“Obama puts a pretty, intellectual, liberal face on some ugly and decidedly illiberal polices. Just as George Bush’s Christian-based moralizing let conservatives feel good about America regardless of what it does, Obama’s complex and elegiac rhetoric lets many liberals do the same. To red state Republicans, war and its accompanying instruments (secrecy, executive power, indefinite detention) felt so good and right when justified by swaggering, unapologetic toughness and divinely-mandated purpose; to blue state Democrats, all of that feels just as good when justified by academic meditations on “just war” doctrine and when accompanied by poetic expressions of sorrow and reluctance. When you combine the two rhetorical approaches, what you get is what you saw yesterday: a bipartisan embrace of the same policies and ideologies among people with supposedly irreconcilable views of the world.” — Glenn Greenwald (Salon)
Daily Archives: 12 Dec 09
Be Afraid, Be Very Afraid

“…[W]ith his garish, pointless and downright inept rendering of Alice Sebold‘s 2002 novel, The Lovely Bones, Peter Jackson has hit a new low in the annals of movie adaptations.” (Salon)
“Copenhagen is about doing as little as possible”
‘An interview with Dennis Meadows, whose 1972 book The Limits of Growth was an early warning of global crisis.’ (Salon)