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Friday, 4 February 2011
Her Smoke Still Rises
Topic: Must Read

 

One of the things that attract me to science fiction is the diversity of its source: the community of people who write it. Among the genre’s iconic figures, Robert Heinlein was a naval officer who turned to writing after being medically retired from the service, Isaac Asimov was a professionally trained scientist; Olaf Stapleton was an English intellectual and philosopher; and James Tiptree, Jr. was…well, he was really Alice Bradley Sheldon. (See here for a thumbnail biography.)

 

Tiptree (as I will call her) was surely one of the most original SF writers of the twentieth century. Her characteristic themes—the ambiguity of gender, the point or pointlessness of existence, the seductive allure of death—resonate in such unforgettable short stories as “The Screwfly Solution,” “A Momentary Taste of Being” and “Houston, Houston, Do You Read?” No doubt this makes her sound trite and even—for those who find such pretentions hard to bear—a doctrinaire gender feminist of the type that infests contemporary university faculties. All I can say by way of rebuttal is—read her stories. The best of them are collected in Her Smoke Rose Up Forever.

 

After a twenty-year literary career, Tiptree died by her own hand in 1987. She was 71. Her stories, though…her stories live on, and if you’ve haven’t read them, you should.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:21 AM EST
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Thursday, 3 February 2011
Stupid Progressive Questions Answered
Topic: Liberal Fascism

Q: How can you say that socialism won't work? It's never really been tried!

A: Stalin would have been surprised to hear you say that.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:37 AM EST
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Obamacare Implodes
Topic: Decline of the West

 

A federal district judge in Florida has declared the entirety of Barack Obama’s health care “reform” law unconstitutional. His legal reasoning need not detain us here. What the ruling makes obvious, however, is that Obamacare will not stand. With every passing week it becomes more and more obvious that this misbegotten law cannot possibly survive contact with political and economic reality.

 

Soon, I predict, the rats (Democrats contemplating their chances in the 2012 election) will begin to abandon the SS Obamacare. And as it sinks beneath the waves, what will the band be playing? “Imagine”? Good choice!


Posted by tmg110 at 8:35 AM EST
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There's No Egyptian Jefferson
Topic: Decline of the West

In this article, the Jerusalem Post’s Caroline Glick pours cold water on the idea that the Egyptian uprising will produce anything resembling a liberal democratic government:

According to a Pew opinion survey of Egyptians from June 2010, 59 percent said they back Islamists. Only 27% said they back modernizers. Half of Egyptians support Hamas. Thirty percent support Hizbullah and 20% support al Qaida. Moreover, 95% of them would welcome Islamic influence over their politics. When this preference is translated into actual government policy, it is clear that the Islam they support is the al Qaida Salafist version.

Eighty two percent of Egyptians support executing adulterers by stoning, 77% support whipping and cutting the hands off thieves. 84% support executing any Muslim who changes his religion.

When given the opportunity, the crowds on the street are not shy about showing what motivates them. They attack Mubarak and his new Vice President Omar Suleiman as American puppets and Zionist agents. The US, protesters told CNN's Nick Robertson, is controlled by Israel. They hate and want to destroy Israel.

Which is to say that the Obama Administration’s stated policy toward the uprising is more or less completely divorced from reality. That, I suppose, was only to be expected. What is more disturbing is the self-deception being practiced by conservatives like Bill Kristol:

The best case—the least radicalizing one for the population, the least advantageous for the Muslim Brotherhood—would be a quick transition now to an interim government, with the prospect of elections not too far off, so people can rally to the prospect of a new liberal regime.

Alas, though, the people don’t want a “new liberal regime”—that’s the reality in Egypt. One would have thought that, after the travails America endured in Iraq, people might temper their expectations for Arab democracy—if that term is not any oxymoron. But the vapidity of the Obama Administration’s rhetoric is pretty nearly matched by the optimistic chirping of all too many conservatives. That’s not a good sign at all.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:19 AM EST
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A Fine Sense of Timing
Topic: Decline of the West

 

I must admit that I’ve always regarded Chicago Mayor Richard Daley as a doofus. This may not be so in an absolute sense—it takes a certain cunning to survive and prosper in the snake pit of Windy City politics—but Daley has a goofball way of expressing himself that makes Glenn Beck sound like Cicero. But he may be a lot smarter than he seems.

