Neo Con Humiliation (The Economist)



The Economist on the public humiliation of the Neo Cons.

The Economist supported the invasion of Iraq, based presumably on "ideological reasons". Still does.

Yet the world's best newsmagazine now sees a problem with the Iraq War. No longer "just poor implementation".......

"Neocons have been discredited for ideological reasons. Most of the recent mistakes can be traced back not just to flawed execution but to flawed thinking."


Unless 'thinking', strategy and ideology don't precede war (?), The Economist is sliding around.......

http://www.economist.com/world/na/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9043308

Lexington
Sidelined by reality
Apr 19th 2007
From The Economist print edition

The neocons are suffering one humiliation after another
Kevin Kallaugher



THE American legal system has rediscovered the virtue of one of the most ancient forms of punishment—public humiliation. Prostitutes' “Johns” can now have their names aired on television. Mail thieves can find themselves wearing a sandwichboard giving full details of their crime. And people who deface Nativity scenes can end up parading through town accompanied by a donkey.

And neoconservatives? These too, it seems, are now being subjected to a grand exercise in public humiliation. Paul Wolfowitz is hanging on to his job at the World Bank by his fingernails (see article). Lewis “Scooter” Libby, a Wolfowitz protégé, is facing prison; Douglas Feith, who worked with Mr Wolfowitz at the Pentagon, is an “untouchable” who is floating around the margins of academia.


As for their patrons, Donald Rumsfeld, Mr Wolfowitz's patron, was sacked from the Pentagon amid accusations that he had lost the Republicans their majority. Dick Cheney is so unpopular that he has provoked protests even at Brigham Young University, a Mormon redoubt which is as conservative as they come. Conrad Black, one of the movement's most generous sugar daddies, is on trial for fraud. It seems that those whom the gods wish to punish they first make neocons.

Not all the neocons have been humiliated quite as badly as Mr Wolfowitz, let alone Mr Libby. Many of them—including Richard Perle, who is widely known as the Prince of Darkness, and David Frum, the man who co-coined the phrase “axis of evil”—are safely on board the starship American Enterprise Institute. Charles Krauthammer and Bill Kristol are as ubiquitous as ever in the media; indeed, Mr Kristol has been given a column in Time magazine to go along with his self-constructed platform at the Weekly Standard. Robert Kagan is in the middle of writing an ambitious history of American foreign policy.

And neoconservativism is not entirely finished as a political force. George Bush rejected the Baker-Hamilton report on Iraq, which favoured early withdrawal and diplomacy, in favour of the neocon-designed “surge”. Elliott Abrams is a deputy at the National Security Council. Mr Cheney is proving no more destructible than Lord Voldemort. John McCain is blowing loudly on the neocon trumpet; Rudy Giuliani, having flirted with “realists”, has decided to stick with neocon foreign-policy advisers.

But the movement's implosion is nevertheless astonishing. One neocon sums up the prevailing mood in the movement. The neocons are a “laughing stock”. Their “embrace of power” has been “a disaster”. Once upon a time they commanded an audience among Arab democrats and European conservatives. But now they cannot make themselves heard above the din of criticisms of Iraq. The “surge” is a desperate response to failure. Many people see Messrs Kristol and Krauthammer as exhibits in a Ripley's Believe It or Not exhibition: they marvel that they can ever have been so influential, rather than want to follow their advice again.

The neocons are being relentlessly marginalised in Washington. Condoleezza Rice is returning to her “realist” roots at the State Department, now that Mr Rumsfeld is out of her hair and Mr Cheney is weakened. She has embraced “shuttle diplomacy” in Israel-Palestine, signalled her willingness to talk to Syria and Iran, and has even been polite about the United Nations. The rising generation of policy intellectuals regards a reputation for neoconservatism as professional death.

