In Vinod’s post last week following Benazir Bhutto’s tragic assassination, there was some legitimate debate about whether and how to criticize the recently deceased (not that we need to restart the argument ;-).
Well, it’s been a week, and we’re starting to see various media outlets printing sharp critiques of Bhutto (see Dalrymple, for instance, in Outlook…). But more than that, we’re seeing American politicans crassly exploiting the tragedy to promote their own sorry asses:
The biggest problem with ads like this, of course, is that they tell people to vote based on fear rather than logic.
Great song, btw (blowback, that is).
nala, I don’t think Harbeer is arguing that it is acceptable for someone to become a hatemonger because the U.S. helped arm a conflict (or engaged directly) in a way that led to a family member dying. That said, I do think there is a huge disconnect within mainstream American coverage of “Islamofascism” (or whatever the weird word of the day is) between current events and very real political decisions the U.S. made that have contributed to things falling out this way. In short, the “they hate our freedoms” line gets played way more often than the “oh, we just armed both sides of the bloodiest war since WWII” or “oh, we fought proxy wars throughout the ‘Cold War’ that devastated homegrown democracies” or “oh we train, aid, and abet dictators.”
Obama!
Huckabee! Jenny Craig for Veep!
40 · muralimannered said
Even the Dalai Lama supports force if it prevents/reverses/neutralizes terrorism. I supported and I continue to support our Afghanistan operations. I think that if the Americans should give books, medicine, and food, along with military assistance to win over the hearts/minds of the folks there. Which is what we’re doing anyways.
Are you suggesting that the USA not use force over there? Those battle-hearted criminals are so over-the-top evil that they had a 12-year old behead an Afghani “spy”, and this was on video-tape. Even forcing them to listen to ‘Poison’ and CC Deville guitar solos won’t reform them. Neither will withholding pancakes.
42 · nala said
The Islamofascists are stupid, and they are morbidly pessimistic. They would have found a reason to hate us no matter what! Even the Kuwaitis don’t like us as much as you think, even though it was Americans (via Exxon lobbyists) who saved them in ’91. No matter what the Americans do, they will get pissed off. Even in India, the Islamofascists there have declared India as an enemy. Is anyone familar with the leader of the biggest mosque in India? This Maulana requested that Saudi Arabia boycott Indian goods. For what? Well, they’ll find reasons to hate.
55 · boston_mahesh said
Right. They are subhuman.
42 · nala said
Well, I’m not saying that any of this is “acceptable,” I’m just describing a version of reality. If somebody whose family was killed by Islamic terrorists became a hatemonger, I think, to quote Chris Rock, I’d understand. My point though, is that history matters, even if nobody in this country remembers it. Sure, many other factors play into it, like unemployment levels, people’s optimism, and real opportunities for people to earn a dignified livelihood.
Again, I think it’s telling that the Bush Administration farmed out all the Iraq rebuilding to US-based private contractors, who further subcontracted to people who subcontracted to people who subcontracted who brought in foreign workers from India and Pakistan and Indonesia and took away their passports thereby rendering them captive, slave workers and paid them a pittance while charging them an arm and leg for crappy shipping container accommodations, worse even than the US troops, while management from said US-based private contractors stayed at all the fancy hotels in the Green Zone. (No, not the one where the Al-Jazeera crew got “accidentally bombed” like the Chinese embassy got “accidentally bombed” in Yugoslavia.)
So US corporations are skimming all the malai off the top while sub-sub-sub contracting to South Asian slave labor and all the while young, able Iraqi men are sitting there unemployed, nothing to do, a mom or a wife (or both) who’s nagging about the kids need milk and there isn’t even water to drink or electricity for most of the day and your homeboy stops by to see if you want to take a walk. What do you do? Check the classifieds?
Anybody read Hanif Kureishi’s short story “My Son the Fanatic?” I like the movie, too, but the story has its own charms. Homegrown Islamic fundamentalists–now that’s a whole ‘nother topic–and one that deserves to be spoken of in the same context as Christian Fundamentalism in this country and also Free-Market Fundamentalism.
