alien & sedition.
Saturday, December 30, 2006
  Papier-Mache Grandeur and Death


I wasn't going to say anything about the execution of Saddam, in part because to do the subject justice (no pun intended) would mean pursuing any number of threads that would go well past the purview of what I'm trying to do on this blog. My own initial reaction was just a sort of puzzlement that something so serious and complex could ultimately just feel so tacky. But Josh Marshall gets to the heart of it:
This whole endeavor, from the very start, has been about taking tawdry, cheap acts and dressing them up in a papier-mache grandeur -- phony victory celebrations, ersatz democratization, reconstruction headed up by toadies, con artists and grifters. And this is no different. Hanging Saddam is easy. It's a job, for once, that these folks can actually see through to completion. So this execution, ironically and pathetically, becomes a stand-in for the failures, incompetence and general betrayal of country on every other front that President Bush has brought us. [...]

The Iraq War has been many things, but for its prime promoters and cheerleaders and now-dwindling body of defenders, the war and all its ideological and literary trappings have always been an exercise in moral-historical dress-up for a crew of folks whose times aren't grand enough to live up to their own self-regard and whose imaginations are great enough to make up the difference. This is just more play-acting.

These jokers are being dragged kicking and screaming to the realization that the whole thing's a mess and that they're going to be remembered for it -- defined by it -- for decades and centuries. [...]

Myself, I just find it embarrassing. This is what we're reduced to, what the president has reduced us to. This is the best we can do. Hang Saddam Hussein because there's nothing else this president can get right.

What do you figure this farce will look like 10, 30 or 50 years down the road? A signal of American power or weakness?
I have nothing else to add.

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Comments:
Totally agree. I hate to state the obvious, but the question I keep returning to is - Where's Osama?
 
I should be watching this Code
 
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Critical analysis of the American conservative movement from a progressive perspective. Also some stuff about the Mets.


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