 

The Groundhog Day blizzard was one of those epic municipal disasters that can bury a promising political career. Lake Shore Drive choked by snow drifts! Hundreds of commuters stranded in their cars for hours and hours! A lesser politician would be updating his resume right now. But not Daley. He decided last year that he wouldn’t be running for reelection. Timing is everything in politics—and as things have tured out, Richie Daley picked just the right time to retire…


Posted by tmg110 at 8:14 AM EST
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Wednesday, 2 February 2011
Sometimes Dated/Still Dangerous Visions
Topic: Must Read

 

Among the many good reasons for opposing the late, unlamented Equal Rights Amendment was the fact that Harlan Ellison was for it.

 

I discovered this historical factoid in the pages of Shatterday, an Ellison short story collection that came out originally in 1980. In various story introductions (he’s one of those writers who feels it necessary to provide authorial guidance to the reader), Ellison makes a point of mentioning that he was in Phoenix or Jersey City or East Overshoe, North Dakota, to speak at an ERA rally. How quaint that seems today, when it’s quite clear that the ERA was superfluous. But it did possess the virtue of making progressives like Harlan Ellison feel, well, virtuous.

 

If all this makes you think that I don’t like Ellison as a writer, let me correct the record. He wrote a number of stories that I greatly admire, among them “I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream,” perhaps my favorite paranoid fantasy of the computer age, and the iconic “A Boy and His Dog.” The stories in Shatterday don’t quite come up to that level, though several of them are pretty good. But turning the pages of this book got me to thinking about Ellison as a phenomenon, as he undoubtedly was in his prime.

 

In round numbers, Ellison has produced more than 1,000 short stories, novels, TV and film screenplays, etc. He edited a pair of groundbreaking SF anthologies, Dangerous Visions and Again, Dangerous Visions, that are still in print. Among his TV credits is the script for “Demon with a Glass Hand,” possibly the best episode of The Outer Limits. Whatever his defects of personality—abrasive, combative, thin-skinned—the man is one hell of a productive writer.

 

So what kind of a writer is he? Though Ellison published many stories that could fairly be described as science fiction, I think that he’s properly categorized as a contemporary fantasist. His best and most representative work, even when it makes use of SF conventions, presents a series of nightmare visions, not of the future, but of the present. Few of the stories in Shatterday could be described as SF. In this, I think, he bears some resemblance to the late J.G. Ballard—though the latter was a less conventional and more imaginative writer than Ellison.

 

I think, really, that the ERA thing is the key to understanding Harlan Ellison: He’s a Sixties guy. Like Stephen King, he never quite got over the Age of Aquarius. He allowed the Sixties to date him, and that in turn has dated a good deal of what he wrote. (See, for example, Stalking the Nightmare, a short story collection published in 1982 with a forward by…Stephen King.) And when it comes to politics, he's just plain tiresome, like some elderly Confederate partisan still fighting the Civil War.

 

But Harlan Ellison has been so prolific that a volume collecting his memorable stories would occupy a good two or three inches of shelf space. That’s not a bad record for any writer, this side of Shakespeare.


Posted by tmg110 at 3:58 PM EST
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Tuesday, 1 February 2011
There's No There There on Egypt
Topic: Decline of the West

 

All too predictably, the Obama Administration has received hosannas from the punditocracy for its supposedly deft handling of the crisis in Egypt—this despite Vice President Biden’s stupid and irresponsible claim, early on, that the Egyptian strongman, Hosni Mubarak, is not a dictator. Really, though, if you boil off all the goo and dribble, there’s not much cooking in the Messiah’s policy pot.