They are also being marginalised—or at least slapped down a bit—within the conservative movement. The “paleocons” have always disliked the neocons, sometimes (disgracefully) just because they are Jewish. But now they are being joined by conservatives of almost every other stripe. Realists dislike them for their destabilising foreign policy. Small-government types dislike them for their indifference to government spending. Libertarians dislike them for their preoccupation with using the state to impose virtue. Neoconservatism could well return to where it started—the intellectual property of a handful of families called Kristol, Podhoretz and Kagan.

Why does the movement seem so discredited? Partly for practical reasons. They misread intelligence about WMD and links between al-Qaeda and Saddam (though some still believe in both notions). They bungled the war in Iraq. They had little real experience of either the Arab world or soldiering. Many of them were even poor managers. Gary Schmitt, a fellow neocon, complained of Mr Feith that he “can't manage anything, and he doesn't trust anyone else's judgment”. General Tommy Franks describes him as the “dumbest fucking guy on the planet”.

Betraying the founders
But, more important, neocons have been discredited for ideological reasons. Most of the recent mistakes can be traced back not just to flawed execution but to flawed thinking. The neocons argued that democracy might be an antidote to the Middle East's problems: but democracy proved too delicate a plant. They claimed that the assertion of American power might wipe out “Vietnam syndrome”: but it has ended up making America more reluctant to intervene abroad. They talked about linking American power with American ideals: but it turned out, at Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo, that power can corrupt those ideals.

The tragedy of neoconservatism is that the movement began as a critique of the arrogance of power. Early neocons warned that government schemes to improve the world might well end up making it worse. They also argued that social engineers are always plagued by the law of unintended consequences. The neocons have not only messed up American foreign policy by forgetting their founders' insights. They may also have put a stake through the heart of their own movement.

Solidarity: Korean vs Arab


A few days after 9/11, I emailed a number of Arab-American sites.

I assumed they'd be fearful, as I was. The victims came first. But what about the potential for ill considered anti Muslim reaction? I asked the sites, why so.....SILENT? A PERFECT opportunity to be part of America and its sorrow- distance themselves from Arab extremists. And, it goes without saying- help deflect ill considered racism from them and their families.

I mentioned young Japanese Americans during WWII: Though their families were often herded into concentration camps, they signed up, fought well and became among the most, if not THE most highly decorated American units in WWII.


And now, time for patriotic Arab-"Americans" to stand up and be counted. Never happened. Silence.


Interesting contrast with Korean solidarity over the tragic death of one one hundredth as many innocent Americans.

And they're not even American citizens.

Vonnegut. Again?

NY Times article on Kurt Vonnegut. "Skepticism" over "the ardor of faith" - the foundation of "decency".

Sounds good to me.

"He says not only what no one is saying, but also what — as a mild young person — you know it is forbidden to say. No one nourishes the skepticism of the young like Vonnegut. In his world, decency is likelier to be rooted in skepticism than it is in the ardor of faith."


I was never a fan, probably because I was born to soon. Even in an age group the article suggests found Vonnegut a necessary antidote to conventional wisdom, that is 'adult'. For his refreshing, even enlightening skepticism about the way grown ups claim the world is.

The article suggests a reread. I'll pass. I missed out on the coming of age ritual once. Once ought to be enough.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/13/opinion/13fri4.html?em&ex=1176696000&en=f2ed49c5c5da7f70&ei=5087%0A

EDITORIAL OBSERVER
Kurt Vonnegut


By VERLYN KLINKENBORG
Published: April 13, 2007
If you read Kurt Vonnegut when you were young — read all there was of him, book after book as fast as you could the way so many of us did — you probably set him aside long ago. That’s the way it goes with writers we love when we’re young. It’s almost as though their books absorbed some part of our DNA while we were reading them, and rereading them means revisiting a version of ourselves we may no longer remember or trust.

Not that Vonnegut is mainly for the young. I’m sure there are plenty of people who think he is entirely unsuitable for readers under the age of disillusionment. But the time to read Vonnegut is just when you begin to suspect that the world is not what it appears to be. He is the indispensable footnote to everything everyone is trying to teach you, the footnote that pulls the rug out from under the established truths being so firmly avowed in the body of the text.

