Dangerous links

No, Stupid, not between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden.
Antiwar.com reader Eric S. has had some problems with one of Justin Raimondo’s hyperlinks (not the same sort of frustrations as doofus the Trotskycon):

I often check the links just for the sake of, well, bugging Frum or the White House. I checked the “either you are for us or for the terrorists” link [in this column] to the white house address, proceeded to save it as a “Word” file, and then checked my spyware. Couldn’t get the files out but was able to quarantine them. The only one that i remember was called paris. There was a total of 7 and this is the first time I have run into any spyware for months.

Big Brother is Watching You

Update: I have been contacted by various computer geniuses who inform me that this is probably just a correlation without causation.

Listen to Milton

Nobel laureate and neolibertarian favorite Milton Friedman gives his protégés something to ignore:

    Friedman supported Bush’s first-term candidacy, but he is more accurately libertarian than conservative and not a reliable Bush ally.

    Progress in his goal of rolling back the role of government, he said, is “being greatly threatened, unfortunately, by this notion that the U.S. has a mission to promote democracy around the world,” a big Bush objective.

    “War is a friend of the state,” Friedman said. It is always expensive, requiring higher taxes, and, “In time of war, government will take powers and do things that it would not ordinarily do.”

The rest here.

Via Justin Logan.

The Incredible Shrinking MSM

Apparently, the Associated Press and Reuters are no longer part of it. From a Sean Hannity interview with Matt Drudge:

    SEAN HANNITY: Just before coming on the air, I check the Drudge Report. You have a huge blockbuster story that is up there now saying that the Pentagon has confirmed — you picked up AP, Reuters reporting — that at Gitmo some of these Korans were splashed with urine. When will the mainstream media catch up with a story like that? And isn’t this part of the problem with the old guard? [emphasis mine]

Yeah, and what about the Tom Cruise-Katie Holmes romance? Where are People magazine and Us Weekly on that one? Dining on Matt Drudge’s dust, that’s where.

Condoleezza Rice: Ignoramus or Solipsist?

Byron Williams shares this gem from a recent Condoleezza Rice speech:

    And when you think they [Iraqis] aren’t going to make it — when you want to criticize what they’re doing and it’s taking a long time and this and that — just remember, not to this date, have they made a compromise as bad as the one in 1789 that made my ancestors three-fifths of a man. So let’s be humble about what they’re going through.

I was just revving myself up for a blistering denunciation of Secretary Rice’s (apparently frequent) misreading of the 3/5 Compromise when I came across this perfect rebuttal – on the rabidly pro-war Powerlineblog, of all places!!!

    Secretary Rice’s point about the “three-fifths” clause of the Constitution is a frequently repeated canard. The constitutional provision reduced slaves from counting in full for the purpose of allocating congressional representation. As Thomas West explains:

    “[T]he Constitution allowed Southern States to count three-fifths of their slaves toward the population that would determine numbers of representatives in the federal legislature. This clause is often singled out today as a sign of black dehumanization: they are only three-fifths human. But the provision applied to slaves, not blacks. That meant that free blacks-–and there were many, North as well as South–-counted the same as whites. More important, the fact that slaves were counted at all was a concession to slave owners. Southerners would have been glad to count their slaves as whole persons. It was the Northerners who did not want them counted, for why should the South be rewarded with more representatives, the more slaves they held?”

    In Vindicating the Founders, West further notes that at the Constitutional Convention it was Southerners, not Northerners, who argued that slaves should count equally with white citizens in computing the state’s representatives; Northerners argued that it was wrong “to give such encouragement to the slave trade as would be given by allowing [the Southern states] a representation for their Negroes.” In short, for the purpose of congressional representation, the slave interests wanted to count slaves in full; the opponents of slavery did not want to count slaves at all. The three-fifths clause was a compromise that reflected the disagreement, reducing the representation of slave interests over what they otherwise would have been. This is not too difficult a point to expect sophisticated representatives of the United States to get right.

Indeed. But I have to ask my new pal at Powerline why he expects the Bushies to be more fluent in American history than they are in Iraqi history. Why bother with history at all? As one Bush aide explained so memorably,

    That’s not the way the world really works anymore. … We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality — judiciously, as you will — we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.

Thank you, Steve Rosen

The Israel National News Service reports that the Mossad is in the midst of an internal debate over what to name the spy agency’s new main building: The Director, Meir Dagan, wants to honor Mossad agent Eli Cohen — hanged by the Syrians in 1965 — but others are opposed to naming it after any particular person. But if any individual is to be so honored, the anti-Cohen faction wants the recognition to go to Isar Harel, the first Mossad chief.

Although no one is likely to ask my humble opinion, I’ll give it anyway: what about the Steve Rosen Conference Center — in honor of the about-to-be-indicted former policy director of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), who, along with his aide Keith Weissman and Pentagon analyst Larry Franklin handed over vital U.S. secrets to Israel?

