"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Feingold on the Daily Show

Update: Crooks and Liars has the Video

I only caught part of it, but I don't think I've ever heard an elected get that kind of audience response in John Stewart's studio. DC dems take now, Russel's message resonates.

I'm skeptical about his presidential chances, mainly because I'm pessimistic about America's willingness to accept a twice-divorced Jew as president; but hey, I'd hustle more for him than for Hillary, that's for damn sure.

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Feingold on the Daily Show

Update: Crooks and Liars has the Video

I only caught part of it, but I don't think I've ever heard an elected get that kind of audience response in John Stewart's studio. DC dems take now, Russel's message resonates.

I'm skeptical about his presidential chances, mainly because I'm pessimistic about America's willingness to accept a twice-divorced Jew as president; but hey, I'd hustle more for him than for Hillary, that's for damn sure.

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Rationale for Redeployment

(Updated, below)

My Trellon colleague Dan offers a couple responses to my previous post agitating for a withdrawal from Iraq in the comments. His thoughts pretty closely map to ideas I used to have, so I'll reply with a new post for greater clarity/visibility.

His first post is a rebuttal to the idea that reconstruction would be better served if we were to generously fund locals:

Nowhere, ever, has there been a case where "generously supporting indigenous reconstruction" has worked without a lot of oversight... none of the civilian organizations who would normally oversee that sort of disbursement, for building things, training people, buying supplies, etc, are willing or able to do it right now...

Actually, most reconstruction contracts have gone through civilian corporations like Bechtel and Halliburton, often on a cost-plus basis. Most of the actual work, though, is done by subcontractors, most of them locals, with huge margins for the contract holder. There are at most a few thousand US Nationals in Iraq working on reconstruction. Most of the work is being done by Iraqi Citizens, but Iraq is retaining maybe maybe 10% of the funds we allocate at most.

Clearly there are issues with corruption whenever any endeavor of this nature is undertaken. However, I think the net effect would be positive if that corruption slushed to Iraqis rather than Americans.

Right now reconstruction is arguably a failure, with total oil, electricity and other key outputs stuck below pre-war levels. It's also failed to create strong Iraqi entities which can manage and maintain the infrastructure. These used to exist: prior to the first Gulf War Iraq was the most developed country in the region, and that was all done by locals, although under a command rather than market economy.

The point is, that the expertise and will exists there for these people to rebuild and manage their own critical infrastructure. It was always a mistake to run that through US corporations.

i think there are a fair amount of internal struggles going on in iraq that would explode overnight if we left... i'm sure we're also causing such death, and suffering it as well, but do you think there will be less if we left? why? if you're saying that we have to leave and let them find balance on their own, by killing each other for a while, and reaching peace on their own, you gotta come out and say that.

That's pretty much what I'm saying, although I don't know how good or bad it has to be. Here's the logic:

It's not possible for Iraq to have stability and peace as long as we remain an occupying power. It's not just that we kill people. It's because we're a catalyst for killing, and no government that relies on our forces will ever have real legitimacy in terms of the monopoly on violence because they will face insurgent attacks.

We're not going to "win" against the insurgency, which isn't actually surprising, so this situation can go on for as long as we can afford to continue it, and never really get better. There's no "corner" to turn here.

Further, it seems unlikely that the Iraqi Army and paramilitary "police" forces -- which we are arming and equipping -- will remain non-partisan when it comes to sectarian tensions, or even be reliable against insurgents. Again, this lesson was there to learn from previous occupations of Iraq and our own experience in Vietnam, but since the architects of this thing believed we were at the "End of History," I guess they thought that didn't count.

At best, out continued presence keeps the underlying tensions in Iraq at a slow burn. As long as we stay, we continue to loose lives, torture and kill people, run down our military, and run up our deficit. When eventually/inevitably we do leave, that explosion will still be primed and waiting to happen. It is beyond our power to defuse the situation.

Unfortunately, I actually think it's more likely that we'll face a worse scenario: shit blows up before we're gone, and we're caught in the middle. That'll be fucked up on a whole new level.