He is not only entertaining, he is electrocuting. You read him with enormous pleasure because he makes your hair stand on end. He says not only what no one is saying, but also what — as a mild young person — you know it is forbidden to say. No one nourishes the skepticism of the young like Vonnegut. In his world, decency is likelier to be rooted in skepticism than it is in the ardor of faith.

So you get older, and it’s been 20 or 30 years since you last read “Player Piano” or “Cat’s Cradle” or “Slaughterhouse-Five.” Vonnegut is not, now, somehow serious enough. You’ve entered that time of life when every hard truth has to be qualified by the sense of what you stand to lose. “It’s not that simple,” you find yourself saying a lot, and the train of thought that unfolds in your mind as you speak those words reeks of desperation.

And yet, somehow, the world seems more and more to have been written by Vonnegut and your life is now the footnote. Perhaps it is time to go back and revisit that earlier self, the one who seemed, for a while, so interwoven in the pages of those old paperbacks.

Memory Consolidation

Consolidation, stabilization reconsolidation of memory engrams. Memory recall dynamics. Fascinating.

National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health (NCBI)

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=14744210&query_hl=1&itool=pubmed_docsum

The neurobiology of consolidations, or, how stable is the engram?

Dudai Y.
Department of Neurobiology, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel. yadin.dudai@weizmann.ac.il
Consolidation is the progressive postacquisition stabilization of long-term memory. The term is commonly used to refer to two types of processes: synaptic consolidation, which is accomplished within the first minutes to hours after learning and occurs in all memory systems studied so far; and system consolidation, which takes much longer, and in which memories that are initially dependent upon the hippocampus undergo reorganization and may become hippocampal-independent. The textbook account of consolidation is that for any item in memory, consolidation starts and ends just once. Recently, a heated debate has been revitalized on whether this is indeed the case, or, alternatively, whether memories become labile and must undergo some form of renewed consolidation every time they are activated. This debate focuses attention on fundamental issues concerning the nature of the memory trace, its maturation, persistence, retrievability, and modifiability.
PMID: 14744210 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=16563730&query_hl=2&itool=pubmed_docsum

Reconsolidation: the advantage of being refocused.

Dudai Y.
Department of Neurobiology, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel. yadin.dudai@weizmann.ac.il
Ample evidence suggests that upon their retrieval, items in long-term memory enter a transient special state, in which they might become prone to change. The process that generates this state is dubbed 'reconsolidation'. The dominant conceptual framework in this revitalized field of memory research focuses on whether reconsolidation resembles consolidation, which is the process that converts an unstable short-term memory trace into a more stable long-term trace. However, this emphasis on the comparison of reconsolidation to consolidation deserves reassessment. Instead, the phenomenon of reconsolidation, irrespective of its relevance to consolidation, provides a unique opportunity to tap into the molecular, cellular and circuit correlates of memory persistence and retrieval, of which we currently know only little.

Other links........

Rites of passage of the engram: reconsolidation and the lingering consolidation hypothesis.
[Neuron. 2004]
PMID: 15450162
Molecular bases of long-term memories: a question of persistence.
[Curr Opin Neurobiol. 2002]
PMID: 12015239
Linking new information to a reactivated memory requires consolidation and not reconsolidation mechanisms.
[PLoS Biol. 2005]
PMID: 16104829
The secret life of memories.
[Neuron. 2006]
PMID: 16675390
Amnesia or retrieval deficit? Implications of a molecular approach to the question of reconsolidation.
[Learn Mem. 2006]
PMID: 17015846

Bush Psychoprofile


From Publishers Weekly, review of Dr. Frank's book on GWB:

