TAKIN’ IT TO THE STREETS
Re: Jay D. Homnick’s Polished
Hamza:
Much has been made of the conundrum faced by the United States
when so-called “asymmetric warfare” is waged upon it. The leviathan
American military, some would say, is in the end a Gulliver bound
supine by nasty Lilliputians who hijack our commercial airliners
and send explosives into our phalanxes with human (single-use)
delivery systems.
What Mr. Homnick correctly suggests is that asymmetric warfare
is what our enemy proposes, as it suits him, but not necessarily
what we must accept. It is in the nature of a first offer, and one
we should reject.
The liquidation of Mr. Rabia represents an instance of the
restoration of symmetry, and one we should welcome, for in a
symmetric war with the likes of al-Qaeda the advantage is entirely
our own…
— Paul Kotik
Plantation, Florida
We should be going after the terrorist anywhere they are, in any
country. They brought the war to us and turn about is fair play. If
Clinton had the backbone to fight back when we were attacked, then
9/11 might never have happened, but we were thought to be spineless
and easy targets.
— Elaine Kyle
COMEDICALLY PANICKED
Re: Mark Gauvreau Judge’s Margaret
Cho: Dingbat:
Had to say, loved the article. I had no particular interest in
Robert Klein, but after reading the article, want to read his book.
That’s what good writing does.
Margaret Cho used to be funny. The panic of the liberals kind of
scares me sometimes.
— Angela S.
Clarksville, Tennessee
“Which is why someone slipping on a banana peal is still
funny.”
As some famous guy said; “never send to know for whom the banana
peals; it peals for thee.”
— Gary Henkel
Colorado Springs, Colorado
HANG IN THERE
Re: Enemy Central’s Out of
Place:
Truth be known, the Democrats are rooting for Saddam. In my
opinion, they’d love to see Saddam beat the rap! One can almost
imagine the prayers from the left. Dear god all mighty Karl Marx in
Utopia, please, please, please let Saddam win. Amen!
Just think how a Saddam court battle win would embarrass
President Bush! Why, it might even put (we’re gonna lose) Howard
Dean or (our troops are terrorizing Iraq’s women and children in
the middle of the night) John Kerry
in the White House in oh eight! Whooo weee, what a Christmas
present that would be for the left!
— Jim L
East Sandwich, Massachusetts
CLOONIANA
Re: James Bowman’s Syriana:
It is clear, from this review why it is often said that
Hollywood makes films to impress each other rather than to
entertain the ticket buyer. Like many, I enjoy a good conspiracy
movie — the first Manchurian Candidate comes to mind. But
no matter how skillfully produced a film is, how can they expect
anyone to come see a film that maintains that we are always the bad
guys. Yes we are probably the most ham-fisted of the major power.
But our lack of subtlety or “nuance” may just mean that we don’t
see essential value with the status quo. Movies that entertain and
don’t insult the viewer make money. Garbage like this is successful
only if they can fool enough people to overlook the inherent hate
for our country.
— Lee Rodgers
What a hilarious review and the fantasy world that guy lives in:
“But then that could be one of the problems with making a film torn
from the headlines of 30-odd years ago rather than today.”
I doubt even Syriana — despite all the pro-Bush people
attacking it — really gets to the truth of the horrific crap we
are doing to those poor people.
I don’t recall us gassing Iraqis with Pentoxide 30 years ago
Last I knew, the oil monopolies, defense contractors, 30 years
ago under Nixon only TALKED about doing this kind of crap like what
these mobsters are doing. They should all be tried for War Crimes
right along next to their puppet Saddam.
Keep shoveling the lies — only thing it’ll do is make sure
another poor son or daughter dies
— Kyle Lussier
So I guess we’ve now learned from George Clooney that torture
works! I know Hollywood was good for something…
— Todd Gross
CUT THROUGH THE FILTERS
Re: Jed Babbin’s What I
Expect to Find:
While I’m not a gambling man, I’ll bet my hard earned money on a
United States Military win in Iraq and indeed on the war on terror.
From my perspective, that’s a pretty safe bet. What will you find
in Iraq? Probably a world that is one hundred and eighty degrees
out of phase from the left wing mainstream media and the left wing
Democratic Party. I think we can all safely conclude now with one
hundred percent accuracy that the left wing Democrat party has
indeed invested its fortunes in losing the war in Iraq. And without
a doubt, it is clearly apparent that the Democrats and the
mainstream media feel if they keep pounding the defeat table,
eventually the American voter will begin to believe in what the
Democrats are praying for each and every day.
As for me, I think the Democratic Party is disgraceful and anti
American. Chairman Mao Dean, the DNC leader has completely gone off
the deep end and has taken most in his party with him. God help
America if this gang of losers ever regains power in this country.
