called on it–that would probably make the experts angry, and would reduce the field from which the cable news stations can draw. And then what would they do?

It reminds me of a related question I’ve often wondered about: does anyone check up on psychics? How many of their yearly predictions actually come true–the ones that aren’t totally vague, that is? Perhaps people just don’t want to know–it’s a lot more fun to believe. And a lot more lucrative for the psychics.

Posted in Press | 6 Replies

Saddam gets interviewed, but Dan Rather doesn’t get the scoop this time

The New Neo Posted on April 16, 2005 by neoAugust 28, 2009

One of the wonderful things about blogs is that they make it possible to read news that would otherwise be missed. The Iraqi bloggers continue to offer their unique perspective, and Big Pharaoh in Egypt manages to bring still another slant to things. Without him, who outside of the Middle East would know about this, a purported interview with Saddam Hussein in his prison cell?

It’s a radio interview, so I suppose it’s possible it’s not authentic. But it sure sounds like him–arrogant (although Big Pharaoh, oddly enough, says Saddam was “humble” while answering the questions–perhaps it was just the fact that he was answering questions at all, or that the interviewer was allowed to address him using the familiar form of “you”?)

Turns out the guy was framed. Naturally; aren’t they always? And turns out he thinks it’s Bush who should actually go on trial (no doubt some here would agree with him). Here’s part of the interview:

Al Fayhaa: We are not talking about occupation here but about the crimes that were committed by you against the Iraqi people. The mass graves, the killings.

Saddam: These are all fabrications. There isn’t a single evidence to prove that I killed anyone or pulled the trigger on anyone. These are all lies.

Al Fayhaa: There are tons of papers with your signature on them. They all prove that arrests and murders were committed after your command.

Saddam: Anyone can forge signatures. I never touched an Iraqi citizen with harm.

The interview made me think of Arendt’s controversial phrase “the banality of evil.” Ever since she wrote it, people have been arguing about just what she meant, and I have no doubt I won’t be settling that question here. But one of the things I think she may have meant is “the seeming banality of evildoers when they are finally captured and under the control of others.”

Saddam the dictator, able to control the lives of so many, with the ability to torture and murder at will (or to order others to do it for him)–encountering that man in the full flush and exercise of his power was to encounter a person who emanated evil. I saw a TV biography of Saddam once, and it included one of the most memorable sequences I’ve ever seen, perhaps the most chilling demonstration of pure evil ever captured on documentary film. If you’ve seen it, I doubt you could ever forget it.

Not long after obtaining power, Saddam had called a large assembly of his underlings together, men who were officials of various types in the government. In front of the assembled crowd, he called out the names of those he felt had betrayed him in one way or other, and his goons took them out to be summarily executed. He had the entire thing filmed, much as Hitler had filmed the slow executions of those who had tried to assassinate him.

The look on each man’s face as he heard his name called and realized what was going on, the nervous and frantic applause others in the audience started in hopes of placating Saddam and avoiding being chosen (like dogs going belly-up at the approach of an aggressive top dog), the gleam of pleasure in his eye as he relished the spectacle–no, nothing banal there. Totally horrifying; something out of the Roman Coliseum, something epic and truly barbaric.

But Saddam in power was one thing; Saddam in jail, quite another. The latter seems banal, but that’s because his power has been taken away, and he is made to move to the rhythms and desires of others. Those with power over him now tell him when to eat, when to bathe, when to talk, when to be silent. Now, he has to listen to a radio interviewer address him by the familiar “inta,” now, listeners call in to the talk show and give opinions on what should be done with him.

And still he gives off that air of unbridled arrogance, along with claims that should be familiar to anyone who has read transcripts from Nuremberg or other war crimes trials. He never killed anyone himself, he says. He should be allowed to go into exile (well, after all, didn’t Idi Amin? In Saudi Arabia, by the way.)

I think it’s not merely face-saving bravado; I think his ego is such that he believes it actually will happen. He spent most of his life giving orders to others, and getting away (literally) with murder. Why shouldn’t he think he can somehow continue to do so? Paradoxically, his arrogance is the best evidence of all that he’s been treated awfully well while in captivity.

UPDATE: Reader Steve S. (see comments) informs me that Big Pharaoh has just updated his post to say that the interview was a simulation, not Saddam himself.