 

After trying really, really hard to ignore an earlier popular uprising in Iran, President Obama has scant credibility when he calls for democracy in Egypt. Observers in the Muslim world could be excused for concluding that the United States is a contemptible enemy and an unreliable friend. The Iranian regime (enemy) got treated with kid gloves. The Egyptian regime (ally) is being shoved under the bus. Go figure.

 

The Administration’s calls for democratic accountability and an orderly transition of power are similarly lacking in credibility. After heaping scorn on George W. Bush’s democracy agenda and sucking up to various despots, President Obama is poorly positioned to champion the democratic aspirations of the Egyptian people. In any case, it’s far from clear that the Egyptian people have any such aspirations. Most probably they’re just fed up with the government’s corruption and mismanagement of the economy, and would be glad to be ruled by a tyrant who’s less greedy and more efficient than Mubarak.

 

So what should President and his people have been saying since this crisis blew up? In four words: as little as possible. It’s better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one’s mouth and remove all doubt. It’s probably futile, however, to offer such advice to an administration that includes the inimitable Joe Biden.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:07 AM EST
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One Down, Two to Go
Topic: Must Read

I'm now about 100 pages into the second volume of Shelby Foote's splendid narrative history of the Civil War, so my literary New Year's resolution remains on track.

A thing that strikes me about the Civil War, now that I'm well into Foote's account, is the adamant nature of the struggle. I know already, in broad terms, what Foote will show me in detail as I turn the pages of his narrative: that our Civil War raged from the first battlefield to the last ditch, inch by desperate inch, ending only with the utter exhaustion of the Confederacy. Foote's narrative reveals something of what this meant in terms of blood and treasure. As President Lincoln noted in his second inaugural address, America paid a high price for the offense of slavery, an offense that was all the greater because it stood in such glaring contrast to the shining words of our founding documents.

The story of this lamentable conflict is revealing of certain aspects of the American character, among them a tendency toward stubborn, righteous anger that such people as Hitler and Tojo would have done well to consider. Elites in the media and the academy may tell themselves and one another  that prosperity and Vietnam have dissolved that hard kernel of the national character. I think not.


Posted by tmg110 at 7:45 AM EST
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The G-2 from Lexi
Topic: Freedom's Guardian

If you're puzzled by the title of this post, I know that you've never served in the Army. The G-2 is the intelligence officer on a general's staff. Hence "G-2," when used as a noun in Army demotic, means information, news, the good word.

Having translated that for you, I'm pleased to report that we Skyped with Lexi this weekend. Things remain pretty quiet in the 511th MP Company's area of operations. PFC Gregg is doing well and looking forwar to her mid-deployment leave, now little more than a month off. She promised to send some more photos soon.

Watch this space for more G-2 as it becomes available.


Posted by tmg110 at 7:38 AM EST
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Monday, 31 January 2011
Dream On
Topic: Decline of the West

 

It really is painful to watch know-nothings like Geraldo Rivera of Fox News as they bloviate about the dawn of democracy in Egypt. This morning, I heard him opine that, hey, if the Muslim Brotherhood is willing to “play by the rules,” there’s no reason why it couldn’t form part of a democratic Egyptian government.

 

To which I reply—humbug. The chances that revolution in Egypt will produce democracy hover somewhere between slim and none. At best, we may see the establishment of an authoritarian regime, run behind the scenes by the armed forces, tricked out with a few scraps of democratic window dressing. But if the Muslim Brotherhood emerges as a major political force in the new regime that’s coming, you can forget about democracy—if by democracy is meant individual liberty, freedom of thought, speech and worship, respect for the rights of minorities, political and cultural pluralism, etc. The Muslim Brotherhood embraces an Islamist dogma that, since it rejects all such things in principle, can hardly be expected to tolerate them in practice.

 

Anyhow, violent street demonstrations followed by disorderly elections are not likely to transform any such country as Egypt into a democratic state. Where no tradition of democracy exists, it can hardly be expected to emerge overnight. Where the foundational ideas on which a stable democratic order rests are rejected in principle, “democratic government” becomes an oxymoron.

 

I wish the Egyptian people well. But there’s no point in pretending that the revolution they’ve made will set them free.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:56 AM EST
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