Good Reason

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Category: politics (page 15 of 19)

To the barricades!

From the ABC News:

During his years in Government former foreign affairs minister Alexander Downer developed a strong relationship with Condoleezza Rice.

For the new kid on the block, Stephen Smith, it would have been much harder work during his first meeting with the US Secretary of State.

But at a joint press conference in Washington afterwards it was all praise from both sides.

“Stephen, it’s great to have you here in Washington,” Dr Rice said. “It has really been a very good first meeting, and I look very much forward to meetings in the future.”

The Mr Smith in question happens to be my own Member of Parliament, now Foreign Minister since Labor swept into power. He’s giving the hard word — Australia’s pulling out of Iraq.

“We came to office in November last year with a longstanding commitment that we would withdraw our combat troops from Iraq by the middle of this year, and I advised the Secretary of State that when the current rotation from the Overwatch battle group is completed in the course of the first half of this year, those troops will be withdrawn,” he said.

This is what I like so much about the new Rudd government: they do the right thing, decisions seem to be made sensibly and thoughtfully, and they manage to get it all done without acrimony.

But this is interesting:

“Can I say that from a selfish, personal point of view as a person who comes from Perth in Western Australia, one of the most enjoyable parts of the meeting was inviting the Secretary to come to visit Perth and Western Australia, which I’m happy to announce she gratefully accepted.”

Condi’s coming to Perth? When will the protests be? You know I’ll be there. Perhaps the cream pie brigade could be persuaded to come along. If I can’t see her in an orange jumpsuit in the Hague, lemon meringue would be my second choice.

Liberal fascism?

There are only a couple of people on my automatic ‘punch in the face’ list. One is Jonah Goldberg. (The other’s Dinesh D’Souza.) It’s not anger. I’m not a violent person. I’d rather go verbal than mano a mano. But when someone has made the choice to argue the opposite of what everyone else knows to be so in a perverse attempt to rewrite history — truth be damned! — really, you can’t have a normal discussion with that person. It would just give them an opportunity to spew crap. Spewing crap is what they’re good at, and it’ll only make it worse. But a punch in the face transcends discourse. And it may provide that person with the reality check that reality never gave them.

The crap I’m talking about is, of course, Goldberg’s book, ‘Liberal Fascism’. Sadly, No! has done a great job taking down the Doughy Pantload’s premise, which is basically the associative fallacy spread over 400 pages: Nazis and Fascists liked organic foods, liberals like organic foods, ergo liberals are fascists. Fascist states are totalitarian, and totalitarians tell people how to live their lives. Liberals would like to tell people what to do (e.g. the environment, good parenting); ergo, liberals are totalitarians. Utterly fallacious, and remind me again whose vision of the state involves legislating people’s bedroom behaviour?

You might enjoy Jon Stewart’s interview with Das Lodenhosen, if your eyes don’t hurt from all the rolling.

Nutbars: behold your god.

Why are people suddenly surprised to find that Ron Paul is a paranoid bigoted conspiracy theorist? I knew he was a John Birch-style extremist as soon as I saw the John Birch-style extremists lining up to form his fanbase. I’ve lived among these people, heard them popping off about quitting the UN, going back on the gold standard, and abolishing the Federal Reserve and the income tax. No matter how much sense they seem to make on individual issues, you can smell the aroma of bat guano a furlong away.

People have been trying to figure out whether Ron Paul is the new Howard Dean or the new Ralph Nader. Neither; he’s the new Lyndon LaRouche.

Why we should ignore the political opinions of religious leaders

John Roskam dreams of a world where religious conservatives can be free to express their bizarro ideas without fear of being snickered at by cold rational secularists.

In this country [Australia], a politician speaking about religion also faces the risk of something worse than being thought a nutter. It’s just as possible that anyone who admits that their religion influences the way they vote in parliament will be accused of being a dangerous theocrat intent on introducing the moral majority into Australia.

Oh, pshaw, John. Everyone knows theocrats aren’t dangerous. They just want to siphon a bit of the power to themselves. Who wouldn’t, with God on their side?

But who’s John Roskam? Well, the executive director of the blandly-named-so-as-not-to-arouse-suspicion Institute of Public Affairs, a conservative think tank. He’s argued that culture wars are indicative of a healthy and vibrant society. Lovely. Usually the Australian system of quarantine works pretty well, but it doesn’t seem to apply to ideas from America. He also complains that

When it comes to gaining promotion, conservative candidates need to be at least twice as good as their left-wing opposition. In the face of this, conservatives simply give up.

