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the wright approach
"It's true that, with victory coming sooner than just about anyone (including Krauthammer) predicted, street demonstrations died young. Regimes weren't toppled. But my main concern was never about regimes being toppled. My concern was—and is—about what may be the scariest trend in the world: Thanks to technological evolution, man-in-the-street rage, even if it doesn't assume regime-toppling form, is increasingly lethal. Very small groups of people—including groups of one—can take a real toll on the national psyche."
memo to tyndall
"But agree or disagree with Mr. Sullivan, it’s hard to deny that he is the surprising new media/political development of the post–Sept. 11 period. A media/political development because he’s gone beyond his influential print platforms, The Times of London and The Times of New York. What gives him an edge in impact and reach over Mr. Hitchens (and just about everyone else) is the way he’s turned his political Web site (Web zine, Web log, online diary—whatever you want to call andrewsullivan.com) into a powerful weapon of nonstop, 24/7, omnipresent total-surveillance panoptican punditry. Using his political Web zine (a form pioneered by Mickey Kaus in his witty Kausfiles.com), he’s done more than just frame the debate; he’s dominated it, smothered it with an overwhelming energy and forcefulness that allows him to riddle his opponents with ceaseless real-time hectoring and invective and polemic."
infinity in sound
esquivel's space has popped...2...3...cha cha cha
occidents will happen
"In 1942, not long after the attack on Pearl Harbor, a group of Japanese philosophers got together in Kyoto to discuss Japan's role in the world. The project of this ultra-nationalist gathering was, as they put it, to find a way to "overcome modern civilization." Since modern civilization was another term for Western civilization, the conference might just as well have been entitled "Overcoming the West." In a complete reversal of the late-nineteenth-century goal of "leaving Asia and joining the West," Japan was now fighting a "holy war" to liberate Asia from the West and purify Asian minds of Western ideas. Part of the holy war was, as it were, an exercise in philosophical cleansing."
tell us what you really think
"Disgruntled has-beens everywhere have a new hero and role model: Bernard Goldberg, the one-time CBS News correspondent and full-time addlepated windbag who is trying to make a second career out of trashing his former employer. Goldberg has picked this moment in time to haul out the old canard about the media being "liberal" and the news being slanted leftward."
test your metal
Airport security strips Dingell as Congressman's metal hip sets off alarms at National Airport
cuba libre
yes , lets bring hundreds of terrorists as close to america as possible and then warehouse them on an island we consider (occasionally) hostile. wait, a couple of thousand foot soldiers backed by the cia. is this whole operation just another bay of pigs?
fuel on the hill
U.S. Ends Car Plan on Gas Efficiency; Looks to Fuel Cells
up your bloomers
"One of Mayor Bloomberg's first moves was the announcement that he's dismantling Rudy's decency commission, something we think bodes extremely well for New York nightlife. Celebrate by supporting these exuberant examples of show-and-tell (some of which might even pass for art)."
puddle jumpers
slate reaches out across the atlantic sea for a fresh stale perspective.
air forced chic
"She was a champion triathlete. She had a master's degree in public policy from Harvard, and she'd been a White House Fellows finalist. She had patrolled the no-fly zone over Iraq and would later direct search-and-rescue missions inside Afghanistan.
She was quite a success story for the modern military, which had worked hard to knock down barriers to female achievement.
Then she landed at Prince Sultan Air Force Base in Saudi Arabia in November of 2000."
keyed up
Former conservative presidential candidate Alan Keyes will join MSNBC's primetime lineup as host of a live one-hour commentary show.
unhappy meal
wendys owner dave thomas has "bought the franchise."
sweet ambrosia
one of americas foremost mythmakers is caught with his quill in someone elses inkwell. and not just once. and the weekly standard blew the whistle on one of their own. bless their hearts. i wonder what they are saying about enron?