50 · Harbeer said
Harbeer,
I’m with you for most of this…although I do think that privatization, when not forced, is neither morally compromised nor imprudent from the risk-management perspective if implemented properly. Your last line reminded me of the comic primer for my very first post-colonial theory class in college (didn’t come in the US,funnily enough), which featured a generously drawn Ashis Nandy intoning, “Colonization dehumanized the colonizers as much as it brutalized the colonized.”
vikram,
I think we all proceed on the assumption, well-intentioned at best(from the recent history of goof-ups in the intelligence services), that our government uses the best rational methods to analyze the date they receive. There weren’t many people calling for an end to the arms race from the perspective of, “they’re already goners” during the 80s but there were a few inside the military who wrote about the logistical implications of programs like Star Wars (which represented the zenith of over-the-top useless defense spending during the 80s). Hindsight is 20/20 but you must wonder about the analytical ability of those who set policy in the past.
harb,
well i guess this is the time to admit that I read Marginal Revolution and Asymmetrical Information (as well as fire megan mcardle)almost every day. There should definitely be boundaries but after seeing how money was disbursed by the Government of Sri Lanka after the Tsunami I started to see more and more traditional governmental functions/duties/responsibilities that could be more ably discharged by the private sector–not waiting for the invisible hand to swoop in and make it happen but set public policy accordingly. I’ve had relatives who worked for the World Bank and so I’m very familiar with the hidebound nature of such organizations, and the damage they can cause by throwing money at problems that they’re not willing to consider at the macro level, but I’m not really willing to believe that anyone is a capable provider of aid simply because they say they care and that this development is sustainable.
Regarding the proper level of intervention in the rest of the world, I think Binayavanga Wainaina said it best.
58 · muralimannered said
Actually, the CIA under George H.W. Bush was predicting the fall of the Soviet Union as early as 1976. What you call “goof ups” are actually deliberate attempts to disprove real intelligence. Bush’s enemies (the neocons) politicized that intelligence and formed what they called Team B and, well, let’s just check this Time Magazine article from 1991 about Robert Gates:
So you see, Vikram, it’s not “the luxury of hindsight.” You’re indulting in the luxury of rewriting history, which doesn’t really do anybody any good.
58 • muralimannered said
There are some resources (like water, genes, and basmati rice) and services (like education, fire departments, police departments, and health care) which I believe should be maintained as a commons, outside of the profit motive.
58 • muralimannered said
That’s pretty well-put. I’m a fan of Marcos, myself.
Murali, I’m not saying that there is anything inherently wrong with “free markets.” I just try to use that phrase (Free Market Fundamentalism) because there are too many people (on this site, in this country) who seem to believe that The Holy Market is a cure-all panacea. This is a broad, irrational belief, and in that respect it is not too different from “Allah will solve all our problems” or “Jesus will solve all our problems.”
Ok, just so we know this is the track record of the CIA when it comes to “intelligence gathering” :
And 3 years after 1976, the supposed declining Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan and remained there for almost a decade.
With such a spotty record over the past 40 years, I can hardly blame anyone for taking the CIA’s reports with an few pounds of salt. That list doesn’t even include the whole fiasco over the missed/ignored/buried intelligence about 9/11. Me rewriting history ? I think not.
61 · Vikram said
Assuming that list is correct and reasonably objective, you call five mistakes over 40 years “such a spotty record?” I make five mistakes before noon every day (and I’m usually not even awake yet). But maybe you’re right. Maybe we should divide the world into “us” and “them” and then have at it.
Some people think that competition is the only way to motivate people. No doubt competition is fun and satisfying, but so is cooperation. I’d like to see more “cooperation” in our national vocabulary and I don’t mean the “I know what’s best, you better fall in line or else!” variety of “cooperation.” I mean listening to people, trying out ways of doing things that might seem ridiculous to you, being willing to be wrong, and who cares if it slows down “progress.” Democracy is a messy and laborious process which does not guarantee that you will always get your way, but it’s worth it.
I like the music track.
That made my insides cringe.
We New Yorkers remember the Giuliani pre-9/11. He did good for the city, but ever since that tragic date, I can’t stand him and his exploitation of that moment. GAH!