Pax Americana

A well-reasoned and thought-provoking essay by Robert Kagan on the current geopolitical system:

People who believe greater equality among nations would be preferable to the present American predominance often succumb to a basic logical fallacy. They believe the order the world enjoys today exists independently of American power. They imagine that in a world where American power was diminished, the aspects of international order that they like would remain in place. But that ’s not the way it works. International order does not rest on ideas and institutions. It is shaped by configurations of power. The international order we know today reflects the distribution of power in the world since World War ii, and especially since the end of the Cold War. A different configuration of power, a multipolar world in which the poles were Russia, China, the United States, India, and Europe, would produce its own kind of order, with different rules and norms reflecting the interests of the powerful states that would have a hand in shaping it. Would that international order be an improvement? Perhaps for Beijing and Moscow it would. But it is doubtful that it would suit the tastes of enlightenment liberals in the United States and Europe.

Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, Over?

People on the lefter side of the political spectrum tend to represent blogs like Daily Kos as representing something like mainstream serious political and social thinking.

Now I normally wouldn’t dignify Kos with a link, but recently they’ve been discussing whether Bush will refuse to step down in 2009, and begin rounding up dissenters into camps.

These people are so utterly sheltered. I grew up in a brutal dictatorship, folks, and for any thinking person to even remotely consider such things of Bush or the USA — in terms of grubby reality on the ground, not even considering the ideals on which the US is based — is from where I stand proof of irretrievabe dementia.

Tell you what. If Bush refuses to step down in 09, I will personally pay a dollar to every single member of the Democratic Party.

Double Standard

A few years ago, the Israeli army fought its way into a fortified bomb-factory in Jenin, a city in the West Bank, ultimately killing several dozen people (mostly armed combatants, according to Human Rights Watch) and leveling several city blocks. Israel was voiciferously condemned by all and sundry for this apalling massacre.

Now the Lebanese government does the exact same thing, to resounding Arab approval.

Things that make you go hmm.