Blogs > Cliopatria > Week of April 7, 2008

Apr 11, 2008

Week of April 7, 2008




  • Juan Cole

    War turns Republics into dictatorships. The logic is actually quite simple. The Constitution says that the Congress is responsible for declaring war. But in 2002 Congress turned that responsibility over to Bush, gutting the constitution and allowing the American Right to start referring to him not as president but as 'commander in chief' (that is a function of the civilian presidency, not a title.)

    No Bush has now turned over the decision-making about the course of the Iraq War to Gen. David Petraeus.

    So Congress abdicated to Bush. Bush has abdicated to the generals in the field.

    That is not a Republic. That is a military dictatorship achieved not by coup but by moral laziness.

  • Librarian R.H. Lossin

    It would be unfair and frankly absurd to blame American librarians and their shrinking budgets, rising legal costs and increasingly costly dependence on proprietary databases for the state of Iraq's infrastructure. But the increasingly unstable position of American libraries is actually part of the same logic that produced that war. The disdain for cultural institutions does not stop at the border--bombs there, budget cuts here.

    That said, the lack of solidarity from the American community of librarians and scholars for their Iraqi counterparts is shameful. Rousseau suggested that empathy is the basis of language and communication.

  • John B. Judis

    If the nineteenth century was dominated by conflict with Indians and over slavery, the early twentieth center was dominated by what was called"the labor question." But very few Americans outside Washington today know anything about the labor movement. I talked recently to a historian who was writing a book on liberalism who didn't know that in 2005, a group of unions had split off from the AFL-CIO to form Change to Win. Yet the labor movement remains the largest and most powerful organized group within the Democratic party and American liberalism more broadly, as well as the country's best hope of restoring a balance of power between employer and employee and between K Street and Main Street.

  • Matthew Yglesias

    In a History News Network poll, 61 percent of historians say that George W. Bush has been the worst president ever. It’s very hard to know what to make of these kind of questions. How can you possibly try to evaluate someone like, say, Andrew Jackson in contemporary terms? At any rate, it will surprise no one to learn that I think Bush has been a very bad president. More interestingly, I also take the view that Bush is probably correct to think that history will remember him kindly. American presidents associated with big dramatic events tend to wind up with good reputations whether they deserve them or not. One possible Bush analogy would be to Woodrow Wilson, who did all kinds of things with regard to civil liberties that look indefensible today and whose foreign policy ended as a giant failure, but who was associated with both big events and with big ideas that were influential down the road. Someday, I bet there will be democracies in the Middle East and some future Republican president will figure out a way to put meat on the bones of “compassionate conservatism” and Bush will be looked upon as a far-sighted figure who made some mistakes in a difficult period of time. Will he deserve a good reputation? No. Will he get one? I’d say yes.

  • News Story

    A leading anti-Semitism watchdog group called Friday for a South Korean cosmetics company to halt an ad campaign with Nazi references....

    A Korad official, Seo Sang-hee, confirmed the ad was meant to invoke a Nazi soldier and Hitler, which she said symbolized"revolution" in keeping with the lotion's"revolutionary" moisturizing and calming effects.

  • David Treuer

    I am not supposed to be alive. Native Americans were supposed to die off, as endangered species do, a century ago. And so it is with great discomfort that I am forced, in many ways, to live and write as a ghost in this haunted American house.



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