| Subcribe via RSS

Pepper on Spitzer: Politi-cos and Politi-hos

March 14th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Opinion, politics by Pepper

Table of contents for Pepper on ...

  1. Pepper on Spitzer: Politi-cos and Politi-hos
  2. Pepper on McGreevey: Yet more government sexcapades

[Ed. note: Welcome to the first in what I hope will be a long-running opinion column by the insightful, and delightfully spicy, Pepper.]

I have been reading a lot of things about Eliot Spitzer lately, a man for whom I voted back in Aught Six, and I think about politics and prostitution making strange bedfellows, but it’s really not that strange, nor that new. JFK, LBJ, Clinton, GHWB, hell, even Arnold fondled women.

I just wonder: in this era when nothing is sacred, and no one expects public figures to have any right to privacy because Perez Hilton is digging in their trash, how did he not figure out he’d be caught? It can’t just be simple hubris, here’s a man who spent his career tracking similar criminals, so he knew it could be, and has been, done.

So what the hell?

More »

Further Reading on Words & Tricks

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Money makes the world slow down

February 16th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Economics by Chris Pommier

Let us, as E.B. White put it in a 1939 issue of Harper’s Magazine, “take a ride on the Futurama.”

According to Jeremy Grantham at Barron’.com we’re going to be knee-deep in bad debt, recession woes and a slow deflation of global financial markets until 2010. Our great-great-grandkids will be paying our mortgages long after we’re gone. Also, the long flight to the suburbs that started in the 40s will reverse. Currently affluent planned communities overflowing with McMansions will become slums and fall into poverty, crime and decay as populations who can afford to move back into the cities.

In my opinion, this all lends weight to Naomi Klein’s view that we’ve been hoodwinked by George Bush’s “ownership society,” doesn’t it? According to Klein, we’ve been fooled by a Thatcheresque switcheroo meant to lull us into a false sense of security, and put votes into Republican pockets by, among other things, looking the other way as risky loans were made to more and more people hoping to participate in the breezy free-for-all of homeownership.

Pop.

Well, maybe there’s some good news, or at least news that is less bad for Minnesota than much of the rest of the nation. Only .83 percent of Twin Cities area houses were in foreclosure in 2007.

Then again, maybe this has all happened before. Eighteen times before.

Further Reading on Words & Tricks

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Opinion: Application of Humanitarian Law Not Enough to Address Global Violence

December 3rd, 2006 | 3 Comments | Posted in Uncategorized by Chris Pommier

Over at Out of the Blue, a blog written by college instructor and my friend Bluegrrrrl, she posted an intriguing article titled “Militarism vs. humanitarian law” (on her blog, scroll down to Wednesday, November 29, 200 to read it). In it she discusses Mary Kaldor’s book “Beyond Militarism, Arms Races, and Arms Control.” Kaldor is professor and Director of the Centre for the Study of Global Governance at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

It’s a great post and it really gave me something to think about. I’ve posted my response here. Just a few things to think about on this bitterly cold Minnesota Sunday.

The one thing I would add to this discussion is that there doesn’t seem to be much of a focus on education and poverty in this. Perhaps because it deals primarily with militarism.

In her premise bluegrrrrl writes that Kaldor says, “contemporary warfare is driven primarily by conflicting political ideologies “ and I would have to respond that this appears to be at once an overly narrow and overly broad premise. Narrow because it seems to discount issues of poverty, education (or lack thereof), tradition, language, history and religion. Broad because, if it is meant to include all those things, then it becomes unwieldy and leads to a (perhaps) simplistic conclusion that application of international law, by itself, would be a deterrent to war/ violence.

My problem stems from the question that, after all, if one is dealing with a group who is fundamentally opposed to the rule of (western) law, what could be gained from applying it?

To me it seems as though Kaldor is still advocating a top-down mode of “squeezing” or “attacking” her opponents. Replacing violence on the battlefield with violence in the courtroom. Or, at least, the possibility of it. After all, who controls “justice” ultimately?

So, for an addendum to her model, I would turn to what I conceive as a “grassroots” model that addresses the needs of the people, offering education and addressing poverty. Most of all, I would suggest doing away with the fiction that we live in a globally competitive environment that necessitates fighting over intellectual, cultural and natural resources. In many ways the U.S.’s message to the world is “Give us your best and brightest and we will give you McDonald’s, KFC and Wal-Mart.” This is the old smallpox blanket trick on a global scale.

I’m adding my vote to what spadoman, another commenter to this post and frequent Out of the Blue reader, wrote said in a comment, “look for the circumstances that caused the crime and try to stop it from happening again.”

Don’t get me wrong, I still think Kaldor’s suggestion is preferable to Bush’s non-answer answer to violence (More vioence! How stupid). She is supporting a narrative that makes room for answers to conflict that don’t necessitate the killing of civilians or soldiers and I absolutely appreciate that.

Further Reading on Words & Tricks

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,