And so I believe the best we can do is withdraw our forces in an orderly and structured fashion, starting now. It's not a lovely idea, but I really can't see how our continued presence is going to improve things.

Update: And another thing: Iraq is currently a huge terrorist training ground. It's like Afghanistan and Beirut combined, with a 21st-Century edge! The minute we leave, that's over. The Iraqis won't tolerate the attacks on their own people, civil and cultural institutions without the justification of occupation; Iraq will cease to be an autonomous zone for terrorists.

Also, on the GWOT: total withdrawl from the Middle East is key. Without us there to inflame tensions generally, we will be able to throw serious money, expertise and effort at busting down on known and emerging terrorist networks throughout the region. Our inability to do this is part of Bin Laden's fucking plan!

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How Do You Spell "Wolverines!" In Arabic?

The Washington Post has hired a 24-year-old GOP activist and former hefe of RedState.org to write an official blog, entitled "Red America." In his innagural post, he bites the "MSM" hand that's now feeding him by way of their lack of recognition for the classic 1980's Cold-War survival fantasy, Red Dawn:

Any red-blooded American conservative, even those who hold a dim view of Patrick Swayze's acting "talent," knows a Red Dawn reference. For all the talk of left wing cultural political correctness, the right has such things, too (DO shop at Wal-Mart, DON'T buy gas from Citgo). But in the progressive halls of the mainstream media, such things prompt little or no recognition. For the MSM, Dan Rather is just another TV anchor, France is just another country and Red Dawn is just another cheesy throwaway Sunday afternoon movie.

I love this movie for it's supremely over-the-top portreyal of the anti-communist, anti-gun-regulation mindset, and for the high-quality youthful performances from Swayze, Charlie Sheen and Jennifer Grey. However, the last time I saw it, I was struck by something else.

The whole second act is about this group of teenagers who have fled the invasion of their hometown, taken to the hills outside, and are ambushing supply convoys with RPGs, roadside bombs, and other looted weapons. That remind you of anything else that's going on in the world right now?

I find it kind of ironic that conservatives remain ignorant of the mirror-world parallels that have emerged 20 years later, except this time we're the imperialist aggressors. Not that I'm suggesting a moral eqivalence between US forces occupying Iraq and the bad guys from a cheezy 80's action movie, but the echoes of current reality made the film somewhat less campy-enjoyable for me.

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Annnnnd... we're back?

Hey all. Obviously there have been some problems here. My hosting company has had my server (which I pay extra for them to "manage") offline for the past 36 hours. Nothing I could do about it.

So anyway, I'm back, and not really in such a buoyant mood as yesterday. Spring sprung, and that's pretty cool. The Belle du Mois (four times over now) is helping to organize an engagement party a friend of hers from High School, so that should be interesting. Need to figure out some moves.

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And In Support Of Continuing The War

Louis Rossetto, founder of Wired Magazine on the invasion/occupation of Iraq:

1. Did you support the invasion of Iraq?

Yes, both the one that didn't happen in 1991 and the one that did in 2003. But Iraq is not the war, it is a battle. The war is The Long War against Islamic fascism.

2. Have you changed your position?

If anything, I believe even more strongly in actively combating Islamic fascism throughout the Global Village. Everyday is Groundhog Day for the anti-war movement, which is stuck re-protesting Vietnam — while we are confronted by a uniquely 21st century challenge: a networked fascist movement of super-empowered individuals trying to undo 50K years of social evolution. Waiting to get hit by an NBC weapon is not an option. Dhimmitude for me or my children is not peace. Righteous forward defense is a necessity.

3. What should the U.S. do in Iraq now?

The US should persevere militarily until we defeat the fascists in Iraq, as we did in Afghanistan, as we must everywhere. The US's biggest failure has not been on the battlefield — where we are relentlessly reducing our enemies — but in waging media war against the Islamists and their fellow travelers on the Left, and in rallying the American people, who are confused, and perhaps angered, that once again we are being called upon to save the world.

