Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Torture and Eliot Ness

The Washington Post wrote on Saturday:

The tactics -- which one official described Friday as a threatened execution -- were used on Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, according to the CIA's inspector general's report on the agency's interrogation program. Nashiri, who was captured in November 2002 and held for four years in one of the CIA's "black site" prisons, ultimately became one of three al-Qaeda chieftains subjected to a form of simulated drowning known as waterboarding. The report also says that a mock execution was staged in a room next to one terrorism suspect, according to Newsweek magazine, citing two sources for its information.


After reading this article, I thought of the interrogation scene from the movie The Untouchables, where Sean Connery's character "Malone" stages a mock execution, a Canadian Mountie expresses his disapproval, and Eliot Ness, despite the fact that he is obviously uncomfortable with the harsh tactics, comes to Malone's defense. (Watch the first two minutes of the link below).



I've watched this movie several dozen times, and never once thought that Malone was torturing the Capone gang member. Regardless of whether it is torture or it isn't, one thing is certain: I want Malone, and guys like him, on my side.

And wouldn't it be nice if the administration acted a lot less like that Canadian Mountie and little bit more like Eliot Ness?

Monday, August 24, 2009

Will on Clemente

Every five years or so, George Will comes out with a collection of his newspaper and magazine columns. It is a sign of my conservative nerdishness that I look forward to them so much. When he hits a groove with his columns, it's really something, and his collections can be like a scrapbook of the political arguments of a particular era. For example, his previous collection, With a Happy Eye But . . . America and the World 1997-2002 contains a section of brilliant, scathing columns published during the debate over the McCain-Feingold campaign finance bill. Will was, and is, an outspoken critic of government regulation of political speech, and his columns puncture every gassy, self-congratulatory argument made by the bill's proponents.

Which is why (he says, finally approaching his point) I'm finding his latest collection, One Man's America, so interesting. It displays both Will's trademark arch tone, incisive wit, and a fencer's ability to hit his opponent right on the mark, as well as a few ideological tics that became increasingly noticeable during the Bush years. I'll be posting about the good and the not-so-good of the book over the next few days. For starters, something light:

Longtime Will fans know that he is a great lover of baseball. (His Men at Work is a fascinating look at how major leaguers approach their jobs). One section of One Man's America consists of columns about football, basketball, and sports culture. The section is titled "Games." The next section, about three times as long, focuses exclusively on baseball and is titled "The Game"--emphasis very much in the original.

Anyway, a column from May 2006 on Roberto Clemente, inspired by David Maraniss's biography of the great Pittsburgh Pirates slugger, displays Will's love for the game, his eye for fun detail, and his ability to pack an entire novel into a single sentence. To illustrate Clemente's great power at the plate, Will writes about two at bats with the most feared tough-guy pitchers of his day.
A Clemente line drive broke the leg of one Hall of Fame pitcher (the Cardinals' Bob Gibson, who pitched to three more batters before collapsing) and, Maraniss believes, hastened the retirement of another, the Dodger's Don Drysdale. In August 1969, after a Clemente shot whistled into the outfield, Drysdale flicked what felt like an insect off his neck, but discovered blood on his fingers. Clemente's drive had torn the skin off the top of Drysdale's ear. Shaken, Drysdale walked Clemente the next time up and retired six days later.


Don't you want to know more about Gibson's broken leg, and Drysdale's bloody ear -- what they said about it, how they felt, and all the rest? I know I do. But Will has a knack for knowing when a few words is enough to propel the reader along. That isn't as hard as hitting a Bob Gibson slider, but it ain't beanbag.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Ron Paul on 'Cash For Clunkers' and the myth of economic stimulus

Congressman Ron Paul intelligently points out in this video that the Cash For Clunkers program will hurt the poor the most, because it destroys the vehicles that poor people depend on.

He also tells this story about economic stimulus in general: "Imagine someone had a new business that needed customers, and to get new customers, they took money out of their savings account, walked out onto the street and started handing out money to people telling them 'you can have this money as long as you spend it in my store'. And so they come to the store, spend the money, and the owner rings up the cash register and says 'wow, today I made a lot of money'. This whole notion that government can stimulate the economy is just as absurd as that."

Monday, August 3, 2009

A good approximation of "Cash for Clunkers"

In my view, if you think "Cash for Clunkers" is such as great idea, then you should be more than willing to knock on your neighbor's door and ask them for the $4500 "cash for clunker" payout directly. I could imagine the scene playing out something like this:

"Hi neighbor, I have an old beat up car, and I think it would be a great idea if you gave me $4500, and in exchange, I will junk this car and then use the money as a down payment on a new car."

"Wait, who gets the new car? You or me? I don't need a new car".

"That's okay, I get the new car".

"Ok, so what is in it for me?"

"By giving me $4500, you may not benefit directly, but this will certainly stimulate the auto industry, and that will help everyone. Plus, my car uses lots of gas and emits all kinds of pollution, so it would really be in your best interest to pay me to get a new car".

"But I need that $4500. I need to pay off some credit cards, and I also need to buy a new dishwasher. I'll tell you what, why don't you go buy a new car with your own money and leave me out of it."

"I was trying to be nice about this and make you feel good about participating, but it turns out that you don't actually have a choice. If you refuse, eventually US Marshalls will show up at your door with guns and a warrant for your arrest. I would get me that $4,500 as soon as possible."

[Update]

Jim DeMint pointed out on Fox News Sunday that it is actually our children who are paying for these used cars. So, in my example above, I guess that would mean that you should go to your neighbor and ask them if it is okay if your neighbor's child put up the $4500.