Bush Administration policies are not only a "great catastrophe" but the products of a disturbed mind, according to this provocative blend of psychological case-study and partisan polemic. Psychoanalyst Frank sifts through family memoirs, the writings of critics like Al Franken and David Corn and the public record of Bush's personal idiosyncrasies for clues to the President's character, interpreting the evidence in the rigidly Freudian framework of child psychoanalyst Melanie Klein. He finds that Bush, psychically scarred by an absentee father and a cold, authoritarian mother, has developed a galloping case of megalomania, characterized by a Manichaean worldview, delusions of persecution and omnipotence and an "anal/sadistic" indifference to others' pain, with removal from office the only "treatment option." The author's exegesis of Bush's personality traits-the drinking problem, the bellicose rhetoric, the verbal flailings and misstatements of fact, the religiosity and exercise routines, the hints of dyslexia and hyperactivity, the youthful cruelty to animals and schoolmates, the smirk-paints an intriguing, if exaggerated and contemptuous, portrait of a possibly troubled public figure. Indeed, if Bush's reneging on campaign promises is a form of clinical "sadism," and his budget deficits an "unconscious attack on his own parents," then Karl Rove, the Cabinet, and both houses of Congress belong in group therapy with him.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

9/11

"Another conspiracy theory". Ho hum....

One of 100's of videos, websites about 9/11. Yawn....

Make up your own mind. The Mall's not open yet, is it......?

http://www.tv-links.co.uk/show.do/4/1409

Like this crazy world, what a crazy guy thinks.........

1. No WMD in Iraq before US invaded.

(Everyone knows this by now.)

2. No 'yellow cake' uranium sent to the Iraqis from Nigeria.

(Everyone knows this by now.)

3. No "terrorist connection" between Saddam Hussein's Iraq and Al Queda. Or with any other terrorist group.

(Almost everyone knows this by now.)

4. US did not invade Iraq to bring "democracy" to Iraqis. There was another reason. Strategic energy resources, distribution.

(More and more Americans now realize this.)

5. 9/11 was a controlled implosion, missile and airplane attack. By our own government, a plausible reason to invade Iraq.

(Unthinkable for almost all of us. We'd better start thinking it.)

6. US invaded Iraq to create a PERMANENT base to control middle east (and Russian) energy resources.

(Few Americans realize this, still.)

7. US invasion of Iraq- although meant to permanently occupy for control of the oil- was counterproductive.
We destroyed the only counterweight to Iran's power. Must have been a VERY good reason to give it up.

(Think tankers finally figured this out? Or did they know from the start? And the rest of us?)

8. US invasion of Iran is a gambler's "doubling up". Lose the bet? Double the next one.
US cannot support or win a war against Iran. The draft is politically unfeasible. That leaves one option, only: Nukes

US aggression against Iran will strengthen the Iranian people's support of an unpopular Tehran government.

(More and more Americans realize this.)

9. US Middle East policy catastrophe is speeding up the disastrous, almost inevitable linkage between Asian (China/India/
Japan) energy consumption grid, energy rich Russia and major Middle East energy resources.
Already, billing petroleum in Euros (or Yen) in lieu of USD has begun. This mean s financial chaos for the US.
This cannot be allowed to happen. But it IS. This is what wars are fought over.

(Hardly anyone realizes this now.)

10. And just to stop at 10 (there's much, much more....) US allies are floundering, unable to depend on the US.
ABM missile shield in East Europe is being rejected by Europe (except UK) and Russia.
Iran strengthened by US annihilation of Iraq is a MUCH stronger enemy to Israel and Europe. Iran has an
intercontinental ballistic missile almost ready.

(Everyone's too confused to realise this now.)


The tradeoff in American liberty for the (so called) War on Terrorism.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8C02QHS0D44&mode=related&search=

NO terrroists attacking the US since 9/11. And why not?
Because US security is so efficient? Because Bush has found a way to "protect" the US?

NO attack since 9/11 for one reason: There IS no "terrorist threat" against the USA. A Grand Hoax.

Of course there will soon be a need to have another phony "terrorist attack". The yellow/orange/red thing is so over.

'Credible, expert opinion........'