Think someone’s having trouble getting on in Australian academia? Poor chaps. You’d think they’d empathise more with minorities.

Back to the article.

There is also a contradiction in the way the media reports political and moral statements from the churches. Contributions on “social justice” issues are welcomed, but contributions on avowedly “moral” issues are not. The implication is that it’s entirely appropriate for politicians to pay attention to religious leaders who preach about the treatment of David Hicks or the evils of WorkChoices, but when those same church leaders start talking about abortion or euthanasia politicians should ignore them.

There is a reason why people should ignore church leaders: Basing your ideas on imaginary people leads to real problems.

God is imaginary, and religions are man-made institutions. Their leaders have no more moral authority than anyone else. So I’m glad to hear them say that people shouldn’t be locked up without a trial, or that working people shouldn’t be pitted against each other to benefit business. These are things that anyone with a conscience could say are true. But if they’re going to say that abortion is wrong, or that euthanasia is wrong, I’m going to ask why they think so. And if it’s because of the presumed opinions of imaginary people, then onto the Bozo pile they go, whether they like it or not.

The Priest Class can’t help itself. All that political power, and all they can do is hanker after it. Until they argue that the political power somehow belongs to them, and enough people believe them. Too bad we have people like Roskam to make their arguments for them.

Religious ‘bigotry’

Hitchens:

Isn’t it amazing how self-pitying and self-aggrandizing the religious freaks in this country are? It’s not enough that they can make straight-faced professions of “faith” at election times and impose their language on everything from the Pledge of Allegiance to the currency. It’s not enough that they can claim tax exemption and even subsidy for anything “faith-based.” It’s that when they are even slightly criticized for their absurd opinions, they can squeal as if being martyred and act as if they are truly being persecuted.

I do hear this from some Latter-day Saints, partly concerned that Romney’s presidential bid has thrust their (in some ways secretive) faith under the microscope, and partly worried that Romney won’t carry the day because of the resulting criticism. They call it ‘religious bigotry’, and it may indeed be that for a portion of the electorate. But it’s also a real worry when a major candidate thinks that God lives on planet Kolob, or that peoples’ skin colour can be changed because of their moral behaviour.

Refusing to vote for someone because they believe fairy tales is not bigotry. It’s an acknowledgement that the job of president may require some critical thinking. As Hitch says:

However, what Article VI does not do, and was never intended to do, is deny me the right to say, as loudly as I may choose, that I will on no account vote for a smirking hick like Mike Huckabee, who is an unusually stupid primate but who does not have the elementary intelligence to recognize the fact that this is what he is. My right to say and believe that is already guaranteed to me by the First Amendment.

Worth reading.

It’s official: Mitt Romney is a fucking douche

I am all kinds of pissed-off about Das Speech. I was expecting Romney to say that he wouldn’t take orders from Salt Lake (and he did), but he also went out of his way to malign people of reason.

I’ll just comment on the greasiest morsels.

America faces a new generation of challenges. Radical violent Islam seeks to destroy us. An emerging China endeavors to surpass our economic leadership. And we’re troubled at home by government overspending, overuse of foreign oil, and the breakdown of the family.

Fear buttons activated. The audience is now primed to reject rational thought and swallow authoritarian dogma.

Freedom requires religion just as religion requires freedom.

Obstreperousness requires pomegranates just as pomegranates require obstreperousness.

Freedom opens the windows of the soul so that man can discover his most profound beliefs and commune with God. Freedom and religion endure together, or perish alone.

Tell that to people in secular countries. Japan. Norway. Most of Europe. You can use your freedom to commune with any beings your imagination can contrive, but don’t go saying religion is some kind of prerequisite.

We separate church and state affairs in this country, and for good reason. No religion should dictate to the state nor should the state interfere with the free practice of religion. But in recent years, the notion of the separation of church and state has been taken by some well beyond its original meaning. They seek to remove from the public domain any acknowledgment of God. Religion is seen as merely a private affair with no place in public life. It’s as if they are intent on establishing a new religion in America – the religion of secularism. They are wrong.

Us them, us them. I know Republicans like to hold up this imaginary scarecrow, but it’s so dishonest. If secularism were a religion, I’d be paying tithes. And it’d be a lot better organised.

Do you ever wonder how it is that Mitt knows the ‘original meaning’ of the Separation Clause so much better than the rest of us? Was it a result of personal revelation? Was Romney doing Jefferson’s proxy temple work, and have a visitation? It’s as if he was intent on establishing a new religion in America – the cult of revisionist channeling.

