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Via CalPundit: Andrew Sullivan is calling Bill Clinton as one of the people who thought the war would be fairly easy. I guess the eternal search for Bad Things Clinton goes on, or at least the eternal search for ways to use Clinton to embarrass liberals and Democrats. Just a couple of points:

:: First, I don’t think anybody really knows how the war is actually going. Things are happening that make it look bad, and things are happening that imply that the things that look bad really aren’t that bad at all. If the war ends up being won in the next three weeks or so, I still think that might qualify as pretty easy. It’s only been two weeks.

:: Second, one has to look at Clinton’s actual words here. He clearly thought the tactics would be an aerial war with lots of bombing, lasting for several weeks, followed by a massive push of infantry and such. Obviously he was assuming that the tactics this time would somewhat mirror the 1991 Gulf War. Since that’s not the tactic that’s been employed, Clinton’s prediction is pretty meaningless in the way that Sully wants to use it: as a stick to somehow beat on liberals.

:: Third, Sully is probably unaware of it, because the CBS News article on which he bases his post doesn’t convey it, but I watched the interview in question and I remember it quite well. Clinton’s larger point was in his misgivings about world peace and national security in the wake of such a war, and what he saw as troubling precedent for exactly the kind of pre-emptive war we are now fighting.

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I hope that our soldiers in Iraq don’t accidentally ingest whatever Peter Arnett has been drinking. “Wow, we didn’t think you guys would fight back!” is not on any list of things you should say when giving an interview to the enemy’s news media in wartime. Imagine Edward R. Murrow going on the Berlin Radio in late 1944 to say, “We didn’t think you’d be able to almost push us back at the Bulge….”

Incredible.

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Syracuse is in the Final Four. The locals seem very excited by this, as well they should be. Of course, since one week from today I will no longer be a local, I’m not really able to get caught up in it. Alas….I like it when the local teams do well.

The feeling is sort of similar to last fall when we moved. I was all set to vote in Buffalo’s various elections, since I knew the issues and candidates, but then we moved a few weeks before Election Day. I ended up not voting at all, because I wasn’t able to register in the new district, I certainly wasn’t going to drive 130 miles back to the old district, and I’m pretty sure I missed the absentee deadline (which I’m not sure I would have exercised, anyway, since I had no idea that I’d be moving back six months later). I did feel a few pangs of guilt about not voting the night the Democrats’ grand strategy — which was apparently jointly designed by Michael Dukakis and The Amazing Kreskin — failed utterly, but I consoled myself that as it turned out, the races in Central New York were not even remotely in doubt.

Anyhow, it’s strange to note the degree to which I never really came to feel that I lived in Syracuse; the overwhelming sensation was of a six-month jaunt — like a Rhodes Scholar’s trip to Oxford or something like that.

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Courtesy Joseph Duemer is this interesting visual guide to blogging “neighborhoods”. (It’s Java-driven; I had to download a plug-in to make it work.) It purports to visually show one which blogs are related to one’s own, if I understand things correctly. I’m not sure how this thing works. When I plug in my own URL, a group of left-leaning political blogs are returned and shown as being in “my neighborhood”, along with Instapundit. That struck me as a bit odd: while I make no secret of the fact that I am pretty much on the liberal side of things, my political focus is not a primary (or secondary, or tertiary, or quarternary) concern of mine here. I would have expected to see some more blogs of the literary variety show up, but I suspect these things are decided by which blogs link mine, and the ones out there that permalink me are all liberals. (Just why Instapundit shows up is a mystery to me, as I’ve never noticed any traffic in my referrals as coming from him — and I suspect that if it happened, I’d notice. I still remember the spike I received a couple of months ago when something I wrote in response to an SDB post earned one of those “Jaquandor comments” updates of his.)