Hi,

Here's one reason I'm cautious about the hysterical science-media consensus on Global Warming. Sorry,"Climate Change". (Agreed. It always does.):

Credible scientific and/or expert opinions are a dime a dozen. Often worth the same, too..........

http://www.fiction.net/tidbits/religion/predictions.html
Predictions from the past

"Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons."
Popular Mechanics, forecasting the relentless march of science, 1949

"I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."
Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943

"I have traveled the length and breadth of this country and talked with the best people, and I can assure you that data processing is a fad that won't last out the year."
The editor in charge of business books for Prentice Hall, 1957

"But what ... is it good for?"
Engineer at the Advanced Computing Systems Division of IBM, 1968, commenting on the microchip.

"There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home."
Ken Olson, president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment Corp., 1977

"This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us."
Western Union internal memo, 1876.

"The wireless music box has no imaginable commercial value. Who would payfor a message sent to nobody in particular?"
David Sarnoff's associates in response to his urgings for investment in the radio in the 1920s.

"The concept is interesting and well-formed, but in order to earn better than a 'C,' the idea must be feasible."
A Yale University management professor in response to Fred Smith's paper proposing reliable overnight delivery service. Smith went on to found Federal Express Corp.

"Who the hell wants to hear actors talk?"
H.M. Warner, Warner Brothers, 1927.

"I'm just glad it'll be Clark Gable who's falling on his face and not Gary Cooper."
Gary Cooper on his decision not to take the leading role in "Gone With The Wind."

"A cookie store is a bad idea. Besides, the market research reports say America likes crispy cookies, not soft and chewy cookies like you make."
Response to Debbi Fields' idea of starting Mrs. Fields' Cookies.

"We don't like their sound, and guitar music is on the way out."
Decca Recording Co. rejecting the Beatles, 1962.

"Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible."
Lord Kelvin, president, Royal Society, 1895.

"If I had thought about it, I wouldn't have done the experiment. The literature was full of examples that said you can't do this."
Spencer Silver on the work that led to the unique adhesives for 3-M "Post-It" Notepads.

"So we went to Atari and said, 'Hey, we've got this amazing thing, even built with some of your parts, and what do you think about funding us? Or we'll give it to you. We just want to do it. Pay our salary, we'll come work for you.' And they said, 'No.' So then we went to Hewlett-Packard, and they said, 'Hey, we don't need you. You haven't got through college yet.'"
Apple Computer Inc. founder Steve Jobs on attempts to get Atari and H-P interested in his and Steve Wozniak's personal computer.

"Professor Goddard does not know the relation between action and reaction and the need to have something better than a vacuum against which to react. He seems to lack the basic knowledge ladled out daily in high schools."
1921 New York Times editorial about Robert Goddard's revolutionary rocket work.

"You want to have consistent and uniform muscle development across all of your muscles? It can't be done. It's just a fact of life. You just have to accept inconsistent muscle development as an unalterable condition of weight training."
Response to Arthur Jones, who solved the "unsolvable" problem by inventing Nautilus.

"Drill for oil? You mean drill into the ground to try and find oil? You're crazy."
Drillers who Edwin L. Drake tried to enlist to his project to drill for oil in 1859.

"The bomb will never go off. I speak as an expert in explosives."
Admiral William Leahy, US Atomic Bomb Project.

"This fellow Charles Lindbergh will never make it. He's doomed."
Harry Guggenheim, millionaire aviation enthusiast.

"Stocks have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau."
Irving Fisher, Professor of Economics, Yale University, 1929.

"Airplanes are interesting toys but of no military value."
Marechal Ferdinand Foch, Professor of Strategy, Ecole Superieure de Guerre.

"Man will never reach the moon regardless of all future scientific advances."
Dr. Lee De Forest, inventor of the vacuum tube and father of television.

"Everything that can be invented has been invented."
Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. Office of Patents, 1899.