I think that's borderline insane. It's not the only questionable drop in the bucket. Deep Thinker (and Conservative Blogger Grandaddy) Gleynn Reynolds answered #3 with only one word "Win." Period. That's a brilliant strategy, Professor. This is a war, not a comment thread on slashdot. At least over there it would have some humor to it:

  1. Whip Up War Fever with Anneversary of 9/11
  2. Make A Phony Case For Al-Qaeda Connections
  3. Steamroll the UN
  4. Invade
  5. ???
  6. Profit! Greeted as Liberators!

Discovered via crooked timber.

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Energy Independence

Nuclear Reactors Found to Be Leaking Radioactive Water

While Nuclear energy looks good on paper, the risks are really very high. I think there's better potential elsewhere.

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All Is Right In The Cosmos

Well, things seem to be working out. Bit by bit, life moves along, and the things that I think are going to be problematic turn out to be imminently surmountable. There's a level of organization and precision that I still want to reach -- Focus, Koeing! Focus! -- but all trendlines are positive.

Greate Expectations exist, yeah, and great injustice too, but I think things are going to work out for me.

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Redeploy / Withdraw

On 3rd Anniversary: Editorials Dither While Iraq Burns

As with their news coverage, the editorials are often harshly critical of the war and the administration. They inevitably say the right things. Yet, after all that, they claim, despite no real evidence, that things will only get worse if we started even a very slow pullout or, gosh-- after three years with no end in sight--set some kind of timetable for same.

About two years ago, I made the change from someone who was against the war but believed that the US had a responsibility to stick around and reconstruct Iraq (rebuild what we bombed, etc) to someone who started understanding that this is not, in fact, how the world works.

At this point, behaving responsibly means beginning to disengage militarily while generously supporting indigenous reconstruction. We remove our troops from the role of occupier, eventually removing them altogether. Local people will have to take on the task of maintaining order. It won't bring peace and serenity overnight, but Iraq will never have a stable civil society as long as US forces are occupying the country.

So we have to withdraw, and we also have to switch the slush funds for rebuilding from Halliburton (which was always a scam) directly to Iraqis. We should have done this from day one: it was the only way the infrastructure wasn't going to get totally fucked up, but a combination of greed and pretension (the Iraqi's needed us to show them how to rebuild, many believed) sunk that hope. If Iraqis really needed our expertise, one would think they could have bought it at market rates, but no, we had to take up the white man's burdin. And here we are.

I don't think withdrawl is likely to happen until the political and security situation deteriorates further. Most members of the power elite share a comic-book sense of American Exceptionalism. They still cling to the fantasies that sold the war: that it would be a Liberation, as if Baghdad were like occupied Paris and Saddam Hussein hadn't been running shit with an iron fist (and our backing) for the better part of 30 years.

They still believe that we have to "make the best of it." It may be a kindly impulse, but there's a word for this sort of pride: Hubris.

The Iraqi Occupation, along with the rest of our Pax Americana, is going to come to and end sooner or later. The only question is whether we manage this transition intentionally, or whether we are overtaken by events.

Sadly, it seems more likely that our leaders will subbornly refuse to change until it's politically impossible to do otherwise because people are simply fed up with the pointless fucking carnage. This whole exercise has been a fantastic waste of human life to satisfy a few hundred bloated egos. Hubris indeed.

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Torrent Update

Thanks to the responses from all and sundry on my torrent question. As suggested below, the Mime-Type is the issue.

I discovered that not only did I have to set up the type on the server side, but also force drupal to list the type in the enclosure field. In retrospect, this makes perfect sense.

Part of the problem is that drupal/php counts on the uploading browser, which doesn't really know about bittorrent, to determine the filetype. I experimented with overriding the default (application/octet-stream) and it seems to have worked. I've whipped out a little drupal module that works well in this context:

http://www.outlandishjosh.com/drupal/torrentfeed/feed.xml

Seems to load up right in Democracy and I/ON.

This is also using the Link element to provide Azureus-friendly feeds as well, although this probably has some bad side-effects in terms of making things clickable for context. I'll keep playing with it in the coming days and weeks.

Thanks to everyone for their feedback. I'll document this and try to spread to word.

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