To give you some idea of the gravity of the crimes this spy nest has committed, AIPAC’s lawyer, Nathan Lewis, had to get a security clearance before even hearing the charges.

Oh, Brother!

Christopher Hitchens, the ex-Trotskyist poppinjay and blathering drunk who has made a second career out of hailing the Bush Doctrine, has a very talented and quite rational brother, and Peter Hitchens seems to have his sibling’s number down cold. At a recent event sponsored by the left-wing Guardian newspaper, the Hitchens brothers confronted each other over Christopher’s sudden affinity for the U.S. — or, rather, the U.S. military — as opposed to his formerly anti-American position, pre-9/11. Hitch was in a snit because his brother had recalled an incident in which The Hitch had said that he would rather have the Red Army in the middle class suburb of Hendon than U.S. cruise missiles defending against the alleged Soviet threat. Brother Chris denied ever making such a statement, but when cornered by admitted it, which led to Peter’s rather insightful analysis of his brother’s evolving neocon psychopathology:

“Hendon’s vice in the eyes of people of your fashion is that it’s suburb, and therefore bad, and it contains half-timbered, fake Tudor houses and people who wash their cars… that’s why I think it was at the end of your joke. It didn’t convey to me that you were a Stalinist, though we had earlier on discussed the makeup of the ’36 constitution of the soviet union, and its implications for the argument about whether the evils of Stalin and the evils of Hitler could be compared (but it’s more complicated than that, and couldn’t possibly bring us to the conclusion that you or I were a Stalinist). What you were saying was that you didn’t care. That ultimately that argument wasn’t of any interest to you. At the time you were very busy supporting the unilateral disarmament of the Western democracies in the face of the most heavily armed totalitarian power that had ever existed . And I thought you were wrong. And I still do. But what was interesting about it in September 2001, was that you had transferred your affections to the United States. And the point that I was trying to make was that – partly because you were altered, as everybody alters, in such periods; but also, because the United States had altered, and had become from having been to some extent the arsenal of reaction (which is why I liked it) – [the US] had instead become a sort of multicultural, liberal global force which you rather more approved of.”

Their interviewer — or, rather, referee — interposes at one point to ask if Chrstopher Hitchens’ neoconization hasn’t led to a certain ideological convergence with his right-leaning brother, to which The Hitch replies:

“I would think not. I’ve tried to formulate it before that it seems to me quite right that a conservative would oppose the war [in Iraq] and it’s a misrepresentation of the division over the regime change to make it left-right in the opposite way. I’m not surprised that the institutional forces of conservatism in America are generally anti-war. Vice-president Cheney’s conversion to intervention of this kind is very recent and not, I think, completely sincere. But it’s better than nothing. Our side won that argument very narrowly…

This is precisely the point I have been making — albeit from quite another viewpoint — for quite some time. In his heart of hearts, Hitchens is still a Trotskyist — not in the sense that he’s any longer a socialist, in the strict sense of that word, but that he’s for a revolutionary change that smashes the status quo — especially religion — and has merely, as his brother says, transferred his affections from one internationalist movement to another. This is why the political biography of the regime-change crowd is, in many cases, so similar to Hitchens left-to-right odyssey: these people aren’t conservatives in any meaningful sense of the term, but rather neo-Jacobins, as Clae Ryn describes them: would-be social engineers on a global scale. Yesterday they were hailing the Five Year Plan, today they are praising the Bush Doctrine: in both instances, they kneel before whatever power it is that seems likely to win, and invest it with all their hopes and desires.

The contrast between the Brothers Hitchens couldn’t be more dramatic, and especially in this confrontation. Christopher is rude — at one point he tells a woman in the audience to “kiss my as*” for daring to suggest that he stop smoking a cigarette — and spends most of his time kissing up to the leftie audience and trying to charm us with his inventive evasions. On the other hand, Peter is thoughtful, and comes close to expressing the very essence of conservative opposition to the foreign policy of the transatlantic cabal that is dragging us all down to perdition. What he calls “idealist internationalism” is, in his view:

“A displacement activity. Conservatism in the United States, for instance, has now become almost entirely a matter of campaigning around the world against regimes it doesn’t like. Which seems to me to be a dodge. It doesn’t help the fact that [at home in the US] schools teach rubbish, marriage is breaking down, that society is [inaudible]. What I have come to value above all things is liberty and liberty of conscience, without which we don’t seem to me to be able to survive. The assault on the liberty of the subject and the citizen under the guise of this war against terror seems to me to be deeply shocking. To find in my lifetime that habeas corpus and the presumption of innocence are under threat and that we’re going to be compelled to carry identity cards because we will have to be responsible to the state rather than the other way round – all as consequences of this supposed idealist campaign to bring liberty to Iraq and Afghanistan – seems to me much more important than flanneling away about how you dislike oppression abroad. We can do an awful lot about combating it at home.”

Hear, hear!