"Louis Pastueur's theory of germs is ridiculous fiction."
Pierre Pachet, Professor of Physiology at Toulouse, 1872

"The abdomen, the chest, and the brain will forever be shut from the instrusion of the wise and humane surgeon."
Sir John Eric Ericksen, British surgeon, appointed Surgeon-Extraordinary to Queen Victoria, 1873

Control the Climate

I can't help being reminded by Al Gore's call for "more engineers" to meet the challenge of climate change- of a near identical call for "more engineers"- after Russia put Sputnik in space. Ahead of the US?!

http://news.com.com/2061-10796_3-6173081.html?part=rss&tag=2547-1_3-0-5&subj=news

The challenge of the "Race to Space" (as the media called it) shares a lot with the war on climate change. Or whatever it's currently called.... Just that climate control is billed as being of planetary and survival importance. While putting a man on the moon (great imagery?) was merely about national pride, not a reply to the threat of APOCALYPSE.

The feeling associated with the challenge of climate change, until they come up with a cleverer way to 'brand' it, reminds me more of the Free Speech Movement (early 60's) and the Civil Rights Movement (mid-late 60's). In their pervasive idealism, religious fervor, political urgency, universal believe in what is "right".

But climate control trumps them ALL in worldwide hysteria. But they DO need a better buzz word or phrase. "Climate control" is insipid, lacks gravitas, evokes authoritarian pretensions. What greater chutzpah can man have than to claim he can "control" the weather?

Only one: control climate!

Global Warming does have much more 'juice', is "hotter". Still, staying warm sounds sort of 'good' to much of the (developed, civilized, powerful part of the) planet. And nobody cares much about what happens outside his own back yard, does he? (the weak "Global" part).

Let's see.... Beat the Heat? Nope. The Big Burn? Promising, reverberates with The Big Bang. But still not right. Fahrenheit 1000? Better. Surviving the Sun? Too generic.


As always, my tongue's not firmly in cheek. I AM sympathetic, and it all may even be the Truth!


Think of a dark street late at night as we pass a rousing, incandescent evangelical prayer meeting. We feel drawn, a yearning to believe, participate, to feel One with our fellow men in something greater than ourselves.

Until we go lie down for awhile, anyway.

Race to Cool off the World.

I can't help being reminded by Al Gore's call for "more engineers" to meet the challenge of climate change- of a near identical call for "more engineers"- after Russia put Sputnik in space. Ahead of the US?!

http://news.com.com/2061-10796_3-6173081.html?part=rss&tag=2547-1_3-0-5&subj=news

The challenge of the "Race to Space" (as the media called it) shares a lot with the war on climate change. Or whatever it's currently called.... Just that climate control is billed as being of planetary and survival importance. While putting a man on the moon (great imagery?) was merely about national pride, not a reply to the threat of APOCALYPSE.

The feeling associated with the challenge of climate change, until they come up with a cleverer way to 'brand' it, reminds me more of the Free Speech Movement (early 60's) and the Civil Rights Movement (mid-late 60's). In their pervasive idealism, religious fervor, political urgency, universal believe in what is "right".

But climate control trumps them ALL in worldwide hysteria. But they DO need a better buzz word or phrase. "Climate control" is insipid, lacks gravitas, evokes authoritarian pretensions. What greater chutzpah can man have than to claim he can "control" the weather?

Only one: Control climate!

Global Warming is much "hotter". Still, staying warm sounds 'good' to much of the (developed, civilized, powerful part of the) planet. And nobody cares much about what happens outside his own back yard, anyway. "Global" is weak.

Let's see.... Beat the Heat? Nope. The Big Burn? Promising, reverberates with The Big Bang. But still not right. Fahrenheit 1000? Better. Surviving the Sun? Too generic.

As always, my tongue's not so firmly in cheek. I AM sympathetic, and it may even turn out to be the Truth!

Think of a dark street late at night as we pass a rousing, incandescent evangelical prayer meeting. We feel drawn, a twinge of a yearning to believe, to feel One with our fellow men, believing in something greater than ourselves.

Go lie down awhile- always a good remedy.