Nevertheless, it’s quite fascinating to plug in several blogs at once and note the interconnections. Just noodling around, I created a fairly large map of liberal blogs and conservative blogs (yes, not everyone fits into those labels as conveniently as others, but it was just a momentary exercise) and as I did so, I couldn’t help but notice the density of connections on each side of the map contrasted with the sparsity of connections between the two sides. I’m not sure if this indicates anything special about the current political landscape or not — if so, it would require more rigorous research than me sitting here over morning coffee clicking stuff and saying, “Hey, cool!” — but it still struck me as interesting. Kind of a graphical picture of the “echo-chamber” phenomenon.

And it was really cool to be able to visualize Byzantium’s Shores, with its 45 hits or so a day, as the center of the blogging universe. Nothing like a little graphical egoboo to start the day!

(“Egoboo” — there’s another ugly word. Are the poets of the future going to be able to create beautiful poetry with the ugly words we keep coining these days?)

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Sports notes:

:: Michelle Kwan is once again the World Champion!

I remember the first time I ever heard of Kwan, way back in 1994 when she was forced onto the scene in the wake of the Tonya Harding-Nancy Kerrigan debacle. I remember watching her and thinking, “Wow, she’s going to be pretty good.” And has she ever been pretty good! I don’t know if she’ll still be around for the 2006 Winter Games, but I hope she is, and I hope that she finally puts it all together and gets the Olympic gold medal that’s eluded her. (I also hope she doesn’t do anything goofy like try to go without the services of a coach when 2006 rolls around. I’m convinced that’s what did her in last year, because she simply didn’t have her usual polish.)

:: It’s Opening Day for Major League Baseball. I’m not going to attempt to pick a World Series champion, because I’m not entirely up-to-speed on the offseason player moves and whatnot. My team, the Pittsburgh Pirates, are apparently in the middle-stages of their rebuilding efforts, and some publications say they could be a surprise this year. They’re still prone to making goofy decisions, their farm-system is still a bit on the lean side, and they’re still a small-market team in a sport that seems totally unwilling to come up with some kind of revenue-sharing. If things break their way, they could have a pretty decent year, and maybe Brian Giles will finally be recognized for the player that he really is. He’s the best-kept secret in baseball.

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A couple of responses to some things posted by Rachel Lucas:

:: The story contained in this post, assuming it really happened (and I have no reason to assume that it didn’t), is certainly nauseating. That someone would go to such lengths to behave in such a fashion is despicable. But for God’s sake, Rachel, that is not a reason to tar all anti-war people with the same damn brush. I am so unbelievably tired of seeing this kind of thing, on both sides of the political spectrum, and it doesn’t help matters when we keep resuscitating the myth — whether it’s the left-wing myth or the right-wing myth — that it’s the other side that does mean-spirited, vindictive crap to “us poor regular folks who are just trying to go about our business”.

:: Rachel also defended, in two separate posts, the notion of violence as a solution to problems. I am not anti-war, certainly, and I’ve never subscribed to the idea that war is inherently bad — well, not that, but the idea that war is never the correct answer to a particular problem. However, when thinking through problems like these — especially the Robert A. Heinlein quote — I worry that the pendulum is pushed too far in the other direction, namely, that war and violence are more a solution than they really are.

The problem I have with war is not so much that it doesn’t work, because that’s simply historically false: World War II was a pretty effective solution to the Hitler problem and the Imperial Japan problem; the American Revolution was a strikingly effective solution to a host of problems between England and her colonies. The problem with war is that it seems to me best geared toward solving very specific problems — and then, not so much solving the problem from the standpoint of addressing why the problem happened in the first place, but simply removing the problem altogether — and that’s about it. If I may indulge in a poker metaphor, war tends to shuffle the deck, or worse, upset the table and spill everyone’s chips to the floor. And while it is certainly true that the specific objective for the war may be achieved — the illegally invading army may be pushed back to its own country, the evil dictator may be killed or removed, the ruling faction’s policy of “ethnic cleansing” may be halted — it’s spectacularly hard to know whether the situation that exists after the achievement of that objective is any more conducive to long-term peace and prosperity than the situation that existed before it. War is not unlike surgery to remove cancerous tissue: it may work in that regard, and it can pave the way to health and prosperity afterwards for the person undergoing the surgery. But it can also lead to more health problems, more pain and suffering for the patient, and ultimately not play much of a role at all in whether the patient lives for another five years or merely another five weeks.