In any case, to my way of thinking, the Democratic Party is on a
direct path to the scrap heap of history. Joe Lieberman sir, get
out now while you still can. You are too much of a patriot and
statesman to be associated with that pack of losers. If you run for
president as a Republican in 2008, you have my vote! But, never as
a Democrat!
— Jim L
East Sandwich, Massachusetts
Elizabeth Vargas is really stretching her lipstick tonight. While
you are over seeing our countrymen, please find a box big enough
for Elizabeth until the war is over. Her passionate “reporting”
tonight is really borderline. What are we supposed to do with
high-ranking prisoners, keep them in the Hilton? I have had enough.
Mr. Jennings is still running ABC.
— Martin N. Tirrell
Lisbon, New Hampshire
NO PAULINE SYNTHESIS
Re: Dennis B. Wilson’s letter (under “Holiday on Wheels”) in Reader
Mail’s Happy Honda
Day and Patrick Hynes’s Keeping the
Christ in Christ:
Dennis B. Wilson’s e-mail concerning the role of Paul of Tarsus
in the establishment of early Christianity is broadly correct in
its observation that Paul more than any other man was responsible
for the spread of the new faith throughout the eastern half of the
Mediterranean world. However, he repeats a number of old and easily
discredited canards regarding Paul’s “synthesis” of the teachings
of Jesus and various “Eastern mystery religions” to create a new,
syncretistic religion that was both more acceptable to gentile
pagans and at the same time a distortion of the “real” teachings of
Jesus of Nazareth. Theories of this sort arose out of the writings
of Bultmann and other 19th century theologians, whose knowledge of
both early Christianity and first century Judaism, to say nothing
of the ancient mystery cults, was not particularly well informed by
the standards of modern scholarship (though one notes that they
have their contemporary acolytes today among those who wish to
detach Christianity from Jesus so as to have the latter without the
former, so much the better to rebuild Christ to their own
specifications). In fact, the more we know about both first-century
Judaism, the writings of Paul, and the life of Jesus, the less
tenable the theory that Paul “invented” Christianity becomes. Those
who would like to understand better the complex role and teachings
of Paul in relationship to Jesus, Judaism and the early Church,
would be well advised to consult the work of E. P. Sanders
(Paul and Palestinian Judaism) and N.T.
Wright (The New Testament and the People of
God, Jesus and the Victory of God, The Resurrection of the Son of God, and
What Saint Paul Really Said), who are
just two of the more accessible scholars whose research is
revealing the fundamental historical basis of Christian
orthodoxy.
— Stuart Koehl
Falls Church, Virginia
ABANDON ALL RULES?
Re: George Neumayr’s The Commode
of D.C.:
Mr. Neumayr is exactly right to identify the case of Duke
Cunningham as an awkward example of Congressional corruption,
rather than an isolated instance of it. The well-entrenched lobby
industry and hollow ethics codes are symptomatic of troubles far
greater than this red herring.
But is it not naive and simplistic (or at least awfully
convenient) to suggest that willingness to cut taxes is the true
“test of a politician’s commitment” to honest governance? Certainly
Mr. Neumayr can marshal countless other viable arguments for
lowering taxes and reducing the size of government, so few readers
would object to this editorial prescribing the same medicine for
another malady. Certainly, though, the point of the rest of the
editorial is that Congressional abuses are systematic, not partisan
or tied to political ideology.
We should honestly assess whether reducing the size of
government to any realistic level (“what is proper for the federal
government to do”) would truly solve this problem. Even should
federal government spending be curtailed to a fiscal conservative’s
fondest dream (let’s imagine spending only for the Pentagon,
Homeland Security, and the Interstate Highways), in this day and
age, would those hundreds of billions of dollars not still be
enough to attract an army of lobbyists, or tempt the politicians
with its oversight? The logical corollary to believing this is to
be astonished to find any corruption in state or local governments,
all of which have budgets far smaller.
Campaign finance laws or other ethical hurdles may be
incremental at best, and disingenuous at worst, but should we
abandon all attempts to define what is “proper for a congressman to
do”?
In the end, there is no magic bullet, or easy answer; only by
deciding that corruption is inexcusable can the public be rid of
it. The American voter is told, with increasing sophistication, by
party leaders and pundits, that allowing the opposition candidate
to win would be far worse than any wrongs perpetrated by our guy.
We’re told that our ends are worth the means, while theirs are just
plain corruption. Until conservatives and liberals decide that our
own agendas are not more important than honesty and fairness, we’ll
keep getting more of the same.
— Evan Humphreys
Reno, Nevada