Yes, I do think religion is a private affair. I don’t think all this public god-posturing is a good use of airtime (and no small amount of money as well). I’d love to see less of it in public life. If, just for once, a candidate for office were to able to express an honest doubt about theism, I would fall over. I might also think that maybe rational thought in the public sphere were possible. But that will never happen in today’s America because religious folk have a stranglehold on the discourse. It’s not the secularists.

The founders proscribed the establishment of a state religion, but they did not countenance the elimination of religion from the public square. We are a nation “under God” and in God, we do indeed trust.

I think this just shows how insidious religious faith can be. All that God stuff is a relic of the Eisenhower years, and now it’s entrenched.

Nor would I separate us from our religious heritage. Perhaps the most important question to ask a person of faith who seeks a political office, is this: Does he share these American values – the equality of human kind, the obligation to serve one another and a steadfast commitment to liberty?

Which Romney has already explained is predicated on religious faith.

Listen: we’ve tried having a person of faith as president. He had so much faith that he could believe anything he wanted was true, without any evidence at all. It was a disaster. Why don’t we try a person of doubt? See how that works for a while.

If you’re a secularist, or if you’re not particularly religious, or even if you’re just suspicious of religious involvement in government, you now know exactly where you stand in Mitt Romney’s America: on the other side of the Wall of Separation.

The two flavours of LIHOP

Scripps News thinks that America is crawling with conspiracy theorists:

Nearly two-thirds of Americans think it is possible that some federal officials had specific warnings of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, but chose to ignore those warnings, according to a Scripps Howard News Service/Ohio University poll.

But wait, if it really did happen, it’s not a conspiracy theory, is it?

The Carpetbagger points out that this actually describes two different points of view: one, that Team Bush allowed 9/11 to happen because it fit conveniently into their nation-building agenda; and two, they allowed it to happen because… they were so clueless that they ignored warnings about it just as they ignored warnings on everything else. In scenario 1, they’re evil, and in scenario 2, they’re just incompetent.

So which is it? Surely they’re not so evil as to permit Americans to die so they can have their way. Oh, wait, they are. But no one knows if that’s what they were thinking, and the incompetence theory assumes less. So what it comes down to is: which is greater, Team Bush’s capacity for evil, or their capacity for incompetence?

Damn. Put it like that, and you could go back and forth all day.

Phillip Adams nails it

On the election, that is.

It hardly matters whether Howard is a bigot or simply another politician skilled in exploiting the bigotry of others. In many ways the latter is more morally repugnant. Either way it’s this behaviour that condemns Howard – far more than any IR laws or his Government’s extraordinary waste of the nation-building opportunities provided by the economic boom.

The youngest voters are too young to recall Howard’s response to Hansonism while Tampa and even Iraq may be fading in the memory or concerns of their parents. But rest assured that the judgment of history will be far harsher on Howard than anything that happens in the tally room tonight.

Election results: Schadenfreude edition

John Howard lost his seat in Parliament.

Ha.

Mal Brough lost his seat in Parliament.

Heh heh heh.

Who else do I detest?

Labor romps it in

This has been a strange election. It’s been clear for weeks that Rudd would be the new Prime Minister, but I haven’t been able to figure out why. John Howard clearly has always been an odious man with ruinous policies, but which one of his faults undid him in the eyes of the Australian electorate? Was it:

  • the nasty campaign?
  • ceaseless toadying with George Bush?
  • getting Australia into Iraq?
  • cutting funding to Australian universities?
  • throwing asylum-seekers in jail and claiming they’d thrown their children overboard?
  • using the race card to attract One Nation voters and split the electorate?
  • his refusal to sign Kyoto and his foot-dragging on climate change?
  • his leanings toward nuclear power?
  • the GST?
  • undermining the redeveloping autonomy of indigenous Australians?
  • and refusing to say ‘sorry’?

Not for the low-information Australian voters I walk among. Even the controversial IR laws weren’t enough to register on their radar. And Howard’s term has been marked by largely sane monetary policy. Why the revolution?

When I asked, people would say something like, ‘Well, it’s time for a change.’ ‘He’s been in for a long time, and it’s time for someone else.’ Simple voter fatigue.

And so Australia shrugged, and sent Howard packing.

West Australia, I know your results are tallied last, and even if you elect all Liberal Party candidates, it won’t make any difference. But I’ll be very disappointed.

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