That’s why I waffled so long on the current war, and it’s why my ultimate support of this war is still quite soft, even as we’re fighting it. Getting Saddam Hussein the hell out of power — and, if need be, the hell off this mortal coil altogether — is, in itself, desirable. The problem I keep running into is whether the world will really move into a better position afterward. I’m supporting the war because I simply can’t envision a peaceful and just world that includes Saddam in charge of Iraq. But I’m also scared because I can envision any number of violent, warlike futures that arise not because Saddam’s still alive, but because he’s dead.

So, I disagree with pacifists who maintain that war and violence are never the answer. But I’m completely unconvinced that war and violence are ever the entire answer, either.

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One of my favorite authors is Christopher Moore, who writes darkly humorous novels that usually have some supernatural element — his tone usually reminds me of some of the comedic episodes of The X-Files, particularly the ones written by Darin Morgan or Vince Gilligan. My favorite books of his are still the first ones I read, Island of the Sequined Love Nun, a whacky story about an airline pilot who is forced into a kind of exile in the South Pacific, and Bloodsucking Fiends, a love story about a boy and his vampire girlfriend. I found his most recent book, Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ’s Childhood Pal something of a mixed bag — some of it was very funny indeed, but the dark tone of the book’s last hundred pages or so didn’t work as well.

Anyway, Moore has a new book coming out in a couple of months: Fluke, or I Know Why the Winged Whale Sings”. The novel is describe as “a rollicking adventure involving an age-old conspiracy, top-level military secrets, a highly evolved super race with a penchant for baked goods, the source of all life on the planet, a very bizarre long-distance love affair, and a megalomaniac undersea ruler thrown in for good measure.”

I can’t wait.

(BTW, I was introduced to Moore by a certain being of pure evil who shall not be named.)

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I tend to not be as anal as some when it comes to matters of language. Just for one example, I’m not one of those people who decries the use of the word decimate as meaning “destroy a large percentage of” (as in, “Homer sure decimated that box of donuts”), on the basis that decimate‘s original meaning was quite specific: “to destroy one-tenth of”. Language shifts and meanders, and words that mean one thing today might well mean something quite different a hundred years from now. This is one reason why readers tend to have a hard time when they first read Shakespeare, for example.

But one thing that does bug me is our insistence on abbreviating words or coming up with “shorter” versions of words, quite often for no reason other than “the coolness factor”. Blog is one such word. I find the word blog inherently ugly — for some reason, it sounds to my ears more appropriate to describe, well, something relevant to a proctological exam. Plus, it’s a shortened form of Web log, which seems to me just fine and not in need of “reduction” or abbreviation. I fail to see where we gain anything by going from six letters to four, except that somehow we’ve consensually agreed that blog is cool whereas Web log is nerdy, I guess. I tried avoiding blog when I started Byzantium’s Shores, but I’ve come to concede the word even though I don’t like it.

So, this morning when I checked the news on MSN, I found a side-headline in their war coverage that read as follows: “World Reax”.

Reax.

Now, come on. That’s just goofy. It really is. It can’t be because of space or line-length, because there are other headlines that are longer, with some taking up two lines. I doubt very much it would be that hard to write “World reacts” or “World reactions“, depending on what’s required. Now, maybe reax is some bit of military jargon that I’m simply unfamiliar with, and MSN is trying to hew to that line. But I’m not the military, and actual English is just fine for me. Let’s leave the soldier-talk to the soldiers who actually have a reason to talk that way.

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Well, I guess it’s clear how out of touch I am with comics: when I posted last week’s Image of the Week, I was unaware that Wonder Woman’s look has been “updated” to reflect a new time. Apparently she looks like this now, as contrasted with her original, WWII-era appearance:

OK, I guess. But I prefer long hair, really.

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