Posted in Iraq, People of interest | 6 Replies

Deterrence: thinking about the unthinkable

The New Neo Posted on April 15, 2005 by neoMarch 4, 2007

Nuclear deterrence appears to have “worked” during the Cold War to prevent the conflagration most of us who grew up in those times feared and half-expected might happen. If deterrence did work, it was because both the US and the USSR were interested in the survival of their respective countries and people.

Deterrence is an ugly way to go about it–after all, its efficacy rests on the supposition that we be willing to launch a large-scale fleet of nuclear weapons to retaliate against an attack. But somehow, paradoxically, having been on record as being committed to such a course of action seems to have worked to prevent it from actually ever taking place. One can surmise this, although there is no way to know for certain how heavily deterrence weighed into the calculations of the nations involved.

One of the many frightening things about the current crop of Islamicist terrorists is that they are seemingly unconcerned about the survival of any particular country or its people, and they are more than willing to sacrifice populations in order to get what they want. Their focus is less on this world and more on their vision of the world to come, with the consequence that they appear to lack compunctions about blowing us all to kingdom come.

Here’s an interesting attempt by Michael Levi, entitled “Old Guard” (in the subscription-only New Republic), to update the notion of deterrence and make it relevant to the world of modern-day terrorism.

Levi makes two main points. The first is the idea of retaliation even for failed attacks:

A new approach would start by rethinking the terrorist calculus. Observers are right to assume that groups like Al Qaeda would be willing to endure severe retribution following a successful nuclear attack, undermining a basic tenet of deterrence. But such groups may not be willing to endure severe retribution following a failed nuclear plot–for them, that would be the worst of all worlds. As a result, promising retribution for even failed nuclear plots may deter terrorists from taking risks in the first place, and hence from initiating attacks. A strategy like this would work best if combined with homeland security measures designed to make terrorist failure more likely.

The second idea is to make it easier to trace nuclear weaponry to its source throught the use of nuclear “fingerprints,” enhancing the capacity to retaliate against states (who are theoretically, at least, more deterrable) who might try to give nuclear arms to terrorists.

The whole notion of deterrence seems morally abhorrent. It’s both difficult and horrifying to realize what we are actually talking about here, which is threatening the large-scale killing of mostly civilian populations in return for the large-scale killing of our mostly civilian population. And, in order to work, it must not be perceived as a bluff; it must be clear to the terrorists and the countries with the potential to supply them that we mean what we say, and are prepared to carry it out.

Here’s Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara speaking in 1967 on the concept of deterrence, as it worked back then:

The point is that a potential aggressor must believe that our assured-destruction capability is in fact actual, and that our will to use it in retaliation to an attack is in fact unwavering. The conclusion, then, is clear: if the United States is to deter a nuclear attack in itself or its allies, it must possess an actual and a credible assured-destruction capability

It seems particularly apt that the acronym at the time for the policy of deterrence vis a vis the Soviets was MAD (mutually assured destruction). The whole scenario seemed mad indeed, something out of science fiction. Did it work? I certainly have no particular expertise in the matter, although it seems logical to suppose that deterrence was indeed a factor.

But one thing seems clear: as abhorrent as thinking this way is (most especially, the idea of retaliating for a failed attack, an attack in which no one has even been killed!), we need to conceive of the horrible possibilities in order to combat them, although sometimes the possible solutions seem almost as horrible. What is the best solution? I certainly do not know. But the idea is that, if we send out the message of readiness to retaliate, we will avoid having to actually do so.

As Levi himself says, we are by no means assured that this approach will be effective. Towards the conclusion of his article, he writes:

None of these elements of a new deterrence strategy is as rock-solid as cold war deterrence once was, and nothing will change that.

I’m not sure I would ever have characterized Cold War deterrence as “rock-solid” (perhaps it was, but, if so, only in retrospect). But it would be a major mistake not to consider these terrible scenarios and try to plan for them as best we can. In fact, if we fail to do so, it would also be “mad.”

So, we face a terrible dilemma: which way lies madness? Perhaps both ways. But the way of preparedness and deterrence seems to be the necessary way to go, as it seems to have been back in those Cold War days. I never thought we’d be feeling so much as a hint of nostalgia for the relative “rock-solidness” of their deterrence–but, regretfully, here we are.

Posted in War and Peace | 17 Replies

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