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24 Nov 09

www.AndrewSullivan.com - Daily Dish

  • Reagan was opposed to abortion, and regarded Roe vs Wade (rightly, in my view) as terrible law. He did precious little to advance civil rights. But he was definitely more easy-going about modernity than the current Republican leadership. He barely mentioned abortion in his eight terms of office, and never addressed a pro-life rally in person. He rarely went to church as president and was the first president to have an openly gay couple sleep over in the White House. He and his wife were no strangers to male homosexual company. Reagan also appointed the first woman to the Supreme Court, and in Anthony Kennedy, gave birth to the judicial father of the gay rights revolution. His biographer, Lou Cannon, wrote that Reagan was "repelled by the aggressive public crusades against homosexual life styles which became a staple of right wing politics in the late 1970s." In 1978, Reagan put his career on the line opposing the Briggs Initiative in California that would have barred gay teachers from working in the public high school system. In an op-ed at the time, Reagan wrote:
    "Whatever else it is, homosexuality is not a contagious disease like the measles. Prevailing scientific opinion is that an individual's sexuality is determined at a very early age and that a child's teachers do not really influence this."
    That was 1978 - a very enlightened position at the time.
  • You might quibble with this analysis, but describing Reagan's cultural and political similarities with Schwarzenegger is by no means "fatuous". Both Schwarzenegger and Reagan hailed from California; both came from the socially liberal world of Hollywood; both were and are conservative pragmatists; both managed to reach across regional and cultural lines to win support. Bush, in contrast, is a Texan, culturally moored in the religious right, with limited ability to reach voters in socially liberal milieus. That's my point. I think it stands.

Eunomia » Railing Against Bailouts

  • But most Republican politicians would rather rail against bailouts that have already happened than talk about how to prevent them from happening again.
  • Many of the new high-profile critics of “bailout nation” were nowhere to be found last fall when it might have mattered. Republican politicians who could have played the role of cautious skeptics and leaders unwilling to be stampeded into emergency measures instead chose to fall in line as they had done time after time under Bush. Most national Republican politicians weren’t railing against bailouts at all. They were desperately embracing them. Ross doesn’t mention here that Luigi Zingales was one of many scholars explaining why TARP was unwise and unnecessary, and he presented various alternatives at the time. It was conventional for many in certain reform-minded, wonkish circles to lump together all opposition to the TARP and other bailouts as nihilistic and purely negative, because they, too, were ignoring or dismissing the arguments of Zingales et al.

Matthew Yglesias » Palin Getting Middle East Policy Advice from Billy and Franklin Graham

  • This story about Palin’s meeting with Billy and Franklin Graham tends to bolster the End-Times possibility:


    The former Alaska governor and 2008 GOP vice presidential candidate told Billy Graham about how she came to faith in God as a girl in Bible camp.


    She quizzed him on the presidents he’s known and wanted his take on what the Bible says about Israel, Iran and Iraq, Franklin Graham reported.

  • Hence the Middle East peace plan suggested by Rev Franklin Graham, Billy’s son: Muslims and Jews alike should try “surrendering their lives to the Lord Jesus Christ and having their hearts changed by the Holy Spirit.”

Totalitarian Texting - The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

  • One blogger posted a picture
    of the cautionary SMS, which states: “Respected citizen, based on our
    information, you have been influenced by the antisecurity propaganda of
    the foreign media. If you get involved in any illegal protest and get
    in touch with the foreign media...”  The image is cut off after
    that, but according to other sources, the message threatens that the
    person “will be considered a criminal according to several articles of
    the Islamic law and dealt with accordingly.”

A Talking Point Built Of Straw - The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

  • To see how false this claim is, all anyone ever had to was look at the Classified Information Procedures Act, a short and crystal clear 1980 law that not only permits, but requires, federal courts to undertake extreme measures to ensure the concealment of classified information, even including concealment from the defendant himself.
21 Nov 09

The Barbarian Inside The Gate - The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

  • "I was very struck also by Janet Napolitano’s comment, I hadn’t read it before to see her say that, that the number one priority is to bring [Hasan] to justice is such a knee-jerk comment and such a stupid comment. He’s going to be brought to justice. He is not going to be innocent of murder. There are a lot of eyewitnesses to that. They should just go ahead and convict him and put him to death," - William Kristol, appearing on Fox News.
  • Let us be clear: this is a fascist statement.

The Jihadists Who Have Recanted I - The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

  • A wave
    of young British Islamists who trained to fight – who cheered as their
    friends bombed this country – have recanted. Now they are using everything
    they learned on the inside, to stop the jihad.


    Seventeen former radical Islamists have "come out" in the past 12
    months and have begun to fight back. Would they be able to tell me the
    reasons that pulled them into jihadism, and out again? Could they be the key
    to understanding – and defusing – Western jihadism? I have spent three
    months exploring their world and befriending their leading figures. Their
    story sprawls from forgotten English seaside towns to the jails of Egypt's
    dictatorship and the icy mountains of Afghanistan – and back again.

  • As he watched the news of the Luxor massacre in Egypt or Hamas
    suicide-bombings of pizzerias in Tel Aviv, "It just became more and
    more difficult to justify that." He found himself thinking about the
    Jewish friends he had made at school. "They were just like me – human
    beings. And we had a lot in common. The dietary laws, and the identity
    issues, and the fear of racism." As he heard the growing Islamist
    chants at demonstrations – "The Jews are the enemy of God,"
    they yelled – something, he says, began to sag inside him.
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An Intelligence Bonanza Of Another Sort - The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan

  • What the trial will likely show, instead, is that there was a great deal of information already available
    before they started torturing KSM.
  • That’s the real risk for Yoo: not the illegal actions that the trial
    will expose. But how much evidence there was independent of Yoo’s
    little torture shop.
  • 1 more annotations...

To Learn and to Serve

  • “With the aging of the boomers and those who responded to Kennedy's call to service, we need to replenish the government work force,” says Max Stier, president and CEO of the Partnership for Public Service.


    Stier, a one-man evangelizing squad on behalf of government service, notes that the government must fill 273,000 “mission-critical” positions in the next three years. This will require vast improvements in the way government recruits and a new willingness to invest in its work force.


    The military, he says, gets roughly 40 percent of its officer corps through ROTC. It makes sense to undertake a comparable investment in the civil service.


    In the small and underappreciated world of those who care passionately about improving government's performance and prestige, there are competing visions of how to achieve this. One group of activists and legislators has been pushing to create a Public Service Academy, modeled after the military academies, to prepare a new generation of leaders in government.

  • It's a good idea and would send another powerful signal that government work is and should be valued. But with the extraordinary constraints on the federal budget, the prospects of the large investment that would be required to build a new institution are not exactly rosy. A civilian ROTC would be a good first step. The Roosevelt program has the benefit of drawing on the entire higher education system's capacity to produce specialists.


    The Roosevelt program could also be an antidote to two debilitating trends in our politics. It would push back against the tendency of politicians to deride government (an odd habit, since politicians are themselves engaged in government service). And it might open the way for a bipartisan achievement at a time when such endeavors are in very short supply.

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